Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH)

 - Class of 1924

Page 1 of 182

 

Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection, 1924 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collectionPage 7, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection
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Page 10, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collectionPage 11, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection
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Page 14, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collectionPage 15, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection
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Page 8, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collectionPage 9, 1924 Edition, Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 182 of the 1924 volume:

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' X Hoights High Sc-hool 4- N . i j 1 1,5 f 3 Miss Iielen K.W:1llac-e i i 7 fi o 0 r U X i fi Mi-. if. L. Wiley., i in sa 5' R ' go Tfx ,J F2U'llity ,, , Y 10 X. 'Q I 5 Seniors, , , , I3 4, 'ni 4 I f Sonior History , 31 r , J 'N 4 g Senior YVill 35 1 X r i Juniors , , 37 ' - i . ,, X i Xl K' I 1 Soplioinores 4.3 i f J . i M i In Meniorizun , 4.8 X v5! .Xvtivitivs , A 51 fff . i i k x C I,itf'r:n'y Dvpartniont 73 ' X x Sc-liool C'alPnd:1r 89 K: l V ' ' Sovivtv , , , Q41 - i N ' f'N i N 5 .Xtliletics 99 'I iz Alumni i i 119 If i , X - - Humor 127 , V f c' .X if fo . J fi 'fii W f4 'W' if , f W- W I - . ' ' - me i in-3-so f fe-M1 ' i X - g . . 2 7 u, - fs- 1. if ii 1 6 fi Q iQDQl'CQFfQi,, ,FQSQQf1., Qu ,nwniooop 'iQQG7,, aoooaw w if ,f,5CMsF f-'moo 'iii 5 in -C 'PHE cxxI,D1zON IsI.fRO -RfJfT?i1R0g I . R f' 'xxx O -xff f X x K L I i 5 9 iN Y OI HN Tw I I5 I ff f 9, .Qs-. EF . X5 n x I Lv., ,,T'1-,,,.L, 'fii,ff CELL, -Q , X fI If fl ! 'ij A Q. I I my ELEN I4 I ,Lf I , ' A3 I' , II I W WALLACE ,If I ! A is I if ' 1 IN ORATETUL RECOCINITION '- II I I I OF HER CHARACTER AND fb Q T FAITHFUL SERVICE I '33, THIS VOLUME IS I ,i 4? RESRECTTIILLY DEDICATED I f I ' , . . . X A! ' V, I ,A f S' id 4 THE CLASS OF I924 jg 5 , HEIOHTS HICII-I ,N WI SCHOOL S w , ,I I ff fb A-I 24 fir' 1 T YM-L b d-'p f ' b J V X ! XFN If U . f C Im- I ' ne XL Q, lfi, 4 6 J 4 f kwa AAII I I, l g Q3 Il 6 gil TIIIE QXLDRON -Q9 b H- 1 ea - QL-M . A ' - . if wk 61 ,f I ,N K X D X X mf MI I .GX I A, , '59 a X f . 155, X X wi - Na i I QE' N . W - 1' ' ' J j G . Q9 l , ' , A231553 ' . A J Q5 ?f ? f M- 1-w '-A-f f ff f f'- xfffff- ,--f .ffXf-g--f-,-- -X -Y--7 W- - Y-- 3 L g .ADX 3 L, Y ,,,, ,AJJM2 7,,,,,,m 'C,:,,,, ,Mx :A g,,,, 3QQ'Kf, D17 12 Q 'N F fl ? 'A ,gg r J 6 5 A I J C' W six . 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MIT!-:R JEAN CHARLESXVORTH r President , Vic-e-President ,,,, , ,,,, .,,, , .,,.,,,, ,, ,. fl- 's I President Student Founc-il ,,,, Debating Club ,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,, .,,,, , ,3-4 Exec-utive f'ommittee,, , VK'e'PreS'defft --'--'-'-'-' - -'-' 3 Interscholastlc Team ,,,,,,., Manager Football Team, Dramatic Club 4 Eg HP? ------'r - A- H A- me Black and Gold r,r,rr,,rA M4 , heqretary ' Leaders Class ........ ...,.,,, 2 -3-4 Q' Debating Vlub , Sewetarym Viifrii Y VV--A - M AiLV V Secretary Glee Club eeeeeee,eee,eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee eee,eeereeeeeee D 92-374 1: Flass Secretary Vice-President, Student Couneil ,,,,,, . , , ,.., .3 E Athletic Assoeiation, ,. Friendship Club ,,,, , ,.,.,. .......,, .,,,, , , Vvistgoma Vlub . , VVEBSTER H. NIANDELL Treasurer ,,,,,.,..,....,, .,..,..,, ,,,,.,,.,,, ,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, 4 W JAM!-:s F. i'oNNo1.l,Y Wistgoma Kjlub -lyrlyb b I --w, ,Q , 8 Secretary , . President ,,..,,,,. ,...,,,, Q Annual Staff , , Student Council., , ., .,., W3 T Editor-in-fhief Debating Club .,.,,, ....,., 3 A4- : Hi-Y Dramatic Club .,,,..,,, ,,,,, 3 -4- tv T reasurer, ,, ,,,, Vice-President ,.,,,.,. ,.,,,,, , ,-I Student founcil , Hi-Y Ml Secretary .... ,, ,,,,,,,,, 4 , V' Baseball , , ,, Black and Gold ......,,.,, 4- ' Football , ,, , Annual Staff .,,.., ,, H 3-4- 2 s 9994 49996 A995 AQQQL, 9996 99996 9996 Q9994.- 999 4 'll 4 le E55tf o--.!':Gi'-- NWwoob,45gI THE CLALDRON 13,,,coc0ii-g0 QJc 'VQ'5t-ng M Q? l l ll t isa o Q l 1 l vi tj 0 Q Q 1 C 1 wi 2 if ax Q G ,W Q fu G A A CD it O C G P A J t Qi Q 3 l ABRAMS, Josi-:vu AKERS, STANLEY ATKINS, F1.oRENr'1-1 BARNES, LUCILE J Class Treasurer ....., 3 Friendship Club , ,4 .V BARRETT, JANE BECK, MARY Student Cpuncil ,,,,,, 4 Q fi Debating Club ,A..... 4 blilfesgigxet 1 Bnou-JY. RVTH Q l BELETSKY' HEX E183 Clulzii Dramatic Club ,,,, 3--1 Glee Club ., 4 f Fe? er S. ' 355 ' Debating Club?-3-4 Friendship Club -1- . rlendship Club ., 4 Glee Club 4 5 'D 4 gn leaders fllassf 5 4 IXRENNEMAN, Lunn 6 fe BINGHAM, ALBERT Black and Gold ,.,,,, 4 Student Council ,,,, 4 Friendship Club 4 1 Athletic Associa' BEvKER, KATHERIXE . tion ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 5 H14 V-,-Y-'-w.,VV,VAAVV 3,4 Student Council 2--1 6 '1'l-easm-er YY-AAV.-A-VV 3 Dramatic Club U3--L Q 'D President VYYYVVVVVVYV 4 Debating Club W3-4 'A i VVistgoma Club . 2 Leader S Class 243-4 ' Basketball ,,,,,,,, 374 Y 5ef'ffft31'y --- '- ---4' Isaseball ttttttttttttt, :H G15-we Club teeeeeeeeee ff-4 F3 Captain, V LDYW, V M4 Friendship Club 4 Q Tennis .A,,A--- I U U 3 President 4 Q A Animal Staff, , ,-L H0l'k?Y ff-A--ffffffffff 245 i' Tennis ,..,,, , 3 ISLAWR, JAMES CD l l f l 5 65 YQ 6 DQ EQA, JQQQC BQQQ .BQQC-EC' 9C-DQL XQQQQ QCQCQ? QQQQG 9QQQ elm le 3 f OO GCi-hi for?-5.59645 THE CALDRUN 1g,..ODG 3 9 w Q 6 Q 6 Q Q 6 C Q E3 P BVIJIN, SARAH BUNIJY, FLORENUI-I BIRNBAVM, VELIA 3 BRUWER. BVRR mee Club 41 TennisII I I I 4 BYERS, ELIZABETH i'ARRoLL, VYILLIAM Dramatic I'lub..2-4 CARPENTER, JOEL BURR, VIRGINIA Glee Club ..,,.,,,,, I3-4 CONN, XYILLIAM 2 1JeI,aIingc'Iuh I 4 B'a k and f-011 3 4 UHEN, HERMAN Basketball II I II II Leader's Class 3-4 1 . . , - ' , Black and Gold Prlendshlpf lub IIIIII 4 Football IIIII.II IIIII 4 2-3-4 Frienrlship Club I I4 CORCORAN, HELEN ,, Dramatic Club ..I.II,I 4 8 CLARK, FANNIE Debating Club IIII 354 ' Leader! Class 'S--4 Treasurer ' J 4' . - ' - ' Z ' Interscholastic, 354 l'rIendshIp f lub 4 Black and Gold 3-4 Hockey ' Q13 Annual Stall' ..I.II.I 3-4 ,, Friendship Clnb I I I4 3 F' 6 899k 139996 I 73994. JQQQ6, 5991-- 3999L 599V 99996 IQ v8I16IS' 1 1G G G0,,+Ql C :lsr .. w Q FL - O 2 ez sd 0 S Q Q 2 fly 'Y 6 6 Q Q C5 CO 11 l 5 O C Q F '1 i Q E F' 4' CONROY, DON,ALD CORELL, CHARLOTTE CORSO, BESSIE CRONVELL, XCIRGINIA lb Glee Club ,,,,,,,. 2-3-4 Student Council ,,.,u, 4 Student Council ,,,,,, 4 Q COY, ALICE Friendship Club ,,,,,, 4 Athletic Associa- Glee Club ,.,..,,, 2-34 ,, 0 -h ,t- VVVVVVV W H ,4 tion ...... . ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 Presidents ,, ,, ,4 Fiiieriiclshtip Club ,.,,., -11 C UTTER, STANLEY geagefls Class 2-2-2 Lefifdefis Class 2'3': - I - rc es ra ,,.,,.,L,.,,,, - reasurer ,,,,,,,.,,,, DIAMOND Rosa Zigtrliirhlliincouncllm-Wi Basketball 3-4 Hockey 'A ' Q -3 , , . A , l, g Hockey Manageryl Basketball .,,.,,,,,,,, 2-3 Q friendship f lub ..,,, 4 Tennis --AYiiiiV-- Viivv- I V3 ' L D DE A191121 JSHN 4 Dum, Hmm lfriendship Club , L4 Cfamglli J u Leader's Class .,,. 3-4f I ' ee U '-----ff'fff ' ' Basketball YKKVKKVVKKVVYYQK 3 DAVIS, ETIIEL Friendship Club ,,,I,, 4 Friendship Club ,,,,,, 4 , 3 DRAWE, GEORGE DUNL.AP, DOROTIIX' 3 l'0Otball ,,,,,,,,1,,,,.,,,,,, 3 Glee Club ,,,,,,,, 245- -1- -i Leaders Class ..,,,, 3-4 Annual Staff, ..,.,,,, .4 , Black and Gold 6 Staff LLLLLLLLL,L.L,LLLL 4 Q 0 Dramatic Club ,,,,,,, 4 ' 6 ll Friendship Club LLLL 4 6 fl 3 5 QQQ4 AQQQQ QQQJQ DQQQO' AQQQ QQQQQ ggqgn AQCQCCF IQQ3 Ilvlr 00 G G GO..,5l THE CALDRQN 13,..oo O .5O DUNN, Donorm' EVANS, MARIIIN Glee Clubs ,. ,, , Friendship Club , FEARY, ALLEN EDYVARDS, CONSTANCE Glee Club ,.,......... 3-4 .4 FISCIIER, ALICE Friendship Club ,,,i 4 FREEMAN, MILTON ENGLEMAN, BLANCHE : Glee Club ........,,,. 3-4 Friendship Club ,L,.,, 4 FEIGENBAUM, ALICE Friendship Club ..,.,. 4 GIMMEL, Doaornv Glee Club ,.....,, 2-3-4 Hockey ,,..,,,,,,,..... 1-2 EINSTEIN, EDITH Dramatic Club ,,., 3-4 Debating Club ..,. 354- Vice-President ,,.. 4- Glee Club II,.....,.., 3 -4 Leader's Class ,.,I 3-4 Black and Gold ,,.,, 4 Friendship Club ,,..,, 4 FOOTE, TRUMANA Dramatic Club ........ 4 Leader's Class ........ 4 Friendship Club ....., 4 GORDON, ROBER Football ,......,.,,,,,,, 2 'I' -3 Basketball ....,...,.,..,,, 3 3 Baseball ......,,.,,AA....... 41181:- gC9C'3 0 6D GCD,,5gl 1gg,.COC O C 0 f: E5 Q t.. 0 Q 5 55 F. Q Q 3 Q GORDON, CARRIEI. GREENBERG, JOHN Gnoss, SOL Gnoss, lxEN Student Council ,,,,,, -l- Baseball ,,,,,.,,,,, 2-.3-4 Atllletic Associa- HALLE, DIARY HALVERSTADT, Tennis ,,,,,, ,,,, , . H011 --f-'ff f ' f ' lf' 'L Debating Clubn, 3-4 PRUDENVE lfaskeiballe Q QQQQQQ J-4 Friendship Club eeeeee 4 Glee Club ,eeeeeeee :H Hamnouum-xx, TCHIHSQ-Q QQQQQQQ Q 4 Friendship Club eeeeee J. mmm Honsox, HAROLD Dramatic Club, ,,,,, , HALF DPROTHT Dramatic Club V ll HOFFLIAN, CHARLI-is Debating Club' u Debatlngilub 2-.5-l Glee Club Vrrvrrrirr 3g4 Glee fjlul, YVVVQW K .4 Interscholastlc 8 hffcretaryg ----- H 5 President, .,,,,,,,,,, 4 Orchestra , , 243-4 Black and Gold Q Y ice President ..., 4 ClIUt'Z'ffC:l0laStlf'5--fi HOLZ, NACJSII 1 ee , u 1 ,,,,., .,,,, - N i Annual Stall' .,,,,,,, 3-4 ' X, Friendship Club ,,.,,, 4 P 3 HARRIS, Enm-:RT Dramatic Club..3-4 Debating Clubn, 3-4 ld Interscholastic ..,. 4 8 Black and Gold ,,.,. 4 1 Q 6 Q 2 Q WQQDQD D WQQQ 3999? ' BQQ 7 BQQCQ6 BCQQA DCQCQCQL QQQQ '2l19 lg. lrwKYO7 ?f'4? TC'4? I 60.5, THE CALDRUN .g.,OO4F'T. COZ ' GXCCOG Q Q sy Q fu m .Q W 4 J Q2 5 TJ QW 'N K3 ., W Q 24 Q- 45 1 1 1 4 ffl fr- 5 rw 'iw if I' Li T Lea ga rm 5 222 QS- vr, K-3- ff! ,., 5 4 I V -FB 5 -rv qv fw VN Ilolwux. llrzmzx Ilmvrox, EIJMIAND lll'r:1,sM.xN. lilm-11-:N Il1'us'r. .I.-mil-:s l.',i4.n,lsl,ip plug, 1, 5wi,,m,i,lg Q, 3 4, Dramatic Vluh 3 4- Slll1ll'llt Vuum-il 4- 1 r Glu- Vlulv 2-3 4- Athle-iim' .'xSS0l'i2l- f Friendship Vlulr 4- tion 4- 6 'mx -H mmmls l!s1m,. 1'll.uu,1-1:-1 Vivo l'rvsi1l1-ni 4- X D 4 44' Il .ll 4 Stllilklli f10llIl1'il 3- 4- 'MSKAREK' LILY l H l V:t:nKf::1:L 'Q lg 4 Auhl1.Qi,. ASsm.i,,, lyrlllflllfll' flulm fi- 4- QI 25:11 F 4 ,V ' H , ' ' 5- ln: '.'f'l:.'.'2-3fl- ' 3 fn if, Hlzu-k llllfl I-nhl Di 4- hon . S 4 ,L 1' , Iss,-, lyfillllilfll' Vlulb 4- K , H, ,Xmm-,I Staff 4. Athlmiu Ahsllilml- . , K QS If .xnfnnul Qin ' 4- Hi - Y 34 tion 3 llvlmtlfng lub .S 4- Q1 4 W l'l'n-lulshlp 4 lull 4- Bllwhllll ,Q I,-rimldsllip1-lub 4 Lvalvlvr s f Iulm 2 3 Orr-hm-sirn 2 .3 4- Bnskvumll 3 Haskpthall 3 4 Blau-k and Gold 4 Ixl2lIl4lgZi'I' 25 Y by lim-key 2 lxm-:s'rl.r:. Hm:.xxon C- KIil'1iIil'Il.. l,0lHl'l'HY lf!-:I-:lu-:m.r:. I-'ricmlsllip mul, 4 Gm, 4-lub Q 3 4 IN-NTHPININPI Kxl-:I-IN. IMIRIS ,-N Q La-url:-r's Vlnss 3 4 Glu- Vluh fF4- Student f'uunr'il 'Z KUI-INSKY. DI,-xxx l ri4-mlsllip Vluln 4- l ri0mlsl1ip Vlulv 4- Frivmlsllip Vlllb 4- IA-:urls-r's flaws 3 4- 6 if O 6, 5 9 Q L4 CD 5 Cv , -an-W f, , , ,, , , FW, A , , Y , 4, 8 D-J-9' A VVVV JKJCJKJFW, , ,, Bwlifs, ,W EQQQQ ., QQQA, ..-FQUQC AQQC ,H-XQLQQQ ,, BQQJ 431110 113. GCT Q 'BC Q L Q 3 NGC 9630 JO C fn Q ff. C5 C C ,A 5 , Q KORACR, NORMA KRORN, LILLIAN LANE, CATHERINE LARONGE, Louis Basketball Class Vice-Pres- Basketball ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 3 6 LEE, RICHARD ident VV,-A-VVVVVVVVVV Q LAZARUS, HELEN Athletic Associa- Dramatic Club .,,, 3-4 LEMKE, LESTER Q Debating Club V 4 V tion .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..,tt.., 4 President ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 4 Orchestra ,,,,,,,i,,. 2 Friendship Club Vluryr 4 Swimming ,,..,,,.,,,.,,.. 3 Student Council., W4 Baseball Manageri Vice-President H4 LIYINGSTON, RAY h LEWIS, ARCHIE Girls Cabinet ..,,., .A Student Councilm, 2 6 Football Q-34 LIRME, BARYTI-IA Glee Club ,,,,,,,,,,,, 2-3 Glee Club ....,,,,,,,,,,,, 3 CQ Basketbgu YYYAYYV' 3 Glee Clubn, Y,Y,V,,, QY3 L6aCl6l S Class Q-3'-1 Track A ' QLEL4 Black and G0ld,,3--I Annual StaH,,,,,,,,,,,,4 Friendship Club ,...,, 4 6 LEE, CHARLES Q LINDGREN, HERBERT Student Council ,,,..r -1- 6 Q 6 F S2 QQQ6 .QQQQ6 BQDQG 9QDQQD6 9994 HQCDCQ6 9996 BGG-XGA 43'-DQ .gil I ig. G G G 6J0..i5i THE CALDRON ig,.tc0co Q Qaf 0ceg ,- 2 W 5 G 2 fgrio o G 0c9,,,q THE CAALDRQJN 13,,,0C 5 O 6 Q Q 6 Q E2 Q W, Ll,m'n, Gnoum: L0vEN'mAL, MAAS, RIDYAL Maas, EARL S DONALIJ I MADISON, MARY MALM, WEBs'r1-:R MAf'DON.5LD, Student mum-ii MADISON- HERBERT Dramatic Clube W3-4 EUGENE Debating Club Glee Club ,,,,,,,, U4 Glee Club ,,,,,,,l ,, 3v4- Student Councilw, 4 l.eader's Class 2-3- Secretary .,,,.,.,,, H4 Athletic Associa- Girl's Cabinet ,,,,,, , Mc'Gr:oRGE, tion ,,.Y,,,,,Y,,,,,,,,,, , ,4- Annual Staff' , , , Muuoam LIELFHER, S'rER1.1xG Glee Club ,..u ,, W3-4 Black and Gold 3- Leadel-'S Class 2-3-4 Leader's Club .,..,.,,., 3 Friendship Club Basketball ,,,.,,,l,,,,,,,- Q Tennis Manager ,A,.A, 4 Treasurer . Glee Club ,uuY,,uV 2-3-4 Basketball , , Black and G01dH3w4, MEREDITH, GLADYS Q Friendship Club ,,,,,, 4 MAUDONALD, 'i MARJKDRIFJ Leader's Class 3- Friendship Flub . 6 VU QQQi...9coQQQ.,.,QQQig,QQQQe.. QQCQG Egcocor QCQQE. EQQQG .900 El 7.7. j.. DGG i'iffW 5D H5 gm, 0O O C C ' if THE CALDRON ja 'NIOQRE NORMAN BIORRIS, ROBERT NIYERS, VIRGINIA MIIEIII.IIAI'sER, MULIMIAUSER, ROLAND Student Council ..,.,. 4- Debating Club ,,,, 3-4 Interscholastic ,.,, 4 Orchestra .,...,.... 2-3-4 President ,.....,,,v,,,, 4 PAULLIN, FLORENCE Glee Club ,,,...,.....Y,., 4 Friendship Club .,..,, 4 VIRGINIA Dramatic Club,...3-L Glee Club ,,,.,,., 2-3-4- Treasirer ,,,,,.,,, , 4- Leader's Class 243-4- Friendship C lub ,.I. ,4 ' 4 becretary ..,,,,,,,,,,,, NORTON, FORRI-:sr Dramatic Club, ,,,,,, 4 Hi-Y ,.,.I...,,,,,, H 4 PENICK, MIl,DRED Friendship Club ,4 O 3 DQDQQI DIJQ' .,, MEQQL QQQ? BQQCQQA, ,ECQQF - KQQQC QQQ elm lg' 8 we fv ocf- oo.,5gf THE CALDRUN 154. soc-1j10f e ew 1 if EFI, y. fl lv ffl Q 253 K7 5 Q Q1 Q l'lllm,u's, l lLMl'Ilt PLATZ, JUSTIN Po1,l,1T, NIIRIAM PouTi-zu, .ll-:AN llasebull I -2 3 Football , Friendship Club 4- Glee Club 3-4- Leadens Class 3-4- ? l'on'rl-zu, J.-wx I'nAssE, Mlnlmlu-:lm l'U1'NAM, MAn.loum Friendship Club 4- llraniatic' Club Uri-hestraw, , ,, ,'2-3- Glee Club ,,,. , .,,,,3-L W '11-,mis V lleaderfs Class V3,.1, Romucns, l3E1 ri' IKICKENBAVGH. Hof-key ,,,,,,, , , 'Z FriendshipCluh,, 4 l1,.3yN0L,,S, RALPH Friendship Club , , 4 lfmmgxppg Student ' Russi-lm., G i:u'rni'u1-1 6 ls,-i9ndsl,gp fhll, Council ,,,,, ,f2-3- R0SENf E D' 'IEANNH Friendship Club 4- Q Athletic Assovla- Leaders Class 3-4- tion , , , 3- Friendship Club ,4- l,I'21II18.tlt'flll1lJ'2'3' hecretary ,,,,,,,,, ,, Leader's Club 6 Vice-President Q Hi-Y .,..,, ,,,l, , , ,,2-3- l Vice President , Combined Hi-Y- Clubs President President Ohio State Clubs ,,,, , C Black and Gold, 3- A-l Annual Staff ..r,.r, 3- Wistgoma Club .. ,, Basketball, ,,,,, 2-3- 55 Baseball Manager .3 D QQCD4 PQQGJK HQQL QQQQQ 9984 FQCQQQ 5992. BQQCQQ JQQ 4 Hgh L1sqhv lwQ Q QQIl5gI 1gg,.COI' v6 C O SAMPLINER, VVILLIAM Debating Club ,,,,,,,, interscholastic- Glee Club ,,,,,,,,,,,,, Black and Gold ,,,,,, Track ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,3- SCHNVARTZ, FLORENCE SINKS, Monrox Dramatic Club ..., 3- Debating Club ,,,,,, SVHMITTENDORF, H.AZEL Glee Club ....,.l. 2-3-4 Friendship Club ,,,,,, 4- SCHWARTZ, SEVILLE Friendship Club ,,,,, 4 SHELHART, JANET Debating Club, .3-4 Glee Club ,,,,,,, 2-3-4- Leader's Class Q-3-4 Annual Staff ,,,,.,,, 3--L Friendship Club 4- SCHNEIDER, ELIZABETH Student Council, Athletic Associa- tion ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..,, Debating Club ..,,, , Glee Club ,....,,,.,, 3- Leader's Class ,, 3- Friendship Club Orchestra, .,,,,,, 2-3- Basketball ,,,,,,, W3- SELKER, MIRIARI Debating Club ,,., 3- Glee Club ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Friendship Clubs, ,, SHARP, ANDREW' Student Council ,,,,, Annual Staffn., ,, . Hi1Y ,,,,,,,,,,,,,r,, ,. ,, Sl'HNURMACHI'IR, ADELE Debating Club , 3-4- Friendship Club .,,,,, 4 SEAGER, ELEANUR Debating Club 2-3-4- Glee Club ,,,,,,,, -lf Friendship Club ,,,,, 4- SHEPLER, Lois Friendship Club , W4- L GH J QGQQ4-' BQQG QQDQQDQ 9996 XQQQG DCQCQG HCQCQQQ L ills ISD Of QTY Y Xfit Wig ' R Wi ' JC Ee 'DQ' ? W QCD CCJL'iiC 1 .JC'T'-' fOg 6 Q l I E3 55 IJ Q Q1 Q 59 Q T? Q Q O O Q SIIERMAN, FIIANK SIIoI'KI-IY, HELEN SPANGENBERG, STANDLIIY. EVELYN Ky President of Vlass fl Dramatic' Club , ,. H4 EIAQIE Glee Cllllyw, 4- 1 8 Student Friendship Club ,4 Friendship Club ,,,,, 4 Hockey ,,..., , ,,,, 12 Q C fuunvil ,.,,,, 42-3-' -1- Athletic Associa- STEWART, ANNIE STEWART, ESTER SMITH, RCDi'KXV'ELL 1 .flqn QH Debating Club Ipaq Glee Club eee, eeee,,, :I -4 Debating Clubee I4 i L Hliy , 2 5'i Glee Clubs , W3-4 Friendship Uluhn , .4 Glee Cluhm, ,Se-4 , ref en V, Q ' Leader's Class ,,,. 3-4 s 0 1 Ombmed H13 Friendship Club ,,,,, 4 SNYIIER, RIK'HARI7 SOMMEIQ, MILIJIIPJIJ 3 Q Ulub President 4- . . ' Football ' Q5 1 hlee Cflub ,,,, ,, , , , 4 A F: SMITH, HENRY Friendship fluh ,, ,4- llaskethall ,RAS Q . . Z. . tudent Council ,,,,, 4- :::3::ES ' 2 Athletic Associa- 6 .. ' 7 ' tion ,,.. . ,,,.,,,, ,, .4 Q vhstgqma club 'Q Dramatic Club ,,,, W4 g President , ,,I, .. 2 D . , Q .' . . ebatmg Club, H3-4 Leader s Club ,, , .I mack and . V Gold ,,.., ..I,,... 2 -SW4 STIPEII, Dcmmm wistgoma Club 6 SMITH JI-:ANI-:TTI-' Vice President 2 f ' ' ' ' 'I' k M 4 Q mee Club I....eII,ee I I4 me Runge' Friendship Club ..I,, 4- I., f 25 'W ri X QC.lii3C.DTaDLMfQ, -N3 JCM' ,QQ ,,,I-DQQQC, BQQQ., 9QQQ6,- JQQK . 'i4ueJQ6f -QBQDQ-Q QHI-613. g0G O 6D G6D,.5gI jgg,.QC C0 C6 ' l U l 1 E 4 1 63 KO 63 ,, ,X 0 6 5 ,N GN 1 C L, N , ,N f. 5 G O fi 9? I 6 6 Q Q STRAUSS, BURTON TAFT, FREDERICK FEDER, THOMAS, ROBERT Student Council ...... 4 Debating Club ,,,, 3-4 MARGUERITE x Y Dramatic Club .,.. 3-4 Treasurer ,,,,...,....,. 4 Debating Club ,,,r 3-4 'I KEGG' F IRGINI-4 Q Debating Club ,,,, 3-4 Black and G0ld,,3-4 Interscholastic ,,,. 4 Friendship Club ....., 4 Q A President ,,,,,,,,,,,,.. 4 Edit0r-in- Black and Gold ,,,,,, 4 f' Interscholastic 3-4 chief .,,,,,,,,...,..,,,,,,, 4 Friendship Club ,.,,,, 4 Y 1 Black and Goldus-4 WAN HORN, H11-DA Annual Staff ..........,, 4 TORER, JOSEPH TREGONING, HELEN Student Council..Q-4 6 Athletic Associa- Q THOMPSON, TRUBY, EDISTA ULLMAN, tion ,,,,A,,,,i,,,,,,,,,,A A4 Q , FLORENCE CORNELIUS Dramatic Club .... 3-4 'T' Student Council ,.,,,e 4 Track e.,.re...........,., -2-3 Qebatgng Club .-,- 3-4 Glee Club ,,.,,r,,r,,, 3-4 11199 Club '-f------ff- 34 j Friendship Club ,r,.., 4 Leader s .Class .,,, 3-4 I Friendship Club ,..,,, 4 'Q Q TR0Ns'rE1N, Swimmiflg f--------'---f-f 4 ARTHUR Mamgef ----f--'-'f--- 3 Glee Club ,,,l,,,,..,, 3-4 Librarian ,,..,,,,r,..,. 4 LJ Swimming .,,,.,,,,,,,,,, 4 Q 8 Track ,....,,,,,,, ,,.r.. 2 Q SN fa. 3 5 F7 Q 5 U 0 QQQDE HQQUW 99625 XJQQAK HQQE, AQQQF - JCQQ' DCQCQQQ ,- -EQ QQC 'Slw lg- 8Of5 U CEC.'i? 400 ,gsli C Eg., Ofkil 1 C 0 Z . 2305 , 'L O Q 62 6 Q Q l aa 5 'fa 6 i fi 5 W 8 Ei' X9 Q5 3 My 4 3 3 M Ll E 2 , 9? ,. L, ,I W,u'Kr:nM.xN, W.u.sn, KENN1-:'rn W.mm:sKA, Wm.1.s. ANNA ly R0H 3 T Glee flub .. 3- DOROTHY Leaders Vlass 3-4 K W Kp Ori-lwstru LZ- 3 President Leaders Class '2-3--4 Friendship Vlub. , 4- 6 Q Friendship Club , H4 Basketball . , .,,, , 4- XVllITAf'Rl'1, XNEII, Bl-:'r'rY Hockey, , ,, 3 Tennis . , 3 lhlflml'-A Draniatic f'lub 3- Basketball- W - - 3 Studi-nt Vuunvil Glee Club ,,,,,,, 2-3- V ll HVl'l'7LAWv RVTU W I,I'ilIllil,ll1'fllllll l.9ader's flass Q-3- W EISKOPR BLU lm E v V ,. gd Debating Vlub 3 Basketball , , 2- v WISE' I I'-WK 8 fn Le-zul0r's Vlass L2-3 Friendship Club , WILLIS- MM'G-WHT Gi President , Glee Club ,,,, , 3-4- Gloe Club 3 Wmsox, lhnm Sl'f'l'9tlf y 1 Leadc-r's Vlass 2-3- I 9-5 l rle-ndshlpf lub Hm.kt.v Q - Wg, gi llmrkvy A ' Wn,:-xox. JANE Sludvnl tl0llllC'll 3 Allllvlil' Associa- 6 -lion , QU fill'l.H Cabinei , H iv Girls Lezulers' Class ,,,,.,,, 2- 3- Glce Clubs, , 3- Dramatic- Flub 3- V Basketball Q Manager , , , lfriellrlsliip Vlub , Jl f QQQKYW QUQQQQ-.. 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HQQQL 41391 KQQCQQ DQQL , A-fJCQCQQf BQQ 'ills 12' 2GG - q3, Qq-- - QQQSI THE CALDRON 1g,,COO C 0 COCg IC f E L, Q 3 L ., G 3 Q 6 xl Q 5 L W O 3 Q .,, 6 E Q Q 5 Q O 6 OD Q - R I I I VVOOD, VIRGINIA YOUNG, EDNA YOUNG, NANA ZELIN, HELEN L 6 Dramatic' Club ,,,, 3-4 Friendship Club ....,. 4 Glee Club .... 4 Debating Club ,,,, 3-4 C Q Glee Club ,,,.,,,,,,,, 3-4 Friendship Club ,,,,,. 4 Inte scholastic ,,,,.,,, 4 Q Leader's Class 2-3-4 Leader's Class ,,,, 3-4 Friendship Club ,,,,,, 4 Black and Gold .,,,., 4 Friendship Club ,.,,,, l Hd 2 ZINK, HELEN BURGESS, DOROTHY' PECK, BLANCHE 3 D Leader's Class, W3-4 Friendship Club ,,,... 4 Friendship Club ...,, ,4 Friendship Club ,,,,., 4 Basketball, ,.,,,, ,,,,, , 4 I, L 8 MORTON, THOMAS EDGAR, DOROTHY BUNYAN, RUTH DUGHON, MORRIS Q +I Student, Council .r,,,I 4 Glee Club ..,.,,,,,,,, 2-3 Leaders Class ,,,, 3-4 ' Athletic Associa- Friendship Club ,,,,., 4 Glee Club ,,.,,,,, Q-3-4 tion .,,,,,,,,,,,..,.,,,,,,,, 4 Friendship Club ,,,,,, 4 Hi-Y .,,...,.,,, .,,,,,,. 3 -4 I, Football ,,,,,,,,.,..,,,, 3-4 5 Q Basketball II,.uuuu.Iuu 3-4 G :rw Captain ,,,,..,.,,,,,,,, 4 ' Baseball ,,,,,,,, ..,,.,,, Q Q Q M G L 0 8999 EQQQL 0639? 9999? 5 QQQ? QCQQQ5- QQQG DQCGG MQQ '2l19 lg' oo oL2-? f,o oo THE CALDRON l9.3t..C0Q'7C'iliW,6 C0'g'-!'1f.f f lhmki-zs, IIAIILAN Cm's'rAI,, IRWIN KUNKLH, HAIQIQIIA: MANIJPIII, SANI-'oim l,I'Cll8SU'tL, . ,, 3-4 Sill-1RMAN,f'HARLl-IS CllLLAtFOTT, JI-:AN I Asr:I.-mo, Mun' Glee C'lub ,,,,,.A,,,,, .4- Leader's Class, 3-4 LEPON, MILDIIIJD Orchestra ,.,,,.,.,,.. 8-4 I,ASSANfJ, ALI-'Iu-zo SIMON, PAUL Glee Club ,,.,. ,,,,,,.,. 4 Orchestra .,,,,,. , .QS4 CORLETT, DoRoTIIv GoI,nII.IMMi:II, WILBUII Football ...,,.,... ..., 2 -3 Track ,,,,.,,... .,., . 'Z-3 Tennis ......,,,,,,,...,. H2 LINUEIUIIE, FRED Leader's Club 2-34- Student Council , , 4 Baseball ,,,.,.,,,,,,,, 3-4- Hasketball, ,,,,....,,,,, 4- Hi-Y .....,,..,..,,.,,,,.., 3- 4 CRANIMLL, CATIIEHINI: Kurtz, EDVYARD Loi-:Ia, SANFORD SCHNEIDER, RUSELLA TURNI-za, Vmcrxu Winn, Runnin' Rosu, Josr-:PII Glee Club .,.....,,, .. 4 Football ..,,,,,.,.....,...., 4 Swimming ...,...,,..., I2 STANTON, HALDANP1 Student Council ,.,. ,4 Athletic Associa- tion .,.......,.I.,....,,.I 4 Swimming Manager ........I,.,,. 4- AS our education stimulated us with a desire for material wealth or spiritual riches? HO of us are to fulfill the world's dire need of spiritual leaders ? Q Q QQQ AQQQ6 AQCQ5-' AQCQCQ4 HCQCQ? BCQCQCQ? K 9993 ACQQQ4 WCQQ 'tho lf' gO3 G G QQ,,e5I C 13a..QG 65 G QCg CQ Q 5 Senior History Q T WAS only five short years ago vious year. We were especially en- I i when our Seniorlclass Came burst- thusiastic in the work of the Student 5 Ing inte Helgllts High Selleelv elated Council, an organization working Q at the thought Ot being in Junior High- for the betterment of dear old Heights. Q Once inside that grand edifice, how- In debating too We Carried eff the ever, We Were immediately subdued honors as Burton Strauss, Helen Cor- 55 by the aWe'lnSPlrlng glances Of the coran, and Dorothy, Hall made the 6 Seniors and faculty. The remainder Interscholastic team. Q of the year we pursued our way very quietly, relieving the monotony only But the crisis of the year was the 6 by making good records in scholar- Junior Gambol. What plans, what 5 ship. Those were the good old days talk, what bustle, what excitement Q2 when assemblies were real events, for preceded that famous event! So the whole school was dismissed to go splendid was the management of the 5 to Coventry auditorium- That year committee that even James Black was is a Surprlslngly large number Ot us Stood inspired with heroism and asked a on that stage to receive our first honor young lady to ffgambey' with nnn. badges- Nor were his expectations, nor any 5 one else's, disappointed for it was 8 How gleefully we came back the the -fbest every 1 next year! Were we not Freshmen? G' Not even the Seniors could look down We are new Seni0rS1F0ur years we W On us HOW! We Would rather not have journeyed the High School road, A tg Say how S00n we Were disillusioned' and we are passing the last mile-post. Q T However, Our Optnnlsrn conquered After the class had been organized, J any lndlgnltles inflicted uP0n us- and we decided to have a ring that would xy we formed a Girls' Choral Club and symbolize only the class of 'Q4. It 2 theJ11ni0r High DebatiHgClub- What was carefully selected and ordered. Q hours we spent amending the constitu- Many and long Seemed the days be- 4 tion Of the latter erganlzatlen- But fore it arrived and was enthusiasti- U We did have One Publle debate at cally displayedg but strange as it may W 2 Coventry which was a huge success. Seem, few people are wearing their 8 C rings now-at least not their own. if How we strutted as Sophomores, groaning under the weight of our The class of '24 will be remembered newly acquired dignity. We im- for starting a new chapter of the Girls 6 a mediately became active in the Glee Friendship Ciub to create a greater Q Clubs, Leaders Classes, Hi-Y, and feeling of friendliness throughout the j Black and Gold, and those especially school. Under the splendid leadership L Q daring tried out for the Dramatic of Katherine Becker and her cabinet, 1 and Debating Clubs with some de- this club has gained a good foundation si gree of success. and has had a number of fine enter- tainments. Indeed, its members are r In November, 1922 we organized our already furnished with material for Junior Class and continued our ac- stories to amuse their grandchildren, ff tivities in the clubs joined the pre- stories of the inimitable Katy Lane l 5 G Q96 QQQQ4 BQQV BQQC-DC 9QQ3 BCQQQG 9QCQf WQQQ4 'RCDCQQ ls .13 0OO O GO,,gl THE CALDRQN lgpoo- o o o Senior History Continued in her Gibson Girl role, of the Mothers and Daughters Tea at which our Seniors were initiated into the gentle art of pouring tea gracefully, and of the insurpassable Fathers-Daughters Dinner at which many of them appear- ed in public for the first time. One of our members, Ralph Ricken- baugh, has brought honor to our class by being elected President of the Ohio Hi-Y Clubs. Our dance this year even eclipsed our success of last year as everyone will tell you-the decorations, music, eats, and favors couldn't be beat, and we are hoping this spring as a final climax to establish the well known Class Day at Heights. However, our accomplishments have by no means been confined to extra- curriculum activities. lVe have also been splendid scholars. As a single example of this fact, consider our record in Oral English. We have learned the art of being good listeners. ive are prepared to talk in public on any occasion: yes, we can even pre- side at meetings however formal they may be. But the incidents of our Senior year which doubtless will become tradition- al are the famous Latin Strike and the as 2529 . in- f 50 5' 3 mock Council Meeting. The former, i an efficient and powerful expression of an over-burdened and oppressed 3 group against the cruel and hard- ni hearted teacher of the Vergilian cry i is too well-known to allow repetition. Jl The latter was an admirably staged imitation of a meeting of the Cleve- F land Heights Council given by seven members of the Debating Club. Re- c. plete with entertainment and real value, it will linger long in the mem- ories of those club members who saw ' it. Probably, attempts at repetition c. will be made in the future-but, of course, we Seniors see naught but dis- mal failure for our would-be imitators. . ' s We are Seniors-Another year and Q this High School world shall see us no i more. We have ridden our last raceg and with the kind indulgence of the 5 faculty, we have finished our course. We mourn that so much of- the wit p and beauty is to depart from Heights I High. But we are proud that there Q shall be one class from Heights whose members shall in after years come back and standing gracefully on our audi- torium stage, shall say. We did not neglect our opportunities nor fail to 3 appreciate our fond teachers. We are glad to look into the bright faces beneath us and ask them to emulat.e F5 our example-VVe are of '24-. Q 6 Q fi. 3 09901 EQQ4 PQQQ6 ' 53995 SOOAEBJ QCQQES. AQQQ-Z HCQQCQL A6394 'ilillr W w J K, W 4, .J gOOZ ijG 6 G61,,5gI THIS CALIQIQUN Eg Cac-i,oX Q3q:i.,QQQ 2 O ' W .1 4 6 V F QQ Q , Q 2 W fa 5 J Q ,V Q 2 Cv ei 2 W I Q, gf J 6 1 5 5 x, Q D M OJ 9996 9CDCDQD'fwV DQQ4 EQQQL QQ? 9660 QQCQL 5QCQQ6'NiQQ3 Wzzk g E'W fW Qi C?G ggi T Q 'ix Q'UFQ'l'17k T7C. ' CN Cg L! J ,fx 4 af W . 1 6 CQ Q. V 1? , 53 6 Q? , Qu W 5 OH , 'fx L, v4 gg, Q F' K. -f -1 X CO Q1 Y ,, 'A 5:2 ci X OW ff? WF 161 ., L frj Q fr, i -- 1 W V h Y , t- W My JC' 'f ,'k3'JDYJJCJ5Y,, jjijiw .DH , ,,, ac3mfJ1 ,,, ,, BCJQCQN, JQQLQLR, , , WW , QQQQ-W ,, ,,, , W BQQQ 434k OGG oo o o oo,,igr THE CALDRQN 1g+.OO 0 Senior Will 'SGC goof aoor voor voor voor voor voor woooi voor fool look roof L Q ,,, : -n':'-1 5-'rr 5-'pan - -. 5.8 gl? 1523, 15-,E Q55 SQZSELE' 35 Sf? 5 59552525 6 O4 21 -5 gf-f gf f-rf 5:7 ggi? of4Q'5. Q ESQ! P F2 5Q 2 'Q'gQ-' 'Q' ,... -' 9: 1: P-1 H gi ev- CD: O WO Q Q-.C i' gm CD-5:5 ,.,. Q 25. :1 Q no --SN N --ww 2 O: ' me mmf. -. Q. : Us ca. 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Hg vUO,- CY :O ami-'52 H, mx' Q P4 gm -.nm W-593, 3305- 550-,Aggie 5,95 gms:-S gig .- -.Tig ms. O93-'92 FTD.. ...swam 7:5-5 .... B., -I F. 04 gr www. 55' E-5.0,-J e4-'gp' 2 Q-yiQ4m OE-'fb Pbgiglgfb 5- W Evgm ' ' w -so L: fo -' F4-fo Q 99099 ' ga V' 'Um '-H O Q SE. Liz.. 65:52 Egfr-gr 51295555 502 f'Sff-aa 3.5 Q 5.3: T 335. :Aga 5.2,-5,65 :Q-Z .4-nw mg-.gm mm 2 U,E.ru-:Ut -an U-Om gn- .qtrhvg H-,105-w,.. 92 o .Q 5- ,.. :-5-,.,. ' -. :: O 2, 'f: 'ff Emo... :FQ sw 0 :1 H- 'D DDE- QF?-s T02-5 Q45 UQ 6 0 E, THE members of the Senior class of 1924 of the Cleveland Heights High School, being of sane prepared with extemporaneous speech- es. el 35 le J 8 O C'D GO,isI C 1?+,,OO O C Senior Will Continued ten-volume series of dictionaries telling how to use it. Ninth: lNIarg lNIcGeorge leaves her jinx to anyone foolish enough to attempt chemistry. Tenth: Harold Hobson leaves his way with the women' to Sterling Cannon, with injunctions to go out and do likewise. Eleventh: Tommy Morton, to the great relief of those who are to be associated with him in college, leaves his habit of asking more questions in a minute than the ordinary person can answer in an hour, to Bob Kneen. Twelfth: Ester Stewart, being of sane mind, bequeaths her intriguing smile to Halcyon Waterbury. Thirteenth: Janet Shelhart, realizing the appropriateness of her bequest, leaves her interest in eastern schools to Adelaide Asadorian. Fourteenth: Katy Lane transmits a part of her charming personality to any junior who is on every committee, in every club, is everyone's friend, and finds time to study in between. They will need it. Fifteenth: Burton Strauss leaves his stage presence to any would-be mem- ber of the Dramatic Club. Sixteenth: Ralph Rickenbaugh be- queaths to the natives of the South Sea Isles, his air of nonchalance, hoping it will keep them cool. Seventeenth: Spids', Crowell leaves her inquiring turn of mind to Miriam Eggers. Eighteenth: Florence Atkins leaves her collection of dance programs, favors, etcetera, to anyone strong enough to stagger under their weight. Nineteenth: Jack Larimer leaves his nickname Sheik, to Theodore Cleve- land, hoping he will profit thereby. Twentieth: Burr Brower leaves his formula for the daily navigation of the halls, sixty per without serious casu- alties, and all memories that pertain thereto, to Dick Braggins. Twenty-first: Frank Sherman wills the proceeds from the sale of his fam- ous beauty manual to the school library, hoping Mrs. Merrill will use it to start a shelf to be sacred to the maintenance and pursuit of beauty. T wenty-second : Web lNIalm leaves his well-known sense of humor to Charles Feese. Twenty-third: Al Bingham bequeaths his football suit to the school to be used to start a museum. T wenty-fourth: Jimmie Hurst leaves his belligerent disposition to Judson Cross. T wenty-ffth: Virginia Burr wills her saintly air to Katherine Keederle. Twenty-sixth: Henry Smith be- queaths his yellow-green-cerise tie to Red Flynn, on condition that the legatee dye his hair, so as not to dim the glory of the tie. ARTICLE III We, being known as the class of nineteen hundred and twenty-four, Anno Domini, of Cleveland Heights High School, do hereby finally make, publish and declare this our last will and testament hereby revoking all other last wills by us heretofore made, and in witness whereof we have here unto aflixed our seal this tenth day of June, nineteen hundred twenty-four, A. D. THE SENIOR CLASS or 1924. Above instrument was by the said Senior Class of 1994 sealed and in our presence acknowledged as and for the last will and testament of said Senior Class, this tenth day of June, 1924-. Signed: ELIZABETH BYERS. Q95-.9 'l36l' W g95DC'Z9Ll'9C2iLf99 99 Q' . 7D9Q. lD99g CQ 9 Q O r 9 V 3 Q V N 1 I f Lx ,, -1 , ., ' 4 s X Ez W, QI O 6 'f 0 r Illll' 'll I 1 1 Q- 4 v A lr X H S' O 4 X , xi I XJ? 71 9 YI X QD . A O . 0 J 9 3 0 of kj ' la mv. L .um , co O Q 0 UT F E3 - 4' Q 22 5 Q 9996 099969 9996 99996 3994 99990 9991 99994 ' 3993 DEI 37 lg' ?3C9f1DfTlOC ?596 GU ,ssl THE QQXLDRUN 13? ,I QW Q , ,-v, ,A E, 5 ff , 46 fi Q5 ui ,rx 4, 2' Q O U W W M A ., L, 6's fi m A ,q F I . , U ff- lv ff, ix X I., rf kv 1, , X., W' xi W W f N , i , r A r ' ,Q ' , fx N N ' N 1 , f L W w r 9 NW ii r A r ,Q 'w W , L R 1 r A r RX , hw ' f , , W f , , F ,NW , i , , N f W r 7 pu LJJ AJIJA JJ JJJ Jg gun mu nnnl AJSQ 3,3 o so 9o oo..lll THE CALDRQN lg+.00 0 0 O Junior Class Officers LEONARD FLYNN ,,,,,, EUNICE Hoax ,,.AA..,, OWEN PHILLIPS ,,,,,, G . , GORDON LELLERS .,..,. ,,,,.A,. 0?- CO Members Adams, Edward Albin, Kathryn Allen, Kenneth Clarke, Richard Cleveland, James Cleveland, Theodore President ,,.,,,..iVice-President ,,,,,,,,,,i,,.Secretary Treasurer Gesell, Edward Glickman, Harold Goldner, Henry 0 Q Avery, Alice Collie, Wayne Gross, Eldy Coan, Virginia Gruber, Wilson Baker, Morgan Cook, Rose I Gillet, L0l'l'iS lil Bakery Nat Cohn, Martin Goodbread, Ruth 8 Barber, Clyde Cooper, Milton Green, Elmer -, Barber, Kathleen Conroy, Donald Guenther, Dorothy Barnard, Janice Corso, Marie Baxter, Alan Crilly, Stephen Haas, Selma D Baxter, Bolierl Crowell, Mortimer Hackenburg, Marian 2 Beelle, Olga Hagert, Gretchen Q Bell, Laurerlee Day, George Hammond, Alfred Bentley, Fred Davies, Maurice Hancock, Harold Berg, Lorraine Delker, John Harrington, Helen Berrlllaurrly Celia Deutsch, Dorothy Harrotf, Robert 6 Berrlsrlerf, pred Dewald, Florence Hartman, Morris Q Best Thomas De Witt, Ruth Heath, George Bing, Marian Dillon, Hannum Hecker, Russel Birnbaum, Carrolyrl Drossel, Lloyd Hein, Evelyn ly Blum, Beatrice W , Hein, Fred 8 Bellarlorll Belly Iglllfitl Rinefg Hejduk, Arthur Bokor, Margaretta 'ps em' ar ara Hennan' Norman Bond Harrlson Helmuth, Donovan ' F , J h - Borgerhoff, Elbert Ffjncligiilgs Henderson, Marlon L Bovington, Archie F . lit F li Hendricks, Kipp C B i S imma er ' Ja' Herman, Alb-'fri Q ragg n , Feicht, Margaret Budd Malcolm - Herkner- Ruth i ' Ferriman, Laurence H M li Budin Leo l - ess, art a ,i Fleming, Rflargaret Higgins Laurence i gunziclgence Flaugher, VVilliam Hoak Eunice 2 llliillnlllliagrrila glnrn' Iiziollard Hoffman, Charles g Bush, Ruth li: derlasljlxlf Hogan, Edna i r ' i Hogen, Charles Y i Eireeniarioililitirenw Hohnhurst, Virginia 5 cvafs' Ethel Fringe ' L at i Homans, Ruth Q twain, Dorlald. rie man, htan ey Hibsclimanl Charlotte . Ciannon, Sterling hi l llubbard, Melvin Cameron, Carleton Gaensslen, P :lip Hurwitz, Lillian Chadwlck, Inez Garrett, Roy Hyde, Eleanor Q i 6 Charnley, Vernon Gammeter, Electa G Q Fhircosta, Mary George, Dorothy Imel, James G l. 5 ESQQVQYQLWYD ECEQC-. -JlJQf if DQQQG QQXQQ, DQQQQ6 XQCQCQ- KXQQ4, ECQCQ els 9 lr O0 CJO.,+eli THE CALDRQN 1g,fO0 0 0 Jaeger, Norma Jenkins, Louise Johnson, Margaret Johnson, Walter Johnston, James Johnston, Stafford Jones, Robert Joslin, Eleanor Judd, Dorothea Kelly, Helen Kimble, Stanley Killian, Patricia Klein, Zelda Klein, Lillian Kneen, Ferris Koob, Lucile Koerner, Frank Kopperman, Sylvia Korn, Frances Kuller, Ruth Kurlander, Leonard Lamon, Earl Lamon, Irwin Larimer, Jack Latta, Grace Lees, Harold Lewis, Milford Linderme, Edward Lorenz, Fred Lutton, Jack MacCornack, Donald MacDonald, Eugene Madsen, Evelyn Maginnis, Francese Makenger, Evelyn Maier, Eleanor Marks, Esther Mason, Jeanette McVicker, Dorothy Melcher, Sterling Miller, Anabel Miller, Kenneth Miller, Ruth Mills, Richard Mitchell, Bert McAndrews, Peter McCandlish, Florence McCluskey, Steve McMillan, Helen McMillan, Louise Mowry, James Members Fontinued Mulhauser, Robert Mulone, Norman Murphy, Grace Neff, Edward Neff, Frank Nelson, Helen Norogroder, Yetta Norris, Rex Needham, Dale 0'Brien, Maurice Olney, George Overbecke, Edith Parkes, Ruth Parker, John Peabody, Eleanor Peckrul, Elsie Perelman, Marvin Percy, May Perkins, Kenneth Phelps, Harlan Phillips, Owen Pischke, John Porter, John Post, Wilmarth Potts, Dorothy Powers, Eubert Prendergast, Virginia Proudfoot, Phyllis Quin, Jeanette Reinker, Edward Recht, Elsie Rees, James Reynolds, Dorothy Richardson, Ruth Richardson, Doris Ricciardo, Frank Rimanoczy, Elizabeth Robinson, Elizabeth Rodgers, Betty Roeder, Richard Rosenzweig, Phoebe Rosewater, Marjorie Rosewater, Doris Rooke, Marshall Russell, Margaret Ryan, Charles Scott, Dorothea Scott, Katherine Schoales, Dudley Schwartz, Sylvia Schwartz, Dorothy Sciscoe, Cora Schultz, Elvera Sears, Helen Simons, Frances Simminger, Emily Sinks, Dorothy Shockey, Lovell Smith, Sarah Nell Stanton, Eleanor Stannard, Paul Starworth, Irving Stone, Elizabeth Sturgeon, Howard Squier, Dorothy Sweeting, Charlotte Tanner, Lyle Taylor, Harry Teter, Robert Thoma, Ruth Thomas, Elizabeth Thomas, Robert Van Fleet, Margaret Vose, Gardner Wallau, Lucille Wallau, Irene Walter, Fred Walsh, Marjorie Watson, Ford Ward, Margaret Wardeska, Eleanor Welfeld, Frances Weil, Dorothy Weiner, Elmer Weiss, Lenore Wells, Virginia White, Polly White, Eleanor Whitacre, Helen Whittlesey, De Witt Williams, Thomas Williams, Albert Williams, Donald Willard, Jean Wilson, Arthur Widder, Milton Wilken, Russell Wolaver, Parke Worthington, Lois Zellers, Gordon Zweig, Nonnie GGsZ.gl QOOE-qi0 l4O l' i 2 GG G G6,,5gI C 1g4..,GC'3 0 O OGED I Q History of the Junior Class 3 ND it befell in the years of the began to creep in on them. They took W Vandals, one thousand nine hun- places beside the Senior and Junior in , l 8 dred and twenty-one that there was a work and in play and were for the Class. And its numbers were many, first time permitted to attend the l even unto ten score. Long had they assemblies. Clubs, athletics, and the kb journeyed in the realms of learningg afternoon dances opened a new field cg many years had they toiled for the in their experiences, but they accepted 3 'S Higher Knowledge, and now had they new conditions and greater respon- l arrived at the gateway of their hopes. sibilities without hesitation. W Among them were leaders, those who , 2 were destined to become great. Among Another year passed' now two Smce Q in them were followers, those who would they had entered UPC? the Pathway if join the great ranks of the People of tial Wouli ssni them lglo ldle' ,Iii p omore a ecome unior. Q the World. X ak X as gk Class was now represented in every 'B organization in the School, while 5 The year of nineteen twenty-one some individuals led their fellows in was a momentous one for the class athletics and studies. Names were 4 5 of '25, for it marked the beginning of added to the Heights Honor Roll, and 53 its High School career, the transition names will be added that will not soon from Grammar School to High School be forgotten in the History of our was complete.. Since then the Fresh- school. 6 man has steadily been losing his part , , , h 5 o iii senior High life. This is due But one Year HOW femams 'H Whlc C3 partly to the inability to accommodate the Class may Sew? i We School' four classes of Students in the Heights Most of .the responsibilities will fall 5 building at one time, but in nineteen upon lllelr ,Shoulders and the lower Q Q twenty-one, he was an active member Classmen Wlll look to them for an of the great scholastic organization, elfample' Alldfo let us hope thai they at least in his Own eyes. It was at that will never fail in. the trust that lS put E3 time that the day was divided into upon them, llor ln any Way Cause the 5 Q half day sessions, an arrangement name of Helghts Hlgll Sghool lo lose Q that well suited many students. any of the honor and lntegrlly for which it stands. W A year passed, and the School ., 3 acknowledged the Sophomore. Fame DONALD NIACCORNACK '25 3 i. .J 523 3 il OQDQ0 HQQ6 .JQQQ6 9QCQ6 H AQQCQG- HCQQE 46996 999 'Sl4I li' f-in X f Kg'-i Q - E5 4 ' Q- 64166 +51 THE CALDIQUN 13+-J ff '40-ff mg M Q 1 4. -21 0 N' Q . I 9 Q 8 Q 6 Y E3 Ei 3 ., Q QU 'j il 1 1 T PH ' in Q? 5 Jw 'F Q Q BJ Qi P3 T N ,, kj iff pm Cfl N VF f N PJ F4 if Q I N r ul N r A , T 1 l J Qr f A rf 5 f ,J ' m f , X n. J J J J J M' 3 J J H JJHWJMJN H ' 'Q Jdfpf Al Evuxg QQ? x L W :Bpwgm ' .nys L3 6147- lga E6fiCZ'i1C? D6 f'v6v 3301 -Q - Q Q r I . -A N I 0 KT Q A I I , ,i if in T F I 6 W 1 1 , . ,N Q N 1 f LJ -g fx 1, W 2 T un 'W l 1 W F Lf' x ff ' W :W K a i x- ' if 1 ,. . 1 w I xg , X 5 f Q N N: W, E1 , .ues ' 1 .i.. .-...i 1 W F N f 1 li X 2 w f 1 J f w ,r w v 1 fl K x r , xl ' ! f 'N f W gJJ JJJ JJ miwmj- Y-JL Lux. L gpg ng.: P145 130 ws 'Q 0 T 1 J Q lYiD'g411Q ,fiffl f1f-'l f N' N r 1 v A - ' '7 7' yy' W' 1 HVXWVYW 'U N Y , W , , 5x15 gil I ?',WC f 1f ? MQ'g 57 Q5 Q, 5 fr, 6 f Ld My ' R X ,r Km 1 W KA' if km ,r 5 lf l .N 1 1' uw ,r, kv 1r, m W -1 L 'r, A ,rf Li N N V. fm A LFE gi xrx gi NN Q if gi an ki I 122 A ff! Q1 12, A r m 1 'q Y N F M1 5 fr, W W W .X fr, 5 I I 963 - ff' O 63 6 W ,QS W WY ,v , , 4 , , , G Mum? , ,WMMJJF , W JM , ,, ,YTDQCJQJC K, AQQQ, DQQQQ KWBQQQ ,-DQQDQQC ,, ,DQQU UQEII44 lla' Gabriel, Frances oc oe oo,,,5j C :l3,..C'5CO 'DCC iO 0O Ahlm, Angela Alexander, Charles Andrus, Florence Asadorian, Adelaide Ashome, Estelle Auerbach, Clarice Aulenbacher, Betty Baer, Raymond Baer, Rolland Bailey, Ruth Bailey, Katherine Baldwin, William Barnes, Fred Bass, Ralph Battista, Joe Berge, Carl Belesky, Sylvia Bennett, Mills Berger, Matthew Berkes, Betty Bewie, Edward Beyer, VVilliam Beckwith, Mary Bertram, Karl Bieder, Arline Bigalow, Dorothy Bigelow, Russel Blatz, Edward Blackburn, Fay Blitz, Isabelle Bolineyer, Jane Bond, Mildred Bourgeois, Russel Boyd, Helen Brandes, Lois Breitbarb, Leonora Bregenzer, Horace Brotherton, Elizabeth Brown, Evelyn Brown, Mary Brown, Florence Brown, Richard Bryar, Ruth Buell, Henry Cahen, Lillian Campanaro, Louise Campbell, Helen Campen, Ruth Carter, Muriel Casserly, Jane Castle, Morrison Chamberlaine, Eugene Chapman, Josephine Christenson, Anna Clark, Howard Clark, Harold Clough, Marjorie Cohn, Frank Collins, Anne Cox, Helen Cross, Judson Crystal, Helen Crystal, George Cutter, Leonard NC-EQQ4 9096 Sophomore Class Dall, Andrew Danforth, Katherine Davis, Marjorie Davies, Charles Dawson, Charles Deming, Clifford De Vries, Blanche De Donato, Clara De Muth, Harriet De Witt, Willard Dibble, Le Roy Dickey, Robert Dole, Burton Donaldson, Christine Dorn, Betty Dorsey, Carlton Douglas, Betty Douthitt, Leo Duncan, Betty Early, Emma Edwards, William Eggers, Miriam Eidman, Gwendolyn Emery, Jane Emery, Irene Englund, Leone Evans, Grace Evans, Ralph Ewing, James Faulb, Jared Feldman, Mildred Ferris, Marian Fies, Hygeia Findlay, William Fish, Lawrence Fischer, George Fitch, Ruth Flinta, Thelma Flarida, Ruth Flynn, George Foley, Jack Ford, Jean Fox, Ruth Fraser, Ruth Fraser, Lorence Frye, Margaret Gebauer, Irene George, Madison Gillet, Douglas Glueck, Morton Goldsmith, Theodore Goldsmith, Jesma Goldhamer, Roslyn Gordon, James Grandholm, Ruth Greenberg, Thelma Greene, Josephine Greenblatt, Rose Grieg, William Griggs, Lucille Gribben, Margaret Grimshaw, Agnes Groenwold, Gordon Gross, Theodore Grossberger, Alfred Grodin, Bernice Guest, Mary Guest, Alice Guin, Clemens Guy, Adine Hague, Arthur Haines, George Hall, Howard Hall, John Hamlin, Peggy Hamilton, Dorothy Hanna, Mark Harper, Louise Hartman, Sanford Hardie, Donald Hess, Antoinette Henrickson, Virginia Hendricks, Newell Herriman, Dorothy Herkner, Dolores Hightower, Helen Hill, Edith Hinsdale, Marjorie Hilts, Nathan Hoagland, Martha Hodgkins, Ruth Holiage, Marcella Hollanden, Leona Homans, Herbert Horton, John Hopkins, Jessica Howard, Isabella Huelsman, Clarence Hunt, Amanda Hyde, Frances Iden, Roy Johns, Eunice Johnson, Paul Jordon, Crain Jorgensen, Eline Katz, Isidore Kaiser, Katherine Kelley, Lucile King, Helen Kilmurray, Howard Klein, Elaine Klein George Klein, Josephine Klein, Leona Klein, Lawrence Kline, Elaine Klinger, Essie Knapp, Franklin Kneen, Robert Kofron, Irene Kubish, Mildred Lahor, Carl Lamb, Dorothy Land, Jerome HQQQG 9996 AQQQQ EQQG AQQDQG J 'Ql4s lg' 8 O 0O,,,gI THE CALDRON 1g,00 Landau, Gilbert Langer, George Larkens, John Lewis, Julia Lee, Helen Lee, Kathryn Linders, John Linsell, Charlotte Livingstone, Marie Lodge, Townsend Lowe, Robert MacArthur, Elizabeth MacDonald, Kathleen Madison, Harold Marshall, Dan Marshall, Iris Mayer, Ruth McCashen, Beulah McCleraghan, Ruth McCleraghan, Robert McGeorge, Donald McGeorge, Marion McGarrett, Addison McGraw, Harry Mendelson, Marian Meller, Jean Merrell, Virginia Miether, William Milburn, Jane Miller, James Mitchell, Edmund Moonan, Denis Moore, William Morrison, Ruth Mowry, Louise Muehlhauser, Florence Muftly, Marjorie Murray, Robert Murray, Josephine Murther, Alice Nesi, Mary Newcomer, Katherine Newman, Evelyn Newman, Mildred Nichols, Bert Noble, Evelyn Norris, Alice Olney, Marjorie Orr, Virginia Oviatt, Clarence Owen, Mildred Oyer, Florence Ozersky, Dorothy Pameroy, Frances Park, Kenneth Sophomore Class f'ontinued Pasini, Dorothy Paulen, Alice Peck, Ellen Peck, Gus Peck, Josephine Platz, Austin Post, Albert Potter, Adelle Potts, Eleanor Press, Della Rayden, Doris Rea, John Reeves, Ruth Rehark, Eileen Rempes, Leonora Riddell, Harriet Richardson, J. F. Richards, Rachel Robinson, Theodore Roemer, Albert Rose, Helen Rosen, Annette Rosewater, Ralph Rosenzweig, Lucille Royce, Richard Sanborn, C. D. Sanderson, Ellsworth Sanner, Russell Sawhill, Richard Schmitt, Dorothy Schiefer, Katherine Schmidt, Grace Schneider, Sylvia Schmunk, Elizabeth Schmunk, Jack Schoales, David Schoenberger, Edwar Sculest, La Nore Seitz, Raymond Seyweit, Fred Shaw, Althea Sherman, Elizabeth Shepard, Bishop Shindelar, Grace Silver, Ralph Sinclair, Le Roy Smeltzer, Charlotte Smith, Clarion Smith, Arden Smith, E. H. Snowden, Betty Somers. James Spargus, Zeeta Speh, Grace Spira, Gertrude Spitz, Miriam Stanley, Jeanie d Steffins, Mabel Stern, Margaret Stern, Herman Stewart, Eleanor Stewart, Helen Stickle, William Stovi ell, Warner Strawn, Myron Struggles, Mary Suhrie, Eloise Suits, Wilma Sunshine, Madeline Swaty, Margaret Jane Taylor, Helen Thomas. Alice Thomas, Eleanor Thompson, Stanley Torer, Helen Treadway, Eula Truman, Eleanore Tucker, Robert Upp, Marylyn Vactor, Alice Van Fleet, Walden Veazey, Betty Vaughn, Evan Vissi, Elizabeth Vorpe, Elizabeth Volk, Robert Waterbury, Halcyon Wall, John Webb, Abner Weber, Christina Weaver, Donald Weiss, Charlotte Welkin, Willard Wheatley, Ruthe Wheeler, Jane Whitcomb, Harold Whiting, Frances Wickenden, Thomas Wilmove, Edith Wilson, Marian Wilson, Marguerite Wilson, Jean Williams, Jane Williams, Arthur Worden, Dorothy Worley, Virginia Woodard, Harriet Zeigler, Esther Zelin, Della Zimmerman, Dean QC-DC-E Qgil VQQCQ6 -I ASSE QQQCQ Qi Q3 P' l Y 5 .T l l U l 1 U tl N l 1 5' 9 1 5 Q 7 o o 'W 3 'Sl46l'- DqO G 0 G0...5gI 1?,,O0 O C0 ' Sophomore History T SEEMS many and many a year ago Cthough not quite threej that we, the now all-important Sophomores, first entered Heights High as little eighth graders. However, each one of us can, no doubt, with more or less difficulty, recall his varied experiences as he was introduced to the cafeteria, the study-hall Cwhich alas and alack is no morej, the library and its rules, the unfamiliar rooms, and the new teachers. We soon began to show the stuff of which we were made. Rep- resentatives from our class were in every club and organization in which the little eighth graders were allowed to participate, the Junior High Debat- ing Club and Orchestra, the Radio Club, the Girls' Junior League, and the Student Council. Not only in activities outside of school hours but also in class work, we showed our ability. lNIany members of our class received honor badges for scholarship in this as well as in the following year. Then came examinations! Summer vacation! September and school!! Freshmen at last! Though never think that we were green Freshies! No in- deed! We were well versed in the ways of the school! We gave popcorn salesg we gave candy sales, we gave dances, but the outstanding glory and proof of our superior ability was the Fresh- men-Sophomore Mixer, which we, the Freshmen, won fairly and squarely. When we became 9115, we had to pack up, much to our regret, and make a journey to the Junior High School in which --poor compensation -we were the Seniors. Our boys and girls made up invincible athletic teams which received many honors, we also gave several successful dances. This September we again entered dear old Heights, but this time as Sophisticated Sophomoresf' We are very glad to have added to our number the Roxboro-ites and Noble-ites. In athletics, as usual, we have shown our ability: Several Sophomore boys re- ceived second team football letters, on the light weight basketball team, they are well-known stars, in swim- ming, too, they claim honorsg and still before us are the track and baseball seasons. The girls, also, have shown no mean ability in basketball and swimming. We have members in all organizations, such as the Debating Club, Orchestra, and the Wistgoma Club. Having immediately caught the spirit of this school, we have learned to know and love its life and atmos- phere and will strive in our remaining two years to maintain the high stan- dards of Heights High. Mis? e Nile s A QQf QQDQQK QQDQDQ 'DQQDQ6...-. DQCQA DCQQQG DCQQG 90065 WCQCQQD '2l47 ig- X, df A--:Sl THE CALDRON ls-Q.. +3063 Q Q V ie lef if Q I H Ji Q Y 1 ., I N M In M O RY Lf ff, 0 W Q Of JEAN SUNDHEIBIER, 1926 I f? IXENX UI Q Life is sum-h a fleeting thing, So very short at best, L, r w 7 Zi lhat we should not so saddened he ' v . . W When fI'1t'lldS are lald to rest. Q She was so gentle, sweet and mild, W A faithful pal and trueg 5 T? But now she's gone, and we are left Sweet lll9IlllI'l6S to renew. EF, Her weary steps no longer tread 6 1 . , . Q3 Llfe s Ill9dlOl'I'C sodg Forever dreaming pleasant dreams, She has returned to God. K-1 4 is - . , E3 WN .Iosr:vn1Nr: Ix1,r:1N Qu X .J W 23 8 rffw FN 35 6 2? Q 55 Q Q V til ga G 6QQG, BQDQQQ lf BC-EQ? BQDQQK BQQ4 XEQQF QQQDA 59994 X-EQE 'gl48 12' w vo o oo..,5l THE CALDRQN 1g+.0O 6 A Heights High Dictionary for Froshes Abridged BOOK: A printed treatise contain- ing facts Or near-facts which nobody would study if it were not for recita- tions and subsequent zeros. CLASS: A group of young persons who know more than their teachers, but who would not let him guess it for the world. CLEVER! That epithet which a teacher applies mentally, to certain pupils, shortly before pupils classify the teacher's attitude toward them as a standing in. CLOCK: That blessed instrument that limits a recitation to forty minutes. CLUB: A group of young persons gathered together for mutual bore- dom. CONFLICT: What happens when your dad gets your report. ELEVATOR: Algebraically speaking, a minus quantity. EXAMS: Torture of innocents. FIRE DRILL: A pleasant intermission during class, but a painful duty dur- ing study period. FRIEND: A fellow who does your Latin for you. GYM: The Frosh's dread, the Soph's delight, the Junior's amusement, and the Senior's derision. MAIL-CARRIER: The evil spirit who brings your deficiency card. PERIOD: A dot. PROGRAM: A more or less satis- factory arrangement of recitationsg less satisfa.ctory if said lessons are not prepared when due. PUPIL: A young person attending school occasionally. RECITE: To recite-the act of dis- playing one's ignorance in a class room. STUDY: An awful bore. STUDENT! A pupil who learns his lesson. CA species now extinc-t.j ,fm Ex N 'Mel-1 EWS Xfgxi f - tl K -il' I 6.31 . 1 .?:gs?:::,H:s.':. rx F-gn I 'DG TEACHER: Your best friend, or your worst enemy, according to the amount of time you have or have not spent on your lessons. VACATION: What you spend thirty- six weeks per year waiting for. ZERO: A peculiar oval mark found occasionally in teacher's records. It resembles an egg, but is hardly as valuable. S. M. H. '25. OQQ6 QQQQ6 9996 HQQQG .5994 ' TKQCQCQ4- DQCQL BQQQC WCQCQ 'gf49 I.. QQc f5Q 0 -3o0A,5l THE CALDRQN 13g.,QQ Q C CQG 22 3 53 6 Q Q 53 6 O W A L ., 3 Zi ffl , 5 KJ O . . 1 an 6 ff? Q Q3 WJ , W O , Bw , A 0 KD gf, m v 'Q 43 6 qi fr, v , X X w fa W O ,.:. f .N Qu xl Gu QD ax Q , . G i Fi O g QOL ' QQQQQ- QQQL EQQQG BQCQP BCQCQCQT BQCQV HCQQQV 79CQQQ 4501 vOCC'3 ,GCW O O U O L Q O O LD C V I V L Q1 Q W fx O N N E3 11 W bf f 6DC'E JG C3 0G.,5g,: 13e,OC CO O CC QXYXEETM 1 95577 625342 I H 1 M XX 1 , I I x ciwibx' L L H NllwlflhlllliiiHPHHP1 INIU!!MUMWNUHUWMHFW .. ncnvmfs ' 3 - J- 6 CQ C06 QQQP QQQ QQ OQQ DQQ4 OCQCQ Q0 CQCQQ , FQQ 'glls 1 lb 93 THE CALD RUN 15,,,ciCc QQ5l-Q cv 9 C fi Annual Staff Q W T? lm KJ fr, ff ll ffl rrp l W wry ffj 'x 6:1 VJ l l lfflflnr-ill-l'l1irjf .lzuncs Vonnolly l l,iI1'rury llc-len fllll'1'UI'llll Nlurjoric lmlon 56 l,llUlUfH'lll1lljj ,, An1lrcwSlmrp 'ff Sp1'r'iul.v , C'z1tlwrin0 Lune llrl ,, .lnncl Slwllmrl lf1m1'rn'x.v Albert Blllgllillll .llumni Ralph lllC'lii Illlllllgl1 IYYJ .lvlrvrfixiug Ferris Kneen O NlIf'I.l'fjl,, . , Dorothy llzlll Vlulm Dorothy Dunlap NVQ-luster Nlzunlc-ll .-lllrlrlivx Mary Madison E, Burton Strauss W5 J l 'N IUR .XSSIS'1'AN'l'S lA-onaml Flynn Clmrlcs llogvn Margarvi Wlnnl if Slunlvy l ri04lnmn Eunice Hoak Fred Walters Lorris Gillolls- .lack Lullon Allxcrl Nvilliarns lk-XVIII Whiltclse-y Plllwl Cass Mario Vorso Gordon Zvllcrs Elizubetlm RlIIlZlll0i'Zy Anna Bundy Bert Milvlu-ll Morgan Baker Clmrles Fel-so Kl, Tlleorlorc l'lvvel:uul Annabelle Miller lVlclvin Hnlrlmrzl Slafforml .lollnslon Belly YYel1 Kathryn Albin W5 Ruth llvrkncr Marjorie Walsh C' E396 ,H Y 301516 WSOI Y Y-, QQEQQC' QQTCQQY , QQQQQ 3QQlf-' ,DQQQV 'TQMQ all S 1 lr Q, goo o oc oo,.ii5f THE CALDRUN 13, ee ecf.-T.ve eec3 Q Q 5 The Student Council Q Q Q7 QT C3 Q Q ez A fx fi Q O LQ L gi O Q Q l 0 C3 W O 0 Q fs 6 Presirlvlzt ,,,,,,,,,,,, ,. ,,,,,, Lawrence Miter G Q Vice-l'rfxidwzl ,,,,.. , Catherine Lane Q Secretary , , , ,Charles Feese 6 HOME ROOM REPRESENTATIVES Q Q william Heath Diary Madison f Robert Kneen Lawrence Miter Herbert Lindgren Inez Chadwick Dorothea Squier James Imel 8 Margaret VVard Charles Feese F Betty Douglas Lorence Fraser Richard Sawhill Alice Vactor Amanda Hunt Donald MacCornack to Florence Atkins Bessie Corso 3 Doris Rayden Jack Lutton Elizabeth Stuart Albert Bingham Leonard Flynn 6 LEADERS OF ACTIVITIES Q Katherine Becker Harold Hobson Robert Kneen Burton Strauss James Hurst Virginia Myers Catherine Lane Ralph Rickenbaugh Eunice Hoak Barbara Whitacre Charles Imel Mary Jane Wilson 5 Frank Sherman Eugene MacDonald Frederick Taft Q Rollin Muelhauser Charles Hogen James Connolly O Virginia Crowell Elizabeth Schneider Q 0 QQQ4 BQQQG X396 EQQQDQ HQCQG 99S-XQQ JQQ6 96655 M5353 'glss lg' as Q 1 1 4 5 OG,,iSl THE CALIQIQON :Ig,.OO O The Girls' Cabinet I' urully 4l,1i.Y0f Dorothea Squier Betty Douglas Amanda Hunt Florenve Atkins Doris Hayden Margaret Ward Elizabeth Stuart Mary Madison lnez C'hariwick Alive Vactor , Hilin lx WN allau sblorenme Atkins M EM BE RS Bessie Vorso Grave Schmitt Barbara Whitac-re Catherine Lane Katherine Becker Virginia Crowell Eunice Hoak Virginia Myers Elizabeth Schneider Mary Jane VVilson Q dw XDQCO CJX-Df fel QBQQQC 'DQDQ: DQ9DCQ4f'f BCQQC Xklgglf UQQ 0. g oo o o oo..,gl THE CALDRON 'l3g.,OO CD O C'Dg 3 Black and Gold Staff' W 5 , 53 Q Q L, l o FN L. , -J ,E Q ,V Q 1? H l l ' 1 l l Q, E 'x I ,J 'D CY wx 53 Q 5 fi fa N l X, IJ Q 3 Q EDITIIR-IN-CIIIEF: Frederick L. Taft '24. E ASSOCIATE EDITORS: Burton Strauss '24, Helen Corcoran '24, Marjorie Iden '24. W NEWS: Donald McCornaek '25, Marjorie McGeorge '24, Florence Atkins '24, Walter G 8 Hambourger '24, Jean Charlesworth '24, Elsie Recht '24, Edith Einstein '24, Catherine 3 r Lane '24, Wlilliam Sampliner '24. 5' SP0IzTs: Henry Smith '24, Gordon Zellers '24, Morris Hartman '25, Dorothy Dunlap '24, Mary Madison '24, Edbert Harris '24, James Hurst '24, Helen Zelin '24. ,, L Q SPECIALS: Kathryn Albin '25, VVebster Mandell '24, Elizabeth Byers '24, Katherine 3 Q Schiefer '25, Dewitt Wittlesey '25, Virginia Burr '24, Lorris Gillette '24. 2' CLUBS! Eunice Hoak '25, Margery VValsh '25. 5 EXCHANGE! Helen Lazarus '24. Q, 3 ALUMNI: Elizabeth Thomas '25. PRINTING! Harrison Bond '25, Robert Jones '25, Laurence Ferriman '26. CIRCULATION: Nat Baker '24, Charles Hogen '25, Morgan Baker '25, John Piwhke ., 'Q5 LI CQ ' 2 Q BUSINESS: Jack Lutzy '24, Manager: Ralph Rickenbaugh '24, Assistant. or U CQ O Q Q o, J C8 O QQCQC MDC-.DQQQ 9C-EC-D5 XQQQ, ,- XQCQQ6 QQCQG BCQQQIQ-L , BQQS ellss ls' L f0Q on J0 Qo,r,5l THE CAIJDIQQDN B.,,,coce o co ocog Ei J R Athlet1cAss0c1at1on 5 9 f f' 5 G3 as CU Q V. . 252 ri U H ci fi l a IJ ,ij g my QP Q ,, l I'rf'.v1'd1'ni , A. Mr. Lawson V1'rrf'-l'r1'.v1ff1'1-111 . ., , James Hurst Src-rrlury , ,, Mr. Norris f , V 6 0 1foo'1'nALL TRAC IX Q Far-ulty Manager .. , Mr. Dewald F3f'UlU' Manager H -- MT- LQVSQYY Manager , . , Lawrence Miter Managers '--AA' V Ifellfk' fnlltll Faptain. , , ., ,, ., , , ,Robert Oswald cilptalnw - H f 7 Pfallk Nlefnlan 6 3 , , 63 - BAbl'.BALL f'oA4'HI:s G' Fam-lilty Manager., , , Mr. Gardner Mr. Dix Mr. Armitage Manager ,,.....,, , A , Ralph Rickenbaugl. W faptain ,, . ., . , Albert Bingham H H Q Q, S3 GIRLb HAhKl'.TBALL 8 f TENNIS Manager ,,,... . ., ., Mary Wilson ' G S Captain .,,. , , Elizabeth Schneider Faeulty Manager. .Mr. Norris Manager .,,,. ,Eugene McDonald Q Vaptain ,, . ., . ., Leonard Flynn TENNIS 6 67 V' V Manager ,....,, ., ,..,,, Eunice Hoak 4' BA5hETBALL Captains , , . ,, ,Anna Bundy I Farulty Manager . , , , . ,,Mr. Gordon up Manager .,,, .. , . . ,James Hurst , , , , 3 Captain, ,,,, , .Thomas Morton Hochhx Q Manager , , , . ,,,.,. Bessie Corso 1 SWIMMING Captain . , ,,,, ,. ,,,. ,Virginia Myers Faculty Manager , Mr. Winans C R , C W M, QYVVWV A ,-.AV Q V HH I S .1 LS f0Al'HES 3 L'adf3iiiiir?-,, ,, , , ., Cliiarlcsrliictigt-n Miss Hale, Miss Bergami, Miss Felgate Q if Q 353626 , A,,,3f24J4M-,,f BCEQC BQQXQC HQQLA 9CQQQfi WCQQQE BCQQQ SQQO -f:IS6iI:- G GG..sg1: THE CALDRON 1g,.,oo co o occg Debating Club 55 Q Li 6 5 Q Q' as 6 6 Q SEMESTER I. SEMESTER II. Presidenl ,,,,,,,, ,, ,, ,, ,.,. ,,,,,,,,.,,, B urton Strauss Burton Strauss Vice-President ,,...,,,,, ..,.,,., D orothy Hall Edith Einstein Treasurer ,,,,,,,,,,.,,. .....,,, H elen Corcoran Frederick Taft Secretary .,.,,,.,, ,,,..... La wrence Miter Lawrence Miter MEMBERS Kathryn Albin VVebster Mandell Florence Atkins Annabelle Miller Frederick Barnes Kenneth Mille,- Alan Baxter Donald McCornack Mary Beck Roland Mulhauser ' Catherine Becker . Marion Bing Richard Royce i Margaretta Bokor William Sampliner 3 Evelyn Brown ' Elizabeth Schneider Anna Bundy Adele Schnurmacker 0 Virginia Burr Eleanor Seager Jean Charlesworth Janet Shelhart 3 Maurice Davies Morton Sinks 1 Stanley Friedman Henry Smith 1 Theodore Goldsmith Annie Stewart 6 Dorothy Hall Elizabeth Stone 6 Mary Halle Alice Vactor X Walter Hambourger Hilda Van Horn Edbcrt Harris Irene Wallau , Maurice Hartman Lucille Wallau ' Eunice Hoak Frederick Walter Q Marjorie Iden Margaret Ward C Helen Lazarus Barbara Whitacre Y Mary Madison Helen Zelin 3 2 HQQQV AQQ4 HQQQ4 5QQ6 BCQCQQ6 BQCQ4 BQQQ6 KQCQ 'Sl57 oo oo,,,i THE CALDRQN E+0C Debating Teams SEMESTER I. 1923-24 Al-'FIRMATIVE I. Margaret Feder 2. Jean Charlesworth 3. Burton Strauss Roland Mulhauser fAlt6T7LGf6D Team lost to Rayen High School, 2 to 1. NEGATIVE 1. VValter Hamhourger 2. Helen Corcoran 3. Edbert Harris Helen Zelin Czilternateb Team lost to Akron West High School, 2 to 1. SEMESTER II. 19Q3-24 A1-'FIRMATIVE l. Frederick Barnes QQ. Helen Zelin 3. Burton Strauss Helen Lazarus fAlternatej Team lost to Shaw High School, 3 to 0. NEGATIVE l. VVilliam Sampliner 2. Roland Mulhauser 3. Walter Hamhourger Maurice Davies CAlternaleD Team lost to Lakewood High School, 3 to 0. QD DQODQf7'f1fDQDQ4 DQQQ6 QQCQQT' BQQQ6 QCQQQ,g 'Els 8 lg' Q I Hi-Y Club Q V, W 0 6 Q f f l J Q, Q sl O Q1 9 V -77, l C5 CQ OFFICERS FIRST TERM SECOND TERM C Presidents .,., ,,.,..., ,,,,,,,,,,,., . Frank Sherman Albert Bingham Q Vice-President . .,,,,,. ,,,,.,,, R alph Rickenbaugh Leonard Flynn Secretary .,,,,,,,...., ,,,,,.., La wrence Miter Webster Mandell Treasurer ,,,. ,,.,,.. A lbert Bingham James Connolly C6 Q MEMBERS James Imel Morgan Baker Fred Linderme kb Stephen frilly Gordon Zellers DeWitt IYhittlesey 3 Albert Williams Dudley Schoales Andrew Sharp Mortimer Crowell Arch Bovington Mr. M. D. Gordon, Leader 8 T IS the purpose of the HI-Y Club to create, maintain, and extend, throughout the school and community, high standards of Christian character. In putting across the F ind Yourself Campaigni' this year, the Club tried to carry out this purpose and the results were f fa most pleasing. Mr. Gordon, the leader of the Club, handled the Club very well and under his direction it had a most successful year. QP 335311 ,, JQQQF WQQE, DQDQQ6 9QQ?,-, BQQCQG QQQCC, 9QQQCTffDQQ Qglwlls 83G 0 O0,,iil 13,,,OO T wwltv 'iC'i5ciC'ilzoo,l2q 'FIIE CALIQRUN 13g..GO C' C'Wf+f if Q Z The Wistgoma Club Q Q' 1 , Lb ,,, Q M1 Q I r fl ff l fa l l ll W l l ' .1 1 r lb T ui X 1 as l J l ll .J Lf rl Q tj 'N ,f Ll K3 i, Q l WY, l l 1,l l lf'l'IltS i-'ou THE Fms'r TI-:HM Oi-'Flux-:Hs Fon 'rm-1 SEt'oNn Tx-:HM 3 rn . 5 l'rr'.virl1:nt , , Robert Kneen Prr'sidenl,. ., , Richard Sawhill l'ir'1'-Prexirlmzl David Schoales Vine-Presidmt ,, ,.Dennis Moonan F, Se-rwtary ,, Robert Diekey Secretary Horace liregenzer fb Trmxurrr . Dean Zimmerman Treasurer ,, , Dean Zimmerman I MEMBERS I ff, Robert Kneen Robert Wright Q fri 1 'X Judson Cross Charles Davies Jack Yoder Ernest Smith James Gordon Clemens Gunn 6 WJ Q l'lil'ford Deming HE motto of the Wistgoma Club is Service, not only in the sehool but throughout the community. The most important 5 fi thing aceomplished this year was the fulfilling of a long-felt want M Q fri 4' a basketball scoreboard. As a project of special serviee to the school, the clubs of IQQ3--Q4 have presented a trophy-case to the students of Heights. Although handicapped by the laek of a leader, it is felt . , . . . 5 23 that the Wistgoma Club of this year has been a vredit to the high Q standards established by its predecessors. 53 6 Q9 J KDCQLDT , i'3wV7Q5Qf',,,,,ik: Qklf 'if,-A9QkQQ: . :QQR J 'PQCQQC' , -DQQ51, QUQQQCS. , LQOS 60 TXT 0 CO iw W Q, ociy'-1oc G -uoouggi THE CA.xLIjRfjN 1?g..CCf DQl 7C CCg Q Boys Glee Club ax X, 1 6 Q W W l l 53 I Q7 I 1 l YF in ,A .X I l l 5 T5 N l l 5 Q GU CU 7 .E l l X? S: O -171 7 C ff l l Prrfsirlmf ,A,,.,. ,, ,, Harold Hobson 6 5 Srcrotary- Trmsurrr ,,,,,. ,,,, , Webster Malin Q ,41ilITl1T1.fll'I , ,, Vlarke Wise l , rf 2 QW W VN MEMBERS l Nat Baker Ferris Kneen Ll T7 Q gi Alan Baxter Paul Simon Steve Mcfllusky Lawrc-nc-e Simon l O Donald NIC1l0I'll'lL'li YYilli'nn Flin fl x lil Q . . . . 5, ur , John DeAgro Blilton Wliclrlcr C6 Charles Davies DllHl'3.H Ycingst Q3 CW Lloyd Drossel Herbert Mzulson V X, ll QQQ6 ,JQDQXEQ ,, ,,,, , ,, BQQG DQQCDSA 996-DF XQQQ6 ,- 9995 HQQQQ? 'MLLQQ 6 1 L, px O un M I Y -x 1 w SX NN N W i ,X xx w 1 N r , 1 x w ,X 1 S W Y W N 1 N N 1. -9 W . X 1 xx 1 I A w I Q m 0 JI 0O 6J 0 GC5,,5sI C 1g4,C0O C0 President .,...... Vice-President. ,...,... .. Secretary........ Treasurer .... SENIORS Florence Atkins Mary Beck Katherine Becker Ruth Begley Carolyn Birnbaum Florence Bundy Ruth Bunyan Jean Charlesworth Charlotte Correl Virginia Crowell Constance Edwards Mary Fasciano Dorothy Hall Virginia Hohnhurst Naomi Holtz Ruth Herkner Dorothy Dunlap Eileen Huelsman Girls Glee Club OFFICERS MEMBERS Marjorie Iden Dorothy Kruggle Evelyn Matzinger Marjorie McGeorge Virginia Muelhauser Jane Potter Elizabeth Schneider Hazel Schmittendorf Eleanor Seager Janet L. Shelhart Jeanette Smith Mildred Sommers Evelyn Stanley Annie Stewart Barbara Whiteacre Virginia VVood Nana Young Florence Paulin Florence Thompson Ruth Schneider Virginia Crowell Katherine Albin .........Barbara Whitacre Virginia Muelhauser J UNIORS Katherine Albin Ruth Bush Ethel Cass Estelle Ford Florence Freeman Eleanor Hyde Helen Nelson Josephine Peck May Percy Dorothy Potts Marie Corso Phyllis Proudfoot Katherine Schiefer Sarah Nell Smith Dorothy Squier Esther Stewart Elizabeth Thomas Margaret Ward Margaret Van Fleet . HIS year the Girls' Glee Club voted to take in about twenty-five or thirty new members, only Juniors and Seniors being eligible for membership. Although the girls have not appeared often before the school, it must not be thought that they were neglecting their work for, on the contrary, they were very busy preparing for their annual performance. A committee chose Sylvia as the play to be pre- sented, with Florence Thompson and Mary Fasciano taking the parts of Sylvia and Betty,' respectively. The credit for the unusual success of this opera goes to Miss Roberts, who has done a great deal to keep up the standard of the Glee Club. Q90 HQQQ0 0096 EQQQQ6 'C-D96 9QQQ QQ QQ -426319. r 1 I . 111 TH R c',x1,lm0N 12+ M S1 ,, V, 1 . 1 L1 Vff FQ lfj 1, .1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1.1 1r1 1 ,w 1r1 1-9 1'1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1-1 ., 1r 51 f 1 ,1 1 1 1 1 , X f 1 f 'I 1 1 1 1 1 1 W ff N g 1 1 ' ' 1.1 f W f N ' N 1 1 1 F , F T F, N1 V1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1. r nw 1r1 yv !'1 1' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1. 1, r jx f T A 71 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 r Q1 f 151 ,1 . 1 K. r 01 f 'V . 1 1 , 1 ' ' 1 1 1 .1 1, 1r1 --- - - .N LL1 W1 ,,, 1 1 ' 1 1 'AJ r, AN 1f- W , Y 12 MQW 'J1J'Jf Jw W,,1Li211uw11 ,.i91ef1Q6.,, g,1gaQwwf, QQ aw H1-11o101Qe 1 iiisxum H1164 112' KATHERINE BECKER DOROTIIEA SQUIER VIRGINIA MUEHLHIKITSER MARY MADISON KATERYN ALBIN KATHERINE BECKER O ' -- G g'G G GG,,igI 1gg..CO O -1 . . S The I+ rlendshlp Club f President ,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,, l ,Y,A,,,,v Vice-President ,,,,,,,, ,,,,YA,,, Wy Secretary ...,,,I,,,,, ,,,,,,A,, 8 Treasurer .,,,.,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, F' Assistant Treasurer ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A, ,,,,,,,,, CABINET .D Presirlerzt .,.,,,,,,,,, , ,,,,,,Y,,,,,, ,,,,,,Y,,,,,A ,,,,,,,, , 0 CIQ Vice-President ,,,,,,,, ,A,,,wV,, Secretary ,..,,,.,,,,, Treasurer ,,,,,,,,, GG CA es 2 cm. .-. sz. 3 Q.. H Y N n n 2 w fb -z :G Social Chairman ........,. Program Chairman ,,,,,,,,, Illemhership Chairman ,,,, Council Representafivesn, Cjv Service Chairman ,,,,II,,, DOROTHEA SQUIER VIRGINIA TVIUEHLHAUSER BIARY MADISON ,,..,,,,,KATIIRYN ALBIN EDITH EINSTEIN ,,,,..,,,ESTELLE FORD FLORENCE ATKINS ,WTRUMANA FooTE BETTY VVEH L- .36 3 ... U3 Ui 3 P su L1 o su .. m :- 0-1 P9 .. U3 o 2 5 - U1 U1 55 c: Fl m 5 o z z :fi li Pi FACULTY ADVISORS :GGG KQN QJCDGG HE purpose of the Friendship Club is to create, maintain, and extend throughout the school, a high moral standard, to promote QGGQF QGGQ 9QGv vGDGrv GGQ a spirit of true friendliness, and to awaken through definite social service a sense of community responsibility. With this high goal to lead the members, who include a large number of the girls in the Sophomore, Junior, and Senior Classes, many successful undertakings have been accomplished. Every Thursday afternoon finds some of the girls at the Holy Cross House, a home for crippled children, giving their time and service. The club has also, at the Holy Cross House, a little girl about three years old, under its special charge. At the meet- ings, which are held once every two weeks, very entertaining programs are always assured. A Christmas Party at the Y. W. C. A., where Friendship Clubs of other schools of Cleveland were also invited, offered a snappy and most enjoyable time for all. Besides dancing and singing, some very amusing plays were given in the progress of the interesting program. Thus, in this first year of .existence for the Friendship Club at Heights High School, many are the memories of good times and worthy service. QQG4 fGGC-EL :GG4 :GGG0 CQQQ 'QCQQ1 ECQCQG - GGG-DG GG H U W 5 D F6 Wg '2l65 lf' I wx u x THIS C'.XI,lJliON l?g..ff Hrmgfg 4 pf. jf Xfkfvil L J Q 'X N x L. J J Vw J Q xl yi M J J ,gx J V. O J J W .. , 1 , , , LJ! uhm K. 1 ,Jw x JN 4. J U J K. J J N L xi J gl P Q' W L W ,,,,X ,,7,, W ,, Q J' 1- 11140 -Jr la--w..4'k Vino: ,, ,W-gr-frxgrw. Y vws. MLW, iDwNQQ .16 6 9666 5006 6 Q 6 GQ 95 -yo 5666 060 93 DCM 9006 'OG 966 9666 9606 oo -socivo oo,,,5r THE CALDRQN 15,r,oo ,o ff Girls Leaders' Class Preszdent ,,.,.,,,,,,,,, Vice-President ,,,,,,.,,, Secretary .....,....,,,, Treasurer ,,,,,,,,,, Katherine Albin Margaretta Bokor Betty Bohanon Katherine Kaiser Lucille Koob Ellen Peck Anna Bundy Ethel Cass Mary Chircosta Marie Corso Margaret Feicht Estelle Ford Marion Henderson Eunice Hoak Louise Jenkins Mary Madison Anabel Miller Dorothy Munhall Virginia Myers May Percy Dorothy Potts Elizabeth Schneider Dorothy Sinks Helen Zelinsky Dorothy Squiers Charlotte Sweeting Margaret Van Fleet Irene Wallau Josephine Murray Eleanor Wardeska Helen Whitacre Marian Bing Margaret VVard OFFICERS HBARBARA WHITACRE MEMBERS ,.,,..,,.ANNA BUNDY , , , ,WKATRERINE BI-JCKER ,,,. VIRGINIA CRowELI. Marion Hackenberg Francese Maginnis Katherine Becker Jean Charlesworth Bessie Corso Florence Atkins Virginia Crowell Hilda Dalzell Dorothy Dunlap Edith Einstein Mary Fasciano Lily Jaskalek Diana Kolinsky Dorothy Kruggel Katherine Lane Margery McGe0rge Virginia Muelhauser Jean Porter Jean Rosenfeld Janet Shelhart Annie Stewart Hilda Van Horn Betty Weh Carol Peabody Anna Wells Jane Wilson Virginia Wood Helen Zink Virginia Burr Marjorie McDonald Marjorie Putnam Ruth Bunyan Fannie Clark Trumana Foote , , , Virginia Coan 9 36 Y' 'WQQ L5 5 0 ' f ooor oooh ioor oooh :ooo iooor aoov vooor ooo 467 ls' Ei ' f N TIIIC c'XxI,1mlmw le.. Xfw - , ,V . . Q KV XJ X. W OX X V ' X4 OX OX .X 1 SN ON Q f., N I W X 1 5 W' VX w Y L w .rl SX wr. OX .X X X X. W OX Xi w N W L. xv .r OX V W . X N X ' X. f Y .r QNX A . X X . X , X k. r OX r. 5 ,.-, w w i N W , K. V Xi I. LQ .X f 4 X F Ki A v K: ,f -- - - ,Q .r 5 .X v 1 . L 1 .rX 'L A if v V in Qi Kg JN 1 ' -1141 Jw A J' JH I Jmufi QTKJXXLXIVY '.a,MQ. 'f':Msw,. ' ' N, ,LWQ zxgxyg 1168 jlsn EGG 6 0L'M'E?- QGOMEQI C 135,.00 C OCg3 gr Q Dramatic Club Q I3 4' I hold the world but as the world, Gratiano, ,el stage where erery man 'must play a part. kv I 3 HAKESPEARE does not say may play a part, or can play a part, but he says must play a part. And the members of the Dramatic Club, under the supervision of Miss Nash successfully than some others of us. w , are learning to play their parts just a little more 2 Their presentation of As You Like It this year has confirmed this belief in our minds. W CAST OF 'SAS YOU LIKE IT 2 In order ff their appearance ORLANDO ,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, R alph Rickenbaugh DUKE SENIOR L .,,, ,..,.,, E dbert Harris ADAM .YY.V,VV, ,,,YY,,,,, M organ Baker AMIENS YYY,,r.,,,,,,, Y,..,,,, N Vebster Malm as OLIVER ,,,,,, ,. ,, Webster Mandell COKIN ,,,,,, ,,,, VN 'ilson Gruber E CHARLES ,, ,, , ,,,, Henry Smith SYLVIUS ..,,,,, .. ,,,r Judson Cross QELIA YY,,,Y, , Catherine Lane JAQUES ,,,, .,,,,,, M orton Sinks ROSALIND ,,,,., . , ,,,, Hilda Van Horn AUDREY ..,,,, . ,,,, Elizabeth Byers 'I'0IfvHs1'oNE .,,,,, ,,,,,,,.,,. J ack Porter PHOEBE ,r..,,,,,, , ..,,,,,, Dorothy Sinks 6 LE BEAU ,,,,,,,,. .. .,,. ,,,,,. D udley Schoales WILLIAM ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,r ,...,,, G eorge Heath 8 DUKE FRIIDERICK ,,,.,,, , Forest Norton JACQUE nr: Bols ,,,,., ,,,,,,, B ert Mitchell OFFICERS 1'rf'-ffirlerzi ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,...,,,,,r.,,..,,,,,,,,,, ,..,,,,,, C 7 Arn RINE LANE 5 ' Vll'6'-1,70-9'ld0I1f ...,,.,,, ,,,, ..., N N YEBSTER INIANDELL Secretary- Treasurer ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, R ALPH RICKENBAUGH MEMBERS 3 Katherine Albin VValter Hambourger Helen Shockey Florence Atkins George Heath Dorothy Sinks i Morgan Baker Russell Hecker Morton Sinks E6 Katherine Becker Lawrence Higgins Henry Smith Q Marion Bing Harold Hobson Sarah Nell Smith , Elizabeth Byers Charles Hogrn Burton Strauss Richard Braggins James Hurst Hilda Van Horn 6 Sterling Cannon Lily Jaskalek Irene VValleau Q Jean Charlesworth Mildred Lewis Margaret Viiard Theodore Cleveland Winifred Lewis Eleanor VVardeska Helen Corcoran Jack Lutzy Barbara VVhitac-re 6 John De Agro VVebster Malm Betty WVeh Q Dorothy Dunlap Virginia Mulhauser Jane Wilson l Edith Einstein Florence McCandlish Parke Wolaver Trumana Foote Forrest Norton Virginia Vvood 6 Lorris Gillette Carol Peabody Gordon Zellers G5 Marion Hackenburg Dudley Schoales Eileen Huelsman 2 QQQH AQQQG BQQQ 4QQQf AQCQ0 QCQQU IQQA ACQQQQ e2l69 lr I ix fYC? 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J, ,,. ,, ,y ,I fr' -JAM W YQMJLHM- :ips - , eQ.kLk .gn ' V' Iykg QA K'?I7O Ig' G6 O 6 G6.,5gl THE CALDRON 1gg.AQ1cogT-i-sfyf-lTff Qvcc ,V Hind X , - 7-'nf-6 - -A---- w H -5 Jx J , , W.-Jwn mia ,JO :Mun ! JwQM-,, . ,- MMG- ' Y 'VM Q Q I L, cv V? F I LJ ,-,P 5 L fix W ,QW fi fi l 'T ,.-, L L, on W Ki r. f L., GN Q fa , I W X. 'S fi 5 i fi rw Y I 1 ' w ag V U rw Ci VW , L4 O Q QQ fb 125 gg,w1v fw fwi?Cicw,Heel THIq CLXIJIDRIJN 13g4,,QGv- Q inQx'F-5663 L I E1 5 Q Q ffm 6 1 if LV ffl -' 9 Q H, lf? Q' ff 65 53 55 5f Q 6 QD ff J 55 Q EF' ff ' Li C Q Q ff on Q 1 V F3 Q Q Q Q 53 4 A Ci FQ Q no vu , V mme ,gwxmona .,, gQQC A. JQQQ: .3QCOfrE- mam awe. mos 4177- IS' X. ?I35v5g:-'wiv' YV Wi, --H ., Q . ,,- x ?YYY,,,4VM-VYVLGQ9 gi r 1 V 1 Y v fm V i Lg -, IIIP, f .XLDRUN 00,eM.vocMg1 f,g.mX,g,Q , fg Y E YI , , W ' l N ,rw F1 ' f- 1 x.J 1 ' Y O3 x W 'N X. 4 ck ' l xrx ' -X I U v l 'W X., rx 1 fx ' i ,N H E du n 1 X N V1 1 X XJ f j , ,WT 1 N Y f E fx X A L., Q ,Sy xW V: ' w X., W fl I rg 1 ,rx .N j r Y ' ci . fi -- 3 K-f 1 C' N 1 xr! , 1 A K. UT ui' .N Y i nb V 1 'N X. ,X w ,X I 1 , N , fl 1 iw , ' A U 'W 5 A5 4 11 Q, fl i fn 1 , 4 - - V OW 1 y N W 1 , 1 1 R., ' N g rw ' . krQ 1 1 3 'N 1 LJ 1 I wi , Y, 1 fm L9 X , ' ! ga W I ' 'H Q ,sw i M1 Ci' KY l . XJ 0 5 1 00.95 A ff-f fy, jx ,- ,WY . X W Y. ' X K f Jr 1QQQr '4'-'wif 74. 5 ' H -I - -.-.JXDQDQQ -jg' mff4f------ , X -,mN A Qgx --fr ,.w3QQQJ5i,,,. ,,,,9QQ-DFW' inmwgyg f mf' ' - -, -ki ---iff, , x HJ. WA i gmygw B173 lb o 0 G0,giI THE CLALDRON 15,..eo e Q cv . . . 2 Tribute to Heights High Q22 .9 OT only in voice and tune is our love strong for 3 thee, Heights High, but a deep true love of R progress has been wrought in our hearts by thy pre- A, cepts. J 3 o If Q HOU hast taught us not alone the knowledge 5 that comes from books, but the need of real ser- 5 ig vice in the world. Q 'D 6 EDICATING ourselves to thy noble teachings, Q Alma Mater, may this be our constant prayer: HAT we may never cease in our yearning to C5 FQ guide and to follow thy ideals. ,rf K, 2 HAT when the time comes, we may meet with Q wisdom the ever increasing need of community, country, and universe. A W 6 , Q Q LORRIS R. GILLETT, 25 Q I 6 Q lb CF Q QCD- 4 1.if'iQQCJE h'+9QQF ' X396 AQCQCQi , -5QQi'- FCQQQQ EQQQI gl74 lg' gC'30 G 6z1'0G,,5SI THE CAALDRON 13,,,oo o oQ 'voog Q N 6 Q 1 at Cl CIS US F on O ll ' 4 4 - a 9 Media Hora E6 Yo entro en mi Clase Un ansioso moniento pasa . . Sintiendo muy azul La maestra se sonrie . . . Porque ya sono el timbre lNIe siento con muc-ha duda Cuando yo hable con Jul Y al Hn lo que sigue nie dice: O .N t - Buenos dias, Senoritag -La excusa seria niuy buena, 3Que buen tiempo hace hoy! Me dice la maestra a ini, 5 Atraso mi reloj anoche - Pero dusted no sabe que llueve Y a la Clase tarde estoy. Y se Ve su reloj en la niesa aqui? - E. P. 1924. sd ya 2 O ,, I En un Sombrereria 5 Un dialogo entre un norteaniericano, sombrero del extranjeroj Aqui tiene Q muy corto de vista, quien acaba de usted lo mas moderno que hay, y no perder sus anteojos, y el dependiente muy Caro .... de Ia tlenda' - Ea, ea, ese me gusta muchisimo. 6 - Buenos dias, senor. 5 Que desea icluante Vale? usted hey? - Para usted veinte y c-ineo pesetas. X 4Quisiera Comprar un sombrero. ri ES exorbitante! A Tenemos un surtldo magmfico de - N , 1 1, 1 k I I t ultima moda' teneniocg, senor, es 0 mas mra o que 8 4 QQuitando un sombrero de jipi- ' Q 1 japaj: Deseo uno exactamente como - 6 Me I0 da usted POI' Vemte Y dee gstei pesetas? -No es muy de moda ahora. A -Perderia dinero. No puedo bajar Q usted le cae bien un sombrero de Copa nada. Q mes bale- -Bien, me quedare con el. Aqui - A mi me gusta este. Haga el tiene usted un billete de veinte y Cinco favor de ensenarme otro semejante. pesetas. Y no es necesarlo enviarme 6 F Pxstoy bien Seguro de que le gus, el Viejo sombrero, esta algo estropeado. CQ tam este de alas anehas- - Bfluchas gracias, Senor. Que usted - Yo le digo que no. !Caran1ba! lo pase bien. Qtuexio HIL Sombrerofitomo este' Como CEI norteamerieano se pone el soni- ., U es mm re' Cofno 65 6' brero de jipijapa y se va Calle arribaj Q Y Bueno. CY ase al fondo de la 's tienda. Yuelve en seguida y coge el -R. L. R. 'Q4-. f V' IQQQT' QQQQC , JQQQW WYWQX-EQ? ,QQCQ 730005 5006 ,5CCC? 4wQQ D175 120 L LT i2nW' W- '7 '?h W 'l'IIl'1 CALDRUN 134- 'VfYT f1' f9f 14'GDG kv i 'W W L? X In 5 ,, fr, AT fr xv Y J i 1 if ww jf Enfra el .Seiior Tomals Morton en un Seior Torer -d Y C1116 te ' I N cafe' y Pxde de comer A la mifad hzxcef For lvtmdrld? V de lb cornidb. le dxce al mozo: Qieiormoore 5-Me ggqlo - J -YZ: te conozco. Tu aura lu vida efcrxbxerxdo. ,f, no me es desconocido, Sefxor Torer -- pero no recuerdo donde CEY1 lox Peruciclmof 2 W-S If fe he visto. flefxor Nfoore AICAI W N -No sebresponde el mozo A mi Paxdre , P1 , iii -No 'CQTQQ elulbcinor de difindole dine-ro Ll ff, conocer 6 A . N -Ah .si Hombre, A 3 J recuerdof T11 eggs el K 3 I que me hzx servxdo U la. .rope-. . fr , N . 7? ,r , ,, hrr-4, 14 WN 5 ,rw VX W W En un bade W Sefxor Sxmou - Me hz:-.ral Udel fAvor,.re?1oritb-, cle . N Ig! SeF1oritb.BeglQy -Lo nenfo, cabmllexfo, pero tengo V1 ad comprometxdof tOdOf lo: bAx1e.r Y Selaor -NO QI Lie AEJQE VX I q , X bznlzxr. E5 que Qftb Ud. Jenfiaclox y ' encimb. de ml Jombrero, 1 ? 1 , F fi w ' PW I ul X , ,, X. 9 ' I 1 M l 'r' 1 nw ,r, . mini , 'q Seior Loeb.-Oye,zxm1gfo, tengo clue Qonfiaxte un fecreto. V Sefmor Manx, - Di ...... Senor Gordon- Hay Pez-rox de Se5or Loeb- Nvecea-ith. qumce mzi..r 1'.a.1en'Co ue .fu.f a.rno.f. 1 Q clurow Sefzor L1Vihgf orL.- Yo Pofeo fig V- Seflor MAAJ,-Puedem erfnr fran- uno de efa. efpecze. . . , . ciuxlo. No .re lo dure A nadxe. f H fu uf 1 Y 1X A L 22 Q, 39 Jill W V940 3'1 . A 1 J YBLJQQ , Q' if ,,iQKQCQ' Y fnivllkl-D4 lf'Qin7xsJQuL5f iQfQifjQQQ QSIVGIS' 0O .0':. iG GU,..5gI: 1?i..CC C C Og U 9 A Shot-Not Fired ES ! It is a sorry affliction-that of a boy seriously taking up golf. Does it lead to a raise or a downfall? VVe shall see. Allons ! In the year 1923, Anna Dominoes fJerry Cruncher says sob, there blossomed, in the biggest bank of our neighbor city, an office-yes,areal. red-haired office - boy, Mickey McGuire by name. Irish of race, and red of hair. Max Mariton won the National 0pen,', he exclaimed, why in Hades can't I too? Zeal, well directed, is immensely productive. As a caddy on Sundays, Mickey soon picked up a few dozen good balls and an assort- ment of clubs. As no one was in the locker room with Mickey one afternoon, he acquired a golf-bag. Young lNIcGuire was a fine office boy, t.ill he took up golf. Rascal, an old lady stood all the way to town one morning because Mickey's clubs filled the seat beside him. It's fun, he would say, to put on this office linoleun1Yit's just like a green. And most of all, Mickey would have liked to hit young hir. Burr, the bookkeeper, at the spot where his left sideburn tried to tickle the lobe of his ear, but he never got up enough steam, or courage. Come, we shall now enter the commercial domicile of Mr. Benson, President. Busy? Say! the month was the biggest in the history of the bank. A directors' meeting had just adjourned, and orders had to be sent immediately to the man- ager inthe lobby. A bell rang in the outer office. Hey, Maggie! the old man wants you, yelled Mickey, as he teed up a pill -but the annunciator was lighted Boy. No one answered the call, and Mr. Benson entered the room. Poor Mr. Benson! The strain on his executive ability was great, but his lowest score for eighteen holes was the main cause of his wrinkled brow. His card had never dropped below one hundred twenty-enough cause for a permanent frown. So. Mr. Benson entered as Mickey's club fell. A sharp tap was heard, desk, holding his left temple asked the boss Oh seventy or eighty answered the boy nonchalantly but say sir wasn t that a swell shot 9 The boss did not answer. Instead he turned to the injured q bookkeeper, I say, Burr, he said, you will take charge 5 of the office this afternoon. McGuire and I are going out ,li Q to play a round at Oakwoodf' ill N F WALTER HAMBOURGER. 1 ' i, and an awful howl, as young Mr. Burr danced around his as as NZ?--' Say, son, how much do you make a round 'Xi-: - ,,. nd ln' ' ' Iaillw, ,,,,,, I D, bi ' U9 . 3 3 9 it ' S S 3 S! v 9 ' ' 5 ar . ,. va O O Photograph reproduced by special permission from the Saturday Evening Post of Philadelphia. Copyright, 1923, by the Curtis Publishing Company. Q BQQQ6 9QQ5 DQQQ0 9994 BQQQG 9994 9QCXQ6 W KQCO USH77 13. 0 6G,.,QI THE CALDRON 1g,..oo no o:frT..f'ioog The Mysterious House f., HE cold, damp sea breeze was minutes. The men grew restless. softly swirling the heavy blanket After five or six more minutes had J of fog around the barren looking house. passed a few of them entered the 8 Far off through the darkness and mist house. They searched for a little while N was faintly heard the mufHed crow of before they came upon the guards a cock proclaiming the approach of bound and gagged. The prisoners morningg while near at hand, the were nowhere to be found. Q soft swish of the waves on the sand ,F It ak sk bk l was the only other sound. I . Th ' h Just as the first flicker of gray began 6 Sun stained t e Ocean 8 deep . . . red, the color of blood, when that Q to show dimly through the thick mists, d - . . . ay ended. No longer was the for- a door creaked in the forbidding house b. . ly . lddmg house alone on the shore, for and the tread of feet sounded like . there were hundreds of men searching Ji thunder on the gravel walk. In an . 1 . the barren land for the escaped prison- 3 instant, there was a sharp cry. The ers -i calm stillness ended with the staccato ' bark of a gun. The whole neighbor- In vain they searched, and at last hood seemed alive with wraith-like they left the vicinity, still with the men moving about in the shadows lost men uncaptured. The winds I beside the house. Hurried calls and sighed relievedly at the departure of cries filled the air Soon, however, the the searching party. noise died down as it left the house and Late that night, two shadowy figures the shots became fainter and fainter. . . At last thev Stopped altogether crept from their concealment ln a -' t K ' secret closet of the house and stole Every minute the earth grew lighterg away along the beach to a boat hidden 1 I one by one the objects in the vicinity in the sand-dunes. Noiselessly they of the house took form, until the rough, pulled it to the shore, and rowed Q grim house was visible amid its patch away. of weeds and overgrown bushes. if I if ik if Nleanwhile the sound of talking had All the world read the Story ef the been growing louder. A crowd of men escape the next day- The belief was p rounded the curve of the road. In that the men hed fnn away from the front, two prisoners with hands bound house t0 3 Weltlng auto, yet Only the were limping. When the group came mysterious house knew where they w to the house, they stopped. The pris- had been that day, but a fire burned oners and a couple of guards entered It UP that night, and H0 One knew h0W the house. The rest of the men waited lt Started! 6 outside. Nothing happened for several F, L, T, Q 5 QQE-BSJQ EQ? XEQQ X-3996 4995- 4QCQCQf HCQCQQ.- 4COCDCQ CDOg fl78 lr ,. ,X F t. Q gcc-9 o o oo,,,5l THE CALDRON E5,,G5 C'3 G GGg Q Q ,, 1 x - v L h e a t e d 'I 1 m e g OU may, and you may not think fellow soon had the entire crew won xy so,butIcan prove to you that'time over, from the grim mate, to the meek A 8 and tide' does wait for a manfsome- little cabin boy. 3 times' A concert! This was to be the main if It was Captain Travers of the huge card on Christmas. Arty had seen to 6 Cunarder, Moravian, speaking. At that. His very enthusiasm had set 6 Q his club, which was a famous meeting everyone a-bustle. Snecky Hobart place of all such seafarers, he was fond had been practising on his neglected of breaking into one of his favorite fiddle in the further-most recesses of yarns on the slightest rovocation. the stoke-hole, while grim, hostl ., QQ P g y Q Q It was not hard to get him started-- sounds had been heard to issue forth Q all one had to do was to pretend he from the sacred precincts of the mate's was not interested. The more disin- quarters-sounds which were more like 5 terested the listener, the better the the dying throbs of a stuck pig, than . . J Q story. So it was that I got him started the sweated-out notes of a battered Q? this time. But I cannot hope to give fife. Even grouchy old Mr. Crum was this narration in Captain Traver's own induced to give as his contribution picturesque language, so without fur- The Curse of the Drippin' Dirk - Q 2 ther a ologies I will roceed. a monolo ue which had been worked CJ K, P P g Q ' . , , . ' f f - G' i It was In the early days of Ilrlsco' IlibntOoilhialfrflgghfsaslwigilledalioffjerilflfe th T ' , th l bl ' , ' A at Tiers en on y an a e one thing necessary for success was 5 seaman, took a berth on the old . .. fry . .. ,, the consent of a day off for Christmas. CE e steam calllope, Golden Pheasant, . Q engaged at that time in the China Arty was unanimously elected to ' trade xvhen the Story began the perform the duty of persuading the ' . ' . ' ' l , h t .d 5 barge was well on its way across the Sgpffntfidid?gS?t'i'fgKf1 shi eggid 6 Q P 'fi - d th ht b t ' . J . acl If an Dug S egan 0 tum watch of Christmas eve. To the dis- to Christmas. Strange that these men . . . . , crlmmatmg eyes of the cluster of sail- should have such thoughts? We ll take . W that up later ormen who watched the scene, it p 3 ' appeared that all was not going so well. When Arty Dewfinkle first set his Captain Yonkers was as tight a sea-boots over the rail, the very der S ever char ed double ,Q smudge-smeared decks seemed to take Comman a, g . 0 . . rates. It wasn t that he was not kind- I qi on a cheerler hue. Arty was a big, I f he S in 3 Wa But a da 3 ' light-hearted, blue-eyed giant, with lg fo? Chrfsmas meanfa Whole day a huge grinning mouth, and big ears. 0 O 1 . . y . H , . wasted, and with coal rates so high, In his own words he wasn t built for . . . I Q ,, . and time insurance so close why lt ,J Q speed, but his strength was as the . . . O -N . would be impossible to grant the wish. Q strength of ten. HIS very appearance . . . . Besides, whoever heard of a day off for excited mirth, and he could sing as . . .Q many songs on his old concertina as Christmas for Sallormen' T S the funniest of clever vaudeville clowns. The crew, however would not take In fact the cheery, bluff, and kindly No for an answer. Even the mates, F' yy' C s SQQI 9QQQf BCQCQQ 99996 may QQQQ? 5994 BQQQ6 1959698 'SI79 ls' gC50 O O GO,,.5gl C'9C G 5 8 Cheated Time Continued who theoretically should have upheld the Captain, complained-and yes- cussed. In the end, the old man was forced to promise their request. But the smile on his face when he said it, betokened some mischief- though it would be impossible for the yankee to deliberately lie. It was quarter past twelve that night when Snecky Hobart hit the deck. As he emerged from the companion- way, he nearly rammed the Captain. Pardon me sir, but weid be glad ifyou'd drop in t' see th' fun tomorrow. The show starts at eight o'clock on the spar deck. Snecky had been well coached. There'll be no fun. Tomorrow the upper works will be painted, grumbl- ed the Captain. In the confusion that followed the senior officer moved off. But the news travelled rapidly. Arty discredited the statement, making the assertion that the Captain only got mixed up. Nevertheless he was delegated to go with a committee to investigate. VVith permission, he went on the bridge. Th' boys sent me up, Cap'n, fer to ease their minds. Of course I realize it was a mistake about yor saying we had to work tomorrow, but if you'll just say that to the boys - 'Twas no mistake. It's a fact. VVhat? VVhy you promised us Christmas off sir. VVell this isn't Christmas, Arty, you come up here into the chart room and I'll explain. Where do you think we are right now? About a thousand miles off Australia, eh? You're nearly right. VVell, you see that dark line running zig-zag through the ocean? That's the internation- al date line. On one side it 's hlonday. on the other side it's Tuesday. At midnight of the 24-th, we crossed the line. Therefore we missed Christmas, and it's the 26th now. Good night Mr. Dewfinklef' Arty came out in a daze. The old boy certainly had fooled them. All for nothing was that practice and work. The boys took it with various de- grees of anger, but it was noticed that the entertainers were the hardest hit. Suddenly the irresistable Arty jumped up. There's a VVest wind blowin' purty stiff, huh? If anything should happen to the engine, we'd go back over the line agin' in an hour, eh? If Cummins is with us -turning to the chief engineer, one of the biggest actors- we'll pick up Christmas agin', and save today fer tomorrow. A sort of double day, huh?', Five minutes later, two figures work- ed their way down the iron ladder into the maze of burnished brass and polish- ed steel of the engine room. At the fourth landing, by the telegraph, they stopped. Then one of them climbed up the grating, to where high on the wall, amid a labyrinth of switches, wheels, and levers, he twisted a large valve. Slowly the engines slowed, then stopped. Slowly the boat lost headway then stood still. The ensuing silence was broken by the telegraph bell. No answer. A shriek of the tube sent Cummins running to the mouth-piece. Q91 QJQQQA PCQQG 496994 A905 BQCQQC' 3995 BQQCQW JCQQCQ OSISO Is- E'DO0 C'3 G2 - 'T',C'3G,.5gl THE CALDRON 13,.,oo Jo,f o o 3 Cheated Time L Continued No sir, I can't find out sir. CCum- mins was a cheerful liarj May be an hour sir. I'll find out sir. Yes sir.', Cummins breathed hard. Meanwhile, the crew had returned to work with a will far too apparent to the puzzled Captain. VVhen the liner stopped, his suspicions were verified. Yet he knew nothing of machinery. There was nothing to do. Two hours later, Arty appeared at the bridge ladder. Is it Christmas yet? he asked. In all honesty, Yonkers had to say yes. Very well, sir, remember your promise-and say, you'd better throw out a drag. Cummins says he can't possibly repair till morning. I,ll tend to my own affairs, snap- ped the outraged Captain. But the peevishness did not last long. An hour later he was showing the new generation how to caper to the tune of f AG OISELESSLY they walked to- gether, Dale and Louise, soft snow cushioning under foot. Arm in arm, with slowly measured tread, they wended their way along the wooded boulevard -in summer, a gay picnicker's frolic ground-now deserted. Deserted? Nay, not for these, who saw all the winter sprites of night slip-tripping through dainty traceries of snowy a squeaky concertina, a fiddle, a harmonica, and a fife, while the crew kept time by clapping. Three tradi- tions were broken that night, when the Captain came into the fo'castle, when the engine crew, or mud hens, mixed with the deck hands, and when officers joked with men. Yet I think no Christmas was ever so enjoyable. And you can guess why the hooker came into port two days earlier. Naturally, the damage was righted immediately after the frolic. And I often have wondered if that rough sailorman was not a better Christian for spreading a little cheer into dingy lives, than many of your psalm-singing preachers. Who knows? At any rate, we disproved that 'time and tide proverbf ,' ended Captain Travers. i rl Here Travers usually pauses to wink a wink full of the most hidden of meanings ever a wink could intend. HENRY Ii. SMITH, ,24-. .g Q limpse wee graceful figures danced lightly to- ward the frozen stream and glided onto the moonlit silver. Led by the wee-est of the wee, to the faintly whispered flute-song, they hastened toward the castle of the frozen falls, a fairyland of myriad jewels in the lady moon's soft caress. In among the silver- fluted thongs of ice they flitted, leav- ing Dale and Louise to the moonswept woodlands. Still, still quietness, as castle path. LORRIS, '25, DQQ' 99992 wWQQf BQQQZ 99996 QQQF DCQQQ6 SCQQG AQQQJ USES 1 12' G6DEve at ' ' ' X 'r'-1t f 'W 'wr'-e ' X' f ff ' , W0 tj ,,w' o Crti gil THI4j CALDRUN 65C9C?iye. tfv'1'?GOd 3? Q Qi V. .., ., J KJ LJ QQ CD ., Q tt? . Q The Martial Adventures of Qthers and Me W tApologies to lYilliam Allen W'hiteD Cm Q Q . . Q WILD plunge from the windy I eomhed my hair, gave my nose a street into a warm, dark eorridor, last dusting of powder, and stalked Q a frantic- seareh for the stairway, a fearfully ac-ross the hare floor to the 'D loud elatter on the steps, an uneertain waiting magic-ian. After I had been 3 I wandering down the hallf-at last the carefully seated, he talked rapidly U photoggrapher's door was reaehed! Re- to himself tor at mel no douht saying xy joieing, I entered to he eonfronted the necessary mystic' words. 6 , . . . , . . . .V . , , l J Q by 'l THQ Pt W1 lzlmldxkeffl Whitt I Fat-ed with my natural grunaee, he V' muitm 'ffllt my lrcpy Mi 'ferret mi heeame almost hysterieal and urged G' to' .ner ow p otter. r gain was I me to he serious: all the while he sn ijt-1-tet to tlllttstltllly again was. pmuced around angrily. Evidently I tg dllrwrtcd' but thu UT? wit H Illgiglc was hopeless. He heeame partially 3 nit slip in nip hand for t. ie p iotograp mer. recomlilod' and ..t00k-- me' I think' as I t,-4.,,,1,lingly Sm-m,,1,1Q,1 up those with his eyes shut for when I saw those ky SfN,',' m.w.,.,t0,l,f.,fm.w,tt9,, St,,i,.S. for sad-looking proofs even I eould not M at the toll was the room in which I tell WIN' MII Was! fl hoped to he made lxeautiful. Hastily HELEN SWWKM-Q 'Q4,. l l X, UE-l N .1 ti 5 M J , is An I nsolved Mystery cw I W .Xb toa seene of grnn desolation manned hut one hope: the ehanee ot Q cw , H I k ' V w v Q wt that Ieter Ifar an, fortune see er, reaelnng Ifort Norman. a three day s returned after a day's hunting trip. journey. That night hy a lonely tire, lYhere that morning he had left the he made his meager preparations for if . . . . - 5 U' P little Utllllll with no apprehension for the heroie fight. Q 5 - - - . . , . . ii l 'IS Sf'lt'lY- HOW Fl 4IT'4'?U'5' 'WUI' of VUVIX5 I'he sun was sinking towards the l and snow reared itself high overhead. if.0,,.um,,.d ,mmntaim as 2, mam toiled XI Somewhere lmeneath tlns grant ava- MTOSS the Snoxv field of 3 lmrron L! Qt nanehe lay Ins partner and all their Valley. It was llotm-Q Wm-H out by ffl f 'II'lY l t55t'5S '5- I 111111 IIWW 4 eontinuous walking and laek of nour- l , U to Q to , m . , ,, . , K ,, , i Q WUDQ Q' Jw Ji J W 9-QWWA ., ,TBJQQQ ,,. BQQQ g5QQQQ ,, ,,,hQGj'i,.,,, ,DQQQQQY , EQQKQ 3 1 O 6' G 6G,,5gI: C 1lg,,,C'3CO G C'E W 3 An Unsolved Mystery Fonlinued ishment. He stopped and sank to his knees, but struggled to his feet again as a blast of wind, the herald of an oncoming storm, swept past him. Several rods in front of him, a small canyon promised shelter, and making his way to the edge, he painfully clambered to the bottom. Out of the gloom which shrouded the canyon, objects slowly took shape. The side by which he had made his descent appeared to be the shorter and less precipitous of the two, al- though broken in places by deep crevices and overgrown with stunted trees. The other towered high above till it was lost in the darkening sky. At its base, a large hole announced a cave, a place of refuge and safety. To complete the dismal atmosphere, a few spectre-like trees grew in for- bidding clusters, throwing their bare boughs skyward like skeleton arms. By a cautious examination, the cave proved to be unoccupied, but it was with dire foreboding that the man gathered fire-wood and entered its mysterious depths for the night. When the tongues of fiame had risen to sufficient height and lighted the cavern with a sickly glare, Peter set about to secure such comfort as the situation would afford. A profusion of rocks littered the fioor, and it was while clearing these away that he made a discovery of vast interest. In one of the remote corners, a pile of rubbish attracted his attention, and a close examination revealed a human skull to his startled gaze! Instantly innumerable questions crowd- ed through his mind. YVho was this unfortunate man? How had he died? Hastily kicking aside rocks and dirt, a small book came into sight. VVith eager hands he siezed upon it and carried it back to the fireside. Care- fully he brushed away the dirt that encrusted it and slowly turned the yellow pages. It was a diary, dated 1887 under the name of Jean I.aCross, probably the man whose remains had so startled him. The most of it was uninteresting, but he paused to read more carefully the last entry: Oct. 22, 1887. Impossible to travel todayg a terrible storm is in progress. I have shelter in a large cave at the bottom of a canyon-Perhaps it is the oppressive silence of the falling snow, but all day I have been aware of something which seems to haunt my every move. There is a feeling as of another's presence, yet I am alone- I have not been able to sleep, even the usual cheerfulness of a roaring fire does not matter. Ay, the dancing shadows on the walls add to the grew- some feeling. As I write, the air grows heavy, some impending calamity threatens me !-I feel the end is near: icy fingers grapple at my throat !-- It is the THING! It has me--- Here the diary ended. VVith a shud- der, Peter slowly closed it. What was the Thing? Unconsciously he drew nearer to the fire, and for the first time, noticed a strange oppressiveness in the air. Was the Thing about to take another victim? He laughed mirthlessly and tried to think it was not so. The fire gave a fitful start and by the momentary glare, a sinister shad- ow overspread the opposite wall. VVith a startled cry of fear, he sprang to his feet, but the next instant a piercing yell echoed throughout the canyon, and he fell lifeless to the ground. DONALD IVICCORNACK, 'Q5 0963 QDQQDK-- KJQV BCQQQS UQQG HQQQQ QQQ6 HQQQG M QQ ellie lg' ooo o o oo,,QI THE CALDRON 15,,oo o.1-3-so Carmen Laudis 5 My Country, Native Land where I was born, l The land that's harbored me in childhood's years, 8 Where rise or fall of fortune concentrates The gladness or the sorrow of my tears, Where spires of my hopes have shot aloft, 6 Where crushed, my bleeding heart has hugged the sod, Q And where again discouraged soul took hope, And smiling, lifted up its' hands to God: Where in my every mood the high ideals 6 And standards of my land have been my goal, Q T rampled Ego, and the base beneath their heel, The worthwhile tendered to my strong control. But o'er all else my land has given me , Within my grasp to shape it as I will, 8 Wide opportunity, and bade me go, And bear my burden, and my task fulfill. W Then comes the subtle thought, what makes this land 8 So newly born, so quick to gain a hold, And in a few short years to reach and pass All other lands, were not her rootgof gold? 3 Oh budding state, democracy, and throne, K2 Then look ye to America, and hear The secret of her world wide strength and claim. ' It is her homes, and to a home so dear, W Her mothers, who have born our statesmen great, 8 And who have taught the rudiments of truth To generals, know our land that consecrates Its mothers and its homes to guide its youth '16 And thus to make our Nation what it is- Y A state of unity, of coralled power, Of happy homes, and democratic men- America, a growing, radiant flower. Q VIRGINIA RICHBIOND BURR. 3 E SQ 53 S991-g1QCQCQQh! . FCQCQ T- TFQQQ-Dfiif CQ9f-'im-E CQQCU ECQQQG BCQQW BQ '2l84l U gggqf-iggi-'i-:,Q QQ,-gil THE CALDRON 13,,,60 OGg 0 4, L, .. Q 3 Q L ,Z W ,- :-Q. 1,4 J ,X ig. ,HQ Arg, - Q .imma fi 3 f 'iff s 7 E RAN N5 l, mal, -1, ., q . , 54-U mx-all M uf V' ' V' 'l3J1llW9' 'Q I . in P, its 1 VV i5,', g ..vg6h:' '53 .1 ' O F ' A ' X 1 Q x 5191, ': U A Vw, fx N, wi, TEL QU on PARLE Q 55 .larfrf 4, '.2f 1 ,!,!, Manx , E Q i n it fi ' 1 Ju . ,L ,, fills Q ' X - - 4 5 4' 4 f 5 I Notre Cercle Francais Q Q ' Q I UISQUE la moitie, ou de plus, des etudiantesj francais. Le department eleves de notre ecole etudient le des langues etrangeres, dont cette asso- franqais, qui les interesse, probable- ciation est representative, a achete Q Q ment. plus qu'aucune etude sans ex- une phonographe avec laquelle nous Q 1 ception, on croit que nous devrons autres etudiants pourrons apprendre avoir quelque chose de plus que ce que il parler et chanter GJ. 5 donnaient les regulieres classes de Gems,-alement pal-lam, le cercle aura francais. Actuellement, personne n'a tous les avantages pour notre francais 8 as trouve ce qui etait it desirer. Mais quiont dlautres pour leurs sujets, et Cette annee HOHS Mons eu la nnnne il nous donnera de l'instruction, de la J idne de former un grand cercle, Com' science de cette langue, et du plaisir pose des meilleurs etudiants de fran- bien grand. 11 Sera parmi les organi- 3 lil C255 de 1i5C0l9 - Ciest 5 dire- CCUX qui zations les plus importantes de toute recoivent les marquffs HGV' et l'ecole, n'est-ce pas? Travaillons, fai- Avant que l'on lise cet article cette S0nS de notre mieuxr enfin entmns organization sera, non seulement nee, dans C9 Qfnnpe de n0S nlfflllfnfs Par' mais bien vivante. Ici on parlera fran- leurs de La Langue Poke, et nous Qais, on fftudiera en francais les pourrons .etre fiers,.non seulement du 0 mania-I-es deg FI-angais, et, Chose 13 cercle mais de l avoir fonde dans notre Q plus importante, on fera de la corre- ecole Cherie- l spondance avec des etudiants Cet des BIAURICE B. DAW'IES. '25. l I be-if--fo o , fa Le Moment Le Plus liimbarrassant .Vai demande a un de mes amis de qui m'a embarrasse le plus. Je suis ' 6 me dire ce qui etait son moment le alle au theatre, et lorsque J,aV3lS pris f plus embarrassant. ma place, j'ai remarque s'asseo1r de- Eh bien, dit-il, voici le moment vant moi un de mes amis que Je h .I SCQQ4 QQQQQ JQQ5 DQCQCQL QQQQ, QQQCQG EQQQ 55-EQQG .5QQg 'gl85 lg' CE G G6..5Qli THE CALDRON 13,..oo c c fog Q Le Moment Le Plus Embarrassant Q n'avais pas vu depuis un mois. Je ne pouvais pas voir son visage, mais c'etait certainement son dos mince, son vieux chapeau, et son col long. Alors je l'ai frappe sur le dos en le saluant, Jacques, comment ca va, mon ami? Comment? Rogue! Bete! Que voulez-vous? Voile les mots courts et secs qui m'ont repondu! La personne a tourne la tete vers moi et, stupefait, j'ai vu le Visage d'une femme! Bien embar- rasse, j'ai furtivement demande par- don, tout en me levant pour choisir un autre place dans le theatre. MAIIJORIE L. Im-:N. '24-. oz- ------ is Notre Ecole Ecole, un mot qui nous vaut beaucoup Parce que c'est la que nous avons pu Jouir de temps d'oeuvre et de jeug Parce que c'est la que nous avons eu L'occasion de developper l'esprit Que c'est la que nous avons appris Des lois de la societe et du monde. Pour ce mot on doit une consideration profonde. Il y avait des jours ou il fallait qu'on travaillat Mais nous avons ere fortifie par celag Nous y avons fait beaucoup d'amities, Chose que nous n'aurons jamais re- gretteeg Ecole n'a pas ete une preparation seulement Pour nous, mais la vie au meme mo- ment Car nous y avons goats la vie veritable. Vraiment a l'ecole, il n'y a rien com- parable. CHARLES '25. 0:---by-A-2, Cyrano de Un drame en cinq actes par Edmond Rostand, ecrit par lui, pour represen- tation par ce grand acteur Coquelin at Paris. La piece, qui est eonsideree par tous les bons critiques le chef- d'oeuvre de Rostand, a recu la plus grande ovation des Francais depuis Le Cid, par Corneille. Ifhistoire de la piece concerne Bergerac l'amour et le grand sacrifice de Mon- sieur de Bergerac, qui est en nos opinions un des caracteres les plus admirables de la litterature. Nous esperons, quand M. Walter Hampden, qui joue le role maintenant in New York, le jouera a Cleveland, que tout le monde viendra la voir. MORTON SINKS. '24-. LQQQQ-.. BQDQQQ 1 XEQQ DQQQ4 WQQL BQQCQ6 499i HQQCQW JQCQQ 4135 la- EC'3C'3 G G GG,5gI: 1g!.,,COCC C0 C5 C'5 Q 6 Xl 1 ., A 6 il y L 1 0 l 1 -X ww ' . ' J m f ' R, ' ill ,lil i l -. 2 IA HM 'll A Q , 1 -0- e 'll' LES W .il - - J l, 1 ' X f Q L l. fl Q N e M O l S 1 E 55 0 . , , . 'T Deux paysans normands se ren- Et alors ll s est demande pourquol elle eogtrent, le meunier et le tailleur du ya quittg, Sans entendre le 1-este du vi age. X ' l H u I U poeme. 'i Dit le tallleurz Le rmcemoutl? 4--4-F U , . . g Q CLe gram se IIIOUC-t-ll?J B9PQUCl le Hleunierz Labiseouti? On m'a demande d'eerire quelque QL habit se COlltC-t-1l?D Chose, 5 Le taluellr: imablscflu' But how in the world can they suppose Q Le meunler: Le grlncemouf' . . Q Que Je SUIS un capable personne --'Q' By whom such a thing can be done? Frederic le grand it Voltaire: Eh bien, comme 'e releve ma lume, J P P ci My task does greatly before me loomg l 21 9- 5 G' a' Mais comme je n'ai rien que je puisse venez sans dire M F rederie: Venez souper at Sans Souei. I guess that I will stop right lwrel C3 Voltaire: J 'ai grand appetit. Pas de la Rhone, que nous, get dire tres vite.j Le professeur : Que veulent dire L les mots chou et ehou-f:leur? 2 lfeleve, bien sur: Radish and horse 4' radishf' p D Un jeune amant poetique, desirant 8 parler de son amour a sa bien-aimee, E, 5 'N lui a dit: 'X J'etais une abeille, toi, une fleur I - sauvage, 5 Moi, une sourisg toi, un morceau fj gd, Clk? de fromage A1 LA C-H07-E F2 QQQL. :WQQQ5 bl-DQ? -99995 9995 99995 QQCQQ QQQCL XCQQQ '2l871G' lf vw' f+ q ufl-.j-i Q w v - - K - Y , - -, f x ,s Q Q gil THI41 pALDR0N lg., 00r'l6 O:1i63C3 TH 1 V 51 X, ?r 3 r-' , O fr, Q 1:1 'X .N I ' , U TC, 3 V Q f T Q 'N Q L., 'i Q1 Q E3 W ,, J r O 1 ? H , j fm W fi 1 z' H QE W .J 1 'f in Iii 4? f-wi' wwf -w wf Nf9QDQGD1'1'7,,,,'KlQf'fffh9l9DQQ ' :MQ my 'fjgggg 621188 H26 af 5-56oo -'o -no osgt THE CALDRON 13,.oo o o oog J School Calendar for 1923 -1924 5 C ' Q I.. .. SEPTEMBER Oct. 8-9: Debating Club try-outs. , . . T ' f ' t dg ' -' ' d bept. 10: Happlest day m the year? mlgree asplrants am e vsere carrie W .' h l . - , . ' Sc 00 Started Oct. 9: Orchestra officers chosen. .5f3I?t- ui Cafeteria Openedt meat Oct. 10:Third Senior Class meeting. Cfltlclzed- Australian Knot New Zealandj Ballot 6 Sept. 17: First Blue Monday. degdedlgpzla 21 H l ht 0 C d 5 - - - , , ct. .:. aw. , eng s . :oo i Athletic Association officers elected. rooting, but the team-tough luck! Q Sent-,191 Fifst Assembly? greetings, Oct. 15: Library regulations made MF- Wiley! strictest. CQ Sept. 20: Capt. Scully on how to save 005 165 lvistgoma Vlub Ofacers Q3 S yourself from drowning. If at first you elected' ' , F' ' don't succeed try again! Oct. 18: Girls intgtfucetli, to Friend- 'h' Cl b b f . Sept. 21: Football rally. CThree 5 lp u y Hg . een ersmger , 5 assemblies in one week' they'll make Octi 19:.1Wr'.IrV1ng Bacheuer' In' Q ug fm it' later D ' ' terestmg didactic lecture on social con- Q C I ' ' ditions in pioneer New York. G' Sept- Q92 Chagrin Falls barely Oct. Q0: Another victory, Akron h0Ht9I1-40'0- North this time!7-6. I 2 . Sept. 924: First Dramatic Club meet- , Oct- Llbfafy regulations made Q Q mg. impossi e. Q , - 1, , , , Oct. Q42 Book-store opened late, Sem' Q02 Illrst btudent cfouncll causing one pupil two night's deten- meeting. tion. 'A Q Iifrst Ofchestra Practice' l Oct. Q51 Dramatic Club tryouts. 'T' First wlstgoma 011111 meetmg' Oct. 27: Lima defeated, bring on Q' Inspiration for the Sophomores. your next victim!-Q6-6, l -, . 1 . . Ml Sept. 26: First Debating Club meet- Oct. :. Senior Class primaries. gt ing, lNIany political scandals. Q Q - x, V , , Y .. - , Q l Sept. 27: First HI-Y meeting. Cuguilitlegilllsfle eu I arty' such Sept. Q71 GiI'lSi L021d6I'S, Class lNIuch light furniture moving. 1 Breakfastg Forest-fire just averted. .1 Sept. QS: Second Rally. Some new F112 ---fa 3 yells and songs. l 'N N J, l First B. and G. Three new jokes! sf K . Sept. Q9: Lincoln drubbed 10-7. l 5 X s---A u .6 i OCTOBER l , 0,13 If , V' n . X l Q 8 Oct. 1: Library regulations made will Q fm? ll 8 My strict. Q 'l ,W gl' c 4 , ., . v R M I Oct. oz Lhardon defeated in hyper- , swift game-20-0. E Oct. 7: Library regulations made K P R 9 j stricter. Ydigwr F a 9991 t49QQDQf 9QQL DQDQQJG 9995 MQCQCQ6 XQQ5. KQQCQQ v F9993 is- Q 0 G C'96D,,isl: C 1g!,,C 0 T1C 6 M X5 R, 1 School Calendar for 1923 -1924 Q f'ontin1u'1l fri. NOVEMBER , 1 X v v - K!! Nov. 1: btlll no assembly! igff 8 Nov. 2: Hard-working B. and G. at staff-members feted at High School .. A Journalist Conference. I ', 44..N. l, 2 Nov. 3: Akron VVest down for the ' ,f count. Stupid game 9-6. '-Q V' G- Nov. 5: Student Council chooses ' in dark horse members for Hi-Council, x. ' CFlorence Atkins-Ralph Rickenbaughj ' ,, ,' 3 Nov 6: VVork begun on Annual. - Nov 7: Book-store not open. Seven pupils censured by Mr. Drury for having no theme-paper. 3 Nov. 10: Shaker slightly salted. V . Q . 58-0. Heights made positively no NOV' 92' Tag Day! Qfle wmor un' Subs. der oat-h to have saldn Do you saw N U I k d ' M. V, , l whom them boys was? ov. f: .uc y ay. iss flrgmia , .w ' . Sale takes Chic's place in assembly. , NOV' 23' Better EHg1ehP'-1y- L' B' I . , 24- excellently characterized. W Nov. 14: The Devil's Decision . , I Csuch languagegju Nov. 24: Heights second loss. N 17 H . ht 38 U S 0 H t Lakewood, 9-6. Mud? .ov. : eig s , . . - o ' dog! Cljardon this absolutely essential b Iiovf Q6' Bookstore open OH the dot exclamationj Ot times' Nov. 19-23: Better English Week. NOV' Q83 Orpheus Chorus' Oh where, oh where are our three as- Nov. 29: Turkey! sembhes wenwqgonei Nov. 30: 79 Heights High students Q Nov. 21: Rev. Dilworth Lupton, send urgent calls for immediate medi- 1 yours for better English. cal attention. g Q14 jmp- Qomsinm-9 p 7 3 - ,S OUR ACCUNDENT EQUIPMENT L C Mm CTE 4 some Frrovvsmu Snow Br MNH- FM f' 'C5FE1f:RvA Rumi v-CT-M5 Eqixink , --A S 5 K L ' ' f - f M Q yy -1, 4 :- ff td :Y X' 'Q X Y 5 ff Q 1' 1' f,,.. 3, 1. ,r 1 t. ff 5 mf' -in .- ' 4 A f J' if l f ws' ,f-1 3 2- ' tt W .f, f . 1 -j-,Lis-'-2.-i s ,Y,,, 1 A K. 4, ei . 3 ' .I , p, A Q Ei QQQ BQQQQ ,. .-JQQQQ 1QQS JQQQLH ECDC: -JQQQ6 iQCQ3 also ls' xy V l 2oo wnodffQoc oo,.,gI THE CALDRON lgs..C0 9O C 0g Q Q 5 School Calendar for 1923 -1924 5 Q f'0IlfiIl1lf'1l It +2 el l A-1' X if -F ce ll - F A g 'gf' Q . , 5' ' 1 . , -, e ' 'l l 1 as l . Va! ' l c. sl jf' ff Ka l Q ai of l l are 2 i DECEBIBER Jan. 16: Spanish class in desperate Dec. 3: Assembly A few noticesf, attempt to Slow UP Speedy lunch' W Dec. 7: Maj. Alexander Powell. hounds- , , Q YVhy must we have so many stupid Jafl- 171 Debating Club, m'd'y9ar Q assemblies ? elect 10115- Dec. 8: Junior Class meeting. Zulu Tlalafei Assembly for the Annual- ballot decided upon. e 3 1'0U'gVI'1'- Football Banquet. U. S. swamped in basket-ball, 26-14. p Q Dec. 12: Junior Class Primaries. Heights swamped in swimming meet Q 'e I.et's have a few more candidates. by U. S. G' How to dress the hair. Instruc- Hoqjkgy game 10st to Rocky River tive assembly for boys only. girls, 5 .Dec. 13: Branson de. Cou's Dream N0 news today, Q Q Pictures. hfluch previous conjecture, Jan' 19: Heights ice-hockey team Q but enjoyed by all. . , bows to Alumni, 4-41. Dec. 21: Christmas concert. Some 1 v . ' W ,ml music. alan 24-31.: luxams. lNIany movies J 2 Buy a ticket to the Xmas Dance? Vlslted to qulet nerves- 3 r Asked 1,4-57,263 times. ' Dec. 22-Jan. 7: Library regulations released altogether. CVacationj. 5 Dec. 25: Look what I got! ff' M O Q Dec. 29: Football Dance, Three Q 'r hearts broken, one suffered temporary collapse. W I 1 JANUARY ,jig G Jan. 7: 750 pupils start doing vaca- ti0ll studying in the P.M. gg .lan 8: School again-how nice! 1:56 5 Q Jan. 14: Football letters awarded- 1 Original speeches! THHT HNNUHL PHOTO te 5 gf-EQ? QQC-EQ? QQ? BQQQG QQQL. 0QQQ6 g 990. JQQQC 9993 'Sl91 ls' f 1 gGfi CT C5C' - i055 :l?g..0O Gl ID06l 0Gg C0 C3 'w fm KW 3 behool Calendar for 1923 -1924 J O Q I 'oul1'n1wd i FEBRUARY 5, Feb. 4: Seeond term started: no Feb. 14: Valentines Day M 309 5 ft eafeteria. pupils disappointed beeause of no Q l ll. and G. Vampaign started. Valentine boxes- l Feb. 5: Vafeteria opened. Vegetables tl flaw? I under 5, salads. and desserts eritieized. em 1 5 'lr 5 dh 6 ld edm' 55 V' FII on qi . Tl I 1 X Feb. 18-22: Student easbiers-Five l . 4 ' 'mm' Prom' Ire? mirth suits for short ehange brought against ' l mvndcd' the cafeteria. .l FMP- lli flflllt- Fllflffllii 011 Aplflied Feb. 21: B. and G. Fampaign over. 4 'Z' 1,sVt'llologV. Q fy ' ' Orchestra assembly and speeeh for l, Fifth period gym elass Qfoming at Find Yourself Campaign. l l hrsl I f l 'l9 had 'lf' gym' Owmg ff' Feb. 22: No sehool. Three deaths l'ilSf'lll1ltI0ll of decorations. bv gcalping with lmtdwts U Feb. 12: Lincoln assemblygPiano I4'eb.425-Q91 Find Yourself Cam- ' f0l'llllltlllt' by 11 eb hlandell. paiglf' VVH-k, l Feb. 13: Friendship Club had Feb. 27: Excellent talk by Prohibi- 1 Mothers' and Daughters' tea. Cafe- tion Commissioner on Patriotism. No ,, K teria roof threatened with vibration. brieks thrown. He has faith. Q1 .f 3 J ,A l l . l rn C3 l l l f 1 fa? X li fi i l .l L, ff' ev l l l .l u, fr, Q ,N Q 'r IHC Hficnti-five 'NJshlfV1RNUELL'5 ORCHRSIM W W MARCH L! ff' . . . . . 3 fff Marc-h 7: Loram-Heights basketball epidemic-. Dr. Loekhart is all for S2 A game, 27-28. Too bad, Heights. vat-Cillzltiolll March 7: Girls play with same jinx U in Roeky River game, 1343. hlareh 8: Junior Hop-VMandell- Q. Mareh 8: Beware of the smallpox Stannard Urebestra. 8 .J . f 9 S 651331 , Yfwww' ii 'XQQ5 ...Q YDQQQ if 'XQQT . 'DCDQCQf1,Y,,3CQQ1i iifDCQCQfDGf QQQJ 'gb 113' c aoc-.i?oc-ioo,.s5l THE CALDRON 13s.oo o oQ,-, ocKo o vi W W i., as e., 5 5 l School Calendar for 1923 -1924 5 lbnlinuerl Y Y I fl FQ I D99 DFJCVCFS if MARCH ' Q Nlareh 17: Freshmen in evidence. Marc'h 28: Eleanor Shaw and Fred- Iuarch 19: First robin noted' eriek Child appear in costume recital. March 29: Leaders' Class Dance. luarch QI: Spring fever begms' lVIarch 28-April 7: Vacation. Every- Q Nlarch Q1-QQ: Glee Club Operetta- cage eoniined to the house and studied all farmers apply for hired help to M h 1 T ' ' Heights High Glee Club' i are 32: Lnele-Niece Dinner. APRIL -f t. 5 April ii Five Heights students my 6 expire from base deceptions of friends. April Q: Six College-Boards taken up 6 as new sport. April 7: Pain alloyed with pleasure: Back to school and Mr. Spaeight's readings from Pickwick Papers. 8 April s-101 Heights visited by seph- ' isticated and condescending alumni. April ll: Dance by 309. C0ther home-rooms invitedj fi April 12: C. A. C. Track Meet at F 1 W Piiblie Hall. A few local --iithietie j Twp .iglej i fellas. ' V K-7 'P' Q L, CT XEQQ gg HQQG DQQQ0 9994, QQQQQ 9QQi : QCDQE , .BQQQ 'ill93 li: Solmol Calendar for 1923-1924 f'0IIfl'llIII'll APRIL MAY .Xpril IS: St'Vl'l'2ll sopl1istic'11t0ll etc. Dizzy? 3: Dr:1l11z1t,ir'f'l11h Play -f .Xs Zllllllllll 1'4'q114-stvml to 111ox'c on by You Like It, by om. of tlwsl. ,ww 0lHlMSLHOUFwmllwr' playwritcs, tvilliunl R. Sllzakt--.L .Xpril I8: First h:1s0t1:1lt gfiillll' of the Spem-Q.. SCEISOII, with lv. S. -XPVH Q15 DMU lUU k5 fm' 'Hulk' lNIz1y3:Ga11110 witl1 l12lkl'XY0tNl. storm' 1'ritic'isn1s vxhaulstvxl. . ' 1 ' Bfay 9: Gzune with If S. .hllfll 2211111110 wuth hhakvr. Cl'rz1r'- UW for SIWW7- Nlziy 15: Long turdy linv. .Xpril 25: fltlllll' with Shaw. UJHHT SOME OF US NEED IN THE MORNING 1 J J J J J J 'fwffhjm - 'VF-L' 'xx 1. A f WW' 7:v O J , .W t J O 1 0 Q .JQ ,4, L X QQ4 4 D A J Lf ph ci 'W Q ,J 0 Q J 6 gm ti fn I L., OD 4 qi 3 L T x ti A N ki 1. tx Q Li 'fx t Q , 01 A IT 1 t t 1 a. gn v 9 Hgtwtgc CYq 5 UQ TG6.5, ' T ,,,,QC C? ?FQ' ?l?l?G as .St THE CALDROX lge 1 LG x77 L. ' 6 O fo . 1 f 95 1 1 'Y li ,-.P N fmtwiiiiw x ,ur 1: i '37 1 , A HJU 1 fem 57 cl X O C C Scrimmage IS lg Success 55 . . , 55 Heights annual football dance ran Francis Paton and Harold Ixneen, who Q riot on December twenty-ninth, and were trying hard to find The won a decided victory over the many Tong-hest Plat-e in Tgwnf' in attendance. 1 Tl . . After the refreshments were served, 4' le decorations, punch, music, and h d , d programs certainly did credit to the t en? was Wore amimg HH morn efforts of the members of the Hi-Y. making until the hand of the sleek ll who were in charge of the arrange- aPP1'03ffhed the hour 'lf tW9lV9 and Q .M - .. - - . . , . ' . , . . . 0 ments. 51mmp obllgmgly lent hm showed that bunday had almost ar- services in giving some cheers f0r the rlved, tlns causing the close of one of hoys of honor, and then a skit was put the finest and most successful foothall on hy two of our famous alumni, dances in the history of Heights High. l ' 6 S e n 1 o r r o m Sixty-eight times two people with dent testimony of the hard work of the high enough spirits for one hundred committee, which was composed of si and sixty-eight times two were one Lawrence lNIiter, Jean Charlesworth, factor in all of the many which made Florence Atkins, Catherine Lane, the Spnior Ifroul of 3 ripping, xvebgfel' and Rillllll RlCkCIl- howling success. To he true. we did ballfllll- , feel rather dressed um 'ind even the . . 7 , I ' , At first in our formal attire we felt old gvni, had it heen ahle to see itself, . . . , , rather dignified, but when our well- would have exclaimed like the old 1 v , U chosen orchestra. btroinherg-Xocorni, woman in the nurserv tale, Lack-a- 7 . . . uf , ' , N started its exciting career, we forgot P mercy on us! this surely can t he I. - Q , , , . , to wonder whether our ties were i l'or, impressive chandeliers with - - , straight or whether our hankies were streamers and manv-colored lights - , ' , at the right angle. , were in place of the usual lofty illu- . . v ,, v ' Sig lllllliltllllll and ox er our heads hung lhere w as a grand march of course ,Q cherry and white streamers, an evi- and later the president of the class n J af' J Jw WJQQEKW,,dj-Eigjiuf' UQQF,Qf.,,aJQiQQ'V ' ,JQQCW Qjebifsff' 'fEuemCE elm le eil THE CALDRON 13 g0 0 CC ,, 4, C6 C C CCCg O -S O C I E T Y 4 8 Q S e n 1 o r Pr o m 6 Continued J threw confetti and serpentine from And then after consuming much l the balcony to such an extent that punch and many little iced cakes, we dancers swished around with whole danced our last dance and trailed ,V caravans of litter streamers trailing home, fans ill Olll' hair, whistles ill Olll' A 2 along behind, and the whole gym was hands, confetti down our necks, tired Q colored with them. but most obviously happy. Q Q Junior Hop Startled citizens of the Heights sat Florence Atkins and Al Bingham 'N up and took notice at the unearthly were pronounced the lucky winners in V hour of 8:00 P.M. The reason? Mostly, the classic art, and the prize was said A 8 the plaintive, well-known strains of with flowers. The less lucky took 1 When I Fell in Love With You as breath and courage anew and once 4' rendered by the Mandell-Stannard more tripped the light fantastic. Time Scholastic Syncopators with the aid was called while Shrimp again of t,uxes. The place? The gym, of appeared, this time to throw kisses se course, disguised by floor lamps and from the balcony. A miniature foot- 3 chairs. The occasion? To be sure! ball game ensued, while members of Q The Junior Hop. the sterner sex scrambled valiantly for y Orders having been given to arrive the lucky paper Covered Candles' 8 promptly at 8:00, the first arrivals At 11:30, we all trooped over to con- 2 'y strolled in about half an hour later. gratulate Leonard Flynn, Estelle Ford, et Within an hour, the best part of the Eunice Hoak, Anna Bundy, Dick crowd had arrived and Shuffling, Braggins, Bert hlitchell, Wayne Collie. D Finale Hops, and all their little Katy Albin, and Sterling Cannon, e 8 brothers and sisters were in full swing. this assembly of celebrities comprising As a novelty, an elimination dance the committee. The evening was was held with Shrimp Phillips and his voted a success and the meeting b lusty voice as umpires. adjourned, 3 . 8 . gf, my ii :MM 'P ll' VT'-if .-, 2 ti limi 7 3 I , ml ' ' ii. i ff Q. A ' 0' +- f c-. 3 i f f' 1,' S J 'll !, Y . ,p a w -, fi. Qui- It ,I 55 gg W 'A 1 at M 2 4 lin- xl tf?yw' gf' I ,.. -lf lk ' ' ,.1, Y - ,A ' Hu ll dw Jo -ooo? woofnn wooot toot aooot toot iooot , tooo 'Gl96lS' SGC'E J0 O 0...g,gI THE CALDRON 1gg..CC Q C 6 Q PW Q, 'i 5 E S Q U 3 3 I 6 0 Q 9 W 5 7 S Q 5 as 6 3 Q Q 8 Q 3 6 0 Q W J O C9 Q Q Q, QA Q O Q Q U W L Q: OD Q 6 ,Q qw 6 6 0 QD T . 6 cm Q QQQG BQQQE Q 3996 MDQQQQ QQQFN' 96065 BQQLQ QQCQQG' iT-Q93 97 NQY 9 g6J'5 ' 6 +-,6 -66..Qgf THE CALDRUN 13,6664-6 6L 66g Q Q 3 H W 3 1 6 MMM 1 6 H 4 I W WE p , P 6 6 xg 11 6 Q 6 5 W M i H aw H 3 6 'M M Q , 1 'E 1 WNW VQ N 6 M11 U r 33 - x - M 6 Q Y Ii 51 1 4 WF, 5 1 NW 3 2 f 1 1 ' VU m 6 w !n 1 ,IV il! 6 ' ? m 5 .E - 6 1 We 'V 4 E ww. N Ei I vi ' I I W Y W ull' Q ir w - , is W! 1 F-X A V M6 6 N 1 :Mt I . I 3 ' I Q :IN- , 1 5 , 1 Ex w i X H41 i xg il B6 ! 5, M 5 1' 72 1 4 NN E ...W : w ' v E i Us N I I I 9+ ? N 6 I ' 6 6 6 g 1 I ,ig Q 6 l 1 1 we W LJ L, 6 i WNW 6 Q LE 6 6 Q 6 LJ L 661 QQDE, 2662 DQQQL, e662 66661 9662 UQQQL 6666 021199 IP' V 8 ,Wx TC QQ r1w E ix 111 5 CPCL' ?.f0 Q ?QCg CU Q -v 'FV 5 4 0 0 t b 21 l l 6 Q Q F3 5 Q Q ff, 55 In nl l QF, 5 rrd ,W - 595 55 fr, CD ,,, 1 fx lfllfwl' Row: Russ: Km-on, Uswallcl Illfllllflflll, Ywllizlllls, Morton. Q-1 Srzwuxn Huw: Mr. .xI'lllll2ljIl'. Plniz. f'nnnnlly. Flyllll. frilly. Vrowvll. Nlr. l,0XV2llll. Vllllllfll Row: lllllgfllillll. L2lY'llll1'I'. Prmwvrs. YYl1iHlvs4'y, S1'lllTlllIll'i, Conlon. 6 rrp l ol'n'l'll Huw: lmvl. link:-r, Norris, Smiill, llrxvingtou. Nlitvr Cjlflllflgffl. Q Zi -iw 4 3 l J.- QA 5 '1 ffl cr W K nfl l Z4 fi in.. WW! Llll... gf . Q gi , . LlA.b Q l l ww 5 A 6 ff ' 3 , 'N I f, .. ? all 2 .1 lil lt! VAIII-JY Osw.-um LICXYIS Q l Guan! lluurrl fl'41pl.l ll. li. iii lifglnlr--J Y fglblrbbuw? HZFJLJV QQQQQ ,, g,,,5QQfii-.. , ,9QQ7CQ'f-, ..5QQ5.'i- YJQMQQ AOQQ gl IOOI3' gGG 6 O OO C :lge.,CC6 C6 CO COCg , , f 6 Q ef K. CO G CO 6 A - 6 6 Q Q 6 6 Q Q 6 6 Q Q C6 CRILLY ROSE KNEI-:N 5 5 Il. B. Center Cen ter 3 Q Q 5 5 Q Q 6 6 Q Q Q 6 6 Q Q W CROWELL FLYNN CQNNOLLY Q 2 End F. B. Q. H. Q Q 6 Q66e 96666 9666 -66666 9666 M3666 966 96664 9663 '3B:IOI lg' 6 6 Q N 1 EOG 6 G G0 CO 04' Ch! ,,'OQg 92 Q A. i Q Ci Tx L 5 O U . r v as Q Ta K7 pw yi ? J L11 K if 2? ,N i Q I.. E U 8 I:.f?lll!Vll'1l! NIQIQTQN PLATZ Q I WM 7 l If' Emi Ki W L- C 53 I' D ' I Q, L O , W 1 4 r F J ra i Q A ea U ' xYILI.lAMS Bmmmm IM rn. S2 ' Uurlrrl II, lf, Q, lf, F W I 193536. 99996 3996 ' --DQDQDQDQ AQQL, --.bi-DQQQ 59996- , DQQQQQL.. a.QQ3 -41 roll'-2' CgGG G G 6G..ggI C 1ge0COC0 C QD C0g Football Review 5 .I Q HOUGH elation over Heights' foot-ball record was moderated by two important qv Q losses, the eight Heights' victories never-the- Q less, constituted a praiseworthy attainment. Q' Heights started the season with three consecu- 6 tive victories. In the opening game, Chagrin L1 Q Falls was defeated 4041, a promising start for Heights. The second victory was over Lincoln, Q conquered by a score of 1047. In this game, the 6 Heights' squad extensively employed forward in passing, the effective use of which play won the admiration in later games. At the Chardon game, Heights added to her former victories 1 5 over a rural neighbor with a score of Q1-0. Q VVith the dedication game at Shaw, came the first defeat. If victories in school spirit are of Q value, however, Heights' students produced a 5 good score, for through effective co-operation a W Q block H of colored kerchiefs was formed in the 5 stands. Though it is proper for the visiting team to do the dedicating with a score in its W HHVBH AHMITAGE favor, Heights was unconventional and lost 3 with a 31-0 score. This was a shock to Heights' pride as hopes had been high. Akron North lost to Heights by the close score of 7-6. Flynn starred in at this game. 2 Lima's last year victory was avenged for the game ended 2643, favoring ' Heights. K2 The contest with Akron Vvest proved a real conHict. Each team displayed 5 solid walls to the other's bucking. With the score of 9-6, Heights took the LJ Q game, only after a moment of intense excitement, when the opponents were close to the goal. The timekeeper's whistle was the saving grace for Heights. Heights played the tune of 58'-0, to which the Shaker squad danced. The Q game was an exact antithesis to the Akron WVest conflict. Though a muddy field furnished an impediment on the U. S. field, Heights Q avenged the former victory of U. S. over her, when she brought forth a score K6 of 38, while U. S. had not one point. It is with regret that we mention Cahenis Q Q misfortune of having his leg broken in this game. Heights' second defeat came at Lakewood's hands. This game was won l only by a field goal. 3 Under Armitage's coaching, fine material was developed. Lewis' end runs W were a source of joy in many games. Morton, at tackle, was a pillar of iron. Q' ts 3094 90996 HC-D94 DQQQ4 EQQG motor roof BQQCQC eoog 'il103T3' 0 G GG..5il C :l9,,.0O 0 0 Football Review Q fY0Il,f'ill1ll'll '5 Platz was considered one of the best ends in the city, and to Oswald, captain, is due credit for his fine fulfillment of guard. Q as Mention should be made of the fine work of Larry lVIiter about whom was heard nothing but praise for his execution of the manager's duties. His two able assistants, VVayne Collie and hlorgan Baker should also be commended. 6 And Mr. Dewald comes in for his share of the credit for his usual fine handling Q of the business end. In conclusion, we should devote much more time to the praise of our splen- did coach. Hub Armitage has turned out a fine, powerful machine his first Q year and, what is more, he has endeared himself to the team, and to the whole Q student body. Cheer Leaders Goimoiv AND SHRIMP ' l u-. Q6 999394 ' A995 99990 9QXDL HCQQQV- ' HQQ4 HQCQQQS 39693 'gIIO4Ig' Q .- -Y 4-swag? SGO 0 Oy'?'T i -GGQQIZ THE CALDRQN 1g+.00Cf-4'0i56X-A bg Q Q i Q, E-9 cc Q Q W 6 0 CQ Q ., Q W 6 Q Q O .. Q 6 0 Q Q 6 E2 Q V I E5 2 Q A ., Q 3 Q I ., Q 0 Q 0 Q 0 so Q G 6 G Q Q 6 CSQQQ Qcwcyl QQQQ JQQQ6 BQQG J 99005 H6996 90994 900 'QIIOS law X W as 1 l 6 ?lo51? -,od-L-Toc oo THE CALDRON 131. oo s o N o, oog CQ V, 10 C Q B a s k e t b a l l Q l 1 . 1b . 7 l 1 l .1 6 FJ W 1 l l 1 l 101 is Q l 1 E5 3 fi ' 1 1 1 5 ri c 1 Q fa .. VARSITY BASKETBALL E2 FxRs'r Row: Flynn, Morton fm., Linderme. I SECOND Row: Gordon, Zellers, frowell, Bingham. I THIRD Row: Oswald, Sc-hoales Cllanagcrl, Cross. W 6 Q IOIQQER 5912 C'X4V ONSIDERING the standard of Quad athletics, taking second place in Basketball is nothing of which' the Heights athletes need to be ashamed. And the rest of our 1924 cage record is equally admirable. C U . . . . . . Finding itself, after several l1l1IIllll3.tlI'lg defeats at the start of the year, the Q l squad swept through three straight victories, including those over University and Shaw. Stopped at Lakewood bv a most superior brand of playing, 1,1 C . W . . 0 CQ Heights lost her next encounter too, but recovered in time to defeat U. S. and Q Shaw for a second time. The second Lakewood game proved to be a battle of the giants and we led with a score of 14-13 when only three minutes of 2 play were left. But superior playing and better condition showed up and the N' final tally was 21-14 against us. The season closed with two more defeats. at l 1 2 QQQF XEQQVQ 9995 DQDQDQ4 91296- DQQQF- 'UQCDf 'DCQQCQQ 'JQCQQ1 01110711 EQ0 6 O GG...5gI THE CALDRON 1gg..OC0 C'D CO COCg in n- Q fl0IIfI.llIll'd 65 if Q fs 6 GJ 3 3 4. en is Q F U 3 e Q LIGHTWEIGHT BASKETBALL 6 Q Q Q, Fms'r Row: Phillips, Sawhill, Reese. Sr-:COND Row: Sinclair, Gordon, Hartman Ullanagvrj, Laronge, Zlll1Illt'I'Ill2lIl 7 , , ,. . 3 8 lumix Row: xxllllilI11S, Perelman, Conn, Needham, Barbour. g Ei my nhl! CD6 fi fp, Nogffdrnv fs 53 5 TAP ca The good showing of the lightweight team gives rise to the hope for much material for next year's varsity. rl l , 6 Q lvlembers of the regular squad who deserve special IIl6Iltl0Il are Oswald, Q C'ap't. Mortoli. fross, Bingham, and Linderme. The outstanding players on the lightweight team were Laronge, Reese, Phillips, and Sawhill. 6 Coach DIX eomes in for his share of Commendation, too, for he developed and built up this team. gill BKQQJC-36, BQQQ BQQQQ 9996 DCQCQCQG QCQQG QQCQQG X3 1. 08 5 BasketbaH Q e-, i K.. 3636jC--TDCj 6D 69Q..5gl THE CAALDRQQN l3g,,ooc ..iCC'2- '-'pOC.i 1iJOCg Q 9 f Q, B a s e b a l l Q Q C? Q l I l l r l Q2 A gr ,, Ll ti Ol QF Q ,W - V iii O ff ff! 'W rl ,A 1 , fi if LA t., 31 Ot YN l Ius'r Row: H. Linflerme HHH, bln-flilskey, Zellers, Gross. Reese. fr N l Suvoxn Row: Vounolly. lIllL'l, l . Linrlerme. Tnnzn Row: llingham. Lee. Kim-kenbauggli, C.lltlllIlg!'I'j K O 7 it 21 l v , , , , . . . . . I 1 IX A 512.-XHUN marked at times by playing of the most disappointing sort 1 2 and then by flashes of real major league ability, the Heights baseball team by of 1993 was c-onsiclerefl successful. It was consiclerecl that, not, by virtue of w f . . . . x nnnnnerable victories. nor beeause of much glory and many trophies won- 'N but because of the sheer ability of the players and their eagerness to play the game and to fight for Heights. I 1 The following review of Heightfs baseball season, with only four victories, . f ,l and all the Quad games lost, does not fulfill expectations. 5 5 O , h,4 ITU QQQDC ,JQQQ6 ..-JQQJ5-,K JQQQQ.. QQQQ, -EQQQQYTNAQEQC-33, ,QQQLJ W, QQQQ wgiwgig- X f me-:go ooqgl THE CALDRON :lg,,.C30 0 e Baseball Continued The scoring of the U. S. game seemed to be weighed upon a very unsteady balance, for Heights was in the lead no less than four times. In spite of Stewart's airtight pitching, U. S. succeeded in gaining nine runs, while Heights lost with eight. The Shaw game was also a Quad loss. The rallies of Height's batsmen in the eighth and ninth, which brought in six runs, came too late. Bingham's outfielding in this game deserves mention, though the poor batting and base- running of Heights account for the low score. The tide turned with the victory over Painesville, wherein Heights won, 7-5. Gordon's pitching aided greatly in this game, and Rheinhalter's swatting of three doubles is outstanding. Again came a loss to Heights in the W. R. U. game. Though Connolly, Imel, Rheine, Gordon, and Imel played well, the W. R. U.'s played better, as witnesses the score of 6-3. Lakewood was a 7-5 victor in a game which was 1-1 for five innings. Here Gordon, straining his side, was made incapable of any more base-ball for the season. Spencerian was subdued by a score of 14-12. Imel's catching was very good here, and Gross worked well at the key-stone, pulling in several one-handers. In the second Shaw game, Heights received 14- to Shaw's 16 points. Red Imel drew attention when he scooped up a swift ball, and threw it, getting his man, all without stopping to gain his equilibrium. Gross made a fielding gem in the second Lakewood game when he pulled in a liner bare-handed. As Height's playing was but fair, another Quad game was lost, 7-3. The Central game was a farce. Dix played twenty-four men, and Central fanned eighteen of these. After Dix's order that all fanning would have a period of rest, the boys bucked up, and got 9 to Central's 8 runs. I Ralph Rickenbaugh proved a most efficient manager with Dick Lee and Burr Brower his assistants and hir. Gardner faculty manager. tt sl- A ll tt li gf?-JI'-N' -5-as-QL -..C . A 4giUoe.- ' Ti!5gX'ffL-llib' - ' X '--1' lj? kj fffg -2'Z,n'xC 'f - -- 2 7 Q, v .4935 Q95 AQQC-Ds ,QQC-EG AQQQ6 AQQ- KJQCQE FQQL. ECQQQ5 BQCQCQ all role EgODi C' 'fli-i1Qi'T'DCU0 QC CC' 'JCC CCg U Q K1 F i li 5 r a c Q 0 .X . 6 f ld 'C 63 W OD T F 4 s ul TN ri rv Q .E ., TD 0 G. J 0 Q5 i 5 ii Q fa Q C7 l F J is L.. 0 0 FIRST Row: Sampliner, Perkins. l Si-:coxn Row: Joxns, l'lhnan, Sherman, Sienna. Larimer. , 'FHIRD Row: Hayes. Nlandell, Norris, Eastman. x L, Foi'nTu Row: Lewis, Armitage Cfbaclzl, Took Cjlznzuyvrl. Smith, Baer. Q F HE forecasts for the 1923 track season gave rise to the prediction that c. lady luck would smile on the Heights team. But she didn't- she laughed K, fb . . . 'Q .9 right out loud. And a heartless, cynical laugh it was. too. .is Q l First, by depriving the squad of a track and a suitable place to practice, and then by allowing an injury to Archie Lewis, the mainstay and backbone fl of the Heights speed-demons, before the important meets of the year, Dame Fortune cancelled the championship possibilities of the Black and Gold. If i . l l , . 1 Not through any lack of experienced men nor through any lack of good material was the showing of the team as poor as it, was. In fact, in the indoor Ml f track meets. particularly the F. A. C. contest. the speedsters were able to hold their own with the best in Greater fleveland. But when they came up against teams who had worked and practiced on real tracks in the outdoor meets, they could not measure up. tu f r Heights did not return victor from any of the five meets she entered. i p 1 l l 5' Ky for o ' 3 , 7 M , , . . U - K, W Y 5 .nY Y C9 L J J J J if , 532 QQQR2? 39991 EQQG ,li J 4 If EQJQQ f-Slit 1 I so ,oc' ,oo..,5I THE CALDRUN 1g,..0O 0 Track Confinued In the Glenville-Heights-West Tech meet, Heights received second place with 45 points. Archie Lewis, however, brought in 20 of these when he secured the low and high hurdles, high jump and 100 yard dash. Platz gained a second in the 440 after a fight, and Goldhammer was barely beaten in the 220. Sienna augmented the score by a third and fourth in the 220 hurdles. Lewis again starred by producing 23 of the Heights' 41 points at the Shaw meet. That Shaw nearly doubled Heights, score by gaining 72 points, may be attributed in part to the poor representation in weights. Sherman, however did get second place in the discus event. Ulman deserves praise for first place in the pole-vault. At the Lakewood Relay meet, Heights did little scoring. Lewis here fairly represented Heights by seconds in 120 high hurdles and the high jump. Lewis and Heights were synonomous in the annual meet at Case, for all Heights' representatives but Lewis were eliminated in the preliminaries. Heights gleaned 6 points here. In the Quad Meet, Heights harvested 8, which gave her last place. Lewis strained a tendon in the 120 high hurdles, but this did not keep him from winning the low hurdles. Norris took fourth place in the half mile run, Sherman put the shot 37 feet. The managership was capably handled by Arlin Cook who had Henry Smith and Ford 1Vatson for aids. The record of the team is no reflection on its ability and spirit. The whole squad, as well as Mr. Armitage, who proved most capable in his first chance at coaching a Heights' Varsity, deserves great credit. On a cement side- walk, you may raise blisters but you canit lower track records. I In T 119 4 .uH QW' 1' ery J Q19 1 2 Q Xislinn Heights inal' 5 . Q 99hg 59992 9996 99995 3994 49996 5994 99995 99 -31.1112- l sf '4i f'X 'iii rl goo oi+: 0!1 'f3Q ,ggi THE CALDRON lgsooiii-iot'l1oJcf-.,oo5 CO Q 9 '5 s ' ' f C5 t W1 m m 1 n g e a IH Q Q E 6 Q Q l I Q Q Q Q FX 'A , l ef K9 Q Q 9 9 Ji 0 l l Q, Q CQ Q Q Y Q Q , , i I I-uis'r Row: NN eaver, llogen, Bentley. Sricoxn Row: Davies, Stillman, Stannard t.llIlllllgP7'j, Moonan, fannon. Q, 'l'uIlm Row: Tronstein, Sturgeon, Yvilliams, futter. Q xg W, . i , l Q5 Q. Q' J Q V41 tbl , . . . . , . lil ' Hlu two victories of the SVVIIIIIHIII f team over East Tech and Glenville 4 ta res Jectivelv, mifht have been auvmented, had the team had student L . 5. is , , Q support proportionate to that bestowed on other activities. l Hogen, captain of the team. 50 and 100 yd. performer, scored high in the Glenville meet and won a second at East Tech. In the 50 yd. event of East l l hi . . . l Q l'ech, Cannon brou ht a first, and in the other meets re- proved his su Jerior if hi gs lt-li 0 speed. High point scoring was given by Sturgeon in the back-stroke events, and Tronstein. in the Glenville 111eet brought forth a first place in the back- Q gg stroke. In the Tech meet. lYilliams won a second bv his sixtv-six foot :lun fc. ll' Q ' ' '! KH his record plunge for the season. Williams' plunging ability has been no 1 mean su J mort for the team. W eaver. l1ll1 Jlltliill diver, won his event at East ' l i l l Tech. and Uharnley made a second in it. lveaver was Height's mainstay in ' l Eg diving, and hc usually produced a first place. His superior diving IS evinced ,is .., ' l l i i I l l l l to E 9 , . , ,, , . , . '4 L5 QV? M., JJLQQV , ?QS !JQlJ'C WQQ1 , 3952355 i s L dsyigmyit Ygjilljtl Qgilsigw f o o oo.,gf THE CALDRON :l?,.99 9 3 Swimming Team Continued from his victory in his event won hands down in the Quad meet, wherein Heights ranked fourth. Cutter, Bentley, Whittlesey, and Moonan, winner of the first place in the breast-stroke at U. S., also merit commendation for their support of the team. It is also notable that Heights took fourth place in the city meet. Opposing all of the scholastic teams of greater Cleveland, the showing was unexpectedly strong. Williams, breaking his own record, won the plunge and Weaver lived up to his name of Champ when he Walked off with the diving cham- pionship. Y With the return of these members next year, Heights may look forward to a more successful performance, resulting from this year's successful exper- ience. 2 2 SQA f'X lf, K f- Q I , si x, X f Q. A , ' F'-N Q xl L Al. 5 ' . i Q x, ,,,. f' Q P .cf 1 96-1mg7999hagi994 A999f- ' M5996 A9996 A991 i 49999 9 l114l rG0 GG.,5iI C 1gg,,G0 Tennis Team 400 3006 UQ? GGL -006 ,GGJQ 9066 0656 96006 QGQQ ,662 5605 ,GODS 96636 9 5 afmggszems, gag in-:gag Q m2.H,1 'S 72.Q-v- cpm: Q :Uq:: rf9 ::8Uq T ' 3552.9-Q Qc mrwp ,.,,':r'c'oI5 -, O ,Q ,dm -5' 5Ug 51 '4f'-'Dq3 19'5'0Cc- H gfsemmmss-.ff awawm 5 mo '- -To ' :.-2E.vQS':?S'2g1Qg,'fa.:'Eg5'Qj,:NfgE. ., '-7,5 :gbg-1-e-pg,:S .m'4m:n55ggD 3 e2sa:1s,Sg:L.saE Sagas? 'Q -1- ' H' '-'FD 'UdO-sgge-v-35.23 U, CDC! Ulf-1 7' OOQOH' 5 '85'Q'5s'af2 Qiifsmsafh' 51 -l'g 's:f'f'+ 2:1?o.D5 5 2 X, g'.:f'o..E gdb ...5 co' D-E-Q S 2 2143.25-,359-5 9? g.-.wsaiyg Q mg-one O v-559' O D , an F-9'-vw Q9 FF 4 f'D9'e4O9,4-:fb gg: f-+.E.. rb5'D 2O in Q- CLE? in-3msrUs'w f 2552255 wwam8ffF'5 5c:.w2. 25g5- U35-Ogmcqgg-3 6 395553233 I1f'f-55535321 O O x mm' O 99 f 255-23555 355525525 Q-Q.,-1099.-c'o,Q 'T' 99 0 ,-.ox Q-rg-:mpg Eggifgg-asf? :QS V so o ,.. 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CALljRON lgeneuegfllgf-jfvg1QQg 6.1 5 1' l V l ' T L b l i ' ' 16 7 ,, u' s lrst tam as et al tl in 4 sw vi l fu W ' W K? is rs l t l l rf ls TZ 5' , fe .J l ?g 1 it l 1 l i I l ft 3 ,jx l en tt it Ti S X 1 1 i l l l i A ff, X4 1 t .laskaleek Kink i l J Wells Wilson t.lltlllll!fl'l'l liergami tfillllfllil Squier .A 1 :N f for-so is-hneider tfapluinl Bundy O' , I-X l , . . . . . 1 l I CJNIC vietory, one tie and three defeats rounds the reeord ot the girl 5 N X Q basketball team of 1924-. l'raet,iee started early in the fall under the ' H tutelage of Voaeh llergami and in November the varsity squad of thirty was X7 s . . x ' I eliosen, training onee a week. , . , . . .. W i i l lulmibeth 5t'llll6'ltl0I' was elected eaptam and .lane W ilson manager. X ' l , . . . . . X- the former playing her tlurd year of varsity basketball worked out both at L ff 1-enter and guard, while the latter played forward until injuries foreed her 2. l . . . , -w l out a few days Jrior to the o menm -' ot the season. i l . t ' P' W l Heights played the initial eontest with Roc-ky River on the west side , l Q floor January 18, 1924, losing by a elose I6-I4 eount. ln their next eueounter. la fy that with Bedford. whieh was played at home February llth, our team eame li l i I i ., ki lf Q ? N in J 1 2 J Ui-Jwi ' Y -Jill: Q, ,, Walilv , W YEQQ'-35 3 Jiifif -Mtxvi ' -'Juli Uglll 1612 gooii-na ,o?+3oo,,,5gI THE CA.XLD1ifjN jgs,,CQ O 'fX Cf Q, FN , l Second Team Basketball O f'onlz'11m'1l 5 Y out on top with their only success of the sea- J son C23-202. Anna Bundy and Bessie Corso gg put up great offensive work as forwards. T On February Q9th the Heights girls traveled 1 to South Euclid and held their opponents to el an 8f8 score, in a fast game. But the return game with Rocky River a week later was the X 1 outstanding conflict of the season. After 5 keeping the lead for most of the game, thc gl opposition broke loose in the final seconds and Q lcd hy their left forward defeated us 1343. The 1 I final game at Bedford was also lost 20412. C ?, 1 Q1 C Q Q FN i l J Q, 6 no 1 I l 9 kff fi 5 X , ' 1 l C 1? 1 I r if 1 5 i i Q, fl l l K Wliitacrc MuH5ley Potter Bergami Cl 'onclll Putnam ' 1 Peck Ford Clhptainl Hunt l Hopkins S Q. f, Qimige OG CD EQQV -JQQQDV BQQ5 BQQQC BQCQQ QQQQG DQQ. 9QQQf -'DQS gG6 C?Ci':DGD f'EO THE CALDRUN iIgg,,OCO O 0Qg Q o ., as Gi rls, Basketball Team 5 5 Q Q I l071fl'II1I1'll EIGHTS doesxft know that it harbors a reeord-breaker within gl its walls. Archie may be a world-beater for carrying the pig- skin, while Red may be a whiz for getting it over, but Anna Bundy sure 1-an put the ball in the basket. It is quite a feat to toss the ball in the loop 329 times in succession without so much as a single miss. is yet Anna Bundy established this record. That is why Heights believes Anna is the most ac-eurate shot in the eity. And who is there to dis- pute it? QP Yvfzz 4 K9 CD Q ,ps Girls' Swimming Team to Q? 4 , 53 6 CO Q5 W O fa U 67 i at 53 S f., as 53 5 Q 6 53 e Sv ,N Q Lazarus Einstein Burr Selmeider vt if Quinn Yan Fleet Russell Snowclen Q ff! Plough Yan Horn Rosenfeld Foote Percy F C .llanngrrj fl 'aptrzinj f 5 5 E? f5fJXOVf '1 ., BQECDQ? .W ,7DQfJF' ,, i3QODC3L,,.. 30595 -, BQ-DQQGiQf '3lQQCfA ,KWEQQQG1 AWAIDQQQ '-Slll 1 8 KD OF Q 9660 3 6 Q .. 5 i' Q oo f,o poCfiioo,,,gj THE CLALDRON jg,,,oo o votfF4-iso O rf, All ws l 5 'fi W 1 umwik Q Q STONE VVINS APPOINTMENT :ALUMNI EVENT IS GREAT SUccEss To HAMARD CRIMSON All the old-timers who returned 5 Heights 'QQ stuck out their chests over Christmas and attended The S2 again when VVilfred Stone was an- Scrimmagef, the annual Football g nounced as Assistant Editor of the Dance, voted it Cmentally at leastj a Harvard Crimson. great success. This event which is W To make the Crimson there is an held always during Christmas vaca- 3 eleven weeks competitive tryout or tion, to allow the alumni to attend, e endurance contest of solne kind and was given December twenty-ninth Stone staggered through a winner. by the Hi-Y Club. Some of the elite Bill', is entitled '10 all the Credit attending were: Herrick, Peck, Stone, Y possible, as making the staff of this Hoak, Paton, Kneen, Dunlap, Mc- 3 paper in the Sophomore year is con- Comb, and Othgrg, The Hi-Y Com- Q sidered one of the honors of the scho- mittee in Charge wagg Ralph Rig-ken- ' lastic life of Harvard and it is an honor baugh, Chairman, Lawrence Miter, which comes only after grinding com- and VVebb Blandell, petition. Stone is also a member of the C5 Debating Council at Harvard. ---- 'R'- Q 'b CORNELL IS DEISTOR T0 HE1onTs ..-.,-- At Cornell they say he just about Q owns the school, and well they might. C63 For one to be a star on such a team e J H Y N v . , , as Cornell had is assuredly an honor, LST ONE or OLE GRADLiATEs b I . .u U ut when that one man is picked as To cite what Heights is making of an end on one of the All-American X, its graduates we will pick one John selections, he surely would deserve 8 Crarner '20, now attending Reserve. all the credit he might derive. Three C Johnny was prominent in baseball and years football at Heights under Mr. tennis at first, but gradually turned his Orr and Mr. Dix, and then under the interest to journalism, and now is a famous Gil Dobie gave Heights a 5 member of the Annual Staff, a member place in the athletic foreground. This Q of the Red Cat Staff, the new Re- was Harold Kneen's second year on l serve humorous publication, sports the Cornell varsity and he is due for editor of the Reserve lVeekly, and was another. Kneen is not only upholding recently elected to Sigma Delta Chi, Heights on the athletic field, however. ij the honorary journalistic society. In He was chosen as one of the two rep- Q addition to this, he has also been ad- resentatives from Cornell to represent A mitted to that select group of key that school at the Intercollegiate Con- wearers, Phi Beta Kappa. ferences, held at the University of .J VVe take John just as an example. Pennsylvania. Cornell had charge of 8 Heights has helped others do this and athletics, and Kneen well deserves A more. credit for his appointment. E2 QQCQKT-'WEQQCQQ BQC-DG HJQQQX BQQQ QQQQH BCQQL 9QQCC'fQQ Ugllrlg ig- 851G 6D C'E' .C'EC'9..iQI: 15+.,99 9 9 9s5 Q e A l u m n 1 9 V' l'zmtinucd Hi-:im-11's lh1AY BE REPRESENTED IN HEIGHTS GAINS HoNoR AT AMHERST lk OLYMPIC , , - E The class of Q4 claims honor to Remember that swimming team of distinction as having the best editor 1922? Two members of that team are of the Black and Gold, Fred Taft: now being touted as possible parti- and we all imagine that the class of cipants in the world's greatest sport- '25 of Amherst College claims distinc- ing events, the International Olympic :tion in having Kingsley Taft 21 as Gaines. Westgn 0f the Class IASSlSt3,I1t Ed.ll',0l' of the AIIlllel'Si, Stll- of 'Q3, and Melvin Morse 'QQ are the dent- Taft IS 9-ISO 2 Ulelllbel' of the aforementioned athletes. Lord Jeff board and'belongs to the Q Heights was once before represent- Phi Kappa PS1 fl'ii'Cel'I1ltX. ,. ed, during the war when Mr. Haga- men, head of the Industrial Arts Dept. ---m-- of Heights, and erstwhile Ohio State track man was one of the judges. lf ANOTHER EDITOR 2 :heie Yffuths hare Tflccessffg an alien' David Russell '22, who came to 'liz db we .opef 'EZ ul? e' f gy Heights late in his high school career, W1 . e Sfvlmmmg or e onor 9 t e is making a name for himself at the I ghltid Styles' ashttfy Encilldlcll for University of Pennsylvania. Besides Q mg lst Orse. if t e as eny being a member of the baseball team, Mountain Association record for the he has won a place for himself as Q hffast Stroke and twwtwenty' untll Assistant Editor of the Pennsyl- Ixlmball came and took the two-twen- vanian n the campus daily ty record away from him. Kimball, i ' who swam third to Johnny Weismuller - Q at Chicago last year, also holds a semi-national record in the hundred. KEEP HEIGHTS REPUTATION CLEAN -'----- A. W., and H. W. Benjamin, both . V T Q ,V X of Heights '17 are now joint owners of 8 BROWN AKES FIRST bmp one of Cleveland's best laundries. The pmverbial first Step in the With the aid of their father, when they business world, was taken by one more were through School- they Set UP the of the Heights graduates. Edgar Peerless Laundry, and are now busily 8 Brown, Heights ,18 and Kenyon 'QQ engaged keeping Cleveland clean. has just started as a manufacturer of These are the kinds of Successes We springs in Cleveland. We wish him hke to hear about' the best of luck. S H A H CUPID Buss' ERRIHX A GAIN. IN ARNLSS The bachelor ranks among the Wiar.Horse Herrick '22 returned Heights alumni are rapidly thinning. Q to Michigan in February after work- Some of the Seniors were happily ing a semester because of illness. VVe surprised to hear of the Berwald- surelylwere glad to see Bud return Dunlap, Hogen-Phelps, weddings. since it is quite dangerous .to the These marriages give some of us still varsity teams, when the alumni teams in school, encouragement that maybe have such talented material around she will yet. Our best wishes to the oose. newlyweds. Q70G 9Q9L A993 KEQQQ s 0995! Q9995 i99Q A9996 L -311.012- W as 1 gooc ofTT-o.-' ,oo,,,5I THE CALDRQN 13,..oo oi-io ooo Q 3 3 A l u m n 1 5 Continued Tl-us YEAR's VVEDDINGS CAN You REMEMBER? Q Beyla Rimanoczy '19 Halter's green socks? g Marguerite Crayford '19 Military training? Dorothy Hogen '19 Miss Whittler? Gordon Phelps '19 That first football team? Dorothy Cain '19 Harriet Roth's brogue? K 2 Marlin Cglgtea '19 Mr. Orr's persuader? 2 'C art a i OHS '20 Heights High School in the Lee e' Leland Becker 'Q0 building? Jean Douglas 'QQ The Outing Club play and side- 56 Velma Wilkins 'QQ Show? 4. Catherllle Sl10Ck6y ,Q3 Basketball practice at East End Y? Q Anna Frances Myers 'QQ Alumnus Al? Q' Jane Drake '19 Field days? Donald Dunlap 'Ql When it didn't ram every day dur- 6 BCFIIICC Berwald ,QQ ing Spring Vacation? Blig' SSHIHOH '29 The Black and Gold Senior edi- Mi re Dehn 'Q3 tions? Ronald P3.I'SOIl 'Qi The Bazaar? W Mrs. Brandes? E - -- When half of us came out at 8:10 5 v y and the other half at 11:11? 5 B' RECENT ENGAGEMENT? Who won the silver cup each year? Q Marie Wardeska 'QQ That first Student Council? Alice liferrill 'QQ Irv. Harrison's orchestra? John Shoop 'QQ The April Fool Black and Gold? cl S Frances Anderson 'QQ The old auditorium? 3 Ralph Cobbledick 'QQ The football field? Dorothy Kast 'Q3 The B. Sz G. printing room? L Marie Ashton 'Q3 Friday night movies? 6 Those Thrift Stamp officers? 5 Q -M ---' The year Heights beat Lakewood Q . ' f b ll? RESERVE WANTS MORE m Tcffet oaile-corridor building? W HEIGHTS GRADS The Campion family of athletes? S8 yyilbur England 'QQ, who listed .VVhen there were no Heights Alum- 7 about ten activities under his name hl? , 9 it in his annual, is continuing his extra The fields aI'0Uhfl the Hlgh school- 1 curriculum work at Reserve this year. The faculty Ol' teh members- , G5 f-Bill was a '-bugu for this Sort of .Vi hen ther? were twelve boys m the up Q work, and the clubs, activities, or Hlgh Seh00l1 gl teams, who did not boast him as a w.-wd- -M C' member, were few and far between. College and high school are all the same M - S 5 to him, as at Reserve, he lists the fol- AKE SUCCESS ON TAGE - lowing activities: Glee Club, Reserve Margy Englander 'Q3 and Jeanette VV:-:ekly Staff, Treasurer of Sopho- Geohegan have won great popularity more Class, Dramatic Club, Annual on the stage. The former is. appear- W Staff, Chapel Choir, Track Team, ing in Earl Carroll's Vanities and CQ Chairman of the Sophomore Flag the latter has signed a contract to ap- 5 Q Rush Committee. pear with Mrs. Sidney Drew. I J is 0 QA bi-EQQ1 9C-EC-if BQQQF 9QCQf'-W BCQCQQ? BQCQA QQCQCQV-' 3QQg lla' oo o o oo,g THE CALDRON 1g+.0O ? O A l u m n i Continued ATHLETICS There is a certain standard of ex- cellence that Walter Camp takes into consideration in picking his All-Ameri- can teams. That same standard is what makes the American collegiate athlete of today, such a square, up- right, and determined person. Any goal will heighten the standards of the individual, and that is one of the things we are trying to do with the selection of our All-Time Teams. Actual prowess alone has not won a place. There is one point of fair play, another of honor, that have entered into these selections. With the high type of gentleman-athletes that Heights has produced, this selec- tion has been a matter of much thought and reasoning. No doubt some will think these choices are not as theirs would have been, yet even Walter Camp's judgments are questioned, and we believe that we have considered each one, regardless of his time, with the utmost degree of fairness. The football combination, as select- ed, embodies a fast, heavy, and hard hitting line. There is plenty of weight in the center, with tall, active rangy tackles, and fairly fast, accurate, tackling ends. Wise, though a trifle light, was extremely sure with his passing and often broke through to throw the opposition for a loss. His lightness is offset by the weight of the two guards, Oswald and Silsby, both of the same type, and real bul- warks, both on defense and offense. Kneen and Muelhauser, both over six feet, and with the weight to go with it, tore huge holes in the opposing line for the off-tackle runs, and were seldom outplayed on defense. Platz was seldom boxed and was a sure, hard tackler. In addition, he covered punts and received passes as well as any end in Northern Ohio. Herrick makes a peerless leader for this aggregation. As fine a type of athlete as Heights ever turned out, Bud', was as wonderful a football player. He played both at end and in the back- field, but we found him best at end. He never seemed to miss a tackle, and played hard, and used his head every minute. The backfield, as great a group of speed, brains, and brawn, as ever assembled in high school, would have been a world beater. Composed of two ten second men, two line plungers, and all triple threat men, they would have struck terror in the hearts of the best high school teams in the country. DeVinney possessed every essential of a quarter, and was never equalled before or after. He was fast, brainy, not too light, and was a marvelous tackler. In addition, he was a great kicker, passer, and offensive man. Norton was heavy and fast. He cut quite a swathe in scholastic circles in '16 and ,17, and his passing, plunging, end runs, and his educated toe won many games. Lewis has been one of the offensive stars of the last three Heights teams. His speed scored of- ten, both on end runs and in an open field, after breaking through on an off-tackle run. Shima passed, plunged and kicked victory often for his teams. He was as hard to stop through the line as Norton. The team as a whole would stack up well with a great college outfit. The line might be just a trifle slow, but it seems to be faster than the average high school line. Lack of space prevents discussion of the other teams, but we believe they are of the same high calibre as this football team. 0990 9C-DQ4 JQDQQ6 9990-' 4QQQf ACQCQ6 DQQQV' .JCDQ J -simp- 'go Q 0 G 0 G0..5gl THE CALDRON 13,eoo oc:'21emo All-Time Football Team 6 Q I to Q FJ Q 6 Q Q L.II.-NORTON '18 R-E'-HERRICK ,QQ fflflpf-5 Chuck perhaps possessed the 0 C . g h best combination of football uf raPtam.MS one of f 6 ability of any high, school J hardest playing men on the player teams of '19, Q0, ,QL Bud ' Q played both at end and in the Q backfield. to Q 6 '-'-1-I Q E6 Q to Q Q.-DE XYINNEY '19 R.H.'LEXN'IS '24 F.-SHIMA 20 Larry's flying tackles, speed, Archie , with his open field A triple threat man Ray s courage, and generalship, will running and speed, was a plunging. passing, kicking and long be remembered. strong factor in the success of running are worthy of rec-og 8 the last three teams. nition. I, 53 8996 BQQQDG BQQD? QQQQS X396 DQQQA BCQCQC QQCQQ' QQCQ J 3 EEW9 5W 9 99 ,gil 134,,99ll fD5Q' D9C'T- 99g I ff 5 9 E . - lme oot a eam 5, ' All T' F b ll QQ Q N fl0IIf1'IIIll'lI 'F' Q f' Q. l i l .J X M l ,rl C J f'1 l l l x-I 5 J I,.l'.'.-ff-l'l.,vrz '24 L.T.-KNEI-:N '21 I,.G.-0sw,u.n '2-L t L It was said thcrc wcrc hut Some writers picked Harold as Ozzie acted as Faptain ol' 5 9 thrcc rims around Jut's end All-American end this year. the teams of '22 and '23, He 9 iff all last season. Tall and fast, he was an ideal was chosen All-Scholastic guard l tackle in high school. in W23. I l W .J 9 Q 9 9 ,, Q l f 6 ca Q l 1 'E I f I i 6 Q Q F 4. .LJ ., L 5 L it ci si Q? f'.v-Wlsi-1 '18 R.G.fSu.sm' '18 R.T.-Mui-:m,n.xusr:a '21 , Wise-'s good record continued Reds long, high punts used Mully, the steady tackle of E in college, where he has heen to be familiar sights. He easily two teams, was Zlll all-round , a star on the Vasc team for made the All-Florida team man with the girls. and a g two years. this year. better foothall player. 9 l , ..l 2 95991 - 39997 B996 9999ff 9990 9999ff 9999 999Q'C' 3999 all 1 14 lg' g0GC'T'i':G G..sSI C bg, 00. ll0 G65 Q 8 Alumni All-Time Teams f SECOND TEAM FOOTBALL L, E, Mort Crowell '25 ,,,,....,,,,,,, .. ,,,,,,,, .. . ..,, Three years Varsity end and slated for another, is L, T, Bob Behlen '14 ,,.,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,., O l dest man but a whiz in his day, 8 L. G. Mac MacGregor '21 ,,.. Steady Mac from Detroit. fi C, Perry Shannon '22 ,,,..,. . . .. ,,,, Class President and athlete. R, G, Paul O'Dea '19 ,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,., . . ,,,, ,..,,.,,, A nother whose playing lasts. R, T, Bill West '23 ,,..... .,,,,,,, . .. .. .. .,,., ..,, M ore familiar to us. R, E, Red Caswell '19 Cvllplllifll... . ........ Str0I1g factor in beating Lakewood that year. Q, Jim Connolly '24 .,,,,,......,,,,,, ,..... . . . .... As steady a Quarter as in High School. 8 L, H, Ray Ehrke '21 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, .. .......,. One of the city's greatest. R, H, Red Flynn '25 ,..,,, ,,,. . . .. ..... Another year for Red F, Chuck Ledinsky '16 ...... ............................. A n Old Timer whose memory remains, HONORABLE MENTION: Ruedy '19, Dunlap '22, Hansen '17, Rolf '18, Treuhaft '12, Hay:-ox '14, Hill '13, Thamer '23, Bohanon '19, Needs '18, 2 Norris '14. f BASKET BALL FIRST TEAM I SECOND TEAM .L Al Bingham '24 ..,.,,,..... ........ ...... . . H .fee Right F0FWaI'd.- ....... ....... E arl Krickbaum '22 CCaptair1J 2 Pee-wee Thamer '23 Cfaptaiuj ,,,,, ,,,,,, L eft Forward.. ,,,,, .,,,,, ' 'Red Caswell.. '19 fi Buzz' Halter '21 ,,..,... ........... ...... ..... YVVVV W C 9 U tel' ------'----,A-,f, ... Hi Johnson '22 Tom Hendricks '23 ,.i.,..... ....... . H ..... ....,.. fl Guard f-,,,,,,,,.................. Ralph Krickbaum '20 Fred Linderme '24.. ,..... . .... ..... ,..- ff,,-- R I ght Guard feee -eefee V V ........... J0hIlIly Dunlap '22 HONORABLE MENTION: Fahrenwald '20, Kohn '20, Sherman '24, Morton '24, Oswald '24. BASEBALL TRACK W B. V V VVVVVV V vrryrrrrrrrrr H' t' 'QI Captain ...... . ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,, , , James '21 8 A B' i QVVYK Kgillgillm 'QQ Dashes ........... .Peck '22, ,.,,,,,,,,, ,,,, L ewis '24- S S V 1 VAVV Connolly 'Q4 Distance. ...,.,,.,,. Henderson '2l.. James '21 ' ' fpaptl-,my Hurdles ...,,., ,,,,,, Le wis '24 ,,,,,,,,,,,,,, James '21 3 B. or Arri Lyons 'QI High Jump ,,,,,,,. Herrick '22 ,.,.., Lewis '24- R' F. VVVVV Bingham '24, Broad Jump .,..,. Campion 'l-1- ,.,..,.,,. Kneen '21 .e on F. ' Y VVVV Vfieinhalter 'Q3 Pole Vault ,.,,,,,,,, De Vinney '19 ,,,,,, Vl'atterson '22 8 L- I5 V jphamor 'Q3 Javelin . Herrick '22.. . , Bradley '22 fi ' V Roberto 'Q3 Discus ......,.,,,,,.,. Kneen '21 .,,,, .. ...Harrison '20 po Y -V H YVVV ivrr Travers '19 Shot Put ....,,,,,,,, Bradley '22 ,,,,,, ., . Sherman '24- Relay ....,.,,..,,,...,, James '21, Goldhammer '23, HONORABLE NIENTIONI Doty '19, Lewis '24, Peck 22 6 E. Linderme '24, Shannon '22, . Sl - , -Q07 J dl -Q11 S . 523. HONORABLE MENTION: Hayes 23, Q md L' 'On 'e England '22, Heath '23, TENNIS 3 SMLESM SWIMMING ' First Man.. Ross '23 Cl'a1Jll Captain ' - '- ' , T B mplffman 'N Second Man ,,,, . .Krickhaum '22 Dflshes - Morse ,QQ Cloke ?Q Third Man on V Y Vhowman '93 DISLHHCC .,,,,,.,.,,, Morse 22 ,,,,,, ...Hogen 25 W Fourth Man Parsons 'Qi Breast Stroke ,,., Manlet '22 .,,, ...Templeman '22 O Back Stroke .. ...Morse '22 ..., .Turner '23 C Din-nnnsi Dives.. ......... VVeaver '26 ..... ..Templeman '22 Plunge .,......... .... .......... . . .. .... ..Williams '25 First Pair ........ Ross '23, Bowman '23 Relay ................. Chudoba '23, Schaefer '23. Second Pair ,............. Hirstius '21, Tuhey '22 Cannon '25, Morse '22 53 HONORABLE MENTION: Flynn '25, HONORABLE MENTION: Kneen '21. Gross '24, Bingham '24, Sturgeon '25 Q QQQf HQQQDE 9993 fQQQD? EQCQ? QQQCQQ 9996 UQCQQTTT' DQCQ J Hglusle L Ky g0Gcfi 0Qv 0 GG.gq THE CALDRON l3,,,0C'5 ,C'5 CO COg Q Q V 6 f Q .J 0 5 cu Q 8 6 C Q W f f p 3 3 3 3 , 3 2 3 E WM 3 Q 5 QQQ4 9QQX-35.4 9994 BQQQA X39 , QCQCQ BCQCQQ XQGXQ4 MDQS 'SIILG 19' ,wi N 1 ' wax rlwlllqw cv gn ff rf 11' rrus, --ff - -f-ff--M sie' ' f L 1 A A A A Y J x J 1 f N f 1 r N l 1 N 1 1 1 N f- N f W 2 w f N f 1 f W f N f W f 1 f 5 f N 1 f W r W' f N f W f W r w I f 1 f 4 - I N 2 1 f N , . 1 f w f N f w f x L1Jf -1J1J-- -J1J- JJJJX- iJLA i1.s,1v.s.N ILL- -vLu- -LLJ QE , UI, ?gCTO f5 iC? C?CE 'FH 0O O 5 W ' W 7 f 0 TD In 0 If 1 W fb Wx f-1 GH ks I EPZ v J if KU W ,rx s R., ff! W ?z fn :T W, I i ! f f .I 'T ,rx l N A vw A a He.-.Rav Y 3 ff orvjcjly I-gy?-35 o aid Waavz E , abqitb tb' on-ms STEVV Chuan Hoavx Elegl 1 we, fi-Q 1' sa 'iv-yy F am' ammatefa T 2 Scyool ljepagfzrie GGUTLT' .. I D7 7 'J D. J' .,..1.,7 Tb W 65 ' ' 4w ED f 4 Em A M 5 rg Q Mfvh 5 ' 1- , MRQQ 'f M I CN 'mif,f3QQ Y LLMQGW , 'lim sfmialk g O 4 Qglfl LS THE BLACK A D GOLD Vol. 9 Heights High School, Cleveland Heights, O'1io. June '20, 1924 No. 38 Larry Miter Convicted of Gum-Chewing, Weeps at Trialg Given Four Years Lawrence Z. Miter, president of the Student Council, was convicted of the unholy sin of gum-chewing in the n-th degree, and four years of hard labor, at the end of which time he is to be hopelessly bound in the ball and chain of wed-lock. This sentence was passed upon him by the members of the Council, acting as jurymen, with the addition of Irwin Crystal, Sol Gross, Eugene MacDonald, and VVilliam Conn, in a vain attempt to outweigh the women's vote. However, Crystal was the only one who seriously affec- ted the result. VVhen Judge Dorothy Corlett pro- nounced the sentence, the prisoner broke down, sobbing. It was for- tunate that the jury-women's vote had already been cast, for it was plain they were extremely touched at the doeful sight. Defending Miter was Mr. Richard Snyder. who based his speech on the invaluable merits of the institution of Divorce and on the advantages of having the Sophomore Formal Promenade endure until 3:30 A.M. The jury was visibly im- pressed by his well-made points, but when Mr. William A. Carroll, opposing lawyer, and far-famed for his melodious voice, arose to the full extent of his magnificent six feet, eleven and thirteen-sixteenths in- ches, and sang forth that the up-keep of the chain stretched across the driveway was too great a strain upon any man's sock, the assembly roared with enthusiasm! The first witness in the case to be called to the stand was Miss Eleanor Seager, who testified as follows: Question: Do you have a very per- sonal acquaintance with the prisoner? Answer: Oh, mercy no! I have only glanced askance at him once or twice, as he joshed Helen Zelin or rebuked Robert Wackerman for his boisterous behavior. Q: Do you know the ratio of your age to his if x equals 4-32 and y equals 929 degrees Centigrade? A: CFranklyl No, but I can tell you the diameter of each of his ears. They differ only by a slight cubic inch. Q: Have you any grounds for be- lieving the prisoner guilty of the offense of which he is accused? Ag Decidely Upon looking out of the door of Room 211 one day, I saw him pass down the hall. Both his ears were gesticulating, which was proof positive that he was chewing the old Adam.,' Witness dismissed. fContirued on Page 4, Column 3J H. H. FIRE TSO PE LING VISITS DEPARTMENT ASSEMBLY ORGANIZED SAFETY ASSCRED Over-glowing Stuart ,,,,,,,,,,...,,,,,,, f 'hief Candle-Vl'ick Imel, .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. 4 ssisfa nf ACTIVE MEMBERS Hose-Cart VVise Kerosene Bovington Fire-Brand Smith Ladder-wagon Flynn Coal-oil Corcoran HONOR.-mY MEMBEltS Mazda Stanton Ever-ready Prendergast Commissioner Byers Tungsten Thompson Arc-light Hogan The H. H. Fire Department under the efficient leadership of Chief Stuart has been very eflicient in stamping out all blazes, and has stopped quite a few sparkings in the Halls of H. H. School. There was a great fear in the heart of the students that they would be risking their lives in our new Fire- proof building but the organization of the fire department soon allayed all fears as the students realized that a shining organization could not help but be protection. Several of the mem- bers have partially faded out but still they retain the designating badge. Here are our best wishes to this organization. May it prosper and its members grow plentiful. DONE IN TEN FLAT Far out-stripping the VVhippet Races, the international balloon races, and the Latonia Sweep Stakes is the mad rush for the lunch line. A bell rings at 11:36 and out of the rooms the pupils come running. Tall ones, small ones, fat ones, and lean ones scramble up the stairs and into the lunch room. Some come from French class, some from History, but those who come from Latin lead in the line, for they have their ponies, Those coming from English class bring up the rear, for they are studying poetry and have too many feet. All keep rushing upward and for- ward. Teachers, in vain, try to quiet and stop them, but ne'er do they succeed. The rushing continues through doors, and over tables and chairs. First one is in the lead and then another. Now we see one boy leading, he is taller than the rest and his feet seem to cover more ground. It looks as if everyone steps out of his way. He gets there in time to eat with the teachers. It is Theodore C leveland. 'SIILQIS' RECOUNTS REACTIONS One day my cousin, Tso Chop Su, come to my laundly, and say that he going to find out some more about Amelican schools, and he want me to come long. So I come. VVe go in big building, and man bow and say to Chop Su, Hello, we go in Auto- lium now and see some. So we go in big dark place. I pletty flaid, not see what we come for see when we not see. Somebody yell, All lite, shoot house. I not like that, but I not say anything. Then it get light all sudden, and whole clowd come in and make big noise. They act like they going start revolution, but in- stead all sit down. Big man go up on gleat shelf in flont, and all shut faces. Then some other man come out and talk about some-he not say what-for long time. Pletty soon little clazy clown come out on shelf and jump 'lound. All stand up and yell at him. I think they got some sense anyway, to get mad at fool come in like that. But he like that, and do it again, and they yell at him again. Pletty soon Big Man get up, so he flaid and go off. Big Man talk some, and all make noise with hands, some with feet too. Tough man go up on shelf, they call Hub. He look like he all leady to fight, so they shut up, but instead he just talk a little. Clazy clown come again and they yell at him: but they mad this time and all go out. So Chop Su and me go out too. He say, Pletty good. But I say, They all clazy fools. They be bettee in laundly! BIAURICE B. DAX'IES, '25. FOUR-PART NOVEL I Pat rimony II Matrimony III Parsimon y IV Alimony Do You Know That Horses roam unfed. Many balls are held. Dumbells are silent wall flowers. Flies are caught and put out. Fouls are hand made. Clubs are minus officers and mem- bers. Baskets are made with balls. Rings fly without wings. +in the gym. Page 2 THE ANNUAL BOARD- AS IT SHOULD BE Editor-in-Chief Horace Greeley Associate-Editors LITERARY Shakespeare ......,..,,.,.,....,.,.,.,,. Editor Betsy Byers ..,,.,,......... Assistant Editor ART Michael Angelo .,...,...,,,........r,,,,. Editor H. Smith .,......,.,,,,,,,...., Assistant Editor ATHLETICS Samson ......,,,,,,,....,.,,,,.,.......,r,,,r Editor Bob Oswald ..,,,,,,......t, A.-mstant Editor D MUSIC - Richard Wagner .......,.,,,,,,....,.,.. Editor W. Mandell ..., ,,,,.....l,,, A .vsistant Editor JOKES Mark Twain ,,,,......,,,,,,., ,,,,,,, .Editor J. Hurst .......,..,.,,,. . ,..,, Assistant Editor BUSINESS MANAGER Iohn D Rockefeller Mana er . . ,,,, ...,A,,,, g J. P. Morgan ......,,,.,, Assistarzt Manager PETTY THIEVING How often have we been obliged to make this time-honored subject the theme of our venerable columns! We have said word after word, but somehow the desired effect has not been produced. Every day we read of thieving in other high schools, and how they are coping with the situation in a much more successful way. We have advised, urged, and pleaded for more school spirit in a great many ways, and once again we call on you for aid and co-operation in this mat- ter. As you all know, sometime ago, one thief was caught, and all those who had had articles stolen from them were allowed to jump on him and do their worst for best, whichever way you look at it.J Now this seems to us to be one of the most pitiful things in the history of our school. There were only 706 pupils in Room 209 on that fateful day! Truly the morale of the present day is deplorably weak. We are now coming to the point of our editorialg close your mouths, and open your eyes, and listen: We want bigger and better Boodle! Affairs have come to a terrible pass, when only one small book, or an inexpensive plati- num pencil is stolen from the lockers of such a few. Shades of Jesse James! But wait, be calm, we must get down to gold fnot brassj tacks, and have a real heart to heart talk. What seems to be the matter with our thieving, besides the meagerness of the booty? Well, for one thing, it is chiefly the unlocked lockers that are looted. What sort of spirit does that show? A mighty poor one, we assure you. We firmly believe that every pupil of Heights High School, man, woman, and child, should carry a jimmy, a spanner, and one real, good old-fashioned black-jack Cto encourage BLACK AND GOLD quiescence in refractory Mrs. Clarksj. Occasionally it might be well to carry a little soup to deflate the security of these six-levers lock fiends. So much for the actual methods. Now, as to the time for opening them up, it is best for you to use your own judgment. We have always found Qforget this: honor among- you knowj, that during re-citations was the best time for the dirty work. The halls are so quiet, that you can work unmolested. If, however, any one does chance to accost you, assume an air of innocence, and if this does not work, walk up close to your in- terrogater and show him some stars. CB-ji. One word more: we have given you the best of our six years' experience in this school, and we wish to give one more piece of advice. When you do a job, do it clean! Don't even leave a Latin book hidden away in some dark corner. No piker in this line shows the real Heights spirit. Rem- ember. Bigger and Better Boodle! WHAT EVERY WOMAN FINDS OUT Once upon a time I thought I understood men And that I could marry one of them With one hand and my eyes shut! But alas! I have discovered: That if you Hatter a man you frighten him to death. And if you don't Hatter him, he is bored to death. If you permit him to make love to you, he gets tired in the end. And if you don't, he gets tired in the beginning. If you believe all that he tells you, he thinks you are a fool. And if you don't he thinks you are a cynic. If you don't agree with him in everything, you soon cease to charm him: If you wear gay clothes and rouge and startling hats, he hesitates to take you out. If you wear brown Toques and Tailor-mades, he takes you out and gazes all evening at another woman in gay clothes and rouge and startling hats. If you're jealous of him, he cannot endure you, And if you are not he cannot under- stand you. If you join in his gayeties and ap- prove of his smoking, he vows you are driving him to the devil. If you are affectionate, he soon tires of your kisses If you are cold, he soon seeks con- solation in some other woman's kisses! If you are a sweet, old-fashioned clinging-vine, he doubts that you have a brain. l13Ol' And if you are modern and ad- vanced, he doubts that you have a. scruple. If you are cute and babyish, he longs for a mental-mate. And if you are temperamental and poetic, he longs for a help-mate. And all the time. He is falling in love with you, for just what you are. And that's the Old Adam in him, Am I right? S. M. H. '25. THAT FATAL LATIN EXAM A girl sat in the school room lone, Whence all but her had fled, The thoughts that chilled her very bone, Were jumbled in her head. Oh when and where was Virgil born, And oh what did he write? She could not think that very morn, She tried with all her might. The next is dreadful prose, she said, And that I never knew, In vain she bit her stubby lead, Alas, what should she do? In fateful calm she left a blank, And passed on to the next, Hopelessly in her seat she sank, And with herself was vexed. I can't do this sight translation, For once she sadly mourned Her neglect of education, She had her home work scorned. Why had Aeneas Dido left? She did not know or care, She slowly left the room, bereft With melancholy air. Yes, sad to say, she failed her course, Do you the reason ask? Behold a girl, filled with remorse, Because she shirked her task. ANNXE STEWART, '2-f. WHO'S WHO Having looked up the records of this person we have been able to find no blot upon his life or even on the library books he took out. He never stole a banana peel in his life and is the perfect, Yes father-I-cannot: tell-a-lie-I-did-it-with'my-little-hatch- et type. He is one of the most trusted persons of the school and has even been known to have taken out a reference book without a written affidavit from home saying that he washed his hands before each reading. Recently he has been elected a guard to see that no slugs are put in the five cent-a week fund. As all of his many friends will testify, it certainly will mean a lot to the school when he graduates. BLACK AND GOLD Page 3 HOW THEY FINISHED By A. ToUT CSpecial leased wire to Annual from Staj Correspondenli Heights High Athletic Field, April 31, 1924-The annual field day con- tests for honor positions of the class of 1994 were held today. A large crowd of juniors and other important people watched the proceedings en- thusiastically, and there was much excitement in the betting ring before the firing of the opening gun. In the melee to secure tickets on the second race Tom Morton was knocked over and trampled but escaped severe injuries. The feature of the day was the race for Class Freshman, which Bob Oswald won by live yards. The officials were: Judges, Messrs. Gardner, Burnham and Norris: start- ers, Messrs. Dewald, Dix, and Drury, the timekeepers, Messrs. Gordon, Downey, Hagaman and Winans: the clerk of the course, Mr. Fraunfelter. The events were run as follows: First Race, Most Popular Man: Entries, Miter, Rickenbaugh, Lewis, Mandell, Connolly, and Strauss. Miter beat Rickenbaugh by a nose. Lewis came in third. Mandell was out of condition. Second Race, Most Popular Wo- man: Entries, The Misses Lane, Atkins, Charlesworth, Dunlap, and Thompson. Miss Charlesworth won by a hair, Miss Lane was second, and Miss Thompson third. Miss Dunlap pulled a shoe at the first turn and did not finish. lNIuch money was lost on Miss Atkins. Third Race, Best Student: Entries, J. Black, Connolly, Cahen, T. Morton, F. Sherman and M. Sinks. Black came on the coarse sucking a lemon and won an easy first. Sinks was hard pressed by Connolly for second. Cahen stopped for a cigar and was disqualified. By a flying leap, Morton managed to finish ahead of Sherman. Fourth Race, Best Girl Student: Entries, VVhitacre, Corcoran, Byers, Ester Stewart and Stanton. Red,' Byers looked a likely winner, but finished last. Too many Camels. Whitacre pulled away from Corcoran on the home stretch. Stanton was third. Walrus Stewart was given a bunch of cabbage leaves by her backers and admirers. Fifth Race, Best Athlete: Entries, Lewis, Platz, Bingham, Sherman, Gordon, and Imel. Lewis made a flying start and was never headed. Gordon, Platz, and Bingham finished in that order. Imel fell at the start and dropped out. Sherman seemed tired from the third race and did not qualify. Sixth Race, Best Girl Athlete, Entries: Wilson, Wells, Corso, Mad- ison, Schneider, Putnam. Corso broke the record for this event. Madison was second, and VVilson third. Wells led at the first lap, but stopped to powder her nose and finished last. Seventh Race, Most Likely to be Valentino's Successor: Entries, Smith Mandell, Taft, Rickenbaugh, Heath and Norton. Mandell won by a narrow margin from Rickenbaugh. Taft was disqualified for fouling Smith. Heath came in third, and was presented with a safety razor. Eighth Race, for Flappers Only: Entries, Spids Crowell, Jerry,', Putnam, Walrus Stewart, Betty Rodgers, Marge', McGeorge, Carol Peabody. This race was won by Betty Rodgers, with Marge Mc- George second. Carol Peabody third. Spids Crowell was the favorite, but was distanced. It is said that Jerry Putnam will protest the race. Walrus Stewart was disqualified for being over age. A two dollar ticket on the winner paid 811313. The only ticket on the winner was held by Jud Platz. Ninth Race, Most Conceited Man: Entries, Oswald, Sherman, Bunn, McDonald, Drawe, Malm, and Con- roy. Sherman took the pole at the start and won a slow first. McDonald took second, and was closely followed by Conroy, Malm and Drawe. Oswald saved his strength for the next race and did not finish. At the half way mark someone yelled, I'd go a mile for a Camel, and Bunn dropped out. Tenth Race, Class Freshman: Entries, Oswald, Hurst, Lee, Higgens, Berkes, and Rose. Oswald beat Hurst by five yards. Hurst and Lee were running neck and neck when someone flaunted a picture of Mr. Spencer in front of Lee, who fell over in a faint. Higgens crawled in third. Eleventh Race, Prettiest Girl: Entries, Shelhart, Atkins, Van Horne, Betty Stuart, Sommer, Lewis and Gimmel. Jane Shelhart was some- what handicapped by rheumatism but finally won out after a gruelling struggle with Betty Stuart, who was overweight and out of condition. Atkins was leading at the first lap, but dropped her glass eye and was forced to stop. Gimmel was third, followed by Sommer, Lewis, and Van Horne in the order named. Twelfth Race, Most Conceited Girl: Entries, Jaskalek, Van Horne, Halle, I WValleu, Dalzell, Weh and Burr. The favorite, Van Horne, had an easy win. Dalzell second, Burr third. Miss Weh was out of her class and did not finish. Perhaps this was because of her weight. Thirteenth Race, Handsomest Man, Entries, Hobson, VVise, Phillips, Liv- ingston, Lorenze, Wilson, Brower, C. Gordon, Strauss, Mandell F. Linderme, and Laronge. On account of the large entry list, preliminaries had to be held. Porter won a hard fought race from Linderme. Mandell, with a three-yard handicap, won third place. Phillips fell asleep and did not finish. -Gisli Fourteenth Race, Most Likely to Become Famous: Entries, Hurst, Lee, Smith, Hambourger, Norton, Morton, Beletsky, Imel, E. Linderme, Cahen, Miter. Beletsky and Norton were disqualified by the eight semes- ter rule just before this race. Ham- bourger, Lee and Cahen failed to qualify in the preliminaries. Hurst and Imel raced neck and neck to the wire, where Imel's magnificent neck showed its superiority. Miter and Smith tied for third. Linderme was fourth. Fifteenth Race, VVomen Most Likely to Become Famous: Entries, KatyU Lane, Bill Coy, Dodo Hall, Fat Zelin, Jean Charlesworth, Barbara Whitacre, Spids Crowell, and Amy Atkins. The wise ones picked Katy Lane to win easily, but she had to be content with second place, falling before the speed mer- chant, Dodo Hall. Jean Charles- Worth took third place by a narrow margin from Barbara Whitacre. Just before the start, Coach Wallace re- fused to allow Spids Crowell to start, as she had been accused of smoking by Amy Atkins. SPORT SCATTERINGS It is reported that when the Celtics came to town they tried to sign our own Red Flynn to take Johnnie Beckman's place at forward. We are glad that Red didn't com- mercialize his skill. The basketball managers think that the once popular ditty should be changed to, Yes, we have no gum: or, We have no comps today. This school has another Joie Ray in its midst, unknown to all. Last January, while going to the Lakewood basketball game, Jimmie Hurst show- ed his skill as a track star by success- fully chasing a Detroit Avenue trolley for nearly a mile through the crowded streets of the Public Square, while encumbered with someone's over- coat, and carrying four milk-bottles. After seeing Webb Mandell exhibit his manly form at the football games as water boy, we wonder why more young girls don't leave home. Huge Scandal! Faculty manager Gordon, and Coach Dix of the basket ball team were seen breaking training by eating portions of a lemon pie, which had been hidden in Mr. Dix's office. They were aided and abetted in this nefarious episode by ye cor- respondent. Al Bingham wishes to announce that his method and form in shooting baskets is patented, and all imitators will be severely punished. Nat. Holman and Co. take notice. Archie Lewis informs us that his nerves were so shattered by a short ride in Short Collie's machine on the night before the Akron North game, that he was unable to show his true form the next evening, and as a result only made two baskets. Page 4 BLALTH AND cow g g fcontinued from Page l Column 32 Miss Amelia May Hortense, Tried to scale a barbed-wire fence. When she'd finished with the climb, She had had a ripping time! BLOCKHEAD What's all the row about over in the next block? asked a reporter of a policeman. Aw, only a wooden weddinf' A wooden wedding? Sure a couple of Poles is gettin' married. THE MERRY HA! HA! All good boys should love their sisters, But I so good have grown, That I love other's sisters Much easier than my own. There are meters of pleasure And meters of tone But the very best meter Is to meet'er alone. --MM Mr. Spencer: Who is famous for writing Scotch lyrics? Ray L.: Harry Lauder. I want a loaf of bread. White or graham? Doesn't matter, its for a blind woman. JUST Who does John Bull? Whose Uncle is Uncle Sam? What makes a Piston Ring? With Whom do the Trade Winds trade? How much does the Milky Weigh? Where does the Gulf Stream? How much is kennilworth? How high does Cain get when they raise him? Who fixes the broken news? Who killed Cock Robin? There was a boy from Heights High School And he was wondrous wiseg He jumped into a football game And blackened both his eyes. And when he saw what he had done He did the next best thing, He went against the Lakewood team And blackened them o'er again. B. A.-'26. SENIOR BASEBALL A run: From classroom to lunch- room. ' A strike: Refusal to do homework. A ball: The formal. A hit: Popularity at the formal. Out: On Monday after a Sunday party. A pitch: Into work after a week of loafing. A catch: Some boy roped into the formal. A fly: Of facts after a night of cramming. A slide: From the danger mark to 75. A stolen base: A successful stall. A training camp: Study Hall. A foul: A bad recitation. Spiked: Caught cutting class. A decision: Where will we stay from 2:20-3:00? Score: Graduating averages. Wild: Guess at a history question. Benched: Failed in a subject. Double-header: Graduation and the Formal. Home-run: Graduation. S. M. H. '25. slrzlls- Next! Robert Mulhauser ascended the platform, and in the manner of his brother, Roland, the orator, sailed into a declamation on the vices of blond straight hair and how it led directly to the pernicious habit al- luded to. His argument was abetted by the splendid concrete example he himself offered. Miss Kathryn Kee- derle was to have delivered the next testimony, but she was attacked by a violent spell of hiccrxughs and had to be carried out on the piano bench. After the court had subsided, Mr. Arthur Tronstein was questioned. A silence was the only response, and it was discovered, upon X-ray exam- ination that he had accidentally swallowed his tongue and until a Pullman-motor could be appropriated to pull it back up again, his testimony would have to be postponed. Mr. Sterling Melcher, the prisoner's most efficient bootlegger, admitted having seen Miter chew, but confessed he did not think he indulged over- often, and his process of mastication was really quite conservative in res- pect to snapping and such forth. More than this he could not say, for strategical business reasons. The climax of the trial came when Miss Naomi Holz came forward and proclaimed loudly and clearly that she and her two little girl friends, Miss Elsie Spangenberg and Miss Helen Zink overheard Miss Dorothy McVic-kers tell Miss Lois Shepler that Miss Virginia Muelhauser had di- vulged to Miss Mildred Sommer in home-room one morning that she had seen Larry actually make a huge bubble in front of his face, and, hav- ing caused it to achieve popping size the bubble burst! Then she knew that Lawrence Z. Miter had been chewing Bubble-Gum! The jury with one accord rose up and shouted Guilty! and the sen- tence was pronounced. G O n5gl 13,,OO 0 Doctor Doolittle ,,,.v.,.,. The Young Enchanted.. A Certain Rich Man ..,..A,, The Happy Warrior ...,,r,,, So Big ......,... ...o.....,.oonoooo This Freedom ,..oo.ooooo, THE BOOK LIST The Rover ,.,,.,7.7,,,,,,.Y......,r.Arr.ooooo Leave It To Psmith ..,oo,.ooo oooooooooo Twenty Six Men and a Girl r,AA7,,o, The Lummox ,...,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,r,,,,,, The Seventh Angel ,,.....,...... ,oooooooooooooooooooo The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table o,e,e.., Innocence Abroad ...............o oooooooooooooo Sherlock Holmes r.e.e.e, Prue and I ...i...,.,,.i.,,ri The Little Minister s...,.i Roast Beef Medium, .,.. Great Expectations ......,.,,,r,, Around the World in 80 Days e,e... Vanity Fair .,............s,.issesseeessee The Newcomers ,,..,V..w,..w..,. Like Father, Like Sona' .... Sentimental Tommy ..sri.,.. Mam Street ............,.s,.,sii,ssrrssss Bob, Son of Battle ...............,,.,ii. Amenities of Book Collections ....,. Rose in Bloom ,,..,i,.,i,,,,,.,,,,..,,,.,... Little Men ..........,.,.....s,..s,.,isssss The Master Craftsman .,ii,.,.,,........i,ss,i Heroes Every Child Should Know ..,,..s,,s Days Off ii..,,,.,,,.,,,.,,Y.,...,... ,..s,..s.rsssssssssss Wlater Babies ,s,is,,,,s James Hurst Larry and Kate Webb Mandell, Treas Mort Crowell Dorothy Dunlap June 19 ,,W.,iFrosty Norton Henry Smith Florence Atkins Ferris Kneen Dorothy Hall Mr. Burtt Toots Foote Mr. Gordon Prudence Halverstadt Theodore Cleveland The Cafeteria Miss Nash Miss Wallace Miss Graham Miss Westlake Janet Shelhart I Freshmen DeWitt Whittlesy Thomas Morton Lee Road Bob Oswald Charles Feese Rose Diamond Pete McAndrews Wayne Collie Lawrence Higgins Football Squad Spring and Christmas Vacations Swimming Team O BQQQE BQQF BQQQQ UQDQP BCQQQG 'WCQQF 965996 CCQQ 'elm lg' oo o o oo..,QI THE CALDRQN 19,oo o o seo35 'll Do .you Remember 3 X - -f if X V Q E A. , X .BNN X' 2 f TW so l W1 f , Q X 3 nl f X rg : ..- me A , 4 . Q U49 Boa osmm TOM VIURTUN U: L 5 Q l vc 5 ,Fall ' ' J .-Eg. at , 5 18,2 wk Q. A , IO J 2 0 1' flll tl lu ' All D090 HY CIHNEL BARBARA UHITAYPE BOBBY BYERS f J if N 3 Ox gi H ll I Q li 3 E M E ' ANDPEMLSHARP 1 W' G Laugh at misfortune's stroke, Betty: Can you play Mah-Jongg?' Q Fortune favors few, Carrie: Sorry, haven't touched a Look at the mighty oak, piano in six months. It was once a little nut like you! ----- -- 'AM- Mr. D. : VVhat is the use of the word C Prof.: Name a collective noun. 'for'? Q CQ Stude.: Vacuum cleaner. Al.: Forinstance. Q 53 QQGn BQQQQ QQG VQQQ5 'JQCQQ 99996 9994 FQQQT A993 fl134l' O o O OO,.,5I THE CALDRQN lgtoo o Prof. Cduring lecturej: All right, THEOREM you back there asleep, come up here and sit in this chair in front of me. And thirteen men rose rubbing their eyes. A girl reading in a paper that fish was excellent brain food, wrote to the editor: Dear Sir: Seeing as you say how fish is good for the brains, what kind of fish shall I eat? Dear Miss: Judging from the com- position of your letter I should advise you to eat a whale. EXTRACTS FROM HENRY SMITH,S NOTE BOOK CBy A F riendj Little girl-pair of skates Hole in ice-pearly gates. Little boy-keg of powder. Lighted match-gone to chowder. Dark Alley-banana peel. Fat man-Virginia reel. Henry Smith, his books and pen Heill be good, the Lord knows when. To prove that a cat has ten lives. PROOF 1. No cat has nine lives. Q. One cat has one more life than no cat. 3. One cat has ten lives. CBy additioni When little Freddie Lorenz arrived at school on the opening day, he car- ried the following note: Dear Teacher: Our sweet little Freddie is a very delicate, nervous child, and if he is naughty-and he is likely to be naughty at times-just punish the boy next to him, and that will frighten him so, he'll be goody. The philosopher calmly defined the exact difference between life and iove. Life is just one fool thing after anotherg love is just two fool things after each otherf, The widow caused a tender senti- ment to be chiseled on the headstones of her husbandis grave. The exact wording was as follows: Thou art at rest, until we meet again. my HUW FlE1.ULlT 7 swim, Q fx- 5 6 - C'r'1ll'y'S Cmnplexzon for a Connoilljs assets For , 6 told utqm QQ? exzunpgq? Q X r G mortorfs guarding For a Lewis' mn For a touchdown? m , - topper? Flyrms lock For a new Kneen for anoxlxer Harold? 0 5 ni clance F6137 0221815 figure for a Crowells smile For Q Q Q perfect 39,7 loolf m7 is l.?1rlnfer's has-for a Qose For a goal post? ' g. marie 'Wave Q plntz For an en-cl man? Ce-lmerfs tackling for a 51 ii' lfhfxlfout? l'liil4S.1nHoori SPGPTS -rocking' the cradle? D096 ni-BOOL M394 NWQQQQ UQXQ1 QOQCOQ 3699? 1199426-fTQQQ 'gllss lg' g5Q fT 6 6G.,5Sl 13+,O6L' 'T'lO C GGg O M 'N - , fe , f iff, . , ' 4 1 4,1 . Z , Q A F B Q. l I fe ' ' 'fff l l f ' l':S r'NQ4'N ' 2 i 4 ' ' -: ' Q .-vnnq Q lVlolnl.ns'lllc. in-aelicfrlrounclll of f'iQl8l'ft,S 2 I ATTENTION DARNVIN Small Boy Cwalking round links with ge Indignant Fomedian: Look here, his fatherj: Daddy, here's a ball for g 5 I object to going on just after this you. . y W monkey act. Father: Where did you get that y Stage lNIanager: VVhy, laddie? Are from? , H you afraid they'll think you're an bmall Boy: It s a lost ball, Daddy. 5 ..m.0l.e? I Iiatherz Are you sure lt,S a lost Q Q we---W mal 3 l Do you speak Polish? .Small .Boyz Daddy: theyife Oh, to some extent. still looking for it. U l.et's hear you. ' f , f Rkgxgsl1u rptbrrgwa Klungnnzda Q 23 prtshi shlikzxxitsllkikluf' Q Whatzat mean? That means yes. Fine. Tell me some more. I 6 i:I'xxtwgyyre. N W Q Whatzat mean? 6 K Mu That means, Iilll going to town xv, .l4 for a few days and will probably re- Offwf . turn on the eleven-thirty-two train. n X fy L. t: i-i-v1.iL-A-4 g 6 gi lNIrs Baker: Have you done your ' I Q outside reading for this week? T t 1 Tommy: Sure, I've read every bill- elf 1 f K l-, Ly board in town. I I f +v ,,Y fi If a lamb gambols, - l Q And you grab a lamb by the leg- I for a muel 3 fo., a dlme Would you be pinching A gamboling joint? 6 fOr lvw fnltj 6 2 -we-1-M Q Rub.: Have you any bow ties to match my eyes? -sew rrtg -ggr V fe e f Dub.: No, but we have soft hats VVhat is the difference, asked the Z5 to ll121tCll ,Y0llI' lleadfi teacher, between caution and cow- W C2 ------ ardice? He: There is nothing like exper- Johnny, who observed things care- ience after all. She is the greatest fully for so youthfulaperson,answered M tear-her. Caution is when you're afraid and Q She: And there is no holding back eowardice is when the other fellow's 'r her salary, either. afraid. A DQQVTT 5QQLQVf, BQ-EXW YQCQQCQQ BCQQQ BCQQQG HQQVW ,BQQCDQ BQQQQ 'gl135 le gCi0 53 ,C'D GCD..sgli 1gg,.60 T 0 I warn you, sir! The discourtesy The professor who was famous for 5 of this bank is beyond all limits. One the wool-gathering of his wits, return- Q word more and I-I withdraw my ed home, and had his ring at the door overdraft. answered by a new maid. The girl -A-g-- looked at him inquiringly. 6 A certain minister was invited to h UQ:-alll'-IS 1?ILi0feSS0r.J0hIfl?0n at dinner at the house of one of the 025' .e,, ale rlgmmfli. dmfs ' leading men in the town. At the dinner h . 0' slr' dt' e mal reple ' ,, ut table he was placed opposite a goose. eiiexpeite ' 'my moglent HOWH . I The lady of the house was placed on 1 5 Iilrodessorqggrneth away, t e gut 5 the minister's left. Seeing the goose EOS? t ethoori in e.F?0r Elanxsi. Q he remarked: '5Shall I sit so close to Own OH e S eps 0 Wal Of lmbe ' the SOQSQ? . . Yes ma'am, the old salt confided Fmdmf-I the Words a blt eflulvocfflli to the iiiqiiisiiive lady, 1 fell over the he turned around to the lady and said, Side of the Ship, and 3 Shark comes in a most lIlOfT6Il?lVC tonei, Iaxcuse me, along and grabbed me by the legy I meant the roasted One' Merciful heavens! his hearer gasp- -----? ed, Hand what did you do? kb The man of the house finally took I ,Let im ave' the leg'hlfl?0u1Ise:Z ig all, the disabled umbrellas to the re- md am' never argues Wlt 5 ar S' palrer S' Next morning on his Way to Customer to Palmist: Five dollars his office, when he got up'to leave the fee? EI,-would you have any Objec- Tltgiftofciliie hfmgllfsgtggfggggg E113 tion to waiting until I get some of the i., ' ' 9 2 woman beside him, for he was in the money you Say is Coming to me' W habit of carrying one. The woman cried: ' Stop thief l rescued her um- brella and covered the man with 5 shame and confusion. L O That same day, he stopped at the Repwt at sive repairer's and received all eight of minutes after ei ht his umbrellas duly restored. As he ever f . I 'morn 'ng or entered a street car with the un- 20 9 the , uf os the W wrapped umbrellas tucked under his semcstu and seg 2 arm, he was horrified to behold gleam- jeu, hom:,,eo,.-teach, 'l ing at him the lady of his morning at -g-,,,,1,w,,Lt,. adventure. Her voice came to him charged with withering scorn. Huh! 6 Had a good day, didn't you! ,477 '-i Q ,..,.. The cross-eyed man at the ball x bowed with courtly grace, and said: E6 lVIay I have the pleasure of this Q dance? ' ' f Two wallflowers answered as with I the same voice: With pleasure. J ---Agp . 1 Q i Q lNIrs. Profiteer: Is this a pedigree dog? 'l.. Dealer: Pedigree? I should just h think 'e is Mum. Why, if the animal Five nutes IN The, Fl.M Q could talk 'e wouldn't speak to either H ' of us. t..SdvQS you forty inthe 3 9995 MQQQ4 XQQ? QQQCQL QQQQ EQQQ4 HQCQQA QQQU iglwigi 7ll I' O X3 in ri I ed cu :D r-1 U U FU Co Z if G O Na e Is In Engroaaed in Ambitzbn Never Without 28 Al Bingham .......,..,, AA4,..... B usy ............ A..AA,... A ndy ................4AA,4A4A,4.................,............ Be bank-president ......,.. ,,.,.... S heckels ij Florence Atkins ,,........ .,,...,.. D arling ...,.... ......... I nstitutes of higher education .,.,,,,,...... To attend Carnival ......A , ...,,,,,, An engagement Lucille Barnes .,...,,,.,,, e..,..... T all .................. ee,.,,.. Rese rve ,...,..........,eeee,,.,.....,,..,....... .,,. .,... T 0 be married .........,,..... . ,.,,.... An armful of books Jane Barrett ,,,,,,.,,.,..,.. .. .,.r..... Small .....e.e........ .. ,...,... Syd ,.....,...., .,,eeeee,,...e.,,.,,,,...,.,.....,., ,.,.,,. T o meet Valentino... .. ........,,Jmn Lloyd Brenneman .,,,,,,,. ......... C llrly haired ..e.... ........ M ath ........................ ....... G0 to Annapolis... .e,,,,,,.. The right answer Mary Beck ,,,,,,,,,..l..le.. ,.,,...,, S mart ......,.,,..,.,. ........ V ergil.- ,..... ,...,.............. ,.,..,, E uro pe.- ,.,. ...... . .. .. ,,.e...,,, Conversation C? Katherine Becker e,,,,,.,. e,.e....e L imc ..........,. .,...... Fri enashsp club ......e. ....... M i. Holyoke ,... ..... e,,i,.., P i ie of work is Ruth Begley ....,.,.,,,,,,,, .ee...... B runette ....e..... ........ A Sorority ..,........... e...... T o graduate .......... ,,,,,.. I ntriguing glances Ruth Bunyan ,,,,,,,,,, ,........ B llnny ........,,,.,, ,....... S llingle Bobs ......,,e. ..,,,,. T 0 shrink ..............,,.... ,..,.,, A friendly word Virginia Burr ,....,,,n, .ee,,.... P oetical ..............,. ........ Ora l English ......... ,...... S urpass her rival ......,.,,. ,,,,,.. A resigned smile Betsey Byers ...,.,,.,..n,. ,........ R ed-headed ...,......... ,........ S haw ........,........,..,,. . ..,.... Out-do Galli Curci ..,,,.,, .e,.,,, I-I er independence ll Bill Carroll ,,.,.,...,.n.,,,,,,,. ..,...... A long stretch .,.,..,., ......... L ife in general ........ ,....., Be a Cook's guide ......... ,,,.,., Th e long stretch r' Jean Charlesworth ..nt,,r,, ,..,,..,, A good manage .,.,.,,, .,....... F red ...............,.,., .,,,.... V isit Niagara ..,........... ,,,,,,, A task 3 Fannie Clark ......,,.,,,. ......... A thletic ......,e.,,,...,.. ....... . .Hockey .,....,..... 1 ........ R ival Zez Confrey ......... ....... T eh freezing glance Q Helen Corcoran .,......., ......... D ignified ......... ......... T he Annual ......... ..,,.... A year's sleep .............. ..,.,.. H er poise F Bin Conwy ,,.........,,,.,. ......... J ust Bin ...... ........, L adies .............. ........ G 0 in are movies ...,.... ,..,... N onchnance Irwin Crystal. ...,..,.,.. ..... .......... R 0 tund ........ ......... N othing ......... ........ Sc are the girls .............. ...,... H is Pop Charlotte Correll ......,.,,. .......... C heerful ........... ......... L . H .....,..., ........ T o stage hand ........... ......, A surprised smile M Dorothy Corlett ,... ..... .......... D a rk ................... ......... M en ............... ........ I t's a secret-, .................... ....... D ates C Bessie Corso ,..,....,... ,......... A good sport .....,.... ......... A thletics ....... .. ........ Olympic Hockey Team ...... ,...... P ep Alice C y .............,.. ......... J ust nice ............. ......... Ar izona ........ ........ T o go there.- ................ ...... .... . , .....,. A hair ribbon Virginia Crowell ....... .....,..,. I ndependent .......... ..... ..,. C h uck .................. ........ H ave a permanent wave ...............,,,...... The busy signal Hilda Dazell .........,,.,.. .......... B londe .........,........... .. ........ Universities... ......... ........ T 0 make a marcel stay p t .,..........., Alice-, Dorothy Dunlap ....... .....,..., T iny and cute ........... ......... A ny nice man.- ...... ........ T o make up her mind ......,..,,...... .,,,,.. A n en-and y Edith Einstein ......., .......... E fhcient .....,........... . ....... .Michigan ........... .- ......., To pass Board exams .............. .,,.,.. S tyleu C Marian Evans ........ ......... A ttractive ......,....,.. ........ C arnerons ...... ........ T o eat pickles safely ...,.....,..,... ,.,..,. A jolly laugh Q Mary Fasciano .....,., ...... ' 'Betty ...................,.. r.,,..... G lee Club ......... ....... T o understudy Rosa Raisa .....,... ....,.. A kind word Q Trumana Foote ........., . ,....... From New Haven ..,.... ......... M any ............. ..,..... W ellesley .........,.....,........,..,...,.... ,.,.,,...,. So me loss Dot Gimmel ......... ...... ......... A d ickens- ...,.,......,.,..,... ......... A l fstilll ...................... ....... A date while he is gone ..........,, .....,.... La ughter Carriel Gordon-- ......, ......... A snappy number ........ ......... Be tty .............,v................ ,...... T 0 be a man-about-town ..,,.... ,.,....... T he Stntz i Bob Gordon ..........., ..,...... A n athlete ..........,....... ......... A ny lady ....................,........ ....... A ll-American ........ ..............,., .....,.,.. A s ardonic look is Dorothy Hall. ...,........, ........, S weet ....................... ..,...... A nything for Heights ........ ,....., G row fat ......,.........,........,.......... ,....l.., ,A smile 2 Mary Halle .....,........,,...., ......... Pret ty ....... ......... Who knows? ..............,...... ......, M ore Wellesley ..................,,,,,....,..,..,,,., Shorty Walter Hambourger ....,.... ,........ B3 illiant.-- .......... ,........ Th oughts ....................... . ..... To be president of Harvard .....,.,......,.. E's Pru Halverstadt ......,.... ......... M arcelled ...,.,.........,... ........ An ything but study .......,.. ..,,... W e'll bite! ......... .,..,,.,..,,.....,,,...,.......,,,,,,, A n absence slip Edbert Harris ............ ....,.... S ure of himself .......... ......... D ebating, ........................ .,,..., P lay Hamlet , ............,,,........ ,.......,, H is curly hair Harold Hobson ...... ......... A lady's man ........, ....... G lee Club .................... ....... T o sing ............................... ....,,,.,. A lady Charles Hoffman ......,. ......... C huck ................. ........ Orc hestra ............ - .......... ........... T 0 play the trombone ,........ ,......,.. Sa id trombone 8 Eileen Huelsman ........ ......... H . R. Captain ....... ........ Th e good of Heights ....... ......,v.. R ide a Kiddy Kar ............,. ,...,,.., G ood grades Q James Hurst ,,........... ......... C ashier .........,....... ,....... Ha ir groom ..................... ....... P lay poker ...............,..,.......... .....,.,., A n argument Marjorie Iden ......... .,...... A busy lady ..,.... ...,,... B 8: G ...................... ....... T 0 write for the Times ..., ,,,. ...,....., H e r work well done Lily Jaskalek ....... ......... D ramatic .....,.... ......... D ramatics ........ ....... D ramatics ...............,........., ,...,..,,., D ramatics l138i Q 2 gO G G G0 ,iq ve U CALDR0NfM00 Um 3..- S., Q S . C 'S -. Q as :S -Q 5 m iv 0 as 'Q 3-V I- ev- ... 4: C, 3 L 'E 33 282-52 E Sex Q? Q E 5:3 6 I 2 ISS? SGEPPS' W S38 vs M-M mi Hwiw MH w aoai- ?, ,,Eb!5 --d-- 5. .1 - is v a 5 -'U '-2.2--.E ,Lv Z wma'-'-U 08-5 tmCl3,2Q- HU... 0 -uh 205--'5n. 5,'3 -gn. 2 ,gp-Quai .xsx..EE:,ggqgg gig f5,.Eog,g ...E,,.5'5g...,3-.aegzh ww-Eiihwgisingirviv,-gg8 E:w.FoSn,wE.Q'5,2'5.3c-3gm8,ggE 13Q15Qw2111e111QQQQQQHQQQ1w5Q4mm414HZmfQr Nmliief We 'If'?1U71fEi? 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QQQQQ JQQ6 EQQQQ qfggq '11391b uf ge W' ' ' i'f' .ggi THB Q ALD RUN e f aC '-X' l+QeUQDg lOi.'f,,fl 'QQ Q1 fi VQDCNTYQY giQQ ff lf 7 ' ' ' UFC O i 'Vi ' 6 G fi ' Q9 w E5 5 9 sy 53 6 fi K fr, lhe elnld eame to his mother ln Ilia 1 IIANC-lull 1 1 --oi 1 f 1 f-I 3 T: IME' tll' ll 'l?f I K ifnlf Mel ' It's years sinee I've seen you. Do Hifi f 'I It .m K mf? 1' you still love that old girl of yours? Never mind, dear, the mother MI H ,t H Y tl 1 t I d ,, eousoled, hut however did you eome hm My 1 0' to dl, ith Just as I used to tell you, when you ff' ' . . . . , , , . ., . ' ' --I was I,,,,md,,,g It WM, fathers were so crafy about her. Whom did w:m.h ' she marry? li I - f e-iff-Q Me, The old farmer was driving home 'gf' 4 W ' L fig from town, after having nnhlhed SOME ANC-E51-UR 5 rather freely. In desc-ending a lull, the Q horse stumhled and fell, and either A ,Hmm from Dmlver had been ,.,,,,1d not, or would Hot. get to its hragging to an. Irishman about the l., feet again. At last the farmer spoke Rocky luountiuns- S2lV2I,fJ:1'lj'Z Dang yer hide, git up You seem nnghty proud of them 5 Vi tlmr' or I'll drive over ye! mountains, ' said the Irishman. I ought to he, was the reply. A 'Vw' mv aneestors huilt them. ., V23 nie ,z . . ffl ,ZH ad, N2 nm lhe Irishman seratehed his head. , ., - 1 fi Q we ra 1 W, Dld you ever hear of the Dead hen 5 A Ql - ' I in one of the old eountries? 'Q .1 ll lf- Yes, indeed. M lVell mv frandfather killed that QU V .4 4'-'L tl . ,, ' 3' ea 1 N - nn f. 'J Ig, Y 72 M? 1. i4 i gw w 1 fll1l1UI-I , W V X W v v LX ILRY IHINC, B141 W U N Have you the eourage to loan me in l a ten-spot? 'N .5 1 u uw Rx O-C bure, hut I haven t the ten. Q 'J , , Y, ,Lg , V Y V Y Y Y W R-304134 J J JK Y N 93149 ,,,, W ,,,. , UQJQ5 ., Wg -DQCDT , 'JQCQQTY MUQQC7ii9QQLQffQl,YwgnQQ6 igilioigo g0G G 65 Q6..5gI: THE CALDRON :lgs..0O lGf Q C'E3 B o 6 N Q? Has attending a co-educationtal 4 Q 4' 'I' school had any effect on your sons? 5 i, q f VVell it's made them a little more Q ' ' gf-9 particular about their neck ties, hut I can't see that it's modified their 6 school yell. LQ, Q - f--e Nurse: Do you know what hap- Q pens to little boys who eat a lot of dates9 E2 Jack: They turns into almanacs, Q I suppose. 'AY X The motorist telephoned from Aus- W tinburgh for assistance. I've turned 3 ll IVIY5 lvllwflll 10 l turtle, he shouted. E 5 ' hey Tom YY l Q VVrong place! Apply at the aquar- li 1llHl!!I was the cool answer. E Farmer: How'd you get the punc- E111P1oyo1' lllo 0o1o1'o11 P01191 011 dj Q ture? dutyb: Rastus, is that a real diamond Q 3 Autoist: Ran over a chicken with You have 111 your 1113 P1h?!I pin feathersfl Rastus: Lawsy bos, ah hopes so. -Wim. If it ain't, ah been skinned outa Did you mail those two letters I 1121113 do113h1i, L 2 gave you, Norah? -'-T-- U 3 is '-Yegm, at the pOSt-0ff-ice. But I Teacher: VVhat IS an oyster? '. Q noticed that you'd put the two-cent Young Noah Lotl M-'hh Oyster 15 tl stamp on the foreign letter and the 11511 1111111 11149 3 H111-N W one cent stamp on the city one. Y 1 - 1 8 Oh what a blunder. New Student: Do they rmg two 5 'B But I fiX't it all right ma'am. I ho11S.fo1' So11oo1?v , li? just changed the addresses on the B1'1ght '1Uh1o1'f uNoPo- They F1112 envelopesvl, the same bell twice! 8 Smith: So your son is in college? ,Em1210yef1 -101ml 1W1S11y0UW01'1f1- HOW is he making ity- n t whistle at your work. N' A Brown: He is'nt. l'm making it BOX: I, Wash I W01'k111g, 5113 o111Y W and he's spending it. whlstlmg' I Q - 4-w4 Q Did you hear the stepladder fall, mama? fo Yes, I hope father didn't fall? W He hasn't yet. He's hanging to the S picture molding. 5 1' 1---A o Toots: Vilas Nlort on the eleven? m Harriet: K'VVell, from where I sat 6 it looked as if the eleven were on him. CQ '--1 ' Knock, and the world knocks with A you Boost, and you boost alone! C6 ?fT1dT nv Drvr A1D'Yl'1lK95 3- Q You would not knock the jokes we use, e'f'1 H '1'I' Q If you could see what we refuse! Q G QQQ4 BQQDQDG- UQQQ DQDQDQQ BQQL- BQQQQ.. REQ? QQ QQ? GQQQ 0311141 lg. OO 0 iieoq THE CALDRON B,cno e co f g , I I I , V N h : L I - I ' I , I 4 . 4 . W? lc: x I I S X gl llc: ,A - ' fffff' fififf n at fer m n 5 I 5 fl . 2 II ,I 2 - III I I 2 W -fffj I g IIIIII' I I 5751? 5 IIIII Isla 2 2 W 9 EIEIE 5 g 1 94. I ' A 'IW' . 21 It law, '5 N i A f,4IMM:'w-!J.!',. lII,w,.III:IL..:Q II,I+wI,KI WIq',,,l IIIII,In-II' we Ei uannusnzs. When we first came to high school CIS there anyone who doesn't?J We thought that books were all the things Which now we know they wasn't. VVe thought them all-important 'Till the years went by a-whizzin' 2 And our books became mere trifles Vvhich, indeed, is what they isn't. And now that school is over We do often wish - who doesn't? We had called a happy medium Of things that was and wasnt .Q QQ- .-JQQQ6 . BQCQQ HQCQCQ? SJQCQG PCQCQCQ? MDQ6 JCQCQQG ! WCG 'fl141l2' C3C?C'J I63 0C '.,QQD 1?q,..QC3 C'9 O CQOg CQ 5 It's funny that you should be so 5 X 1 tall. Your brother, the artist is short, Q ' , f . . ., I f , isn t he? XI f , He Cabsentlyj: Yes, usually. y f HBEEFH Eg Q .A X Betty YV.: I wonder why poor Art Q 1 , 'um ed in the river? I J I9 V Q Bob I'.: I think there was a woman 5 , j at the bottom of it. -ana f odoo M l - I QUITE PROPER A ,Jfhat girl accepts rings froni men .f f' . .. W she doesnt know. CA gi How can she? f-f k A Has to. She's a telephone girl. 4 x ml-I I , .. -HI!-H X - Irof.: A fool can ask more ques- Pi X. , Gus H1 Aff LLM., tions thanra wise man can answer. N ,x X N 5 btud.: Ihat s wh we all Hunked. O 5. y Q All the world loves a lover. H-wi'-W BI tl l ,, t' , sl st ft Best Blau Cseemg Couple OH, on o mer is t ie excep lon s ie inns si p X 4, . up until the young man leax es. Q IIOIIQYIIIOOIIDZ Here you are-just Q- - Q KE' A v A lg V I N 4 1-4 v y ii-iii l a.feu'n1ag.m1ries to help pass avi ay the .. .Iv0ryAwhat an odd name fc,r i tune. 1 - lp. . 4374-it A QU' . i l Yes, she's one hundred per cent j HIa, can I go out to play! pure, i I What, Wlillie! XYith those holes 5 9 in your trousers? Q l Naw, with the kids across the l street! gf THE NEWS Bliss Vrankshaw: lYln1t is the plur- is , i H N al of mouse, Dick? il i- Z gf 54 ,Q QW l Dick: Mic-e. I Hx 1 'jg X Miss Clrankshaw: f'orrect. Now j 3 AM eh i W the plural of spouse? Dick: Spice, 5 p HMVH, -, ' l It's a wise child that goes out of the rooin when the old inan l1121Sl16S w, his thunib. 4,f,., -N l , ,, . I ll She: Are you sure that it was a l ' N ff year ago today that we IBGCHIIIQ en- li A gaged, dear?', He: Yes, I looked it up on my ' 1 cheque hook this morning. 1 1 7H4 i- l l It was their first real quarrel 1 l 5 If I were you, she said, during a lull in the doinestic storm. I would 5 l have more sense! 9 Wqy we at HOTTTQ. I i Of course you would. he retorted l L QQQflh5JQC3f, BQQDE' UQQQP, GQQT' DQQQL DQQC -EQQQG, IUQQQ elim lla el 1Q -'TGC O C'E0,,5SI THE CALDRON 1ge,,GG i d'OL'ilLfO OGg Q E QQ wo eh- wiv, On l llillifri looltecl j q V 0 5 1 1 so reoccu lee! Ae 7! Q ' N3 mas Vicahnfz E5 Q Q E35 5, Mi Q + 5 Q Une day I bought a lottery ticket Mistress: IVhat makes you so sad, for a horse, and what d'y think? I Dinah? j won it! At once rose visions of me Dinah: Ah 'speks mah feller ain't D astride a jet black steed prancing down loyal. Q the avenue, while all the girls exclaim- Mistress: So it's the eternal tri- ed: Ain't he grand? Just like Tom angle? Mix. Dinah: Ah fears it am an infernal And then two days later. I received hexagon! 3 a letter from the chief of police stating Pelican that if I didn't remove that dead horse '----- from vacant lot 13, I would be pinched. Father tat head of stairsj: Susie ----gg isn't it about time to go to bed? Q, BURRUYVED 1100135 Daughter ta nimnent laterj: f'Yf-S, Mr Norris Csternlyj: Do you know lgaftherltlfiifrl' . pon t put It SH fl mlgmttj' why I Hlmked you?-v our lea t 1 s not too gc? 3211 npw. Student. tangrilyjg I haven't any U6 eww' N ' l -2 , . -A-gif-. ' INNER Norris. --Exafilyf' h is that fellow with the long H--wh-W air. He's a fellow from Yale nI,wonder why we had a puncture., MAIL I W iyften heard of those X ale lrobably because of the fork III lockq -- J the road. A' ww-gsi 3 N V ' 9 VVilliam. did you put father's 11ew A V be YUU N' U Siilesllltlll- are YOU- book in the bath this morning? what df' YOU Hell- N Yes, mother, I did. I heard father I Hell Salt- I m 3 Salt Sf lf'f, Sllake- say last night that it was too dry for -- him. Q Your advertisement says that at -W--M-- e l this hotel there is a beautiful view First Lunatic: Say ya' gotta' for miles and miles. piece of toast in your pocket? So there is. Just put your head Second Lunatic: No why? out that window and look up. First Lunatic: 'Tm a poached egg Q w-Yule Record. and I want to sit down. H-MN i,Qi9+DUsD4 ,, , QffQ3MQ6A. , 599373, JQQQL, BQQQ 5QQQQflf'iT3Q,i6'Yi7QLQ6 :2ll144l2' ez ly Q 5 gC50 G OD GG..sg1i 0CO O' C COC Q 8 . 1 101 gg: Sm xii-ip '1 2 3 u U , 43, l 4 5 M I J r l .0 .IFN 8 . X :J + ' A 5 4 Q 6 - an any 4.15: uw s Q . SOME OF OUR PET AMBITIONS thugd Vgilkta H125 fear a iamelf' said e ra os on e eser. W To be appreciated-Bob Gordon. ..i,.- C3 To pose for staycomb ads-Ed Gussie: What did your mother Q Linderme. say when you told her I was sorry for Q To have 3 Stadium-Mr. Kneen' havingvmade a fool of myself at your To secure some new members of the partyj . . E6 board of strategy-Mr. Gordon. Eqlthi Uh, Qhe Said she Il0UCCd C0 To have his picture in Physical nothing unusual' 'N - ' Culture-Don Cain. ------ To beat Shaw in football--All of us. POPULAR H1GH-5CH00L .To own a trophy case. to help hold BELIEFS 3 his medals-Archie Lewis. CF rom the teacherfs outlookj i ShTC1fhl2i,aCr0SS the Enghsh Channel- That every student who stays after Of le eaver' B A ,Q6 class is showing commendable in- W ' ' ' terestf, Q ----'- That everyone who doesn't is stupid. W What is your idea of the tightest h0T:ftSfJ3g7y recitation requires two man in school? u ' The guy that W0h't take 3 Shower, That the student who talks the most Q because they Soak him too much. in the class room is the mostintelligent. r --- - That the longest paper shows the -- greatest amount of thought D Webtfglllsvigcifisf the might are those CFr0m the Pupil's outlookj 2 i That every teacher can be kidded W HH'- 1 along if you know how. Mrs. Baker: That's the fourth That voluntary OCCUPHHCY Of 3 J time you've looked at Smithis paper. fffmt Seat means 3 Sure E- 6 J. Hurst: But Smith is such a poor That much waving of the hand will Q writer. keep anyone from being called on. ECQQQY 9' EQQG OQDQC 5725-DK-EQ -EQCQR - EQQQT- X002 9QQQG -. BQQQ alms H20 ooo a e,o oo.iq THE CALDRQN 13t,..oo c oc.-L?-,ooo B f, in -ffl ' N N .l X.. A 1. 'N QC HOUR S? RNHCQ . php, Some say that luck, Is only pluck. To try things over and over, But courage, good will. Patience, and skill Are the four leaves of luck's clover. Prof. Small chickens instinctively follow the first moving objects they see. Tom Morton: That may be so, but in my experience I had to follow them.' If Virginia is Wood is Elizabeth Stone? If Helen Sears can Rose Cook Ruth some Goodbread? If Lutton lost all his Jack would he be Owen Phillips? If Ralph had a Bunn would Mor- gan Baker? If Estelle has a Ford would Virginia Turner? If Dorothy Sinks has Helen Rose? Should Margaret Feicht would Wil- liam Flaugher? ' If Andy B. Sharp has Williard De Witt? Should George Drawe Clemens Gunn? If Zellers danced with Florence Andrus would Al Bingham? If Stew tips the scale at 500 how much does Betty Weh? Would Gus Peck Wilmarth's Post? Would Jack Porter in Mr. Barber's Shop? Billie Suits Bob Baxter. If Ralph is Silver is Helen Zink? THE BREAD LINE I They stand in solemn single file, i Each one, a tray in hand. Their line extends along a mile I This famous little band. y They choose the things they'd like to D buy. Then wait in vain to dineg For wait they must or else they die In Heights High's long bread line. N. B. M. BRIGHT SAYINGS OF OUR FACULTY Miss Wallace: Girls you must learn to be simple. Miss Hale: Draw around in a circle, two feet square. Miss Crankshaw: Not at all Mr. Spencer: Let Florence give the first suggestion then skip around the Room. J C..o Y X A Q I grub l C Yuwelsi TMKQS a el-mwrni-ng l'11fl'0'l' QQ? QQQQH A996 AQQQA AQQ1 AQQQ1 E QQL. AQ QQ6 CQQQJ al146l2- K-f E63 G 0 6DG...5!3l THE CALDRQN 1g5.0CoQ'i:5CoLiiC OcnCg 1. F, e A 8 Q fs Q ,. axe? , Q -Q, p Q , :J f, - 'l I --ig-N -vu -'fu gf I I :ful I' I I ' Y I3 A 2 Y- f f ' a yo H V X fri I 'I F ff N. ' O t -2 .. is aa-'Q .a f Ja ,g Why are we ll-1'l'e, P 5 6 C0 C5 Q Q Teacher: Leave this Room! SENIOR HABITS E6 Junior Csoftlybz I don't intend 1. To be haughty. Q to take it with me. 2. To hang around the office. Q -'----- 3. To cut class ONE FOR BIISS LUTTONI 41 To study C93 hard. Q M To prove: That ruled paper is a 5- TQ Prepare for graduatlofl 10 Q lame dog- weeks in advance. f is Proof: 6. To come late to class. F 1. Ruled paper is an inclined plane. 7- T0 Saafe Uefvy S0PhS Off the i Q. An inclined plane is a slope up. H001' at Fflday dances- I g 3, A Slow pup is a lame dog. 8. To prepare for college-board ex- O --.--- ams. I I . x 'B No matter how poor a convict is, 9- T0 V1.S1t M155 Nash- Q Q Or how little is his gain h10. To foke about the teachers in He can always go to prison, 'E 6 annua - J And get a watch and chain. 11- T0 hang around the halls- 4- Q ------ 12. To set worthy examples to the Q A You have a terrible cold. flltllfe S6I1i01'S- qi HI caught it on a fishing trip. -,.-..- Did you get your feet wet? . . UNO, I Slept in the Cold Stablesf- .The Scotch minister rose and cleared X Q ..NeXt to the draft horses, I Sup- his throat but remained silent, while 8 posef- the congregation awaited the sermon G' -G in puzzled expectancy. U Sam COn outside looking injr Look At last he Spvker K 2 heah, niggah, is you.in for lifew 6'There's a laddie awa' there in Ci li Rastum CQn inside looking outlz the gallery a kissin' a lassie, he said. Q Not me, I a1n't, just from now on. When he,s done I'll begin. .., 6 QQ? DQQQ6 QQQDQ 99996 BQCQ4 9CQCQQt XQCQ5.- BCQCQQ6 . , BQCC3 'gllI47 lg' laser,-fel THE CALDRUN latogrgioi- 1102-'ZEQQS KJ OD ,W ey '-7'fiL il ts, l Ni' E8 T V. l 55 5 O O PN '5 if l Q Q r ' r i 1.wfFW'i?A 3 The Ca Feteruas ew 1-vnce 'taFF g I, R, It was during a golf game in Scot- The jurors filed into the jury box V' 8 land. The first player who drove and when the twelve were filled there ' off was very' bowlegged. The second remained one juror standing outside. T pllayill' llamllldfgll Tzltfhlf Oppgnelf If the court will Come to order ads huge' ydlllt P3111 111 IITQ irlllfllx please, said the clerk, They have J lemnimtflnle L ll lzze le we n is sent us thirteen jurors instead of Q Q Om ' fr' ' twelve. Yvhat do you want to do with Q Hoot, mon, said the bow-legged 9XfI'3 0fl9?', 0110 in anger, what S U39 golf! VVhat is your name? asked the V E3 --Aweelf' Said his opponent Com, Judge of the thirteenth man. Q plaeently, ef 'tis nae golf 'tis gude Joseph A. Brainesf' he replied, Q limquet' Clerk,', said the judge, take this v' wgiwi man back to the 'urv commissioners J .. Q .., , v - v .. - and tell them we don t need him as we 1 Q ll' mm 0 of dat guy, he Complam- alread Y have here twelve men without 8 Q ed. ofTerin' me six dollars a week! Bminig .f Q VVot does he 'tink I amea College graduate? wvvwfh l v T Y , hliss hlatthison: Hilfe have had a . Y1'S. I flI'0V0 OWI' fvriy l1lll9S Ht fine lesson this morning. Can anyone high speed-fearfully wet all the way, acc-mmt for it? but l didn't skid a hit. A W , i , N , , . , iw, Swede: 'Sure thats easy. Henry A kvlly wlrlllghclfls' Smith left his 'College Humor' at T No, Ilowerlmoat U ll0m6'.N T so kg fra L 9 W, -A gt- t . X ,f f , N A M af-Q MQ Jac- 'h f'3 av Ji J haf J, JF Y,Y, fjxbtlf avkvkk , 5 bob? YN JQMQ Q s Qt-A 'lgll 48 le T'H'I'S A-N'N'U'A'L IS MADE POSSIBLE THROUGH THE COURTESY OF THE ADVERTISERS HEREIN REPRESENTED AND YOU ARE URGED TO SHOW YOUR APPRECIATION By PATRONIZING TI-IEM NOW IS THE TIME Charlotte TO BUY YOUR COAL FOR NEXT WINTER Hdff -f 1' CHARLOTTE FILL UP YOUR BIN WITH GOOD DRY COAL Call 4' F. P. KNEEN Cedar 1467 We Ash The Brown Bros. Coal CO. 1850 Coventr Road 9533 WOODLAND AVENU CLEVELAND HEI3CHTS,O. 9104 MADISON AVENU 'EI4913' G. C. KICH RICS PHOTQGRAPHER Portraits of highest quality to meet the needs of everyone. Prices from School Annuals a spe- cialty for many years. Our advice should prove valuable in the 56 -1-0 590 arrangement of your PER DUZEN school year hook. Mn-vnlwrs of l'hYotYoYgYr:nphei'ls Asslmofdlneriea, UhioilXEl1iuali'liillizir1Va Socis-ty,Uhio Sm' lnternarional Prize. 1910 Tri-State Trophy, july 22. N22 2ll2 Lee Road If.vmbli,vhrd mm 1889 Fairmount 4486 GY ER 260001 Shoppe F. I. POYNER l'liRMANliN'l' WAVE SPliClAl,lS'l' x HARRIET POYNER CLIJANSING CREAM SKIN F0019 .-.- ROUGE Fairmount 3676 2789 Euclid Boulevard Cleveland Heights, O. ssl I Sole' On The Heights 'Q EIGHTS HI is at the top, in education. SherWin-Will- iams is at the top in paints and varnishes. Both are a part of Cleveland ee home products. Your education is not complete until you not only know but use the right product for each surface. How are You to KNUW7? BY CONSULTING OUR HOUSEHOLD PAINTING GUIDE You will avoid costly mistakes, eliminate disappointment, get satisfaction. This is the time of year to freshen up and protect your home. There's fun in it, as Well as benefit. Ever stop to think What's in a can of Sherwin-Williams Paint or Varnish? Not just lead, oil, zinc, color or Turpentine, important as these all are-There's beauty, restfulness, cleanliness, improvement, economic enhancement, protection, preservation ! These are the reasons for painting. Don't delay. We recommend a good painter for the larger surfaces. Consult the Guide! NEARBY AGENTS City Hardware 81 Supply Co. - - - 10548 Euclid Ave. East End Painting Co. ----- 15709 Euclid Ave. Euclid Park Hardware Co. - - - 17807 Euclid Ave. Chas. Michel Jr. - - - - - 12421 Cedar Road Stamberger Co. - - - - - - 2185 Lee Road Stamberger Co. - - - - 2945 Mayfield Road H. C. Brown -------- 12504 Euclid Ave. SH nwm-W1L1.1AMs PAINTS allimv .SH s MAIN 4200 601 Canal Road, N. W. Cleveland 'illillg' REMIER SERVICE 01411 that the name implies I 4 CREATIVE PRINTING SERVICE COMPLETE DIRECT MAIL ADVERTISING CATALOGS V HOUSE ORGANS V ANNUALS THE PREMIER PRESS Premier Building 4 Cleveland, Ohio 8l151Ix' ,dbx ,. 1 Uglllsslga - .i P1,AYHoUsE SQUARE AND EVERYWHEREH --i-- The Heights is Not a One Horse Town! Traveling Salesman to Street Cleaner: Is there a dry cleaner in this town ? I want to get my suit cleaned. Street Cleaner: No there h'aint a one here. Traveling Salesman: Oh Boy, but this must be a one horse town. Street Cleaner: Mister, You would'nt'a think so if you had my job ! , Ghz 1IIUlZI?5 Glzansing and illyzing n. 1321 EUCLID AVE. CARNEGIE AND 81 ST 32 'TAYLOR ARCADE RANDOLPH 8100 1218-30 EAST 71 ST 8718 Houma AVE. 11715 DETROIT AVE Compliments of The Harrington Electric Co. si15413' SCHOOL of BUSINESS A knowledge of business procedure is un essential part of e'veryone's education Member Nat1onalA oclatlon of Accrednted Co erclal Schools NINTH PROSPECT HURON C L E V E L A N D Compliments of The J. M. 81 L. A. Osborn C0 --PSD 5 SEQ- VALET 5 ' Aj' V 1 D Y E ING A 4, 1 AIX PORTIERES REPAIRING ' ,I 41MIg1ga1IiE,,mi' E CURTAINS PRE SSING l ' ' Iffiiiililf S H A D E S rl' 0 I I - DRY CLEANERS - 1 12427 Cedar Road ER ICE NOT AN ORDINARY DRUG STORE But-An Institution, where SERVICE AND QUALITY Are Paramount. QQ NV GEGENHEIMER DRUG Co. The fprefcrzfiiofz Sfore 3096 MAYFIELD COR. LEE RD. CLEVELAND I-IE1oH'rs I 5 613, Plea.fz'ng Portraits SPECIAL RATES hr STUDENTS QFD WY THE NEWMAN STUDIO Photographers 1706 EUCLIDAAVENUE TELEPHONE PROSPECT 2110 ffl 1 5713? NHLLER FENWAY HALL CEDAR ROAD Complimentf of DRUG DRUGS CIGARS 'X' ICE CREAM and SUNDR I ES 5 STORE C M --+SI1s81i+ FLOWERS AND PLANTS IN ANY STYLE FOR ALL OCCASIONS Prepared by experts with years of experience in catering to people of discernment. Delivery Service Anywhere Phone, Fairmount 4392 -mer- '99 1846 COVENTRY ROAD Between Euclid Heights Boulevard and Mayfield SPANNER We Sell Good Coal of heat-the smallest amount of ash-and no clinkers. The largest amount Weight Full 2000 pounds to the ton. Service Deliveries when you prompt want it-not any old time. - Price The lowest for the best coal we can buy. A TRIAL ORDER WILL CONVINCE YOU Telephone, EDDY 1896 The Erie Goal 8: Coke Co. OFFICE AND YARD: 1196 East 152nd Street BRICK Facing for your new residence is more important than your clothes. The latter you can change, but the brick Qeither good or badj remain with you .li Les us show you our full line of colors, textures and styles Our Exhibit Roomr Will Intfreft You Be sure to install a BUILT-IN MAIL-O-BOX in your new house A BUILT-IN WALL SAFE is also a great protection THE R. L. QUEISSER CO. orrrce YARD Schofield Building 900 S. Woodland Main 4224 Cedar 2778 For the Best in PRINTING CA L L FAIRMOUNT 3943-R wx'-we SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE PRINTING OF xPROGRAMS: FOR BANQUETS AND DANCES wkfclek ALSO ALL KINDS or COMMERCIAL PRINTING F. M. MCDONNELL 3099 MEADOWBROOK ROAD CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, OHIO Uwe CHOOSE SPENCERIAN FOR 10 REASONS The wide scope of courses. Personnel of Faculty Convenient location' Collegiate degrees offered. C I . Valuable placement assistance A Omp ete equlpmem' offered students upon graduation. RCPFCSCDIHUVC Student body Success of Spencerian graduates. Athletic and Social Activities National Reputation. GRADUATES ARE PREPARED To SERVE As BOOKKEEPERS STENOGRAPHERS SECRETARIES ACCOUNTANTS TEACHERS ATTORNEYS SALESMAN AND EXECUTIVES Call, write or phone for detailfd information SPENCERIAN SCHOOL 3201 Euclid Avenue Prospect 4500 FOUNDED 1848 THE . BECKER-SEIDEL Compliments ay' the AMERICAN HEQLQNG Q I N G PLUMBING CQMPANY CONTRACTORS QC, QQ? we NIV 2341-2343 EAST 22nd ST. CLEVELAND, OHIO -ri 1 6oj' BUDIN' HIGH GRADE DELICATESSEN 'EFS Werarryv a full line oj Imported Delicacies 05' w E c A T E R T 0 PARTIES AND PICNICS S F 4322 1864 C y R d LOUISE SH OPPE A Wo m a 71 's S iz 0 p 'I' 4' SILK HOSIERY LINGERIE BRACELETS NOVELTY JEWELRY 4, SPORT DRESSES SPORT MILLINERY 'l' 2791 Euclid Heights Boulevard The TREUHAFT Co. fir WELL BUILT HOMES IN CLEVELAND HEIGHTS and SHAKER HEIGHTS FAIRMOUNT 1629 3777 MAYFIELD RD. 161 THE WEBB C. BALL CO. DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY SILVER CHINA PRESTIGE THAT ADDS TO VALUE BUT NOT TO PRICE SINCE 1869 ALCAZAR ilil ln the center of the fashionable life of Cleveland Cuisine and Service Unexcelled. We Invite Your Inspection. Weddings Reeeptions Luneheons Teas Cards Dancing Banquets SUITES Single Room and Bath, S75 per month and up Daily Rate, 33 up -: - Double, 34.50 up Kitchenette Suites, one to six rooms, S150 up Completely furnished, including Linens, Silver, Dishes, Maid Service, etc. D I N I N G R 0 O M Our Dining Room is Open to the Publie Regular Table d'I'Iote Dinners, week days, Sl.50g Sunday, 82.00 Also a la Carte Have your guests live at the Alcazar during their stay in Cleveland Derbyshire and Surrey Roads, Cleveland Heights Phone, Fairmount, 5000 I 6119- FRANZ C. WARNER ARCHITECT of the C L E V E L A N D HEIGHTS SCHOOLS 'GRI 5319 ESTABLISHED 1885 CALL FAIRMOUNT -109-410 TI-IE O. A. DEAN DAIRY CO. Pasteurized Milk and Cream 3211 BIAYHELD ROAD CXLVELAND IHHOHTS Thirty-nine Years on the Heights GRADE WN'NHLK, PUREIGUERNSEY CRawj MILK FAIRMOUNT 4190 FAIRMOUN1' 4191 THE STAMBERGER COMPANY HARDWARE - PLUMBING SHEET METAL PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES, LAWN MOWERS, GARDEN HOSE, SCREEN DOORS, WIRE CLOTH, SCREEN WINDOWS HOUSEHOLD ACCESSORIES TWO HEIGHTS STORES 2945 MAYFIELD ROAD 1 2185 LEE ROAD 'gI164IS' PHONE - FAIRMOUNT 4078 .disc diff Walter Baumlich Plz armaczkt all Wifi' Lee Road, Corner Redwood EVELAND HEIGHTS Compliment: of THE KLINE 86 KOTHE COMPANY Dentists' Supplies and Equipment 1335 Schofield Building Cleveland MAIN 5878 A Superlative Graduation Gift INNUMERABLE thousands of boys and girls will have become, in June, young men and young women, and will leave Alma Mater and take their places as earners of wages or salaries, or managers of homes. Your boy or your girl will be one of that number. In recent years a graduation gift that has become popular, both because of its material usefulness and its influence on character, is an insurance policy, issued on the life ofthe young man or women. Life insurance, of course, is not a luxury, but an integral and essential part ofthe scheme of life. Materially, it protects the home which is almost certain soon to be created. Also, it helps to establish the reputation of the young man for prudence and for respect for obli- gations, in the eyes of bankers and others upon whose good opinion his future largely rests. Ifthe girlistobecomeself-supporting, it provides maintenance for her after-time, and all along the way supplies a fund from which she may draw in emergency. Moreover, life insurance is the greatest known Srhoolmufler of thrift. Without that virtue the young man has little chance of be- coming a financial success, and the self-sup- porting girl has little chance of making herself financially independent-as you know. Give your boy or girl complete equipment for the hard task which adulthood imposes. And remember that nevcr again will that boy or girl be oble to obtain life insurance at the low rate of present age. We are at your Jeroice, at any hour, and at any place. MURRAY 8: WALKER, General Agents THE PENN MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. Cherry 1974 1700 Keith Building Cleveland el165 lg. FRANK STELLA GOODYEAR ELECTRIC SHOE REPAIRING Work done while you wait. Best material used in all our repair work. Workmanship of highest quality. : :: REASONABLE PRICES :: :: We also carry a complete line of Laces, Shoe Polishes, Creams, Rubbers and Tennis Shoes S H O E S H I N I N G 1619 LEE ROAD CORNER MAYFIELD EAT OUR FOOD'AND NEVER BE SICK Always Patronize Wanetick's Creamery 1795 Lee Road Where Quality Counts WE APPRECIATE YOUR TRADE -:I 1 661+ I-IOFFMAN'S Sodas ICe Creams and Candies THREE STORES ' 1016 EUCLID AVE. 10410 EUCLID AVE. EUCLID BLVD. AND COVENTRY RD. 'ITIFIIE A. A. LANE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Genera! Contractors FACTORY AND COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS 4116719 S U B U R BAN DRUG STDRES DOWN TOWN PRICES QQ NV The CAMERQN DRUG C0 1797 LEE RGAD CLEVELAND HEIGHTS WB DEI IVER F 20 II ll THE BOLTON - PRATT CONSTRUCTION CO. General Contractors 7113 EUCLID AVENUE CLEVELAND, OHIO DEPENDABLE SERVICE TO THE PEOPLE OF THE HEIGHTS THE MORSE-CRABLE COAL COMPANY :: RETAIL COAL DEALERS :: O Y Y N 2 l6c'3 DOAN AVENUE E C EAST 96 Sl' AND I: 4574 N X CFNI RAI R R QIWOIP THE JAMES B. OSWALD Co GE NERAL INSURANCE QQ W I-IIPPODROME B U I L D I N G QE -My STRONGEST COMPANIES REPRESENTED PROMPT Loss SETTLEMENTS '3Il7Il3' THOS. B. JAMISON RADIO EQUIPMENT ELECTRIC WIRING AND H A R D W A R E PHONE, FAIRMOUNT 1313 1847-49 COVENTRY RD. CLEVELAND HEIGHTS, O. CANDY ICE CREAM We have the Official GOODYEAR K O NI O N SHOE REPAIRING S Y S T E M I N N QQ? QQ W NIV 1791 Lee Road J O H N L E N T 1 NI Expert Shoe Repairer TOYS SCHOOL SUPPLIES 3191 EU?g3,453E,g.ggg 1'S BLVD' we-177-db C E D A R L E E RESTAURANT 2118 LEE ROAD AX- QUALITY SERVICE AND H O M E C O O K I N G OUR BEST ADVERTISEMENT QYP SPECIAL RATES ON LUNCHES on DINNERS WE carry the entire R. C. A. line of Radio Sets, as well as a complete stock of Radio accessories and parts. We are right in the neighborhood and can give you the best in merchandise and service. See Us First The Heights Electric Co. 2203 Lee Road A. C. KAESTLE Heights '15 Fairmount 4216 STOP at -SC-HQ-ALES WHEN YOU ARE SHOPPING AND GET YOUR HYGIENIC BAKERY SPECIAL ORDERS for PASTRIES AND OTHER BAKED GOODS and wfwigww BAKE GOODS T3? CALL ' FAIRMOUNT 3834 AND WE WILL DELIVER 3102 MAYFIELD ROAD 10 YO U R H 0 M E Masonic Temple PHONE. FAIRMOUNT 2823 sg 173 Hg. KATHERINE MCLAUGI-ILIN jwillinerjf 'X' FAIRMOUNT4302 'Y' 2903 MAYFIELD ROAD CLEVELAND HEIGHTS OHIO Compliment: of CITY HARDWARE CO. AN W 10546 EUCLID AV E. E. Complimentf of F E L D M A N Qual!-ty BROTHERS 7-Drinizkzg PLUMBING AND HEATING 322 CONTRACTORS 9701 CEDAR AVENUE GARFIELIQ 2621 Hager W' 10309 BARRET AVE. QINI7 I ll if 1111 EE 95 W F12 Sai ul! Eli 9. W 31 E! 5 wi Ei Gi Wg F JE W -.v5,2::+.Lv.sum5-..c.1,:J-sfL..1w..zeA.nzu.mz.vxx..uk:sm1.w. 4.ff:Ms.'z . V , K .wav Mui' .A ,. kg,


Suggestions in the Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) collection:

Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

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Cleveland Heights High School - Caldron Yearbook (Cleveland Heights, OH) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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