- -ff f f faxfiji - '35-iz 2' . NTT. . . 'V5 m xl - Z pf C T1 m S 0 H G nfl' G 'ev . . . . lil. ll ll lvllMliillitI.1ll.i.:illi:i,lxMll+1lll.lWQ3S 03 cm cm up n:nn cm an cm cm u Qt: V X100 W W U W UD U U lm 5- -' V X, qe X. E Studie- Isn't your egg cooked long enough ? Daughter-ladiniring a set of mink skins from Fatherj- lil Goody- Yes, but not soon enough. I can hardly realize that these beautiful furs come from such lil a small sneaking beast. IE Father- I don't ask for thanks. my dear, but I must in- E1 sist on respect. El E E Ethel- Have you ever read to Field Mousef, E Florence- No, how do you get them to listen ? EI Soph- VVhat would you say if I flunked four subjects ? E Fresh- Get out, you're fooling. El Soph- That is what Mr. Mase said. E E I once knew 'Ig A girl El VVho was so modest That she wouldn't lil Even do Brownie- I spent a lot of money at Kelley Pool last lil Improper fractions. winter, IQ Julia- Did you like it as well as Hot Springs? 'EI E E E E Evelyn- I looked through the keyhole last night when El Mafgafetis fellow was Calling OU her-U Q Glen-- I'm the best dancer in the country. lfil Father- And what did you find out 5 She-'fyes' in the country. IQ Evelyn- The Lights. EI E E E E Mother- Young man, the lights at this house go out at Did you know that George talks in his sleep? E ten. No. Glenn- That's all right, don't delay on my account. 'AWell, it's truep he recited in class this morning. E E E IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE N ,X ff Ma fa A .Vg fvd .X A '-'iw , ,'if,1V',Nf11-mu, f' sf Crzmson and Grey 9T'+'w ui'4g?iD5bN' an' 'cm X Jn ma Yamini' an '1'm 'ul1 u X xg EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Q DQYIAQ N -7 'X N fv , Y , ,. f', 13' 1 ,' Q:-2,1 'X W WH' xo 3 K gif' I 4 N QQ,.I.Q1ff7f ga y- 11 Wfx? N 1-sim Q IEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEJEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIII W 112 4 QT 2255 Crhnson and Grey gig? g cm a-5-7 . -- n cm cm an in cm Alpha Pi Fraternity Arcade liarr Drug Co. lirucks Bros. U. C. Benfer Bonnet Shop Brown Tire Shop bl. C. Brannan Canton Actual Business C H. C. Cappell City Dry Cleaning Crescent Restaurant Daily Reporter Co. Daily Times E. C. Davis lleis Fertig Co. lim er Mfg. Co, Dover News Exchange Dover Buick Co. lmver Auto Supply lien. B. lleordorf X Son Dilger and Helmsdorfer Len Dues Endres Florists Sam Everett Espenchied Dairy Exchange National Bank Chas. Feil Fisher Electric Co. UD ol. i, :v'm.ii'1' vi in w,1,:'i1s'1v5iFFX!TTq'l r.i1 i Awww wmwdmmmndwnWf9Of C,-keanu cm im an an cm:nu ma 'mi dtifoab List of Advertisers Fienlmerg Co. Ford Sales and Service First National Bank -loc Fried Co. Franklin Inn G. C. Fuller Furniture Exchange Garver Bros. Garage on the Square rl. I.. Gilpin XYm. Gross Hanna Furnace Co. Harclesty Milling Co. Haas Shoe Store Harhaugh Studio Harry F. Harbaugh lieu. Hanson S: Son Ilerf--lones Co. Heitzman Bakery Immel Feed K Milling Co lr. Soft Drink lieppler Electric Co. Dr. XY. R. Keller XY. C. Keyser A. XV. Kline Curtis Klar C. E. Kreiter G. Krebs X CO. Iireamer and XYelJer Il. ll. Iiohy Iiuerleher Bros. Sam Levin Linn Hert Co. Mrs. C. C. Maurer Marsh Lumlier CO. Alctilcnen Millinery S McKee Mnnr's Shoe Repair H. H. Milar Myers Bros. Noakers Northern Engraving Co. Ohio Printing Co. H. E. Palmer I'attersnn's Confectionery Penn Mold Mfg. CO. Phi Sigma Chi Fraternity Pike Theater L. H. Quick Reeves Mfg. Co. Reeves Banking 8: Trust Co. A. J. Rausch Ress Bros. Reiss Billiard Parlor F. S: A. Ringheimer Richer Plumbing Co. Ricker Provision Co. Richart 8: Everhardt Geo. T. Ruefly C. F. Sneider X Sons Shaffer Black Co. Senhauser Co. Seiliert Printing' Co. Spear Music Co. Homer S. Spence State Savings Bank Co. Stuhlmiller Confectionery Stettler Bros. Sugar Bowl Spahr Bros. Superior Show Repair E. C. Sxveitzer XV. -I. Thomas S. Toomey CO. Union Dairy A Yurheer Insurance lVatch Shop XYagner Lumber Co. VI. X . Wfagner Cletus XVeaver Wleher Theater NYeaver Garage XV. A. W'inkler Wveinliarclt Bros. NVentx Lumber Co. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQEEE l , , . ,...,f,,1,,,,,,,,,ff, ., .QVKD - ,, zzz , , hat l ullf w fliimtfwif..wl.t..i+i.tlll+.wi it Comm and GW .Ji J TM... io xfsf EIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIIEIEIEIIEJIEIEIEEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEJIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEJIEIIEIEEIEIEIEIQIL? IE! El IE! EI IE lil IEI EI EI EI El El EI lil EI El IE! IE El lil El E IEI lil lil E3 IE! EI lil EI EI IE IE EI IE! IE E IEI IE lil EI lil lil IE El IE! IE lil IE! El El lil IE! lil lil V51 at -' WORLD'S LARGEST COUNTRY STORE Thousands of thrifty people from their earliest childhood have bought all their daily needs at this World-Famous Store. Generation after generation of economical folk have made this their store home as their parents had done before. And so there was buildeid the greatest and In-ost famous country store in all history, a store in which Thousands of people have reposed confidence and to which they remain tmswervingly loyal. We're so sure of the values we offer that We say, if after you buy anything in our store you find a better value anywhere else-money back. - The Garver Bros. Co. SAVE IN STRASBURGH , ,VN .. , , , , ,,A ,,, , , YF Y 10 Crimson and Grey ' , il. Af 'wgg n:un cn- cm ublqvi- is 'V rs 'in Y Y cm xiznni cm 'dziuiiu X g'Xr Q51 Phi Sigma Chi Fraternity ALPHA OMEGA CHAPTER EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQ EE EIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIElEIIElIElIElEIlEIIEIElI'.'iIEIEIlEIEIEIlEIElEIEIlEI lil lil IE EI lil Ei! El lil lil Ili! lil IE lil lil EI E lil lil E lil E E IE! El IE! E Iifl IE El EI lil EI IE! Ili! E11 E EI IE lil lil lil IE! lil lil lil lil IE! IE IE IEI IE! IE! IE! IE IE! r'1 md, 4, VJ. AA M Lff,' .D Crimson and GW? M Alpha Pi Fraternity ZETA CHAPTER -ry 0 an cm cr' n-:un my -A z , , , ,v ., . 771 l A7 Crimson and Grey J LA an an cm u0x.4.-- N, - .n an m an ---- - n::m cm cm n-Slat, 29 The Deis-Fertig Co. Wholesale Grocers The house of Quality and Service' Establislied 1978 The perfect Baker I Every Sack Guaranteed im H I 1 K H my GLENDORA COFFEE The fine quality and rich aroma makes it a repeater everywhere. Packed in tin to keep the flavor in. ga, -1 5 7 1 Hm m ' ,..AY ' FANCX VALLEY BUTTER I always in perfect condition from our modern cold storage G + ' ND + ' F -..' gig Wholesale distributors of the famous Sugar Loaf Line of --L-PRA Q Q Qi .Fancy carnued vegetables. Q? 4:3333 Ciizf Q cuAnAN'n-:Es Q ms l , ' S PERFECT Bimus UM CHEESE-Fancy Round Swiss, the kind that makes Tus- V' tal Aumxnlmnliisconpmr ..: C31'3W3S COUUJUY f3m0US- QEEMQQRA mwwjtls - 'sT,JosEPH. na ..,, ylllr wgaxngil ppl. II. 'fl , H :nniniuu1 ml ull Our Reliable New York State Fancy full cream washed curd pronounced the Best. f-D We sell exclusively to dealers and are kd e, BLUEV Q NU 15 ,. .. X, EH ALLEY BU qw 55 f-...hi TTER 3 A w afof V ,- , as t usuwilggfn mf, 55 if .. not their competitors. pasfeurized IEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIlilIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEE!IElIEIlElIEllEIEElEIIEIIEIlElIEIEIlElIEIlEllEIIEIlElIElElElEIIElIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEI IEIEIIEIEIIEIILTIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIElElEIl.EIlEIII'5Tll.EIEElEIEIEllEIIEIIEIl.EIIEIlEIEIEIEIElifs VJ E CMU 'wflxfvz 1 , W? , , 4 KL KN 'QAM I '4 7' I- A1 -X ' -,f7G'z A LI5f,xQ5n ma -. 'nznn we L mg: u C T I rn- 8 O n U n d G T e y gngigbu cm 5 X ny, IEIEIIEEIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIIEIEIIIIEIEEIEIIEIEIEIH IEHEI E E IE lil IE lil lil IE EI lil lil E11 lil IEI lil IE! E lil EI IE EI E IE! E IE! IE! lil El EI E EI E IE! lil EI IE EI IE! EI IE! IE! IE E E E E IE! E E E E lil EI lil lil lil IE The Reeves Manufacturing Oo Manufacturers of BLACK AND GALVANIZED SHEETS CHARCOAL IRON SKELP SHEET METAL BUILDING MATERIAL STOVE PIPE AND ELBOWS DOVER, OHIO LK VN X V , IAJQE. w 1 ii ff 1 Qnjv-' C - 3 G - ffpjz gf 4-Jfife ,, ,Vx fb rx- ,F A v Tzmson an Tey Q 1, , yu m,1,Ni ,.W,x. ma u u.n:n.n cm an cm cm -ilgfilsn mn cm nil' cm an arizhb 'll Ml Emll ll Magi Q O I n H EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQQE x A-Best-O Electric Iron Glalififllinkifi Slight turns of the regulating knob adjust the temperature of the ironing surfacek to any degree of heat between 300' and 6000. Once the proper heat on the ironing surface is obtained, the thermostat inside the iron automatically maintains it. Sold at All Hardware and Mamfactufed by ' Iflectric Stores THE DOVER'MFG. CO., Dover, Ol1lO, U. S. A. EEEEEEEEEEEEEE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E. E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E l l l-an Crimson and GW? l M l lllll fn SJ le IEIEIIEIEIEIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEEEIEEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIEJIEIIEIIIEIIEIIIEIEJEJJEIEIEIIEIEIIII IEIEJ IEI IE! E IE lil lil lil IE! IE IE! lil E lil El lil El EI lil llfll lil E E IE lil IEI IE IE E lil IE EI IIIEI IE IE lil IIJII IE E EI lil IE! EI IE! IIEII IE lil Ei! lil El E lil lil lil EI IE! E Compliments of Herf Jones Co. Manufacturing Jewelers and STEEL ENGRAVERS Indianapolis H. A. Intermill El? R MZ Q f7:'z 44VK'D . 1 f- 44 07 V2 C '-'H ' W ' 514 C r 1 m s o n a rz J G r ey Q N' f'4f ' 13,W'wWUw uw WWPf' Q W X mb an ur- -- X hznn an cm W cm angie cm cm u:n.b u:rJ Wag: X W ug EU YQ EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE X Q EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE The Hanna Furnace Company Dover, Ohio FURNACE DEPARTMENT COKE PLANT DEPARTMENT Manufacturers of Manufacturers of Pig Iron Coke and its By-Products JEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE gw a N TT Q 1 X A if a 55 5753? Q 3 Z S m CU 12 Ga? 'J M a AI H S s PTPP L EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE x ' f' Y 1 f' l 1 K LX, M W: , 0 X147 255-'l - Liana Q 14:9 Z awff ll' lllll lllimll lliillllllliili zll- ,llll li ,i , 1 'i , ii i .1 , ' C Tl ,Tl S O n U n C? G T e Q .cm an atm: an llll rm cm UQ! EEElillilElillillillillilIillillillsfllillilE'JlElEIElElEllEEIEllEllElElQiIlEllEllEllEIlElIf3lEllEIlEIlEllEE2 lil lil lil lil L51 lil lil IE! lil lil E131 lil lil E lil El lil IE Iiifl lil E lil lil lil E El lil lil lil lil lil lil E lil E lil E lil IE lil lil lil lil lil lil lil lil lil lil lil E El lil lil E The Dail Reporter Dover's Only Newspaper It publishes MORE local news than any other newspaper in Tuscarawas county. It publishes MORE picturesg MORE featuresg MORE sportsg BETTER comics, than any other Tus- carawas county paper. It is the ONLY newspaper in the county which gives its readers two telegraph services-The As- sociated Press and The Internaional News Service. Among its more popular features are: Bring'ing' Up Father g Little Be1iny's Notebookwg Hold- ing a Husloandug Joe's Car g Dr. Royal Copeland's Health Talksg Can You Beat It? Pacific Sz Atlantic News Pictures. The Daily Reporter's Circulation has gained 1100 in two years. Its sworn circulation April 1, was 4410. That's proof of its Service and usefulness to Dover and coininunity. The Tuscarawas Publishing Oo. S lm' I 'M 1 1, 1, 1 , , , , ' All ' mn 'l' - nzun url - ' and IE lil EJ EI E El IE! IE! lil E El IE! El lil EI lil lil IE! IE! IE! E IE! IE! E IE! E EI IE! ITL! IE! IE! IE! IE! lil IE IE! IE IE! El lil EI IE lil IE! E EI E21 EI lil lil IE IE! IE! E IEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEJIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIEIEEIEIlEIlElI'EIElIEIElElElIEIIEIEIElII2'flIEllEIIEIEIIEllEllEl Ress Bros. Tobaceonists Results of all Athletic Events Prolnptly CRANE'S PACKAGE CANDY Soda Fountain YI Q35 I N , Q Nl 5 00 O 3 Q Z QQ cv W Q fd LQ Q EQ!?3 les L., LQ V215 Qnfi-if . ff' ,., Lf C., Crimson and Grey ,Q Q, lil 'w l, Vi EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE That Delicious Food oakerls Velvet Ice Cream Order Through Your Dealers EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 57, ,X Z? 4 Crimson and Grey A YN: 47934. X ,, Len mb ---- --xzun an an af5:.li U Elin cm ' -an ' l1EnhN ' Mimi A 'HKS Nash Leads the World Motor Car Values We will he pleased to show you. The Weaver Motor Co. DOVER, OHIO Compliments of C. G. Fuller Contractor DOVER, OHIO BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE li: Q, EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE E : Viiil,2Xc5 f 1 Q 171 avbqfl . 'Y I Qvfxfz 142' 4 Why, , X im in jj ii cm cm cgi Crlnlson and GTQJJ ma cm un ---- ma N y - E E E E E 'E W E A W ' ld lg . . III QI' E . EI Druggist E . L51 The Nyal Quality Drug Store E Victrolas Victor Records E E E E . . E The Daily Times E As the leading newspaper in Tuscarawas County takes a particular pleasure in welcoming the class of 1922 of Dover High School into the broader world of aiairs that will greet it upon graduation. El . . El To you, the citizens of tomorrow, we pledge our earnest efforts to always present the most reliable, IE unbiased news reports, and other features that make a newspaper readable. lil The position of a newspaper in its community is a responsible one. It is the moulder of public El opinion, the disseminator of information, the gatherer of local and world news. As a proof that THE EI DAILY TIMES has constantly endeavored to maintain this high standard its circulation has grown lil steadily until it is the most read and quoted newspaper in Tuscarawas County. E1 To the present students of.Dover High- School and future citizens of the community we pledge the lg same untiring eiort to maintain the high ideals and quality of service that have placed THE DAILY TIMES in the position it enjoys today. E J. E. HURST, Editor and Publisher EI The New Philadelphia Daily Times E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE ft 1 hr. f-, LQVK fs 1 1 i7 .ff fxfxe ' l ez z7 ky g A. , . , 4 . EA A, X- Y ,J A-A 'Q sf Crimson and Lzrey - 1, ' , 11 ,N ,. ,W y12 'Eg D49 lm n:,.. Q.. .. xliain o-- 'fam adl' mind! W ' clln ll hurl W' get A milling experience of half a century is back of Peerless Flour Standard of the World An article must have merit to be approved by three generations of house-wives. That is the record of PEERLESS FLOUR. It is better to profit by the experience of others than by your own experimentation. The Hardesty Milling Co., Dover, Ohio The Barr Drug Company Get It at Barr's THE REXALL STORE DOVER, OHIO i EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE K . and .33 YQ EEEEEEEEEEEEEE E EE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E -E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E Compliments of WILLIAM JOHN THOMAS Dues Barber Shop High Class Barbering LEO DUES, Prop. EEEEEEEEEEEE on ff 1 Ire, - ,W azz ef 3 awfrrpt C - 3 G L-'Taz 412 P N 4-,,-.jffj up to rzmson an rep A. x X , Qi l ago cm an ao' ma an n:nn ab cm' l :Qi cm cm --n n:nn '--- 1--' cm ua 2- ,, XJ. A, m 6 ' 'f ,Y 5 0 11 , f, - , swrs 'rule l'.H'l'I 2I'l'll YIGXIK bl C 'l ' I A cur isn't just zi cureit's Engine, f x WMM lil ff Springs, Clutch, Tiuinsniission, l3eui'ing's, Exif und zi lot of other things. Y A A -, ' If they uren't built to GIVE service, Q 520. , Flgqef lf you have to PAY to get service. f f ' ' Our cars feature just these above es- 1 sentizils, hence they stand in zi class by ' themselves. WE SELL SATISFACTION Th G h S C Both Phones 101 e arage on t e quare o. Ohm Keppler Electric Shop 300 Wooster Ave., Dover, Ohio Electric Supplies and Contracting We repair everything electrical Phone 298-Y IIEIIEHEIIEIIEIIEIIEIlilIEHEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEEIEIEIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIEEIEIEIIEIEI lilriimmmiilrmlilmliiriimlmmiiilnnizmfiiijilliqiimimmmnmmimimnmimmmmmmmmraumpiiz in A4 ,r ll' 'LRG 1 0 L21 Qvxfl ilav., ,--7 RFQ jx N N , 3 'f G Crimson and Grey 5'1 2 'Q' Z gr? AZf ' ' l mu 'A 'Wai' ' ' an ---- can an f.m ---v ufsgirf- cm cm an an egg IEIIE'IElEIlElElElEI1'1TlIEIIEIIEII.EIIEIEfIIEllEIlElEIEIlQlQiE EIIJJ EIEIITEJIEIIEIIEIIIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEI lil lil lil E IE E lil EI lil lil lil IE! lil E lil E El E EI IE! EI lil IE! lil El lil IE EI EJ lil EI lil lil IE IE! IE! E IE! IE! El E El E lil E lil lil lil IE E EI lil IE El EI IE! X H. A. Richardson The New Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph. The Phonograph with a soul. No needles to change. The Edison Records are called Re-Creations because they re- g ally Re-Create. H RICHARDSON H ' JEWELER AND OPTOMETRIST 205 Third St. Headquarters for Snappy Duds HART SCHAFFNER Sz MARX WALK-OVER SHOES Society Brand Manhattan Shirts 'vu'-un nn.. -nun..-nunn-----,I G 'f ,,,, , 'EM U Match Us If You Can We appreciate your trade Vx F 4 A 'I fabfgd V I i , -ii ,i'1 1i'I ii 'it' -54 1 1 i ii 1 , i Nw ,iii'i'm' , - , -X-'T df ff 1 I Q T M V Crimson and' Grey 4411517 i i Vi, N iii! i it ,iii 1' xg lm: cm G msn-D m-, cm gmrgi W- 2-Sion cm cm db cm an ' dnzmi iim K Q THE Editor ...-..... - Associate Editor ..., Sport Editor 1Boysl---- Sport Editor fGirlsl ..tA Society Editor ....... Literary Editor--- .QXNN U.-X L STAFF Business Manager ............ Assistant Business Mana ger ..,, Advertising Manager ,s,, ,- Sales Managers .... Head Artist-- - Artist-- ---- - r it riir ri.i of 1922 -----Robert Brooks ----Alton Siebert ------Calvin Miller ---Josephine XVasson ------Clara Reeves ---Katherine Bigbee ------Ted Jentes ----Clarence Gintz -.---George Rice Robert Bassett 0 H LRO5' XYiegand ----Martin Groenenberg --------Theodore Neff E1 IE! lil IE! lil El EI IE IE EI IE! lil Lf-I E lil lil EI IE IE! EDJ IE EI IIT-I IE! lil IE Dil lil EI lil EI lil I-51 EJ lil E51 EI IE! IE! IE! E IE! EI IE! IE! lil IE! IE! IE! IE El EI E IEEIIEIEIEIEEIEEIEEIEIEIEIIEEEIEIEEIEEIEIEIEIIEEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEI,' Gif' ff Qlfw Vxf' EEEEEEEEE f EE 'Z 2? ZADI4 Crimson and Grey fl, W Mai V' ?'7N3ilL5 lp cm V- nzm an cm an ugggxi n im: cm an cm an nan mn 1 mh a i L C5 is , A M ' S Sells IT for less 128-130 Fa,c tory MEN'S AND BOYS' CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS Shoes for the whole family The Linn-Hert Co. Furniture Dealers A Funeral Directors Ambulance Service Store Phone 116 Night Phone 552 Dover, Ohio C. E. DALLMAN, Mgr. HEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE X X l kgfxfff I 0 122 aafvlz . llffxnz 1 ENS ' lllj1l'!'Ql'wliV'i'l1'l,il'wl 'N N 'NI Crzmson and Gre M A RQ lllll ' an n:un an cm Q was im ---- QQ WJ lilllrfllilllililIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIElillillillilliflliillilElEllElI'iIlElQ'IEllEllEll.ElElEJlEllEllE.ll.E'JlEIEllEE lillil lil E lil lil lil lil lil E IE lil llfll lil lil lil lil lil IE lil E lil lil lil IE! E El lil E lil lil lil lil lil lil lil EJ lil lil lil EU E3 E lil lil lil E El lil lil lil lil IE IE! lil IE lil lil l-l The Fisher Eleetrie Company EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL 205 Factory St. Phone 1398 Dover, Ohio The Shaeffer-Black Co. Wholesale Fruits and Produce New Philadelphia, Ohio Distributors of Liloby's Canned Fruits Stroh's Bohemian Lager Budweiser Qlfv 4. ,xjj 7 1 , :W b lm? QQ-X, Crimson and Grey f F' W if 'Tw ln cm -Y-- rv-nn un un W ma n W an uuznrgl dn my X N xg f Hr fgx f.. f EEEEEEEE Gilpirfs News Stand AT WAITING ROOM Phone 52 The Penn Mold 81 Mfg. Co. M3.I1llfE1Ctlll'91'S of INGOT MOLVDS FROM DIRECT METAL Dover, Ohio Wheeling Office: Wheeling Bank and Trust Co. BI'dg. Wheeling, W. Va.. UEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE N ikfafz 2 4: ff? QNVSJ' V fl-ffv:-2 gg-C'?'-' T ' fi' Crimson and Gre Pk' 3,26 mn ---- nzm an Y ma ufigigrl :D gigs uw IEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEEEEEIElIElIIfiIEIEIEII.T5fIIEllEIlEliIlElEIEIlEIIQ2IIIEllEEEE IPJIEJ lil lil E EI E E IE! E E IE EI EI IE! lil lil EI IE! E lil EI EI E lil E lil lil EIII E EI ITQI lil lil EI LE! EI E lil IE IE! IE IE IE! lil lil IE! lil lil E lil IE IE lil EI lil lil E :El Sermhauser Clothes Help Build Personality True Clothes, True Taste, True Fabrics, True Hand Tailoring True Value, True Fit The Watch Shop Dover New Philadelphia na if Rf 2 -on em cm an n:un cm an De Bevoise Youthsway viffff X li .1 xx V tsig U R880 5 Offxf 'N . . X yr-4 H its i it . Z 1 .E - :x I ki ' Q ' L : i1' 3 1 6: De Beveise goth? assures straight youth- ful lines and is cut ex- tra long to come well down over a topless corset or girdle. An elastic waist line and self - adjusting shoulder straps are special features. Price 75c up We have DE BEVOISE BRASSIERES in a wide variety of styles, plain or claintily trim- ed, all of exquisite ma- terials. DE BEVOISE Brassieres that Beautify for all Figures, for all Occasions Graduate from High School Then What? What do you plan to do after completing your course in High School? There are many avenues open. Among those of- fering the best opportunities is a thorough train- ing' for business. Such a training is valuable in any vocation. The completion of such a course lays the founda- tion for development into the following positions: PRIVATE SECRETARY, ACCOUNTANT, SHORT- HAND REPORTER, SALES MANAGER, COST EXPERT, ETC. For 45 years the Canton Actual has been train- ing young people and today many of them are business leaders. A catalog will be mailed on request. Send for one now. P1'iCeS'50C UP Canton Actual Business College L. H. Quick Sz Co. 428ZQ11lf,2f21?gN' UEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE B a Q 5, 2 3 S Q.: ci Q if-if -f i E H , gi li E+ ii fill, EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE if? is KA R i '- GW 1 14 fi? Qvqfm - i 142' 44 12? fav? A j s3,jw',' wil' 1 fi ' ' Crimson and Grey -:H ,1 w 5 'll1 fll1'l,l'i''l11 ll'W'-ii K is Kami i cm' n cm W utcnn uni ii cm new XQ ' mpgs cm wuz: -- unznii :nb i E' ini ii 'i in N WLEEQ Q EEEEEEEEEEE If It's Good Hardware, We Have It Sporting Goods EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E Brooks Bros. 221 W. Third St. Dover, Ohio Phone 63 Reiss Billiard Parlor LUNCH-CANDY-SOFT DRINKS Cigarettes and Cigars 124 Factory St. ' r F - rx i N . fu? f 2111 'ff i Qwfx .J . L'-f Xfz 5 1 :vii V, , Cv 1' , ' '-1 - Crzmson and Grey H .1' Ti ft' l1 w TTQXX' M ln cm nina cm on cm :rn ug!! 25531: mn cm i mi 'lun iicxriznii 1 Ui ifikilli i W Franklin Inn One-fourth mile north of Strasburg YOU KNOW OUR PORTERHOUSE STEAKS ARE THE BEST Chicken, Frog, Lobster, by appointment Entertain Your Guests Here Sandwiches, Soft Drinks, Dancing' 9 W QA'KBXm1WdUMMM .SxYJi 5'lfL:'C S5NN1W7EYfQ0 -f W - -X 4 '.v- - . -- .MQI UAA A fFvfil'X GWW9 allbbll QV'-910-F1210 X nfl'lIfJA lll ij The Dover Bllifili CO.--Buick Sales and Service Accessories and Supplies Phone 30 214 W. Third St. EARL W. WELDON, Mgr. Dover, Ohio When better automobiles are built, Buick Will build them IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EL EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE fl-- 7 f' O - i X Vmuwxw-xy wr! ,UM rw-1 Y w lf' -12 I Zigi C ' 3 G 2 54' I i QV? ,,N.,,,,,H,,,,y,1m,w X X rzmson an Tey R1 , X QAzbl '!m !W:H'AEHL,'N M N dn' an mznu -fn cm a i mn cm -- n:nn' an -r un Y get EIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIIIIIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEHEIEIIEIEJEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIE lil E lil IE E lil IE! IE! IE EI El lil E El El E lil Lil IE lil IE IEI E IE! IE! E E EI E IE! IE E lil EI E E IE EI IE EI lifl E ILT! EI lil El IE El lil lil EI IE El El llil IT-TI MQ'-Q AH-Cggt Furnagg The VVGIIJEZ Ll1T1'1b6Y' CO. Lumber Dealers FRONT RANK STEEL FURNACE BUILDERS, SUPPLIES All Kinds of Sheet Metal Work Myers Brothers 315 Cherry St. DOVGY, See us for plans The yard of Quality and Service Qi if i 'Sugoi W and GW C if ii Quality Service- The Innfnel Feed and Milling Co. WINGOLD FLOURee-ARISTOS FLOUR PURINA CHOWS Hay, Grain, Seeds and Salt Both Phones 10 Dover, Ohio Stuhnfiillens Confectionery The Home of Quality Candy, Cigars, Lunch HEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE l., , E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE N 3 Xhffkzfwqfw X! fl 0 zzz gyxif . A Qyfxqz 4: zzz 1, 552335:lil,sluml1-MNil ll all l or T Q15 Cflmson and GW? at Zi QQ Tel EIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEHEIIETIIEIEIEIEIEIIEIlEIIE1lIElEllElEIElIEEIEIIEIlEIlEIlEIEEf-JIEl?L IE IE! IE lil EI E51 El lil lil lil lil E E Ilil E IE! lil IE! E E lfil lil IE! IE! lil E EI IE! IE! E IE! lil E lil IE IE E EI E E El IE! IE! E lil Ifll IE El lil El IE! EI lil lil lil :El Smart Tailored Clothes for Young Men Ca1opel's Tailor hop Dodge Brothers MOTOR CARS The hardest service brings the highest praise The S. Toomey Company iz' 1 V '1 fx A ,Q x'-YTNCW 2-ff Q 11? 44,xffbJ..' C . r-fy-Nz Q ,, ,,:, QV: Egy- f , rzmson and Gre a T Y' wk u cm an cn- x'-- EH --D cm xm u y QPQD mn -Xiu: nz: cm ug QQ, 6 EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE -t?Dl70H' -avswmfss nmnwepw- 'X f A:-fa 43 W Q3 Cyp A DvER THE SWT EDITDRA BOYS GIRLS' EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 1- I wffx-fl , 1 1 1 171 11 1 - V' 1113 up QW f' ZW Aaah? C r z rn s o n a n 3 G re y ,Q y 1, yy yy xl i 'dz' ,W 13 ,Q My W3 i1ilE'Q3,,, QD gm cm gg .... 5:11,-. an cm cm MQ ilu' i' im il 'i i ind' i mi cm' n:nnl' i ii i Ae fi BEFORE AFTER Made Like New! E From a worn, holey, shapeless disreputable looking shoe to -,Www , X one of shapely lines and factory-finished appearance. That's A the transformation brought by our before-and-after shoe y f y repairing. We are not mere cohblers but rebuilders and re- l if shapers of shoes. Give us a try-out. Su enor Shoe Sho Un the Square p p Wentz Block H. H. Milar Dover, Ohio ' Dry Goods, Silks Ladies' Suits and Sweaters Carpets, Rugs BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Lx, Xfxf LilgiQ'm51N5:1::Hg3w ww 1 kxx, C T i Trl 8 O T2 G FL 6 G 7' Q :IQ Y' 3 Egg: LH, lug! . ,fig ,I ' in yu lrliflfsi Y up if T in mi, ,.iil,i,i 1. it ii .1 +I, li Will. lillillnlwllhll ul will .1 Q C N yli.:liwlllilwi., lllvlilmmlli ,mlhlrli ii ialguwlimlmlllllllllllwiiiiilllmlllwlml1jM K S3 G , E E . EI The School of Experience I . . p W I-El teaches slowly but Well And some things can be Eveiuyihmg ugjlgoofl- Shoes E learned satisfactorily only through experience. a Ieasona 6 puces How to handle money judiciously is one of lil these, and acquaintance with banking customs E aids greatly in supplying this knowledge. E The Reeves Banking 8z.Trust Companyfthe E largest Bank ID Doveremvites accounts of young people, also extending assurance of its friendly E counsel to those who may Wish information upon business or banking subjects. E . Stettler Bros. lil The Reeves Banking and Trust Co. S Dover, Ohio 216 Factory sa-cet IE Every modern Banking and Trust Service-Business or Personal E E E EI r E U I lil Mrs. C. C. Maurer Prmtmg. EI of every description IE' Deal r in EI e Q L-oose Leaf Sheets and Binders E Staple and Fancy Groceries Rubber Stamps EI Second Street DOV613 Ohio , , , E PM 5 Selbert Prlntlng Company IE Keuerleber Block Dover, Ohio E E E E E E . E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE - ,NC is , 7 - - fel? ' f H W ah QQ C r i m s o n a n dl G re y i i H 3' i WWqW,'iiiirim q1r'i1iw1i'Wi'l6?Qv3gb'1g an cm an an -:n:nn k--- cm cm snuff: 533,-on cm cm ug' ma un ' 'aiu' ' 'l uiol l' 'N Wh N J: in Rausch Your Grocer Fancy and Staple Groceries Country Produce Third Street Dover, Ohio Paln'1er's Fashion Park Clothes Emery Shirts Dobbs Hats Van Heusen Collars Paln'1er's United States Depository First National Bank Dover, Ohio Invites individual and Corporation ancounts. 4 per cent. interest on time deposits. Member of Federal Rf:- serve Bank. Union Dairy Milk Cream Whipping Cream Butter Butter Milk Cottage Cheese 115 Wooster Ave. Phone 433 DEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE7 1 M W if Crimson and Grey 1 1 Q OTTMMiwwimri' W Ti 3 21:5 cm! cm an ---!- N auzlfin an cm an uri: L fbffikln cm cm u-- ---- n:u.b an Mais! ' uf: -X IEIIEIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEEIEIIEIIEHEJEEEIEEIEIEIEEEEEEEEEEEEEIEEQGQS IEIIIH E EI IE EI lil lil lil E E IE! lil IE! lil IE! E El lil IE lil IE! E Ei! IE! IE IE IE! lil El E E E El E El IE lil lil lil EI IE! E lil IE IE! lil IE IE lil lil EI IE IE llfll E IE El I-I MeGlenen's for Fine Millinery The Meat Market on the Square HOME DRESSED MEATS We are as near to you as your phone Phone 414 207 W. Third Street Curtis Klar Q 113 West Third Street Dover, Ohio The Wagner Lumber Co. H. B. Koby West Third and Broad Sts. Both Phones 47 Custom Tailor GOOD CLOTHES ALWAYS 323 Factory Street Dover, Ohio VN l pf -.X rv 4-Zi ff 1 ebff-' C Ti rn S O n a n C? G TQ y 1-V542 41? 212.21 ff N 29 'R-.fir in cm n:un cm a cm aQ?rS Qgn mn 'l cm an ' acid ' 'l ch: Y' ng!! The Furniti1re'EXchange -Ia I4 rictoly bt. TLlSCi11'HXl'ZlS County's only Cash Furniture Store Furniture Rugs Stoves Electric Wfishers T U 214 We Lipliolsteiing We allways sell for less. st Third St. Home ph EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQQ George T. Ruefly Fresh and Cured Meats of all kinds one 89 Keuerleloer Bros. FURNITURE DEALERS FUNERAL DIRECTORS Home Phone 198 222 West 3rd St. IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Ideal in Style, Quality and Fit Hass Shoe Store Third Street, Dover, Ohio N X Yl4,k X' 11'---iff-U-1--.-f ll C Qnfs ale or - and GW llll vsf EIEIEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIElillillillillillilliillillillillillililliEllEllElElEllElEllEllEllEllEllfilElT3fllEllEllELl35 El E IE lil lil lil E E E E lil lil lil lil lil E lil lil li lil E El E E lil IE! lil IE E lil lil lil E lil lil lil E lil llTl E lil lfil lil E lil E IE! lil lil lfil lil E lil lil lil Fl J- E. Allman, MET- Edwin F. Allman Bicycles Awnings Th P' 'Pi 1' Sh eAlliiij1ieB1'os.,CfJii'1iirs OW Dover' Ohio The Best in Photoplays The only'Picture Show in town with Pipe Organ mu The Quality Shop High Class Plumbing' and Heating, and Household Necessities Good Lumber Quick Agents for thelfollowing high grade materials: Mouat Vapor Heating Systems Laundryette Washing Machines Barromite Water Softeners The Marsh Lumber Co. Kohler Enamelware DOW? Ohm Ricker Plumbing Sz Heating Co. Home Phone 156 Bell Phone 5 State Bank Building Phone 370 Z i QW 17 Crimson and Grel? w, i 'Z it AZ Tj, ,, ,yy yi ui ma an cm --u-:u.n an cm cm u 4 E Q9 Elin Mun nm: Y an 'cm uni 'izHi ll ii ' llci:n'ii 'ici L 'A Exchange National Bank 3 MCKQQ Dover, Ohio Dealer in Safgty and S91-vice Staple and Fancy Groceries Established 1867 Combined Capital, Surplus and ProfitsfS1S9,291.85 Combined DepositsfS1,034,25T.81 Total Resourcesfrli1,3S0,296.85 Walnut and 7th Sts. Phone 259 Good Tires and Tubes Good Vulcanizing' Good Oil and Gasoline Good Supplies of all kinds A Real Juicy Drink Ssglreshing And last but not the least Sweet GOOD SERVICE Red Top Orange Dover Auto Supply Co. , . 314 Factoi Street Junlolfi Drlnk CO. Mgr. iy Vulcanizei' H. M. Taylor John Burkhart IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Ei P 1, EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE X lxfixfz, X , i ff 125 C . 3 G 0 727, I g ll' ' an cm nzun an cm cm u T1 Tn S O n a n T Q y n m .... E35 an .. cm 5 EIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEHEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEILEIIEIIEIEIEIEIEHEIEIIEIIEIEEEEIEIEEEIEIEIIEEEEEEISQQS IE IE! lil IE lil lil IE! EI EI IE! lil lil E lil lil lil E EI lil IE! lil El IE IE! IEI EI EI lil lil EI IE El IE! El IIIII lil lil IE EI E EI IE IE IE EI E IE IE lil EI lil El lil EI IE IE! Brannan, Photographer PaSteu1'iZed Milk A1-asm P01-was Espenschled Dairy Fresh Milk and Cream Commercial Photography Copying Enlarging and anything in the photograph line 319 Factory St. Dove Weinharolt Bros. Sugar Bowl Say It With Flowers Soft Drinks and Home Made Candies As near to you as the nearest phone Phone 133 New Phila. 225 Factory Street Ja 175 ZX P' Crimson and Grey Z an X rf:1x5jj',.V lp -- xznn un on ms cxefigigj '-5' Q-n mn an cm -m m::m: cm mn n QQP IE! IE! EI lil IE! IE! El lil El IE! IE! E11 IE! EI IE! IE IE EJ IE! lil EI EI IE! lil lil E EI lil IE! IE! IE lil EI EI IE El lil Ei! lil E IE! E E El El Ei! lil LE EI EI lil IE! E E IEIIEIIEEIIEJIEIIEIEIIEEIEJIEJIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEEIIEIEIEEEIEIIEEIEIEIIEIEIEEIEIIEQSQ Rieker Provision Co. Groceries, Provisions, Fruits and Produce CLETUS WEAVER Fresh and Cured Meats Attorneyeat-Law Corner Fourth and Factory 235 F21C'f0T5' St- Home Phone S4 Roasters and Packers of American Club Coffee ' BE PHOTOGRAPHED THIS YEAR ON YOUR Sunny Slde BIRTHDAY Start to keep a record of yourself by having a photo made at The Harbaugh Studio Phone 5-16-A Third Street Vincent Wagner Parral X ky'--f W ff Q V171 awfi-jx - V - f I I -27,1 m I rgcujij: E Crzmson and Grey m ..,, ical'nL1!ll1:W!.1l.l3l:m Q EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Cheer Up Harry F. Harbaugh Patterson Confectionery The Dry Cleaner Tobacco, Soft Drinks, Candies Phone 431 327 Cherry St. Dover, Ohio 204 N. Wooster Heitzman Bakery C. E. Kreiter Staple and Fancy Groceries Clean and Wholesome Home Made Bread 232 Factory St. Phone EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE FACULTY A553 15:5 E EI IE! IE! E A E W EI D N E Q E Q E x EJ U N lil El EI EI Q Ig SUS 'E ii! E 3 E 3? lil 2 EI 0 E :s E S E ug EI Q E E Eg 151 E Q5 Ig H E Q E .1 A E EI ' X 2 lin u X IE! 'W El g, E , lm E IE! E bg IE ,Af-ci IEIIEIIEIIIJIIIEIEIIEIIEIEiIEIiIlElEfHI.EIIf3'JIE'IIEIlEIEIIiIlEllEIElElIEIIEIElEll.EIEEIEEEEIIEEEEEEEKEEQSEQ VN IZ 7' ff 2 3 ion cm cm n:nn cm cm an ogg? W. C. Keyser I Groceries, Good Coffees 203 West Third St. Dover, Ohio rimson and Phone 408 208 Facto Gre Qvfxfz QV g Z -3 of , Vex' f i - ' K 7 , VTHS l.itmnnwm ,f5:A5n rm cm dit cm un usb mi 'll l will Geo. Hanson SL Son Established 1857 TAILORING AND SHOES Quality like Truth Will Out ry St. Phone WE SATISFYV 398 ef T1 EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE, tit i Optical Store X WN 1 T-ff 'nii 7 Weber Theatre Utmost in Photoplays -il Eyes Tested-Glasses Fitted G. Krebs Sz Co. OPTOMETRISTS Dover, Ohio Save Y ur Eqe s Coming Attractions Connecticut Yankee Turn To the' Right Three Musketeers ,. E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE X , FW , fu. iff ,, ,, Zsfkjl - 412' Q HT' we egsiis il 1 4, it alia. ll it C T 1 m S O H an H G my f i U, P' Q E E E Phosfo and Good Health Flour EI Get acquainted with these two foods. No better friends IE could come to your home. Its 'tgoodbye constipation and IE almost every other disease if you partake of them freely. E-I For every dollar invested in these foods your will save at IE! Compliments of least two dollars in other foods. If you want Health, if you EI want to econo-mlze, if you want to be happy and contented, El W, R, KELLER, M, D, purchase a small amount today, make the test, if not pleased EI we will return every penny. E A. B. Klar, Food Speclallst El Office Hrs.-8 to 11:30g 1 to 5 Phone 68 E i , ,- El 400 WOOSt8l Av-e., Dovei, Ohio E E E E E E - ' E Rmhart 81 Everhart Dilger Sz Helmsdorfer Ej 'Vapor,Stean1,IlotlNaterI1eatn1g C0Uf9Cti0H9FY OU the Square E and Plumbing E , El Tellings Ice Cream IE Charter and E Phone 240-X Dover, Ohio FOSS Chocolates E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE ,D , , -, ci m ma noi Fienbgygg A. W. Kline, FlO1 lSJC THE LOW PRICE LEADERS Funeral Designs and Cut Flowers Dover, Ohio Ladies' and Misses' Coats, Suits Dresses, Millin- ery, Waists, Hosiery Dry Goods and Infants' Wear Phone 43-2 E- P13110 SL. Sam Everett Barber - City Dry Cleaning On the Square High Class Cleaning' and Pressing Under Central Hotel DIF HAWKINS, Prop. Phone 82 IEIIEIEllilIE!IEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIBJIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEEIIEIIEJIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEJJIEIIEIEIIEIIEJEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIPJEIIEIEIIEI 'i i E ii E i H i B 'fl wi W? 9 5. 2 3 S QQ cu Q ff' U i H H H111 Q i il U'T'g CE fl IEIIEEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEEIEIIEEIIEEEIIEIEEE!IEHEIIiIlEIlEllEIIEIEEElEIlEIIEIEIElEIIEIIElKQ?i5ggSfi il X L K Y Y 1 1 0 izz . Qf?NCW 44 ZZ? 2 gy? :YET W 3 ---- idrigns- li mu 1 :cg C TZ nn S O n a n 3 G T Q y cm cm an an nu tm an ' la L EIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIQEEIIEIIEIIQEIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEEIEIEEIEJIPEIEIEIIEIIEJEIEIIQIHIEIIEJIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEJ lil IE EI E IEI lil lil El E E1 v El IE! El E E IE! E lil IEI IE E E E E IEI E E lil E E lil EI E IE! E Ei E IE! EI lil El El EI EJ IEI lil IE! El lil lil El IE EI Ei! E Crescent Restaurant Wm. Gross A Clean Place to Eat COP- 3rd and Walnut Butter Kist Pop Corn Candy 204 Factory St. Tobacccj Cigarettes e ' For the Convenience of the Public ' We have opened a New Department for the E' C' Payment of Rents, Auto Licenses, City Light Bills, Water Works Bills, Gas Bills. Fyegh and S3113 Meats, Bagou, Lal-d We shall at all times place our services at your disposal, and be glad to look after these bills for you Without any obligation or cost. Our aim and ambition is to serve the public. Poultry and Butter The Bank of Service -Open Saturday Night Phone: Home 103 222 Second Street CO. z Y! Y ff 1? C - -- - nib an cm m clL!.g xg n do an Make Our Store Your Store Spear Music Company 220 Factory St. D0 Radio Supplies and Equipment Complete Outfits and Supplies The Kreamer-Weber Co. 313 Factory St. ver, Ohio - ff ,147 'f ,,- 1 Elly r 1 rn 3 o n a n 3 G re 3,7 lifgniil ,li iii Tl i,ill,slETj!g1lli1!,El-Wig? lil 'Y T 53 EI E 5 rn S I-3 F-7 rr E. E 113 rn EEEEEE EEEEEE EE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Fire Automobile Life Vorherr Insurance Agency Established 1370 Office: Deis Block Do Oh Ph 495 A F. Cgl A. Ringheimer Groceries 401 T r as Ave. Ph 170 K Flay 53 lid X . , , , f, V7 , , f-xffi . fkfvw If 172 f I I x T : illMr lll'jllW,l'lll' 747' C TZ TTI S O Tl C n 3 G T 9 y ' 7 A A7 'sl LJS1TUllll4ml: 'l lllllllizlsil an lm arm: un cm cm ue: .5 'QL E411 cm ---- n:m: an cm -cu mo cm ursifgg EEIIEIEIEEIIEJIEIIEIEl.Ellill.E.llEllI2IlElEllEllEEllElElEllElEllEllEllElf'ilElElElEllEllEllElEllIiEllElEl El lil lil IE lil IE E lil lil lil lil E lil E El E lil lil lil lil lil lil E E IE lil E E E lil lil lil lil lil lil E lil E E E lil lil lil lil E lil lil IE lil El lil El lil lil El lil Geo. B. Deardorff Sz Son The Dover' News Exchange Hardware Manual Training Edge Tools Cleveland Plain Dealer and News Yearly subscriptions for Magazines taken Cal ' t H 'l ' . . P196 ,mf Wal e C1ga1's+Candy-Confections Mission Finishes George Marlowe, Prop. 8 Factory Street Dover, Ohio Chas. Feil Wall Paper-Window Shades Compliments of FRAMES AND SHEET PICTURES HOMER S. SPENCE Framing a. Specialty I 57f ,xfwjwr . Lkflxrz I I f ,Q-, .2 xfxjx A -J ,c Kuo, I NAL Y N 3 N --1' n:n-- m- cm cm C TZ In 8 O n a n 3 G Te Q D mul: ' ein: 'au 1-in Lan ii emi 'situ ' Auto Supplle Tires Repairing' Vulcanizin Brown Tire and Supply Shop Endres Floral Company Haywood Method of Too Surgory The Best Flowers with Service as Good TIRES Goodrich Fabric Silvertown Cord Madison Fabric and Cord 631 West High Street New P'liiladel,phia, Ohio J. ROYCE BROWN, Proprietor 208 Wooster Ave. Studebaker Cars Wo1ld's Largest Manufacturers of Six-Cylinder Cars C F. Schneider Sz Sons 814 Fac tory Street JEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Repaired While You Wait F J and we won'tqkeep you waiting' ,V ' lo g ' e' W'th ' N thods X, X W 1 ff - - n , eith 1. 1 oui up-tw ' N X 'W date shoe-repairing machinery 1 l M W. , and expert me , we can ' 7 fy' take an old, shapeless pair of 5 :S LX i I men's or women's shoes and in - fa- 2. fe minutes turn out zx new- looking, shapely, finely-finished - H' in pair. Seeing is believing-sit in -21,11 0 - our shop and watch us do it! -1-1- ' 1Nl?3l, fllhlllln , 'X i Y llll XL all 7 S 322 Factory Street EEEEEEEEEE V-J X Ki lilsffvz Z 1 W? A X i l,lxf f A - 'X ' Crimson and Grey 'is' 0 z ' K , 1i1TQ-o cm ma an --vv n:nn --u cm cm ugxf HSTQQ cm cm an -fv- n:nn an cm cm IEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEEEILEIEIEEIEIIEIIEIIEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE IEE! EJ EI IE E lil Ili! lil IE! lil E lil EI IE! EI ITEII El E lil lil IE lil IEI lil El E IE E E E E E EI lil EJ IE EI lil El IE! lil E EI E IE lil E E lil E lil IE! lil lil lil lil lil rm Compliments of Edgar Davis, M. D. Compliments of G. C. Benfer General Distributor of Dalton Adding and Calculating Machines The Bonnet Shop The Arcade Bowling Billiards Pool Candy, Cigars and Cigarettes Factory Street Dover, Ohio K5 f' I P- . 'W I ff i 4-x fx .J . Lfffz I gi ff 1 xfw-.. X 'V A- v ,, Crzmson and Grey 1 .S ' , 1 A A 'fig ln cm x::n.n cm an ms cnmfrj? kiln an an u u:nu cm' -H E CD 5251- QQ SW 'X Q E -4 G ,Evo 05,5 F. 1HEQH A?7VC9I'ZZIQ5IfL UZVQIZJCS MASSILLON. OHIO QXNG AN0 Q , GT . 59 '21 eo Printers of ' x ,O The Crimson and Grey SSILLON JIEEJEIEIEIIZQIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEJIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEEIIEIElmllillmlmlilmlillilmlixillillilEIEEIEIEIEIEIEEIEIIEIIEIEIEIQJEJEIEIEIEJ EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQf EE w u u f mW w Wm muw mm m um mum Cff Tfl80 n and GTG? 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Q 111552,-1:1,4'::S-H'.122 :ga -4 q.c.i.u4.1.:x:i lc- ,.'.1li.:15.3g,-K., fini m.,,,1I-5-,ff 'L.Fq:l:3nr::.g.'.'.':.:I: . 1 S-1Z4--1'K':':1:-9iS12fZ--1 161391-e3e:e' '!.Unx!q': :I :-'rhfi.1:-.1:1:gu::43:yfl,:f:1:,21l,'.-.2-J-- -1-1514--K :0 z:'! ::.'-..::- ::4'v,..:.:i:'.- 1 FI.wi-1:::Q:1:-31:1-niiaiu .ii-1 :el-2-:::-:ev 4:4 vi. 4.155-'a:g5g.q 53,4 :,g,g,332,.ff.5fie-'S'-'gihifxz.3-s4g.f.:.m:.I. .rw-- gin 3-g..5IPI'1 , 5-sg:E:2:e15Si: 1?E2:?if5Hi423 52 H592122?255321211i1lf5i3525:2441E':lnglsfmzgiig.xfzsgusilgshailntsizczsigse.f5?.s1g2f2:,'i'15-.WE. angina ...ff--ef '1- .1: :':::n.:..n:: 1.-.'. .- .:. : x :, 1 'aza .3 .5351 353312 4,3 -5,-In ,fe I., ,,.y.--.s..:'4 4:41.11 ,ag j:,: ag., '51::I:.3g,,5e-fII. -,: :Inf -. 5 ' liz' '1'4'1 V- .1 44: 4 ' u g A Yip .4 i,i:q.,-i:...i..1,1I5,i.i .22-4,1-I fgx,4..I.g3I.,1:I,::e.f.I1.,.I4...Q.QI I I . . .... . . . 2-:.-1: :--:3.I3:I I . . . gg: in II.,.,.. . .2 .. A 3 . fm I I .4- II . I .. , S5???f5Zff:2:5?3!225!f3If?fb?iff!Ff3E?f25f?2fFi35???2!5!!3?2J2ii1.x2i .fiiffifiiii 152121555552is!ie2su:es'Ee::1:71' zmwf- Hifi' ' ' -' 'ff--- .mfs fn. 1 Q.:-zij nu JE' : 351- t .F c 125' -, :Img 'Ez ...I J..-. x..- N75 Q.. 2-f' '33 I I .. '2:Y .IDL x J. I c M- .- ,. :I ,-of -- 44 54 C' ' son nd G e fx? rzm a y r y QD 2 z 1, .', A-ff :E cm cl cm uuznn an ma cm RUSS BESSIE A. H.-XXYK History Teacher Ollitz University B. S. in E. XYhen truly resistless purpose encounters obstinate will, The will must surely crninlilt- while the purpose keeps going still. MR. M. MOOSE Commercial Teacher Ohio lfniversity His copper-plate script is always the same His favorite question is 'XYhat's your name MISS RUTH M.-XRIE MOORE English Teacher XYooster University A. B. Ever see a canary heating at the bars. Never a bit olytrnsive yet longing for the stars? MISS ROSE ATKIXS French Teacher XYittenherg College Brooding moods are lurking in the shadows all the while, But in spite of all the shadows she always has a smile. MR. XY. -I. TRAUTXYEIN Coach Vliittenberg College XVherever he is he's boss supreme. Yet he's never impossible, never extreme, RUSS MIRI.-XM ,-X. BOXYKLXN English Teacher University of Chicago Ph. B. 'Terribly in earnest. furious at delay, She keeps right on going in the same good way. IEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIEIlillillillillilETIEIEIEIIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIETIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEI ll X N it l ci ek 4 Fi Be ac' a if. fe ff S JN IEIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIEEIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEIEJIEIlEJl'iIlEIIEIlElElEIElEIElEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEllEIEIIElEQr Mi x r' , W, ,U ff 025 X - If 5225 1 le Skillslullialllslllzlliilllglllltlltrlllmrit r l 5, . W T C T1 m S O fl G fl C? GT Q 17 M an umm an M an E N Egg lg IE MISS DALE ANGEL IE Latin Teacher LE-I Ohio XYesleyan, Il. .-X. El Qlwa5:sQattending-to business, aln'a?'s,tlemurely' the sameg. 0 EI , urel3 she .insneis the question. What s there in a name. E llr. R. C. Sl-lL'Rll' IE Klanunl Art Supervisor EI Miami L'nix'ersity. .'X. B. 'EI The man who never shirks, altvays works, and nevver failsg EI He s on the Job at everything lrom society to nails. S MISS CORQX KNAPP E Mathematics Teacher IE Ohio XYesleyan, li. S. IE She can measure an :irc of the heavens :is well as brains in the head. lj-I And no one can bluff or deceive her, but must go to work IE instead. E MISS FLORENCE ECKERT lil Domestic Science Teacher El Thomas Normal School lil Domestic art and a home-like heart- EI Here they aren't found apart. E El MR. l.. H. :Xl-EX.fXNDER EI Music Teacher EI Oberlin College El XVhether it be chorus, orchestra or band, IE He is the best director in the land. E El RHSSESTHERBHLLER Ei History Teacher lil XVittenberg College EI Conscientious as can be. always there on time, EI Any one can see that this teacher is sublime. i E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE lil E 151 El lil 151 rm an E ei G y el la Q lil 3. E 5 E S lm Q lil z El Q., E 9 E Q2 El . E lm 2 an E g .2 E1 ? I-'gl :E-. E E lil 5 EI E gl ia: E' E EI :E L-ii 'E El .- E t imimlmimellmliilamriilalalmvmmmmmriimmmmnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmo nzdn b uh:-' ln MR. GEORGE NUSSDORFER has been with us since we started in the first grade at Dal: Grove and we know him as a man ready to befriend any of ns whenever the occasion arises. MRS. C,-XTHERINE BOYER bas been at Dover High School for five years and we hope that she shall continue to be there, in-any times live years more. She is a friend to all of ns and her perpetual cheerfulness and advice has brightened many a gloomy day. MR. J. A. MCGONNIGAL, Mac, has been our engineer for three years. Nothing need be said of Mads record as it speaks for itself. Mac is a philosopher and his philosophy and advice has helped many a High School Boy over difficult obstacles. MR. GEUHGE NUSSUUR FER .47 .47 XXX-J X RI 'lfxrz I f 4, .77 I Q V, II , I'L4x,z ,, , ,, ,, , fx' A ' 'I ' 7 I A, I 7k C 7' Z IT! S O TZ G TZ 3 G T 9 ff , f' A I ' Ll III, , ,wgyx I' 1 Qyg 295 IIII , ,,,,,,,,,Q A EIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEEIIEIEIEIEIEIIEJIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEI IEJIEI EI IEI E IEI IEI E Iiil IE! E E E IE E IE! E EI IE! IEI IEI IE! E EI IE! IEI lil E E IEI IEI E IE! IE! IEI E E E IEI E IE lil IEI IEI IEI EI E IEI lil E IE! E IEI E E IE EI EI IFI .N -2.23 ,'- ,fy 4,559 'Ta'-:.'1'?x f-J'f,1,gg! Lgf ,w,.X' W HIJIII v ':'5' I'r1 I'II I'i'I:'III III'II' I 'I ' I ', , I u I J 'Mix I -If! X Nr E53 V4,I!',IHII,W1,A , X ,J ,gh ,XI X ,+I .,I IEE!! , I I X - K ,V 'v f ' , V -- , , ' , M, ,QNX sd- ,. tw ik!! ' 1 lg A V ,-:Y - nf Q ,W Q' -' w -5 ' ' . I-'---' X. H fx Jag-V Qiifgyf 5 'HEY Jfal f Y- . Q , MN I, ix Ll Y, , , ff If 2 soN - - , up Q J' GRIN V I' '- , HI. f Z mv I , ,N 3 J ,,,- L . f ' '- - Y AI, -, -- ,f- -. f- F A 5, ' '- - ',- :Y -J .' ,L ,Ia A , Gas , ,Q ,ffviji , 'I Is, ' I X ' .A 41, I' - L, Q n fxj ,,f-ff Z1 - .1 4- ITL, ' 2.1 ,Q , 0 Q, fx, Q, Q . If ,ku ,Q 1 2, f 5 .Ly -L -K .3 f , L' I L: 1 joy Lg '31 Q T7 , 7 ,jf I w ' in gg '-3IT44f 1. If , -1- A1 5' -43 Y -f' , N. , '-N J,-'ma-' V? l4',,4f A , 'MJ' Qf I I - W fx, I' AX V--P I W 'L ,' ff-, i , ,TILL-F Q, FEM lf' 2' 1. ,?7'ji.-'Ai Qi !f?:iQj will I . nfQ5,fi'A QQ G L-IY':fI1ff 'Al'-,. I ff'ffAiL f- Hifxr A -Lf, ,fif 'L -Y'L lk',H -L '9 A ,ULN ,g 91459 ,fi In WVZLTJ C .J 'PAR Rfb 'J -'. QQ. .-Cxfl I -A ft V5 b,? Vxg4gq:f Cv? i 3-'fx 4 ' , -if DA J U A '14-VIL I W if ' AL' ' V VTX - '5' 'fwfr ,f E ,f5,i'C1L .5-WTJZI '10 IH11 If 'fmf' W Lxj -'ff 5 W ,QQ PCM ff S,-V If J .JT m if F-, ,J YQ '-j1'Cf' 'T N -F 1 ' ,IQ gi V' 4 'lf1'S f'f, 3,1 LJ I Q1 ' fl-I ga, ,V I' xl, 1 Q H- 'V ,1,gL+-.Kg Ifj A , , V, K, ., V L , 1, ., , , I l, I MW? J I 2 TH E CLASS BEHIND THE BO0K Vi' 4- l 5, 1-',1 .ld A 'Ida' v -3 'ln ,Y N P I , s . i I Q 'I .In W1-O 1, -s- 1- N' , 0 4 . ,JU O . 0 1 fm ' In 4 I a P THE SENIOR CLASS Rl DBILRT l'iRl.H lliS'!l'refident CLARA RHliX'ES-Yiee-l'resident, Secretary and Treasurer P.XL'l-lNlf XY.'XL'liER5-Class Histuriau COLORS ANI! 1-'1,UXYlClIflIlue :mil Gnld. ,llnerivun lieznut, Ml 'I l'.l7N ' ' -' l, '1 Commercial Course- Bassett. Rohert Bechtel, Hilda Clemens. Florence Davis. Gladys Everett, Mildred Finton, Irene Gintz, Clarence Cvroenenherg. Martin lentes, Ted Kessler, Clayton Kline, Hazel Lahm, Helen Loessi. Paul Miller. Flurence Miller, Calvin Morgan. Daisy Reeves. Clara Reidy. Monica Roche. James Smntz. Carl Streb, Mary Thompson, Edison Trubey, Paul lValdick, Frances XYalter. Ruth lYilliams, janet Latin Course- Bigler. Katlierine Bruuks, Ruliert Ualzell, Kathleen Fauser. lidna Hawk. Gretchen Kiefer. Ethel MacKay, Anna Marshal. Marjorie Quick. Duruthy Rice. Genrge Richard. l.ena Rolmart. :Xrline Mlalter, Pauline XYHSSCIH, -lusephine Ziegler, Ruth Vocational Course- Adams, Catherine ylurgens. Mary Mar Lalm. Hulda Lab, Margaret Schlnndt. Cornelia lYeigand, Roy Seilnert, Alton aret El El lil lil lil lil El lil lil lil lil a N, E N lil H lil El a E sul E Fiiql. ia 9 E E lil o E :s E Q E S, I'-:jj CU El S' E fe, la gil' E1 EI i lil H El lil a E , El E gc E La Ei? E lil El E lillglillillillilillillillillillfillillillillillilmlillilEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEIEEEQQF' lVl'r'h.,X, A, fi '-.,, Z 1:9 as 171 zfx-'l - l. X ,zf ,4 07z fxff 526539 -'il U MA , ,. N X, lx Crzmson and Grey HMA' A ' 71 , , , A'-' ull Mun l lun l u l -r ll nzml- ati lll an 1 lui! :LQ il ljjjbgtn cm 5 .... nga., gl-9' ll L3 'l lan ggi? ElifllillillillilIEllEIlElIEIlEllElElElElElIEIEilIEllEIIEEIEEEEIEEEEIEEEEEEIEJEIEIEEQs E E1 E E E lil lil lil E E E lil lil lil lil E lil lil lil Ill lil E E E lil IE E E lil E E lil lil lil lil E E E lil lil IE E E lil lil E E E E El lil lil E lil E CLARA RlLliX'li5. Tu - llcr voice nas cvcr Noll, lfcntle and low, an cxccllt-nt thing in uonmn, .. , . . . ,. . 3 Nice lrvsulcnt A-4: bac. Ircab. 5--J: Lliorux l 4 Annual Stuff 4, ' ROBERT BROOKS, l3ulJ - The sztinti bc with mc 'till this hook com t Prusulcut 3-45 Annual Stall 4. MAR-lORlli MARSHAI.. Rlztrgv - Small and swcvt with light brown hair, And frowns ul-on her face are ram. Chorui l-7-V Y XV C 'X -IA N ET XYI LLIAM S- Su'eetncs-: personified, Fltorub LZ-.ig Drznnatic Club. CALVIN MILLERM He's known near and tar as our athletic star. Football 1-245--lg Capt, 41 Baskethall 2-3-Jg Capt. 3g Chorus 1-2-34: Hi-YQ Annual Staff. IRENE FINTON Picks - Bob-haired beauty, Chorus l-.2-J-4: Y, XY. C. A. 1 l -in it mwgllllllgllllll Cffmwn and Gfw Iununl I llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIII X ' lf E :I JI lmlmlmrmmlmlmmlmmrmriimnmlmralniimllinmmmmmmmmEmmmmmmmEmmmm V MONICA REIDY- Quit-t and unobtrusive she came ' But she gots thvre just the same L hurus 1-2-3-4. CL.'XYTUN KESSLER, 'iTElYZHl1i'+ Of fricnlli he lm: manv Ili fins--11:15 hu anv? I Poutlgill 4: Bneketlmll 3--lg H1-YQ Chorus. FLORIQNCE CLEMENS- For she was just thu quiet kind. Chorus 1-T!--I' Y W C 'X JOSEPHINIC XYASSEM, joe - Shc has rt hcart that is guy, And :x smile for each day. Basketball 1-2-3-4: Capt. 51 Mgr. -lg Chorus l-2. ALTON SEIBERT, Si - I exist as I nm. 'Tis enough for any man. H 'X 5 Chorus l-4: Annual Stall 4. MILDRED EVERETT, Hun - She is naturally fair enough ' W To nccd no helps from a powder puff. ' Chorus 1'-1. , . i in EIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIEIIEIIEEIIEIIEIEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIFQIIIIIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIE WX IEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEli!EEIIEIIEIIEEIEIIEIIEJIEIIEIEEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIE E1 2 E lm nm E lm lil lil E E1 151 lm was fm E E1 151 E E1 :in E1 lm El E E 151 um fm lm uni E fm E1 rm an lm ri: nil an E E Q lm rm 151 lil lm E1 lm E1 E1 E1 Em liz lim nil li: F-Tl VJ lllllllllllllllllllll I 'H WMMh M Mi +wwmH wm uiM wM hmmm M w mv CT lm so n U nd GW 9 fQ1QQQ4UZ M w I at -E m M PAULINE XVALTERS Shall he he great? XYQ think Qual fate - I Has much ln storm !or hum. , Oi learning Shu lmlh nn .nlvuml.mcL. Hlstorxzm 1-2-31 Lhoru- 1-4. Y, XV. lf A. EDISON THOMPSON, Edna DOROTHY QUICK, Dm A careful studcm she has been. Chorue I--I: Y. XV. C. A. HL' LDA LAB- Her quiet grace and face s t 1 , I ll n n d 1 1 live 'oy 0 n me 'rien 5 51 fhorus 1--L PAUL TRUBEY, Squint Mun of lun' wonls are the b t HAZEL KLINE- The kindest, best of friends Chorus l-4. 1 ,XA 1 A 7 5, , l ll l l QW ff ZW QNX ' Ywilt l , lllWff..fi 5 -X JW' 1 rl, rg, - llll lml an in D, and GW l.:,lll,llllrllilliflllflllllllllwwi lil E lil IE D3 E E lil E lil lil liil E lil E E E El lil lil lil E El E E El li E lil lil li lil E lil lil lil lil lil lfal El lil lil lil lil lil E E IE E lil lil lil E lEllElEElEllEllEllElElEllE1llElEEElEll'illEllEllEllIillIillElIillElEElElEJElilEEEEEfll'ElEl.'Qll.EllEgQx34 fv GLADYS Di-XYIS4 Her bright eyes quite often seem W To nlrmcc wixh life :ni-l misclzicfs gli-:im. W THEODORE NEFF, -'Nippt-f - He will tinrl :i path or make one - lfootluzill 1-2,3741 Rnselwnll 3-4, M.XRG,'XRl2'l' LAI!- ubmull but mighty nnnl always lmlwpy. Chorus 1-4g Y. XV. C. A. FLGRENCE MILLER- Tl1is little girl is very shy, Hut slw'll ovvsrcome it if she'll trv. PAU L LOESSI- Business :mer plegsurc, He takes his with lull mensux Foollnnll 3--lg Bnselmll. FRANCES XVA LDICK- Merry ways and luminous Eyes A good little vnnipire in disguise Fllorus I--lg Orchestra 1-4, VK , W 0 fizf 4. Xl . 'kfxz ,7, Eggmillllllilllsllllllvlllfllllmglly lwfllvlyug i Cwmson and Grey i all V i all ff 'UQ ii Q v-x -L -- k--- ' cm aan, Ar wif lilEElilIEHEIIEEElilEEL!IEHEHEENE!IEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEEIEIEIIEIW f KATH LEEN DALZELL- None linen' her lzul to like her, K lmrus 14. ROY lVlfIGAND- Do all thin gs nn-ll anrl time will tell, Annual SIJCT 4. KATHERINE BIGLER- What she does, she does right. Chorus 1-4: Dramatic Club: Y. XV, C. A.: Annual Staff, HELEN LAHM, --Peg God made her snmll that He might make A more choice hit of workm:inship. Chorus l-.lp llramatlc Lluh. Cl-ANlfNCE GINTZ- A bubinew man xp he. Dinnmtic Flnh: Amxuzil Stuff. DAISY MORGAN, Da - She H1155 her han' and powders her nose, Slu-'s sweet from her head to the tip of her toes, , Chorus 1-3. l ElEllEIlElIEllEllEllElIEllEllEllEllElElEllEllEllElEllEllEllEllEl EllillillillillillillillillillElEllElEIlEllEllEllElIElElIEllElIEllEllElElIElEllElliIElEllEIl ,W ,, ,,, , , XQJ' , , , , , ,u,, u, , 7 fail A 'A' Crzmson and Grey I7 All -1 an cm :xn cm -an or cxrkihlf n ur- cn -- --3: cm uuznn -- cm l RUTH ZEIGLER. SIMS - A maulcn tzur wxth Nlnmnq hrnr. l l Chorus l-4: Ilrmnatxc Llub. , l TED JENTES- Thu kind we nrud more of. Not our vnu I1-we to ihove. Mgr, .xi ' ' r ' ' ' ' Haskrtlmll 2-.x-41 Mgr. gg Prez. 1,:. r,..51...11 4. Lay-t, 1: llxvh, .'XnnuJl. CORNIiLI.'X SCH LL' A pleasant young In-ly wxlh a snnl ll NDT4 Chorus lf-4: Y, XY. C. A, GRETCHEN HAXYK- -Her very frowns are fairer f . 'Il l f Il ld mn Snues 0 0 Ier mm cns at Svc.-Trrns. l-: Chorus If MARTIN GROENBERG, Mart - ,X great artist surely he will he. ' Chorus 1-4: Orchestra 4: Bnskcthall 4g Dramatic Cluh: Annual 5135. l 1 8 i v l l E1 Hu- IXIEFER- She knows shout it full. 1 Sha knows. she knows. Chorus 1-3. l IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 47 EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE XtwL,X, A, ,Cf QA, X -6 ,Z 44? Q gif ex ix ' . M- f , ,,, , ,,, ,,,,, , , -t t' l ' Q Crzmson and Gre Nvt A A m l AV- N tm tm u -- 1 u:nn --u l cm l cm ' y an cm cr ---- can -mllllldn l 'ug f lm? EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE HILDA BECHTEL, Becky - l,.cl's llc gay whilu we m:tv. w , . . Basketball --J--lg Lam, 4: Chorus 1-I ROBERT BASSETT, Bo - I live that I may lm in stylc. Else whv is lite worth while? .V a- . xp-.. 11 . roottmtt -.t.4, L..,t,t.m11 1---.J-fl, .xmmt staff. LENA RICHARD- Givc every man thy car llut fun' thy voic Chorus l-.v, Ll.an.at1c Lluh, ANNA Mr-XCKAYi Thu wold dclizhts in sun people. Chorus 1--lg Y, XY. C. A. ARLINIE RGBART- Keen sense and common sense, And no room for nonsense. Chorus l--lg Orchestra 3-4: Dramatic Clubg Y. NV. C. A. MARY STREE- Tho' days may come and days may go S1111 Mary smllus and makes not foe. Chorus 1-43 Dramatic Club. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEI GEQRGE RICE- .X rcmly V.-lupus. .A run- Uh, who has nc-1 felt mln.- Chorus 1-ig Hi-Y Dram. . . JAMES ROSHE, -Timm A quiet lomruc :hows a mxu Baseball. CC LYER HAIR- '4Greaz in AH mhinus Lux sm: much Hx 11' Staff EDNA FAUSER- True Lo hrr wuul, lxur uork. hcr lnunds C1101 us 1-3. CARL SM UTZ- 65 1ui u 'm 'mx fl mug man H 1 1 I 1 Ambitious lo do the bus! he can. STANLEY ENCK. Dizzy A 1w,.l1l nun hu ulll lw. E Q Lau V-'33 Q E X 2 Q E S 'S IQ H :Q El H 3 lil E EL? E 9 E if 'E 3 E :El S E Cu E 9 E, 8, Q fu FA 151 lm H1 E131 - lil '51 E lil IE li' EJ E13 E mmmmmmmmmmnlmmlmlmimmlmlmfalmE1anminm1i1m11:Jli1121Jlmmrmm11:1:11mnri1mLif11,Lgj Agly H X Clfllfxf ..,,,,,.,,w . Q. ,r ff., ,, ., ,, ,?VTjll A if fav' Q eff ' we iiliiuti- Ml ii,illlull ll C T1 'H S O ff an 3 Gfev lm .T A aggwf lw I fllllllllllllllllllll X K sv G EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E Senior Class History Twelve long years ago the present Senior Class started on its quest for knowledge. After struggling bravely for eight years the class Hnally was ushered into the mystic portals of High School. where perhaps the happiest days of school life are spent. 'Wfith all due formalities the class was organized: the var- ious officers were elected, and the class colors. flower and motto were chosen. For the past two years Robert Brooks has proven himself to be a most satisfactory president. Clara Reeves, whose duties as vice-president were exceptionally light, was made secretary and treasurer. During the entire four years the class has been ably rep- resented in all school activities whether social. athletic or in- tellectual. The seniors are well represented in the Y. XY. C. A., Hi-Y, the choruses, the Soc and Buskin Dramatic Club and the orchestra. WVe are very proud of the athletes in our class. XYe had five regulars on the football team not mentioning several reli- able substitutes. In basketball four of the Five men on the team were seniors and will leave some places that will be hard to Fill. Captain Bechtel and two other seniors were on the girls basketball squad. And no doubt several of our class will be on the baseball squad. The class has led in all social activities during the past year. The Seniors' out-door affairs were: a marshmallow- toast, one autumn evening in a grove near Beach City: and a coasting party, one freezy moonlight night on Dover Hill. The class gave several dances in lVentz Hall. An attractive and enjoyable VVashington Party was celebrated in the gymnas- imn. Appropriate games were played and a delicious lunch was served. It is certain that each of the Seniors, upon leaving school, will strive earnestly to live up to the standards set him by his instructors and always to be a credit to Dover High. PAU LIN E KVA LTERS-'22 ,,Z f, ,, 1 1 . lbw, , ,,,A V, ,, '- I-D' Crimson and Gre ' H 1' 'N 'W 39 S l ll ll lllllllllll lllllllllll GT , Axfwlx u , 7 Ar X Y . sf p ii . . i ,mil I H ir 2 in I T, y m m m an cm ua, an dm Ugg: gigs i i ml i, I law llgaililllli .!,. iii'Llilll nllllliir ll nhl' nh l i . gi Senior Prophecy I was in the lobby of the Tokyo Hotel when the mail was brought in. I received my bundle of letters and, upon glanc- ing through it. saw a newspaper bearing a Lf S. stamp. I opened it and found it to be a copy of the Daily Reporter for Dec. 16, 1934. The next thing that caught my attention was a column outlined in hlue. I received a surprise as I read the following: Bliss Ethel Kiefer. who graduated here in '22 and who has been teaching in various places in Brazil has hn- ally answered the question 'XYhen is a Brazil Nut? in her re- cent book of that name. Miss Kiefer has devoted all of her spare time during the last ten years to a thorough study of the question and it has been predicted that the results of this study which she found in this book will completely revolutionize that branch of sci- ence. In this same paper I found an advertisement for Holesum Doughnuts. known. the advertisement stated. all over Ohio. I read the advertisement and had another pleasant surprise when I found that Edna Fauser owned the chain of bakeries where Holesums were made. I looked back at the 12 years since leaving old D. H. S. and tried to remember what I had heard concerning any of the old classmates of mine. I was rather ashamed to own that up to the time of reading this article I had known very little of any of them. I resolved that I would see how manv I could trace. ' A week had passed and I had done nothing towards my research and then one day something happened which made me glad that I had not expended any energy in that di- rection. I was going out of the hotel door when I collided with a young man who was hurrying up the steps. I glanced up to apologize but the words stuck in my throat. The young man was none other than Roy VVeigand. That afternoon I found him in the lobby. XVe were both glad to have some one we knew to talk to and having found a secluded corner began trading questions. XVhat in the world have you been doing all these years? I asked. He laughed as he said, Oh, I're been freebootingf' I bummed around from one place to another and finally landed in .-Xlaska. I did whatever I could find there until one day I had a chance to buy a fellow's gold claim cheap and I took it. I made enough from it to trip it around the globe. I've run into nearly every one of the class of '2Z. I had been sitting there with my ears open all the time he was talking but at those two last sentences I became all ears. You're just the one I'm looking for, then, I said eagerly. lYhere's Ted Ientes? Ted has succeeded General VVood as adviser to the Philippines. You know they're independent now but they asked that the U. S. send them an adviser and I guess Ted's as much of a success with that as he was with the ladies in old D. H. S. Gretchen Hawk is on the islands too: teaching modern dancing. She's found her element. Wl1at about Dorothy Quick, she of the high voice? Dorothy Quick? Let's see-Oh, yes, she's working with Gene Stratton Porter, testing the quality of the vocal cords of various North American birds. I hear the results are quite interesting. Isn't Pauline XValters with her? They used to be well nigh inseparable, I queried. No: Pauline is teaching French in a private school in Yersaillesf, He chuckled: Do you remember George Rice? XVell. rather! I met him in New York. He's manufacturing 'Slickem Hair Oil' and he claims that his best advertisement is the fact that it is being used by the actors in the 'Soc and Buskin' troupe. Lena Richard is the director of the 'Soc and Buskins' and they seem to be making quite a stir in Chicago. XVhere's Clayton Kessler? I always thought he'd be the one to repre- sent '22 in dramaticsf' Roy threw hack his head and laughed. He's on the stage all right. He has made the hit of the season as the 'Chronic Grouch' in 'The First Hundred Years are the XX'orst.' I laughed too when I tried to imagine Kess as a 'Chronic Grouchf I thought a moment then. Oh, say, I said eagerly, did Hilda Bechtel really settle down with THE MAN who was always some where on the IE lil IE! lil lil IE IEI IE! lil lil lil lil lil lil EI lil El Il5J E El lil lil El IE lil IE IE! EJ E lil El lil lil lil lil EI lil ffl lil IEI lil lil lil lil Lil lil IE lil lil EJ lil lil lil E IEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIIEIEIIJJIEIEJIIEIlEIE'l'.iIlElI.EIlElEIEllEIIElIE.llEllElIElEllEllElEDEIIEIIEI X f LPfY?.,,,,,,., ,,.! ,,r,, .. f-N 1217! X C . gzgoymiiiriiiii:w.i.iiiiieiiiwl M-,E ,mr E. in mason KS e BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E, E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E m horizon during school da 's? Somehow I never could quite picture 'Becky' as settled Bown to anything. Becky settled down? Zowie, no: she's about as far from being settled down as anyone ever has been. She's just broke the world's altitude record in her new aeroplane designed spe- cially for her by Theodore Nefff' Well, I said with a chuckle, that 'shore do' sound more like Becky than the other. Do you know where Carl Smutz is? Glory how I use to envy that boy his red cheeks but shucks! nobody would have believed they were real if I had had them, I reminisced. Surely, I know where Carl is. He's inspector of horses for the U. S. Cavalry. He gets the most and finest ones from Edison Thompson's ranch in New Mexico. And what has happened to Helen Lahm and Daisy Mor- gan ? Helen is in Australia at the head of a big woolen mill. She runs the mill and her husband finances it. It is supposed to have such good, rich stock that I'm thinking seriously of investing. Daisy Morgan is manager of The Evening 'Har- old' in Washington. I can't think of all the members. Can't you tell me a few ? I said as I scratched my head. 'WVell, he said after a little thought, Calvin Miller is Secretary of State in good old U. S. Margaret Lab, Anna MacKay and Monica Reidy are running a tea room at a winter resort in Alaska. Isn't Florence Clemens with them F I asked in surprise. Florence? Why she's city manager of Dover. She's been in office now for six years and is better liked every day. Of course you remember Clara Reeves. She's the steel mag- nate in Dover. Owns the Reeves Steel Mills. She seems to be pretty much of 'magnet' for a certain young man in Dover, I hear. ' How about Ianet XVil1iams? She went over to NVales to study singing and is now con- sidered even better than Galli-Curci. I heard her in some opera, it's Welsh so don't ask me to tell you the name, I couldn't understand a word she was singing but she put it across alright. By the way, have you read Stanley Enck's Causes, Eifects and Cures of Civilization F Since its publi- cation H. H. NVell's works have been almost forgotten. Hazel fl,-Xa, , zvz 1 ,fx and Grey QC-'ii ' f' A n cm cm unznbl lin an nu! cm an dbi-JH? Kline is wielding the quill too. She's set a new standard in novel writing. By the time her books are off the pay list in the library they have to be rebound. She doesn't have much trouble disposing of her stories either. Go on, tell me some more. Cornelia Schlundt is in Africa. Cornelia in Africa? XVhat under the sun and the moon is she doing there? She introduced basketball to the Hottentots and her team is world famous now. I met Frances XValdick in Paris. She was on her way home from Vienna where she has been an in- structor in one of the music conservatories there. Is Helen Lahm the only one married F I queried anx- iously. Roy grinned as he said, Gee no, I almost forgot! Mildred Everett is anxiously watching the 'Grohth' of two husky 'Mi- lard ,lr's.' Culver Bair found his ideal woman and is support- ing her quite nicely with the returns from his farm. He has just perpetrated what is known as the succotash plant be- cause it yields both corn and beans. I don't suppose you've seen Ruth Ziegler and Kathleen Dalzell yet, have you? I asked. No, he said, I haven't. VVhere are they F I saw them just about a month ago when I was up in Yokohama. Ruth introduced American styles to the Japa- nese women and they accepted them so eagerly that she estab- lished a shop. She's known all over the world for her won- derful creations. Kathleen is her head model and it's no won- der the Japanese women accepted the styles when they saw them on her. Oh, that reminds me, said Roy. Arline Robart is in China. Carnegie Technical School sent her over to found a school of mathematics. She's a wizard at solving some of those 'Chink's' puzzles and has even taught the Chinese a thing or two about originating them. You remember Mary Streb? She's quite a prominent lawyer in Cleveland. She's a second Hawkshaw when it comes to finding evidence. Clar- ence Gintz is at the head of the Pinkerton Detective Agency. 'l'here's no need of saying anything mfore about him. You used to know Clarence well enough tu know that whatever he tackled he put through. Marjorie Marshall is at the head of the sales force of the Linagab Garage in Smileville. Irene 5 ii ,oi mm 'fa IA To C i it !ll.ll.tlimi lil I I I I ,ge tr Hmgon j'lllliiN.!',lli1w . 1. n i.. 1 '. .- 11' i Im cm an nm nn:l:u- an cm cm cl, - Finton is posing for advertisements for some new kind of face cream that's guaranteed to produce dimples. The last I heard uf Bob Brooks he was raising cane down in Central America. He makes some kind of brew from it and has grown quite rich from the sale of it, The people down there call him 'Babbling Brooks' Isn't he married? I queried eagerly. Roy shook his head. XYell, I said, I wish I knew where :Xlton Siebert is. He owes me a dollar: he made a bet with me that Bob would be the first one from our class to be married. I am afraid you will have quite a time trying to locate Alton Siebert. He has started on a trip around the world to try and see something he has not painted, However, you can Find his works in any art museum. Such are the trials and tribulations of a genius, I said with a laugh. I've always wondered what Hulda Lab would do. Did you happen to see her? Oh, yes. Shes chief dietitian in Lakewood Hospital. Florence Miller is a doctor and is doing wonderful work among the poor children in Chicago. Is James Roche still as afraid of the girls as he used to be ? Oh my. yes! Roy answered dryly He has a troupe of about fifty of the most beautiful girls gathered from all over the world and has practically put Ziegfeld out of the running. He calls his troupe 'The Gold Bugs' He must be afraid of them, I agreed, Do you know, I said suddenly, I wouldn't have so much trouble believing that of Robert Basset but it sounds a little 'hshv' to sav the least about -liinmeyf' I i Bo Bassett, Roy said scornfully. XVhy he was disap- G fl ff! G fe 12 ip lliililmlmlmmm Ii'illi1lr':ililill'rW ulll llll : W g pointed in love and it made him a woman hater. He went up into the north of Canada and is hermiting up there in the niountainsfl 'Poor man, I murmured. It certainly must have gone hard with him. XVhat's Paul Loessi doing? Did he succeed in graduating from D. H. S. yet? I saw Paul down in New Orleans, he's setting up pins in a bowling gallery. During his spare time he works on geoin- etry problems that Miss Knapp sends him once a month. He hopes with a little extra work, to be able to pull through in time for the coming commencement. XYhere is ...... Oh, say, he interrupted eagerly, did you know that Josephine XVassem after a whirlwind campaign has been elect- ed president of the N. L. S. F. D.? No I didn't, I said dryly, and I don't know very much more now than before. Explain the initials, it may mean v. more. His eyes twinkled as he said very gravely, National I,ea- gue for Standardizing Feminine Dress. Oh! I said weakly. Then when I had regained a little breath, And what about Martin Groenenberg? You don't mean to say that you haven't heard of him, he said in astonishment. INell, I know I'm an ignoramusf' I said heatedly, but you don't need to rub it in. But let's not argue, let me out of this suspense! Did he break some wonderful record or what? Break a record! Rather! He's the swiftest 'lightning artist' in the world! It was too much. The world went black. R. I. He-'22 EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Egg EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE T55 EET EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE bar, ,W ,, VZ, , ,NH , Ld X I 57 , X 1 I tiQW 1 11: 11wx' 1w lu' qv 11 'F ' 7 Avi? 3 C r 1 m S o a n J G r Q y 5 ' icq? A 'A Z Abi 2, :An Y cm ' an cm an can an cm 4-asia 21535411 cm n:nn -an cm no.-g f f JUNI QS EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE fiff 5 Qz A V, f,z ,Ju J, , zxff Crimson and Grey f , M MART ufggj L9 Qu il' cm! Y un an cm nu:u.n' 'i M' Y 'uiinm iiiiiiig an an cx-- n:nn an Joe Shull JOh1i Me Francis Mans Helen Maur:Er Josephine Wihle Curt PEeters Ben MiLle1' Florence BeLle1' Bob Krantz Sam WieNland Bruce WilcOxen Chuck Walters Ruby HorN l cm cm SOME WELL KNOWN JUNIORS Joan Johns iges lld3.I'y TI'U hey AN na Margaret Adams Paul Von Kaenal Thelma Gellser Earl KOOS Gwilyn BR,aun Hilda Schlunt Edith LOh1'Hl3ll Birdie PFeiffer EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE J E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE GlaDys Potchner DOnald Benson Julia WEntz LoRetta Jackson Peg Hostetler Ivor Goodrich Cot Gettle Jim Hilton Mean Cherub Shields Cecil Stocker HUGH Harvey Rus ZOllars Harold Bowen Cecilia Laiilmer , aff Q 17112, A-fem - K- , cm an an Wm: qtinzm un 'N mn un Crlnlso rl an 3 Grey q A A mdihxwlm W :W !!1!!Y'i!!d wah EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E I 27 ' 0 V, ,lf gy? .1 1, 1. 1 'w if-u 'E' t 1 an ml mn Cm - cm n:nn JUNIOR CLASS ROLL AND OFFICERS H ERA I .15 GETT L E-President ROBERT KRANTZ-Vice-President MARGARET HOSTETLER-Secretary and Treasurer HELEN MAURERSClass Historian COLOR AND FLUXYER--Blue and Gold Pink I MOT'l'lJ-Onward and Ulm J Latin Course- Commercial Course- Goodrich, Ivor Hill, Lucile Hostetler, Margaret Johns, Joan Koos, Earl Schoelles, Catherine lVentz, Julia lVible, Josephine Vocational Course- Adams, Anna Marga Eberwine, Ralph Gieser, Thelma Harvey, Helen Lash, Norine Menges, John Schaar, Elizabeth Schneider. Harold Schneider, lValter Stalder, Louise Stocker, Cecil XValter, Charles VVeinhart, Pauline NVeinland, Samuel AVilcoxen, James Tet Howell, Harold Beller, Florence Benson, Donald Braun, Lydia Brewer, Bertha Capper, Loeffler Conn, Hazel Finley, Louise Gordon. Glenn Groeneuberg. Dirk Hilton, James Herman. Ida Horton, Raymond Kelbassa, Paul Huston, Erma Jackson, Loretta Lauber, Cecelia Mans, Francis Nigro, Tony Osborn, Edgar Pfeiifer, Bertha Potschner, Gladys Rausch, Justus Sanimons, Theo. Schlundt, Hilda Schneider, Carl Shull, Josephine Commercial Course- Telle, George Trubey, Mary Uebel, Margaret AXVZISSCITI, Joy XYassem, Pauline ll'einsz, Carl Xlfendling, George XVilson, Frances Zimmerman, Prudence Zollar, Russell General Course- Braun, Gwilym Brown, lYillis Gettle, Harold Hofmeister, Pauline Horn, Ruby Krantz, Robert Lebold, Adrian Maurer. Helen Miller, Ben Peter, Curtis Shields, Robert lValter, Elmer EEEEEEEEE 4 ,MVT ' , 7 X 1 Qzfa V' C Tj fn S O T2 LZ Tl ci G TQ jj , 2? i , N 'lQlly 31llil'lillli.llllll ivllli bl, u n no an anznn -m an cn: an uoaifffk 5245 mn cm nhl-un ' an un:nu' ' 'nb cn: l' ab-,L .S r lg ' N Q E E E E E E E E E . . IE Junior Class History E E lYe juniors first honored Dover High School with our sociable class, the other classes claim our attentions much of lil presence in 1919. The upper class men did not consider us the time. llie consider this quite complimentary. lil as doing so at that time. but since we have acquired such a :Xs is usual, success is generally accompanied with certain IE reputation for both our mental and physical abilities during sorrows and misfortunes. XYe had an especially great sorrow IE these past three years. they have been forced to respect and and misfortune befall us last summer when ,lOl1I1 Rickseckef. EI even to admire us. lYe wish these unbelieving ones to refer one of the ni-ost popular and brilliant members of our class. to the teachers grade Cgtrtls and to recall the fact that during was drowned in the Tuscarawas River. XX'e certainly shall lil any contest our fellow class men always won the majority of always miss him, lil the prizes, Iii g1tl1lQtiC5, just ask any t,lrl timer, Ur, better If in reading this you come to the conclusion that we lim- IE-I still, Miss A-Xtking giiirl hir, 'l'rautWeiir, iors have a pretty good opinion of ourselves, we just wish to IE In the beginning of this term we held a meeting for the say that the attitude of the other classes is enough to cause it. El election of officers. It seemed that the old officers were so Since we have already made a good impression, what remains entirely satisfactory that it resulted in their reelection, Cot to be done in our Senior year is to make it so deep that it can lil Gettle, President, Bob Krantz, Yice President. Margaret Hos- never be lost sight of even if we are forgotten as individuals. E tetler, Secretary' and Treasurer. Later Francis Mans was . . chosen as assistant editor of the animal staff. HELEN MAURER IE XVe have had a good many social affairs. including par- El ties, marshmallow toasts, and dances. Wle aren't quite so sue- They admit that they are the stuFf.- IE' cessful in strictly class affairs for, since we are naturally a very i STAFF E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE X Y' , I I 0 zzz Qqvxi' . wlfxn, , 37, W A, g535ix,QL. V W ,iL .... E., u., G, Crimson and Grey A 'A ,Q gf- 1 cm -- Magna cm cm ' 4 YQ .1 x EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE SQFHOMORES Lllll xx ff V wif EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Krebs, Norma Vorherr, Mildred ,A V, 14-Q Commercial Course- Baab, Eleanora Bassett. Laird Bair. Marvin Bitzel, Lluyil Conn, Doris Conn, XYalter Cox, Mary Domer, Forrest Domer, Gail Froelich, Mildred Gibbs. Howard Geottge. Harold Hines, Irina Hughes. XYillene -lentes, Verna -lones, Helen Kerr, Mildred Koos, Theodore Koos, Catherine Koos, Marjorie Kramer, Frances .X Crimson and Grey 3, it ? f 7 ab-.fvxi l Elm im: an cm cm urnn SOPHOMORE CLASS ROLL MARVIN HAIR-President ELMER GLtJYER-Vice-President PAUL REEYES-Secretary and Treasurer DON,-NLD MILLICAN-Historian CLASS COLORS-Blue and XX'hite, Bl0'l l'0-Excelsior. Lahniers, XYilnia Levengood. Earl Link. Bessie MacKay, David Mathias, Harold iller Marion Morrison, XYalter . Iosher, e en Nolf, Clair Prince, Dorothy Rearich, Helen Reeves, Paul Reicly, Henrietta Reiss, XVilliani Robart, Miriam Rosenberrv, Mildred Smith, Ralph Smutz. Earl Smntz, Myrtle Stein, Marjorie lYeller, Cleva XVilloughhy. Glendon Young, Eugene Ziegler, Herbert Zollars, Herbert Vocational Course- Blickensderfer, Florence Blickensderfer, Mildred Hilton, Mary Kirk, Edna Lieser, Homer O'Donnell, XVilliani Penn, Myrtle XVasmer, john Zutavern, Mildred General Course- Swinderman, Beatrice Easley, Edyth Thompson, Lillian McCurdy, john gi I EI IE! lil IE IE! EI El El IE! lil EJ lil lil IIIII IE lil II-il El lil E lil E Ei! IE El El lil Lil Ei! lil EI IE El lil lil lil Ei! lil IE El Ei! lil lil EI El EI lil EI E Ei! lil lil lil E IEIEEIIEIIEIIEJESIEIEIPJIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIl5llElElElElEIEIlElElEllEllEllElElEII.EllEElEfIIEIlEI l iff' - '7 , Abfijl - fl sr' I A ga it iw Wlllilw Cnmson and Grey httyslll i i i my K G EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE. E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E FEI LIFE Oh! you hear a lot o' chatter 'Bout the world all goin' wrong And you hear a lot o' patter That the young 'uns xvon't last long. Every age must have its groxvlers Groxvlin' 'bout its numerous crimes And of course each has its hoxvlers Howlin' 'bout the wicked times. For to some spleenatic tattlers Life will always he all wrong And some poor deluded rattlers Shut their ears to every song. I sure don't believe their ravin' That the earth's a wicked place That really isu' worth the savin' From its sin and deep disgrace. Let 'em moan in mournful numbers Cf the wickedness and strife It accentuates the pleasures Of that glorious thing called Life, K. l. '57 f fa? - fl-f-Xp, , Z- ,, - , fi ' -'lim ,Tri fs M., wi X 1, if-'D Crzmso F -' , it A Q mf?-iw .i- ,'1i,?L'-g itil! ii i i dn ii in- iii! cmgnu an ii iiimu-S MU i l n an J G 7-ey n --fv :man -ah' Wi iixiiiiliii ii cgi lg E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E Sophomore Class H1story IE 'Our class entered the portals of this institution with an enrollment of EI sixtyeeight but several dropped out before the end of the year. The strange thing about our class, which must show its popularity, is that it numbered lil seventy-live at the beginning of this year. lil VVe organized in the early part of September, choosing Marvin Bair as If-I president, Elmer Glover, vice president, Paul Reeves, secretary and treasurer 'EI and Donald Millican, class historian. lVe chose blue and white as our colors, E and Excelsior as our motto. Our social events this year were very successful. XYe gave a marsh- lil mellow toast north of Strasburg and a sleighing party to Beach City. :X cle- lil lightful time was reported by the numerous members of the class who were EI present. lil Our class was well represented in athletics. Men from our class such as EI Dutch Miller, NValter Morrison, Eugene Young, and David MacKay helped E-I Dover in acc1L1ir t0r1es Joth on the football field and on the basket- ball floor. I-EI We have attempted in all our endeavors to live up to our motto, EX- l.E.l CELSIOR, and we will try always to keep up this high standard. lil R. D. M..-'24 E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE VN gi. .ff 142 Z3f1?.J i l l l G PJ . 1' i ' ill ' c .. . : im cm an unzzm cm un tm an easiest lumnus Football By Grantland Rice Bill jones had been the shining star upon his college team: His tackling was ferocious and his bucking was a dream, Vtlhen Husky NVilliam tucked the ball beneath his brawny arm, They had a special man to ring the ambulance alarm. Bill hit the line and ran the ends like some mad hull amuckg The other side would shiver when it saw him start to buck. And when a rival taekler tried to block his dashing pace, He took the oath an army truck had rolled across his face. Bill had the speed-Bill had the weight-the nerve that would not yield From goal to goal he whizzed along while fragments strewed the fieldl. And there had been a standing bet. which no one tried to call, That he could gain his distance through a ten-foot granite wall. XVhen he wound up his collge course each student's heart was sore. They wept to think that husky Bill would hit the lille no more. Not so with NVilliam-in his dreams he saw the field of fame, Wlhereon he bucked to glory in the swirl of Life's big game. Sweet are the dreams of campus life-the world that waits beyond Gleams ever on our inmost gaze with visions fair and fond. VVe see our fondest hopes achieved-and on, with striving soul, XVe buck the line and run the ends until we've reached the goal. Bill tried to run the ends of Life, when, lo! with vicious toss, A rent collector tackled him and threw him for a loss. And when he switched his course again and crashed into the line, The Massive guard named Failure did a two-step on his spine. Bill tried to punt out of the roft, but ere he turned the trick, Right Tackle Competition tumbled through and blocked the kick. And when he tackled at Success in one long. vicious bound, Old fullback Disappointment steered his features on the ground. But one day when across Fame's Field the winning goal seemed dim, The wise old coach Experience came up and spoke to him: Old boy, he said, the main point now before you win your bout, ls keep on tackling Trouble till you've worn that lowbrow out. Cut out this stuff around the ends-go in there low and hard, just keep your eyes upon the goal and drive on, yard by yard. And more than all, when you are thrown or tumbled with a crack, Don't lie there whining-hustle up--and keep on coming back. Keep coming back with all you've got and take it with a grin. NVhen Disappointment trips you up or Failure barks your shin, Keep coming back-and if at last you lose the game of Right. Let those who whipped you know at least they, too, have had a fight. Keep coming back-and though the world may romp across your spine. Let every game's end find you still upon the battling line. For when the One Great Scorer comes to write against your name, He marks-not that you won or lost-but how you played the Game. Such is Alumnus football on the white chalked fields of Life. You find the bread line hard to buck while sorrow crowns the strife. But in the scrap for name and fame among the worldwide clan, There goes the winner fades away before There goes a man. Q If. B 2 B Q 3 0.1 C3 et fm Q25 E5 I' lst Q gli Qi sill sit lsr . vw Ar. we lil lil El lil lil El IE lil lil El EJ lil lil lil El lil lil IE lil El lil IIJJ lil IE IE lil lil lil lil lil lil E lil lil lil lil lil lil lil lil IE! lil lil lil llil lil lil IE lil lil lil lil IE E lEllEllEllElIEllElEllEllEIlEllEllEl'.iIlEllEll.'iIEllEllEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIEIIEEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEI X Wxkarv Z 2 ff? AVQJ3 Jlfxn, I, id'1M ,!N +' wf 'VX ' Kgf ' 0Wif, MWw+ + Cffmm and GW M + .,, N, utah? 4vMw ww Mw wQw +u1uw wl E'FQ f EIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEJJIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIJIEJIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIEIIEJIEJIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEI ,kj , f', X ' X , . A is 3 MWL f ,, I U W ' f ,' It fx Q , 3 I x XM' v x hi 4.31-,l'5-:-:ff '5 I V I X 'fgziin ,, 5 I A , N JEL, 1 5- 3 A ff i f H ix ' . ff E X ' ' ,f' ix 'ff NS2n, X lm , X1 ,ai f fy' ,u! N ' Y , fl, M 1 ,f ,fff ' ' 'M' :ix fb Ti K' N' M'-xl-17 DI Q QJ 1, I M lilIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEHEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEJIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEEIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEH Haas, Irene Timpe, Hilda Grove, Lillian 21, f,. ff Az nznncmuu Commercial Course- Albreeht. Clara Alpeter. Arthur Bamlieck. Ralph Bair. Oliver Beers. Russel Burquist. Ruth Bernard, Glenn Brewer, Ralph Brisgal. Marian Burtseher, Helen Capper, Phillip Carruthers, lYalter Carpenter. Harold Davis. Rees Daniels, Dnrthy Donier. Calvin Egler, Robt. Enck. Roht. Funkhouser, Ernest Fentz. Florence Franz, Helen Frantz, Elmer Grimm, james Green, Glenwood Groh, Marguarite Haas, Harry an mu FRESHMAN CLASS ROLL AND OFFICERS RALPH ROSS-President HARRY KLAR-Yiee-President MARVIORIE TOOMEY-Scretary RALPH BREXYER-Treasurer EMMA FINLEY-Historian coLoR AND FLOXYER--Blue and Grey. Violet. Hagerman. Agnes Heidy. Jeannette Hostettler, Clyde Kuerlebcr, Helen Klar, Harry Kuemerle, Bernice Jentes, Glenn Lantzer, Vernon Link, Bessie Loessi, Tom Luikart, Goldie Maurer, Laura Maybaugh, Glenn Myers, Bernice Ott, Harold Pennick, Bernice Rearick, Virginia Reidy, Henrietta Richard, Carl Ross, Ralph Rosenberry, Eugene Shaffer, Charlotte Smith, Thelma Stein, Harold Stucky, Carl Tate, Gladys Thompson, Alva Todd, Theressa XX'eher, Bernice XYendling, Hazel Zeigler, Esther Latin Course- Alton, Loyd Alton, Mary English, -lane Finley, Emma Guerin. Evelyn Hawk, Sherlie Hewes, Charles Edward O. Bassett Lewis, Ralph O'Donnel, Dorthy Quick, Marjorie Toomey, Marjorie VVallick, Mildred Zimmerman, Claude Vocational- Affolter, Edna Davidson, Edna Gleitzman, Randall Hciff. Rubt. Kreiter, Dale Kurtz, john Labb, Eugene Leyengood, Earl Leiser. Mary Long, Lucy Moser, lYillian1 Ost, Marian Ricksecker, Margaret Rufenacht, Carl Smith, Laverne Smith, Lucile Steitz, Hazel Turnbull, Alma lVeigand, Edna lYinkler, Florence General Course- Ludy, Ernest McBride, james Pershing, Sterling lN7as1ner, John sl WE' ir- f M247 Q Nl B 94: o 3 cn :1 Qs C5 'G Q W, ef rc N 5 as n 4' ll H53 Fl F7351 zisgl, ,T G, V, are sz EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE in an lei Iii in ia an ra im la in as an ni m lil na lm ta In in in Iii mi 151 in in E ia rm .nl an 11:11 nl E In in lm ni la lm in ein in 151 mia In in til :Ei ai 1:51 an rm in I-51 . .1 fb w u zvfxqz N W 4:2 4: Z7 f 45j5f-' - M. -fjmv 4 zz f 4.7 'Aj Edgy 5 Qi-J Cru son a 3 re Hg pr Vg-gut n cm cm nv-'fm n':u cm cm S 4 Linn in K, M ,,,, Q, U n G 9 , , A I EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE NJM. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Wiiiigyiii.iii.iMii..iiifin Lhiiii iiiiijeia Crimson and Grey 5511ll'li.iliiigfiliilliiltiliiillllgmimljtiiliiilislilmsliliilil'liliW'liEQ?f5jg e sl Freshman Class History On September sixth, nineteen twenty-one. the class of '25 entered Dover lligh School as freshmen with an enrollment tlftr1lChllI'I!l1'L'tl and twolllelllliers. Thus far we have lost only two of our members, reducing the number In one huntlrcd. Un Septeinlier twentieth the class was organized, Rum- mv Ross being elected president. Soon after this another meeting was held and llarry lilar was chosen vice-president. Marjorie Toomey, secretary, and Ralph Brewer. treasurer. Blue and Grey were chosen as the class colors, and the violet as the class flower. ln athletics we had a boy's class basketball team. Mar- garet Rickseclcer represented us as a sub on the girls' basket- ball squad. lllost of the girls of the class are members of the Y. XY. C. .-X., and have been quite enthusiastic in the work. Our only social event during the year was a party at the rooms, on October seventh. NVe had planned to have a inarshmellow toast, but on account of rain it was turned into a very gala party. Une interesting factor of the class is the N. K. Q. S. So- ciety, composed of twenty freshman girls They have suc- ceeded very well in keeping their order as much of a secret as possible, and the only known fact concerning them is who its officers are. Nut Sed! Our class, as well as any other, has its grinds and also its comedians. Nevertheless, we are the class of '25, and through our undying efforts hope some day to outgrow being called green freshies by the upper class men, and show them that we can and will succeed. l'IMM.X FlNl.lfY '25 Lamp What a Freshie Has to Say lYe are all familiar with the story of Aladdin and his wonderful lamp. XYhen that shiftless boy brought home an old lamp from one of his rambles, the question in his poor household turned to thoughts of food, of which the little fam- ily had not partaken for some time. Mother, l will take this lamp and sell it to buy us food, but l think if l clean it first it will fetch a better price, said .-Xladdin, and he and the Gold Dust Twins commeiice.l .ho r onslaught on the old and tarnished lightgiver. Xhlhen Aladdin rubbed the l.amp a giant genie appeared, saying, lVhat wouldst thou have? l am ready to obey thee as thy slave and as the slave of all who may possess the lamp. XVG humble Freshmen have our lamp4Dover High School and all that it offers. If we but do our part, the education to be gained in Dover High will give us as powerful a slave and servant as any which the fairy tale attributes to Aladdin. A servant which will be faithful not just now nor for the next few years, but one retained, a servant always, doing for us, and through us for others. XVhether Aladdin ever lived and whelhei' there ever was such a lamp is a matter of grave doubt. There is no specula- tion, however, about our lamp. It actually does exist, with a genie for each of us. A genie whose strength of power can scarcely be realized or appreciated. Too many of us, though, are inclined to go .Xladdin one better and wait for some one else to rub the ldlllp tor us, a procedure not calculated to bring such a result in this ad- vanced age. lt is up to each Freshie to rub that lamp for himself- not as easy as was Aladdin's task, it is true but by a process of study and attention in our allotted four years to the educa- tion offered us. Then, too, we have the satisfaction not possessed by Alad- din-the satisfaction of having given honest effort for the re- wards gained. THE INFANT-'25 D. O'D. V JEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE wJWg EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQ5 I EE W 7 f, 'W Y lefiiciff Q 0 M Cffmm and Grey :fab Q W W M J EAD X 1 M atm: --n an coin,-S igim- cn' ---- n:nn un ---1 ---- cl X X QW gif: 539' 'iw -I ,-7:35 -. A My X .ffL,Wf?E W ' hwf fl, f, ,:-Q j44i'E Q - vii' 'f u gf, 'S 5 55 El? E ,W 1 ' o ., 4 f A 2 fl X ' I ul' 45 Q5 ,620 Q3 K +B,mKs 454 +JFHTf5 EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Q ' 7 3-xx .- XWQDUQ' 611 Gwent? Ginn Q 5 2:22 1, 272 igxfjn . 1 1 1 '-VV 1 W -f iii .J H. l... l ' .,L'flVl.ill lLll'll'L.QEc3 C'1'T'30n and GW? H223 liliiiiiiiiiimfiisiiiiiii,,iiiii'WTiiiiiiirliifiififiiwtfigiriiVTf iisii1willlliiiiifiifiiiiiiiiiifiiifiiiiiiiitfieillilfn unznn In Appreciation of W. J. Trautwein Call him Bill, Dutch, or whatever you please, but whenever you meet the Dover high school athletic coach you meet a real man, a true sportsman, and an incomparable ath- lete. This is not an attempt to Hatter the man. He has heard lots of it, but he is still unspoiled by its insidious inlin- ence which so few have the ability to resist. He served as a non-commissioned onficer with the Engi- neers in France and did real wok and saw real fighting there. yet he returned to XYittenberg College where several years later he linished the scientific course with honors. XVhile no records upon the subject are at hand, it is to be doubted if any other three-letter basketball and football star in Ohio has ever secured his academic degree with a record so proud and Su clean. As a coach he taught sportsmanship and the fundamentals of whatever games his teams were preparing to play. He fear- lessly distributed his criticisms where they belonged, and his harsh words-which were never too many nor too fewewere without that sting which is a symptom of malice aforethought. Contrary to the opinion of many experts, men do have a lik- ing for their fellowmen which even transcends all other emo- tions in the world. It must su1Tice to say that the men on his athletic squads have the best feeling toward him that can pos- sibly exist. They appreciate the fact that they have had a real friend and have trained with a real coach. Spectators ad- mire hini, too, for his play is always directed toward the op- posing team and not toward the grand-stand, the bleachers, or the side-lines. Mr. Trautwein has been a success in the Dover High School. XYe hope that success continues. A man of his type in person, character and mind is needed everywhere. He is needed nowhere more than here, for Dover deserves the best the iield has to offer. gs M IE! E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE mfg! 5 E E WYTW EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQFQ3 . ak? E1 E -N g g E E E E I E x E f 1, Q X 2 f I E 3 gfwf - X E J! ,ymmmxg-wmmm Mm E M WM' f Q lil . X I-Ei' X W 'lfmf Q ,A E i N aa! ' W 1 x, X . IE We 4 ru E FSM ww- 'A'hi X 10 0: ,E S E ,fl V QX5 Ji X S IE x,,x 1' fLugwmmlafux-,uxwsal.gm11dOQ'.rxaLs:9.1ex.,11:1: :Q,::.''.m1mlwmmm,mxsummm11m1mx11W'wwWWvxww -WN .fx W Q, - P E ' 3 HW Q E f w 1! Wil rl f- 9. X9 K g A Ei' tr I JSN f L. VJ lm 11 y f aww- E wf - N U H , H lx K xxxxx w3L ,gavmxx jx E Y J E E Q1 Q Xiu SNM 3 Q Ri ...X va JJ E H IE 6 X ,X ' ,162 ,:.i i E E E E E E E E E E E Q fx 1 i QL Z' iz Crimson and' Grey X AA I 5:5 Q '- X -' ,An yn- --h- Y u:nu an cm cxocprk L20-x 1 f f , UWM XWIJLJ ffwfnv . f x I ' EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE ,,r w EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQK N1 3fN? ,... ,area .gs . f , -W ,, -,MZ iQQSlUli:lillliIi:iiMilli.f3illliJi1,3i,lil1liQB'illii'Miil7'lilQMMllllwiillfilliiiigltii'lilitliiiigwi C T 1 m S O n an C2 G Te y liiliiiiim ,iilillliiliii l 3mgzmlmllilllllllllllllillmiilllilillllllwliiliiil .ij EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Football At the beginning of this year it looked as if Dover High would be represented by one of the best football teams in this part of the state. But partly due tu over confidence and the loss of several uf the best men by having them declared inel- igible, we finished the season with only a fair record. Xve started the season well by defeating the strong Co- shocton teain by the decisive score of 26-O. livery man on the line played his position like a veteran on defense: on of- fense, they opened big holes. The back-field possibly played their best game of the season. They ran the ends, bucked the line, roll-blocked, and performed well in every department of the game. The following Saturday Dover added another victory to its record by defeating Millersburg 33-O. The line again dis- tinguished itself by allowing its opponents only three first downs and opening holes for the backs to plunge through. Uhrichsville was the next team to fall before the Crimson and Grey by the score of 14-3. The down-county outfit in- vaded our town confident of victory due to their ll-l-O victory over Carrollton the previous week. But the line-plunging of Dover's backs could not be stopped. Late in the last half the opponents were able to get the ball into our territory and after several attempts to score they were able to put over a drop- kick, this being the First time Dover was scored on this season. On Oct. 29 Dover journeyed to Steubenville and received its first defeat of the season, 7-0. The teams were very evenly matched, so the game was played almost entirely in the mid- dle of the Held. But in. the last half McSwiggen. Steuben- ville's star, picked up a fumble and ran sixty-five yards through the Dover team. The Crimson and Grey fought hard but was unable to score., XVe received our second defeat of the season the next Fri- day at Wfooster, by the score of 3-0. At the beginning of the game XVooster got the ball and advanced it to Dover's twenty yard line. Here our line braced and after several unsuccessful attempts to advance the ball VVooster put over a place kick. scoring three points which proved to be sufficient to win. After the first three minutes, however, they never made an- other hrst Cliryvll while Dover threatened to score several times but each time lacked the punch tu put it over. This was one of the hardest defeats to take as our team was the superior in ey ery department of the game. ,Cin Armistice Day Dover met the strong A-Xkron South eleven, and although Dover was defeated by the score they have the satisfaction of out playing and out-generaling their opponents. ln the first half Dover scored on the big Blue team by good hard football, but just before the half ended an Akron man got away for a long run and scored, but Dov er still led by the score of 7-6. ln the second half the team again played their best ftuitliilll tif the season but it seems we were not supposed to win for Akron again got away for a long run and scored. Still our team kept on fighting and did not quit until the final whistle sounded and they were defeated 13-7. Every man on the team played a very good game and de- served to win and every one who saw the game remembers this game as one of the best exhibitions of football ever seen on the local field even if it were played in a sea of mud! On Thanksgiving Day our team was defeated by our old rivals, New Phila, l3-0. All we can say is that Phila. had the best team that day. Our outht was somewhat off form but we are not alibying: we were defeated decisively and fairly. This game was a big disappointment and the only reason we can give is over-confidence and possibly over-training. Nevertheless our team all did their best and tried their hardest to win and that is all that we can ask. SCHEDULE Dover ............ ...... 2 6-Coshocton --- -- O Dover .-......,.... --- 53-Millersburg --- --- O Dover--- ----.--- --- l4-Uhrichsville -- ------- 3 Dover-M ----- - 0-XYooster ,...,.-....,- -- 3 Dover ------- - O-Steubenville ........... 7 Dover --..----- .--- - 7-:Xkron South .......... 13 Dover ------ ------ O -New Phila. -- --- -- 13 Total .--. -...-. QD Total -- .--. --.. 5 EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 7 ef W Qsfyfl - i aww? 1 ,,,, H47 , ,eff ., ,,,, ,, , ,vfllfi U X ' an E if mm .ili Q U. Cftmeoe and Grey gghl:lliii.illliliifill.lillmmlpiilfiiliiiiilliailmwmwillgliliiiiimilgiiiiimaiiiilllllliillilq gg of Football Team . CAL RlILLER- Stinch -liud-Captain Cal was right end and knew the position well, having played for three years. Very few yards were made around his end and he could run down under punts with great accuracy. He was always there play- ing his same good game. He is thinking of going to school next year and we are all hoping that he makes good. As eaotain he was a real leader and was always in there urging and helping his men along. He surely will be missed next year. BOB BASSETT- Bo -Quarter Bo was one of these quarterbacks that you all like. He runs the team smoothly and wisely against the opposing eleven. He was a very fast man and could run ends and make sneaks with the best of them. He was the only experienced man on the backheld and he had them working like veterans. He was crippled in the Akron game and could play only part of the game against Phila. and he surely was missed by the team. This is his last year for the Crimson and Grey. FRANCIS MAUS- Mausie -Halfback Maus was one of the best backtield men Dover has had for some time. He gained many yards and got them when they were needed most. He was good in all departments of the game, running the ends, bucking the line and on either end of a forward pass. He will be with the team next year. TED JENTES- Ted -Halfhack Ted showed up wonderfully considering this was his first year on the team. He was a hard tighter and had the never-give-in spirit and fought through thick and thin. He showed the opposing teams some real line plunging. He will be missed next year. CLAYTON KESSLER- Tarzan -Fullback Kessler was one of these easy going men who keeps up the same old pace all the time. He was good at bucking the line and forward passing. Tarzan was one of the best punters in this section, always out-distancing the opponents. He intends to go to school and we sure- ly wish him success in his athletics. MILLARD GROH- Mong -End After being out of school several years Groh came back this year and made the team. He showed great ability as an end and was in Fighting every minute of the game. He was always where he was sup- posed to be and was feared by many of the opposing backs because when he hit a man he was down. He was equally good on offense and defense. He is captain-elect and we wish him the best of luck and suc- cess with the team next year. BEN MlLLER- Angel -Tackle Big Ben, our 200 pound baby, outweighed all his opponents. Bcn could make a hole as big as a barn door and was very aggressive con- sidering his size. He is one of those big. good-natured fellows who is liked by everyone, even his opponents. He has another year to play for Dover and we feel sure he will make good use of his size and ex- perience. BOB MILLER- Dutch -Center This is Dutch's second year on the team and he is only a Sopho- more. He was a very good center and he passed the ball where it should go. He was very good on defense and few yards were made on sneaks or other plays through the center of the line. VVhile on offense he opened up holes and almost half of the ground gained was due to his hard work. He out-played his opponents in all the games and will be a good man for next year's team. EUGENE Y.OUNG- Scrap-Iron --Guard Gene was little and light but he is a good guard. Although this was his First year on the team and he was out-weighed in every game he put up a remarkable game and Dover is very fortunate in having this man back next year. TED NEFF- Kid fTaekle Ted was one of the best linemen in the county and was very con- sistent. He was always breaking through the opposing line making tackles and blocking punts. He also showed his ability in the back- Held on several occasions where he could play any of the positions. Should lie go to college next year we feel certain he will make good. IVOR GOODRICI-l4 Goody -Sub Haliback Goody was a very good man and could fill any man's place on the team. He was always there when needed. and as he will be back next year we know he will make good, as he will have some experience. VVhen he went in the last two games of the season he performed like a veteran. BOB KRANTZ- Bob -Sub-lineman Bob was very faithful and a hard worker and he made the men on the team fight for their places. He could play any position on the line well. He will be back n ' I V n for the team. XV .TER MORRISON- Bally -Right Guar ' Ballv was a demonstration of the fact that the best goods are often done up in the smaller packages. He played in every game and was one of the most aggressive guards tlfe school has ever known. Oppos- ing-players lookingior holes gever picked on him. EARL KOOS-Manager-Tlidqery well tlirom'h'o'uT't'l1e regular football season. Although this was his hrst season as manager, he proved himself an able hustler who was always on Llic -iob. 1-ie was helpful making one of the best football schedules the school has ever known. Tony Nigro and Glen Willoughby were two men who were out for the team but were declared ineligible. They were greatly missed but they helped the squad by coming out and scrimmaging and next year they will be able to make up for lost time and will bc very valuable men for the team. Harold Bowen, Raymond Horton, Bob Shields, Don Benson, Will- coxon, Vtlassmen and Capper were men who were out for the team but who were given very little chance to show their abilities in games but their work was appreciated and they will get their chance next year. They deserve just as much credit as the regulars for they were anxious and willing to go in there and give their best at any time for old Dover High. ElillillillillilliillillillillilEIIEEIEIIEEIEIEIEIIEEIIEIIEIEIIEEIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIIEIIEIEIEIIELEEIEIIEIEIEIIEJIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEJ lillillillillillflilillillElElE.llEllEllElElillillillillillElf'illEIlEIIElf13llEIIEllEllEEllEIElEllEIEllEll?llEllEIE,g W fem - mmm -M f 0 ZZ X QNFP75 C ff 'H S O 0 H 3 G f Q y 5173 2 2? f . 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Grey ' fag 4' Al' 'D M191 -1Sl:l' -u:11d-num ' 'lm' W vb 'acid' 'un 1 lam ue:-1,-5' lei. 1151: 1 cm m unzzbw' an nn' nd' ur 1 an ' ldb-M gl C To EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E Basketball After two weeks of strenuous practice under Coach Trautwein, Dover defeated Strasburg by the score of 38-19. The team did not play up to expectation as all the men on the team were on the squad last year and the spectators were look- ing forward to an even more decisive victory. The next game was played at Cambridge, with the fam- ous Cambridge High. Our team was defeated by the close score of 22-18, this was very good considering that Cambridge holds decisions over Mt. Vernon, Canton McKinley, Dayton Stivers and many other good teams. During the next five weeks the Crimson and Grey re- ceived as many defeats. They were from East Liverpool, Steubenville. New Phila., Ulirichsville and Akron South. At Steubenville we made more field goals than the opponents but were defeated on fouls. The N. Phila. and Uhrichsville teams were both outplayed but fate was against us and we came out of each game short by 2 points. At Akron South our team put up one of their best games of the season, but during the last part of the game they weakened and Akron won 42-26. But during this series of defeats the team showed some of the finest spirit and fight that has ever been displayed by any team and instead of being discouraged they and their coach kept on working all the harder and they were rewarded by eight consecutive victories. After the Akron game we journeyed to VVadsworth where we won 22-17. They have a very small floor and for that reason it was a hard game. The two best games of the season were with Massillon and Xlfooster. Massillon later won the championship of N. li. Ohio by winning a tournament at Akron, In this game as in the game with XVooster the Dover team's passing was superior to any seen on the Dover floor. On lVashington's Birthday we went to Canton and played the McKinley Reserves. On Friday we played 1rVads- worth for the second time on our own floor and decisively de- feated them 37-1-1. The following week we played the strong Wtioster team and it was our night on. The passing and team work was wonderful. The team was equally good on offense and de- fense. Every man on the team scored and the opponents were allowed at no time to get in close shooting range. lt was the fastest and best game that the team plaved. Probably the most interesting games of the season were with Phila. and ljhrichsville. both of these teams won on our Floor and were defeated by our team on their home floors, later in the season. Uur game at Chrichsville was a defensive game at all times. This may be shown by the fact that dur- ing the last half Chrichsville did not score a single point and our team scored only three. The final score was 1-1-6. This was our last game and since both Dover and Phila. had won one game it was decided to play a third game to de- cide the inter-city championship, so a post-season game was arranged. It was decided by lot In play on our floor and al- though the Dover quintet outpassed the county-seat outfit they were unable to score. The conditions were exactly the same as on Thanksgiving Day, Phila. had the best team. SCHEDULE Dover ....... ...... . 39-H-Strasburg -- 18 Dover .......... --- 13-.-XfCambridge ..... Z2 Dover--- --- 27-,X-12. 1-iverpool --- 54 Dover ..---- --- 2.3-.X-Steubenville -- 29 Dover -----.- --- 27-H-New Phila. -- 29 Dover ----- --- 10711-Clirichsville --- 21 Dover ------- --- --- 26-.-X-Akron South --- 42 Dover ---------- ------- 2 1-A-lVadsworth -- 17 Dover--- ----- --- 29-.X-Phila. ------ 26 Dover ------ .--- . 35-I-l-XVellsville --------- 13 Dover -------- ------- 5 O-1-1-111335111011 -.-....... 19 Dover ,,-,,---- ----- l 9-.X-Canton McKinley 14 Dover ----- --- 37-l-1-XYadsworth --.---- - 14 Dover -------- --- 36-ll--llvooster -------.--- 17 Dover ,,--,,---- --- 1-l--X-Uhrichsville .----- -- 6 Dover ----- --- 12-Hflghila. ----- - 19 Total --,-,.,- ,-.- -l ll rllllllll --- --..-531 EEEEEEEEEEEEE Basketball Letter Men TED ulENTES- Ted -Captain Ted who played running guard, was found to be one of the most aggressive players his opponents ever stacked up against. One of his strong points was that he always kept going. He could play the defense and offense equally well. As captain this year he did much to keep up the spirit of the team. This is his last year for Dover and we wish him all success if he enters into college athletics. BOB BASSETT- Bo -Forward This is Bo's third and last year on the team and we be- lieve he can consider his basketball career a wonderful success. He was a fast floor man and hard to guard. He could shoot from almost any angle and in almost any position. He was also the most accurate foul shooter who ever played on a D. H. S. team. 'He led in scoring this year and will be missed a lot next year. CALVIN MILLER- Stinch -Guard Cal. last year's captain, was always on the job. breaking up the opponents' team work and Fighting for the ball. He was the most consistent player on the squad. Nothing flashy or showy about his playing, just the same old hard. never-quit game all the time. He excelled in starting the team work from his position as bank guard. Cal graduates this year and leaves a record any one could be proud of. CLAYTON KESSLER- Tarzan -Center Kessler was the pivot man for Dover this year and filled the position well. He is tall and can follow up shots with great accuracy. He always played a clean, hard game and was respected by all his opponents. By his graduation he will leave a place that will be hard to fill. FRANCIS MAUS- Mans -Forward This was Maus' Hrst year on the team and he certainly showed himself worthy of his place. He was always in the game and giving the opponents all the fight he had. The fact that his shooting did not become efficient until the latter part of the season kept his average down considerably. He is captain-elect and we wish him the best of luck and success with his team next year. IVOR GOQDRICH- Goody -Forward ' Although Goody did not make a regular place on the team this year he showed he had the stuff and made the other fellows work hard to keep their places. He played part of the Phila. game and showed his ability and next year we be- lieve he will be a big part of the team. Ben Miller, Harold Gettle. Martin Gronenberg and Dave MacKay were men who were out for the team and showed their ability on many occasions by going in and relieving the regulars. They and the rest of the squad deserve lots of credit for their spirit and faithful practice 'and we hope they will be rewarded next year by regular places on the team. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 'i a a nl U i a .-. l E 151 g ll s a pl FQ Q Nl E 60 O m Q 3 Q.: C3 'I Q Q o Y 'Q as E K 2 l a Egl fl ai H? Asif. sa Q71 N EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE X W Qfavw QW 41, 1222 , , ,aofrm ' Qffvz, Z , Q Wfffff , fy? hg3Ql H L M H i h ML wW Mg N H HWH w umH M wLQ1zj CWHSOH and GTG? as l,mQT Mw uL m uL m.Eg IEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEEEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIEIEIIEIEEIEEIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIEEIEIIEEIEIIE EE IE! EI IE! IEI IE! E IE! lil EI IEI lil E IEI llffl IE! lil Ifil lil lil EI lil Ei! lil IE E EI IE lil IE! IE! IE El lil IE EI E lil IE IE! IE IE! IEI IE El El li! E1 IEI E lil EI IE! IE! lil E E -. , 1313 'r 1 , , 5 jf: -g 4. '. ,'- - Qt..-:Al .' r 4' ,Q - .-f, j.1 ,' V' ,. la - 11 , s 4 n.. ' . nf ' F 'Lg , 'w A A, . ' f- ff '.Jif'fr. 41.-' if - w '1 - , 3 I ng. f N J 1 1, g ., , , CAN: rf r 2. ,- ., 1. W' J, -,S a 21 sf, Qfff.- i 5a?Lf'f'f'N ul ' ., 1 .. I A 1 f. l.,- 4 25, V A .11 -' 'Dial Girls' Basketball The Girls' Basketball Team of 1021-1922 was far superior to any aggregation that has ever represented Dover High School. Practice was begun under the direction of Miss Atkins. More candidates rc- ported than ever before. After two weeks of strenuous practice we invaded Uhrichsville where we were defeated by a score of 21 to 18. due to the fact that the game was played under boys' rules The next two games were played against Strasburg. both being victories. The following Saturday we journeyed to XVadsyvorth where we defeated the much touted squad coached by Etter, to the close score of 9 to 6. On February 3rd we defeated our greatest rival. New Phila. This was the first game the girls of these schools ever played together. The Dover team completely outclassed the Phila. team in every de- partment of the game. This can be justified by the score which was 32 to 1.3. The next two games were played at home. February 10th we defeated lfhrichsville 18 to 5 and the following week we defeated VVads- worth 19 to 9. The Dover team was badly off form in the game with XVadsworth. The following day we traveled to Steubenville where the greatest disappointment of the season occurred. XVe lost 57 to 5. On March 3rd we again played Phila. at the county seat where we were given our third and last defeat. The game ending 18 to 19. SCHEDULE D H S Opp. fhrichsville X D H S--At Yhrichsville Dec. 16 18 19 Strasburg X D H S-At Home Dec. 25 59 5 Strasburg K D H S-At Strasburg jan. 6 25 24 lYadsworth K D H S-At XVadsworth vlan. 1-1 9 6 New Phila. X D H S-:Xt Home Feb. 3 32 13 l'hriehsville K D H S -At Home Fcb. 10 13 5 lYadsworth K D H S--.Xt Home Feb. 17 19 0 Steubenville R D H S--.-Xt Steubenville Feb. 18 5 57 New Phila. X D H S-At Phila. Mar. 3 IS 19 203 159 TOT.-XL NUMBER OF POINTS MADE Hilda HCCl1lel ......... . ......s.. SR Baskets-76 Points 76 losephine Wassem .......... ---29 Baskets-58 Points 39 Fouls 07 Mildred Rosenberry --- --,l3 Baskets-26 Points 26 Rlllll Ziegler ........ --- l Basket - 2 Points 2 Helen Maurer ..... -.- l llaskct - 2 Points 2 Total .... ..,..,,,,, ..,...,... ,-,,, 2 0 3 HILDA BECHTEL- Becky -Captain-Center-'This is Becky's last year on the team and many will long to have her back. Becky never found a center to outjump her and the public saw but few to out- class her in basket shooting. As captain Becky was very faithful and efficient. JOSEPHINE XVASSEM- joe -Forward-Manager. joe as a Senior has finished a very satisfactory career as a basketball player. As a Sophomore she played as side center on the team and advanced stead- ily until she became a very successful forward. Joe was ready to Fight and stick up for the Crimson and Grey standards in every game. She is a very high jumper and quick in making passes. Joe also proved herself to be a very good manager. MILDRED ROSENBERRY- Ditty -Forward. Ditty came forward in the field of athletics as a Sophomore showing great ability. Although Ditty is small she shows great strength and speed and is es- pecially good at making baskets. ANNA MARGARET ADAMS-Guard. Anna Margaret is one of the best guards of which our team has ever boasted. She never let her opponent get the ball before she did. Her ability in intercepting passes has won her fame as a basketball player. JOY VVASSEM-Guard. Quality and not quantity counts with Joy. She has astounded people at her wonderful guarding ability. She plays a fine offensive game. MILDRED EVERETT- Hon -Guard. Mildred did not have much chance to show what she could really do. In the games she played her position was guard and showed the fruits of good training by her close guarding and her hard work. RUTH ZIEGLER- Slats -Center. Although this was Ruth's Hrst year on the team she has filet with great success. She has taken her place as center and kept the game in active play. HELEN MAURER- Corky -Forward. As a sub Helen did not get many chances to play. She was one of the most faithful players and the chances she did have she proved this by her good pass work and basket shooting. ROSE ATKINS-Coach. The successful season of the Dover High School Girls is due to the never ceasing efforts of Coach Rose Atkins. She has brought the basketball girls to the highest standard they have ever attained. Much credit and many thanks are extended to her. H H q l ' ll Q ll l i 5 S l n f l i3 til, Q If. 3 09 O 3 Q 3 m C3 'I Q Q e? U i Q n n ll '?ll H. 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T0 IHINK we 9110013 sufmafe PAB1' M5 C 11 . 771055 Hofkfa f-1fCH'5c HOUL Gays ,ffur Pflfaa fs nz wgys ffvclfkkvff- ALTON was R' H m2iEN f:g '4z':fc'f E:'?JT MDM Ares mmm ra PEJTER' nw Annw ED FEFUF5 -417755 RUF WGETS Hff ,OR TVPEWQITM f p. 14595 NA? on, na Nix ' L' -5' 3 Ta .X-1, 'N . - ' Y I xl-XX ,gay ALTOPQ y00vE ,Z bm ' 4 V , , . an A no auMP 1 ' N, p ZL ,hfvaun nano, 5 ,A . f , 'f QQ Z- 1: W7 - : +39 2 3 - 'PA' hx U rm Q--K ,ga iii W WI A 1 5 , I -favll 1 -15 ,. -- - :B e ' , .. Y .- 1. ' ...Q ,u H. c .al 1 4 IEIIEIIEIEIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIQBEIEI lEllElIEIEllElIEIIE!IEl IEIIElIEIIEIIEIEEJIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIIJJIEIIEIIEEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEII If L- 7 s 1 HZ 'f M ers C ' 3 G '-avril The Triumph of Le Farge -lack Le Farge was seated at a handsome desk. in his Lincoln .-Xveuue apartment. Before him lay a telegram. That it was of vast importance. was evident from the look of anx- iety upon his face. which looked strained and drawn. He tapped nervously upon his desk with a heavy gold pencil. Straightening up suddenly he pressed a button before him. Then he waited impatiently for his man to answer it. Haskins he said. pack up my things at once. Have reservations made on the Santa Fe. I am leaving for Cali- fornia at once. I find I must go to Pasadena immediately to look after a matter of some importance. Haskins bowed, and answered. Yes, sir. He stood for a moment. as though awaiting some further explanation. That will be all. Haskins. I am dining at the Mont- gomery this evening. No! IYait a moment. I suppose you had better see to closing up the house for the winter. I may not be hack for some time. Haskins' face showed his amazement. However, the training of an old servant asserted itself, and he only said. I shall see to it. sir, and left the room. -lack Le Farge was a rather plain-looking. well-set-up person. a trifle above medium height. A faint tinge of grey showed at his temples. He seemed a man of forceful char- acter and of some determination. although there now seemed lu lie an air uf hopelessness about him. Le Farge had always been a man who had confidence in his fellows. Now however. he had just found that one whom he trusted most had betrayed him in a low. mean manner. That man was Big Bill Murphy. politician and promoter of new corporations. jack had become acquainted with Murphy at a political convention. He had been taken in by the big man's charm uf manner and personality. Murphy professed to be delight- ed with jack. and determined to cultivate the young lawyer's acquaintance. There seemed to be something familiar about the young fellow. Then Le Farge decided to run for District Attorney. The opposing candidate was Murphys man. Murphy by this time knew why jack had looked familiar to him, and he went to a friend of his. the editor of a yellow journal. and told him the story of .Iack's boyhood. Big Bill had recognized .lack at the convention as the son of a Bowery saloon keeper. The fellow. Benny Ryan. had been notorious in the shady politics of his ward. jack had been taken away from his parent and had been brought up and educated by an aunt. This aunt. Mrs. Chester Le Fay. the wife of an eminent -jurist. had adopted the lad. Upon the death of the husband ,lack had been the mainstay of her life. IYhen she in turn passed away. the youth. then just twenty-two years of age. inherited her fortune. The journals, of course. enlarged upon the facts of the case and the scandal caused .lacks defeat. This defeat great- ly discouraged him and he decided to give up law as a pro- fession. He never dreamed that Murphy had been the one to thus take base advantage of him. Thus it was that he went til him for advice. -lack had de- cided to turn to Finance. He thought that Murphy. on ac- count of his promotions and dealings in the markets. would be able to give him valuable advice. He found Murphy at his office in the business section. Murphy welcomed -lack warmly. NVell! well ! he said. sorry to hear you lost out for the attorney-ship. Big Bill noted Le Farge's rapt attitude. He perhaps guessed some- thing of the lawyers errand. Can I be of servfce to you? I came to you for advice on some good conservative in- vestments, 'lack answered. I want to invest some of the money which was left me by my foster mother. Could you advise me of good stock to buy? Murphys eyes hardened. He shot a swift appraising glance at -lack. I have the very thing for you. he said. A new movie producing company recently incorporated. The thing is absolutely right. Bound to earn big dividends. How much capital? Our company, The Hegira Film Cor- poration. is capitalized at 35,000,000 Safe? 'XYhy. jack. boy. she's sure as sure can he to pay out. -lack seemed very much interested. A fourth of the capital stock is still upon the market. The smooth talk of Big Bill quite won ,Iack's confidence. BEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE H E U H B H 'fa in Nl 5 09 O 3 Q 3 W Qt Id t to E gi . as ga Hg Hi 3 :Q fer. Li EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE NVKJNZ ff ff U21 1- Q . QV-NV, , ZZ, ,, fLgTW 'f 'iliPMit w4i.im,.iiix .i.. i . T It I I C Mm S O n U n 3 GW 37 Logo' A K 'f Y J bw mi 'mi' Wahl mb i an mo cm! nfs: 5 .is 34- cm cm unznn cm mn an cm cm oA-'J ' SJ Q5 Y EIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEJIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEJIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEEIIEIEIE IE lil Ei! Elf! El IE EI IE E lil E lil E lil lil IE! EI lil lil IIIII EI lil lil lil IE! E lil El lil El E EI lil El lil IE IE IE IE! IE EI IE IE! lil IE lil IEI IE IE lil El El EI El E He agreed to invest a greater portion of his inheritance in Murphy's company. Murphy assured him that he would have him made a director in the company. This pleased jack for it would give him some interest to attend to. now that he had dropped his law practice. As jack was on his way from Murphy's office, homeward bound, he witnessed an accident. A man who was crossing the street was unable to avoid an automobile which was bear- ing down upon him. He was struck by the fender of the machine and thrown heavily. jack was the first to reach his side. An ambulance rushed up and jack accompanied the injured man to the hos- pital. Here it was found that the fellow, an ex-service man, had not been seriously injured in the fall, He had been through three years of the war and had a touch of gas. His lungs were gone. Le Farge found the service man was out of work, and seeing a man who had served his country tlms faithfully in hard luck, decided to send him lVest for his health. Pasa- dena, the home of the Hegira Film Corporation, had been in his mind since his talk with Murphy. He decided to send there Evered Chase, the war victim. Chase had been very grateful to jack. and the two had become very good friends, during the few days he spent in the city before starting west. jack had told him of his in- vestment and he decided to look up the Elm company when he arrived in Pasadena. To tell the truth, Chase did not go in very strong for corporations, especially movie corporations. He voiced his suspicions but Jack waved them aside lightly. Do you suppose, he asked, that Murphy, the great political boss, who is running for governor, would be en- tangled in fake corporations ? You never can tell, Chase had answered. He still had his suspicions. If he could save his friend's money from a false venture, he might in some measure repay him for his kindness. The 'next day Chase left for California. Upon the same train was one Big Bill Murphy and his very charming daugh- ter. The politician, big, jovial, and evincing a desire for con- versation, inet Chase in the smoker of the train. He took a seat beside the service man and offered him a cigar. Noticed your service button, he remarked. Always feel friendly to a man who wears one. Chase accepted the proffered smoke. The two men chatted congenially for some time. They exchanged introductions. So this is Murphy, eh? mused Chase. You're run- ning for governor of our state back there, Chase offered. Ch, you're from my state P Murphy asked. I suppose you think it odd that I should be running away to California, so near the election day. The fact is, I am pretty sure of the result of the election, Murphy said this confidently. Then, too, I am interested in a film company out here. You must show some interest in your investments you know. Somehow from the way he said this, Chase gathered that probably his suspicions of this Hegira Film Company might be well founded after all. Somehow he seemed to feel an in- creasing dislike for the big man at his side. Here Murphy changed his subject. By the way, you must come back into our coach with me and meet my daugh- ter. She finds the trip wearisome. She will be delighted to have someone to gossip with.', Chase was not at all averse to meeting this daughter. He had noticed her before when Murphy and she had passed through his section. I should be delighted, he told Mur- phy. The daughter was charming and no mistake. A rather quiet, self-confident girl, she seemed to Chase, with a mass of golden hair and a peach bloom complexion. She seemed to radiate a quiet, intoxicating beauty. Her eyes, especially, attracted Chase. Violet, he thought. The kind that seem to run from the emerald green of the sea on a sunny day, to the deep, almost black-like shadowy depths of a silent pool. Helen was her name. A plain but beautiful name, the service man thought. Helen Murphy. How unlike her father she was. After meeting her the time flew swiftly for Chase. When he reached Pasadena he felt that he must be in love with her. He hesitated to investigate the movie firm, fearing to find her father a crook, and thus cause her unhappiness. However, there was his duty to his benefactor. He carried on an investigation, and as he had feared found the Hegira a fake. The whole thing was a wild cat - av 1- -iff' QMRA 4 ,, .,,, ,..,, ,,,, ,, 5 ', ,, 141, fi, ,Q-,.., ., 1 Ti V' l LQMm'kn lvn, Uruha am E 2325 Cfunfon and Grey EQXMhahhmnmhhmmhmwhwhhmhmWKgggzg fiI'4'ilN1,lIiUIl of BIUI'lll1:VvS-. It was his telegram. explaining this fact which was lying before .lack upon his desk. XVhen he gave his orders to Has- kins it ran: Hegira a fake, Murphy here. Framed you on election. Come. Gratefully, Ilvered Chase. -lack lost no time in starting for Pasadena. XVhen he arrived he was met by Chase. Too late to see Murphy, old chap, Chase said. You know he was so sure of that gov- ernorship that he felt he couldn't be defeated. As you know he was defeated. The doctors said that the emotion caused when he heard of his defeat caused a stroke of apoplexy. He died. His daughter is here, though. Say. you must meet her. She's a perfect lady. not like the old boy, and she's all alone now. Murphy was a widower. You evidently are interested in her, slack told him. Perhaps she will need some legal advice. I shall probably offer to assist her in clearing up the Hegira affair. It's to my interest as well as hers. Now. after hearing Chase's description of Helen Murphy, -lack was forced to admit to himself that he was very anxious to meet the daughter of the man who had taken every ad- vantage of him. Chase took him out to the Murphy home and presented him to Miss Murphy. XVhen .lack saw her he knew that although Chase continually sang her praises, he had greatly underestimated her. .lack saw in Helen Murphy the embodiment of his ideal. He was not the sort of man to let himself become infatuated with any girl. He knew that his feelings for her even at this time were genuine. He talked with the girl about purely busi- ness matters. She had decided, before the men left. to se- cure -lack as her attorney to aid her in clearing up her father's affairs. This clearing up of affairs proved to take considerable time, two months to be exact. Le Farge made good use of the time. Not only did he unravel the tangled affairs of Murphy and regain most of his own investment but he won Helens sincere admiration during their business connections. This admiration turned into something deeper. In short, Helen fell in love with the young man, much to the chagrin of Chase. That young man had been so rash as to entertain fond hopes concerning Helen. Three months after Chase had introduced the two, he noticed the following in the society column of his favorite paper.- BIG BILL MURPHYS DAUGHTER T0 MARRY PROMISING YOUNG ATTQRNEYT . Evered Chase. though loving Helen as he didfproved himself every inch a man. He was the Hrst to congratulate llack. Helen deserves every happiness. he said. I am sure that you can give her the happiness she wishes. 'lack grasped Chase's hand. You are true blue. Everedf' he said. But for you, our happiness would have been im- possible and Helen and I both want you to have a share in it. XVill you act as best man at our wedding? I'd do anything for either of you. Chase answered him. I accept the honorfl The two men passed out of the room arm in arm. :Xt the threshold of the building they parted, one going to the hap- piness that awaited him. the other to anything else fortune had in store for a real man. STANLEY ENCK. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE i ElillillillillillillillillilliiflEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIlE.llElElIEllEllElElEllEllEllEllilIEllEllE'llEIlElEl.EllI2IllEll'.liIlEllEllQlZl ' MM lil E lil IE lil lil El lil lil lil lil E lil lil lil E El E E IE . lil li lil E lil lil IE lil lil lil lil IE EI lil lil lil lil lil E lil IE lil lil lil lil li lil lil E llfl El lil lil lil IEI is lllll llllllllli..l llil llll.lllllFll llllf nllTI- ll' ll l i C H m S 0 fl U H fi' GT Q 37 I gmt B D mmf glll ll bww All I ll up The Story of My Life I was born in the shop of the Columbia Powder Puff Company of New York just three months ago. Little did I realize what lay before me. I was put in what they called a 'santiary envelope' and with a lot of other sisters just like myself, shipped to Marshall Field and Co., the most exclusive department store in Chicago, Illinois. I was glad to see the light again after such a long and dark journey. The girls in the store put us all in a place beside some cans-which if I remember rightly they called powder boxes. It was a very noisy place for everyone seemed in a rush to get somewhere. Oh! I became so tired being handled and pushed around. I was in no one place long enough to rest. VVhen one by one my sisters left me I wondered where they were going and what was going to happen to them. One day a very pretty school girl picked me up and I saw her give the the girl behind the counter something in exchange for me. The girl, whose name I will say was Rosy, did not seem to think much of me, nevertheless, great to my delight when she got to her home she tore that horrid envelope from me. She laid me on a dresser. She had put me on my back but by rolling my eyes a little I could see myself in the mirror. I became quite vain for I thought myself very pretty. There was a lovely sky blue bow tied at my back. I was allowed to rest all night long but in the morning Rosy picked me up again and before I had got wide awake she rubbed some white stuff all over my face. At first I felt alI choked up and thought I'd smother. It was lucky for me that my eves were not quite open for l feel sure I would have got some in them. She seemed in quite a hurry for she was not a bit careful when she put me in her skirt pocket. The next I saw the light was in what they called the rest room of the school. Rosy took me out of her pocket and rubbed me, just think of that, over her face. I felt like open- ing my mouth and biting her. She was not the only one who did this to me for all of the other girls had handled me, instead of being gently rubbed over their faces, I was pound- ed. I did not know then what the purpose of it all was but since I have learned that they wanted the old white stuff Rosy put on my face. I began to think that none of my sisters had gone to any of those girls, and to this day I think exactly the same way. I was punished like that every day for almost three long months and now I am leading a retired life, Once in awhile Rosy picks me up and looks at me, but she always looks dis- gusted and puts me down again. As far as I am concerned she never need pick me up again for I like to rest. Once during my life she washed me but now I am as black as ever again and I don't believe she intends to even wash me again before I die. IRENE FINTON. ,, .47 , I LVN . Nf7, 1 1 I f'fA .ff 1 Y 3 'Q 'Z Agp C r 1 m s 0 n cz n 3 G re y X '47 , 'Z' ' ,jx Q! M zum A-n cm adept-3 XS' ikbn H mu ' -- n lui: Mu L L f In Memoriam JOHN DAVIS RICKSECKER Class of 1923 IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEGT 'R Ti M1 f I I Wi, , fx-jx , iii,-, ,Y 1 Q' ii f' ffm ,X M i, Amt Crimson and Grey 'fda 2' 2 Ja QPF ab lub: rib: ink L 'T I l:'wi'i i'ii- 1 .1 i . 'i il 1-fi! lull . ,f,:' 2 , '- f - illmyliiii:Egg-ili'LJiiI,.ll'L-li.' ill.: or 'i H iii, '-H, '- ,i ' il Qi q D cm Y cm an an U B lliifgg ,iii 'l- ag EEEE Society EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E On May 19, 1921, the class of 1922 gave a reception at Wentz Hall in honor of the graduating class of 1921. The hall was beautifully decorated in the junior class colors of blue and gold. Demuth's orchestra played for the dancers and did it so ably that they were encored again and again. A buffet lunch was served by two of the lower classnien. This reception was well attended by both classes and the class of '21 declared it was the best Prom given in the history of the school. Sept. 9, 1921-To begin the social season of 1921-1922 the Seniors gave a dance at VVentz Hall the first week of school. About fifty couples attended and the dance was considered a success by everyone. VVendling's Novelty Sextette Urches- tra furnished the music. Sept. 16, 1921-The Sophomore and junior Classes en- joyed a marshmallow toast the same night. The juniors went to Beach City and the Sophomores went above Stras- burg. These were the first social events of the respect- ive classes and both were big events. Sept. 23, 1921-The Seniors, again, showed their desire for a busy social season by having a weiner roast at Beach City. This was attended by a majority of the class and near- ly everyone else in High School. Everyone enjoyed them- selves and declared the evening a success and the Seniors good hosts and sports. However, one machine load of Seniors was disappointed because they were not able to join in the fun, having had many blowouts and finally losing their way. Sept. 20, 1921-The Freshmen planned a marshinallow toast, and were very much disappointed when the weather man sent rain. They decided to go to the Y. M. C. A. rooms and enjoyed themselves just as much. The evening was spent in the usual Freshman manner of smearing their faces with marshmallows and marsmallow fights. Dec. 10, 1921-The Seniors gave the second High School dance of the year. About forty couples attended, New Phila. and Uhrichsville High Schools being well represented. 1Vendling's Novelty Orchestra again pleased the dancers with their music. Although the hall was not crowded by dancers the dance was quite a success and everyone had a good time. Dec. 29. 1921-The junior class gave the annual Christ- mas dance during the Christmas vacation. About fifty con- ples attended. including alumni and college students. Wend- ling's Novelty Boys again made a hit. There was something doing from 8:30 until 12 o'Clock. -lan. 12, 1922-The Seniors of D. H. S. '22 enjoyed a live- ly sled-riding party on Dover hill. Among the features of the evening were spills, rolls, ditching and riding belly- whoppersf' This was the first party of this kind the Seniors had ever had. but it was evident that it would not have been the last if the weather had favored it. Feb. 21. 1922-The Senior class gave a George XYashing- ton party at the Gym. This party was unusual due to the fact that it was possibly the first class party at which there was no dancing. Games had been arranged for the entire evening, that is, all of the evening except that time spent in their favorite pastime-eating. The evening was also highly instructive since they all learned some strange facts while playing Truth. March 14, 1922-A dance was given at VVentz Hall by the junior Class. Because of it being during the school week, this dance was not very well attended. But what was lack- ing in numbers was made up in enthusiasm. 1Yendling's Orchestra played for the dancers. March 18, 1922-A lively St. Patrick's party was given by the juniors in the Gym. The evening was spent in games and stunts, after which a delicious lunch was served by the junior girls. This was another successful, danceless party. ., -2 V, I., -V: , 'lx X.:z 422 2 A QL! A , fx- Crzmson and Grey -4452, gy, ' f A x JQQAD .1 ., .. n-Jn cm fm nodal: 12,5 ing gy .xrr-ru: M -r Y X' ' ,Q lil E1 Lil EI Iifl EIII EI EI E EI lil E lil E EI E IE IE IE lil Ei! E1 IEJ EI IE! Ili! IE! EI lil EJ IE lil IE lil EI IE? IE! lil El IE E IE lil IE lil lil IE! IE! EI IE! E IE! E IEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEEIYIIIEIIEIEli.-'ilIii!EIEIEIIEIEIEIIQQIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIE QQ ii , iff, ,. 44 1? ,, ,QYRJT ' az 4 vale vc iQilllllllu,leiiliigiPisllliiiiiiliilliilllmiilili.il-Weillll.iiilliiliiiiil Crimson and Grey lllllgii Y ... .MWTlT.llllllllllllilllllllllill'lilQQ IEIEIEIIEIEIEHEIIEIIEIElillillillillillEllEIlElElEllElElEllEllEIlEIlEIlEllElElEllEIEliIlEllElElEllElCf IEE E-II lil E E lil E lil lil lil lil IE! E lil llfl lil lil lil lil lil EI lil E lil El lil lil IE Erll lil lil E El lil lil lil E IE lil lil lil E IE! lil lil lil lil lil lil lil lil IE lil lil lil lil E THE SOC AND BCSKIN Great Fletcher never treads in buskins here, Nor greater .lonson dares in socks appear. -Dryden. The Soc and Buskin, high school dramatic class, was or- ganized at the beginning of the fall term. So many pupils desired to take dramatics that it was necessary to eliminate Freshmen and Sophomores, and to allow only those -luniors , and Seniors who had passed in their required subjects. Miriam A. Bowman organized the club and was the dra- matic director. The members elected the following officers: Stage Manager. Clarence Gintzg Property Manager. George Riceg Advertising Manager, Kathryn Biglerg Electrician. Crwilym Brawn. The class of twenty was divided into two groups so that the need of each might be better developed. The work in- cluded voice technique, pantomime, characterization, stage craft, and the study, interpretation and appreciation of worth while plays. The class designed the materials and made a set of interior scenery for the high school stage. - During the year every member has had the chance tu ap- pear twice before the public. Three one-act plays presented for children were: The Heart of Pierrotf' Six Wlho Pass XVhile the Lentils Boil, and Three XVishes. In May Sup- pressed Desires and Two Crooks and a Lady will be given by the -lunior members of the class. These plays are more sophisticated than the former. It has been the aim of the organization not to star characters but to give each an op- portunity for individual expression. The Senior play Clarence Mrs. Martin .... Mrs. W'heeler- Mr. XVl1eeler-- Bobby Wlheeler Cora XVheeler- Class will present booth Tarkington's popular ---.Xrline Robart Florence Miller --Clarence Gint ---George Rice ---Helen I-ahm Yiolet Pinney---. ---Kathryn Higler Clarence --- liella ---- Clayton Kessler - - l.ena Richard llinwiddie -- ---Martin Groenenberg Hubert Stem--- -.---- Roy Wfeigand EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE ENE ,glElElElIEllElIElEllf1'll.E.1lEllElEllEllEllEllElElIEl EI E E EDJ lil El Lil EI E lil IE lil El lil lil E lil lil E E E lil E E23 lil lil E lil lil lil lil Ei! lil lil IE lil lil lil IE IE lil lil lil lil lil El lil lil lil IE EJ lil lil lil IF1 fL 'V' ff ,fa W U 44D'1FT!N ' , ,V aw 7,115 fx , fQNfQ ll CHM 'I G nd GW l llll Crimson and Grey Dover High School Never Despairn Published under supervision of SENIOR CLASS OF 1922 Dover, Ohio - ,,, , , 4 fbfg , 'kwa ,W 7 .2 fxfj-mtl l f W E jf dm 1 E E Crimson and Grey rw E in it limi1QileiiiMiliiuii.1iiwilliziiiiiliiiliiii!li lilMQexQgS 0 lb? x Q. iii MECH,-XX lC.XI. IDRAXYING Mechanical lJrawing has been added as a separate study to the vocational course in Dover High School, Mr. ,l. XV. Trautwein, a lfVittenberg graduate. is the instructr,-'. The small percentage of boys who took advantage of the opportun- ity this year realize its value and it is certain that next year's class will be much larger. The work was begun by making lettering sheets. using the Rhinehart method of forming the letters. Several sheets were then devoted to applied geoinetery, which dealt almost entirely with construction work. This was followed closely by orthographic projection and developments. Detailed draw- ings and developments of various articles such as pistons. funnels. intersecting pipes. and other articles were made. At the present time the class is working on pictorial presenta- tion. which is making a picture of an article in such a manner that measurements can be taken from the drawnig. The next step will be tracing and blue-printing. Practical nia- chine-shop work will be taken up later. Such a course prepares one for a drafting position after graduating from high school or for an engineering course in college, R. XV. '22 MANUAL TRAINING More pupils are taking manual training this year than ever before. Mr. Schump. the instructor. conducts daily three two-period high school classes, and one grade classg and once a week an after school class from the eighth grade. The advanced classes are given lathe work, which in- cludes wood-turning and some pattern making. The lathe class has turned out several table lamps besides candle-sticks and many other articles. A list of the articles reminds one of the output of a small furniture factory. Gver one hundred articles have been made by the high school students alone. Though too num- erous to mention all, they include: porch swings, porch chairs. cedar chests. piano benches, and library tables. This department also assisted the Soc and Buskin in making an artistic set of interior scenery for the stage of the auditorium. It is hoped that in the succeeding years the Manual Training Department will maintain the high standard that has been set and strive for still nearer perfection. HEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 77 f abc Q IEIICAQ Exiggfijqz 1' 277 ZFSWQ Crimson and! Grey QQQXX-ZQXYEQH' ' ---- can un' cm uofiigg i 'Kxzon cm ' 1 35:2 EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Si EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE A ua: EEZ EEEEEEEEEEEEI e- ,VV Q. , , , , ,i ,, , . fiiiiilf A ZW C r i m 3 o n a n ci G re y W 3 , it J' li ' , , i ..n-:un up gm im :xiii by '5 in 'H cm cn- - cr.-- -iuznn m- rim i ll ll' uiaifelfi 'bf THE D. H. S. CHORUS Vocal music in the high school is firmly estab- lished both as zi study and as a tine art. A chorus rehearsal sounds like a concert and not like the raucous orgies of a clemoralized mob. It looks like a class reciting and not like a convention re- laxing. About two hundred students have elected to take the work. In our mid-year recital the entire boys' and girls' choruses presented separate numbers. There was no culling, picking or choosingg all who were enrolled were given the opportunity to sing in public. in those chorus numbers there was a successful effort to produce tones rather than loud noises. XVhenever there is a desire to raise the roof of the high school building at contractor will be employed for the purpose: choruses should be adapted to a work that is less strenuous and more appropriate. Singing is good exercise. The study of music is thc most highly sublimated endeavor to which a student can direct his industry. Community singing is one of the most ennobling pastimes in which a body of people may be engaged. People may get together in song better than in any other way. These are not copy-book maxirns: they are truths that assert themselves with irresistible force. Some things may be learned anywhere. Others may be learned better in school than anywhere else. Vocal music is one art belonging to the lat- ter class. Every student in the high school should learn vocal music of his own free will. There should he no surplus pupils to dispose of when- ever the time for chorus rehearsal is called. May we also indulge the hope that such situation will some day obtain in the Dover High School? gf VT M J E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE TJ-VV , , ,,-77 ,VKJT . ' , V , V-Z ,W Ko ll ww lflvllriwuliv I I Wil I l I Www at C Tl m S O fl fl H 5 G' Q 9 if I I I e Tlligllll il il I 'il' I av 9 .A l ll dd mb cmznn 'uh ' cm ' cm :oi A' 374341: Y ' cm ma u-- -'B' lun nb cn: 'cm l EEE!EIEIEIEIEIIEIIEQIIEIIEIEEIIE!IEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEI IE IE! EI lil lil lil lil lil IE lil E E E El EI EI El IE! EI IE lil E lil E El IEI IE lil E lil lil EI E23 lil EIII lil lil E E IE! lil IEI lil IE lil E IE El IE IE! E IE! lil El I'I IN APPRECIATION OF L. H. ALEXANDER Mr. Alexander, who is often referred to as Alex, has been in charge of the public school music of Dover for several years. What he has done for it speaks for itself. He has put chorus work in the high school and in the grades upon a plane that redounds to the credit of all concerned. Persons who listen to the high school chorus, the grade choruses, or any of the orchestras or bands that he has organized, led, or instructed, have the pleasure of listening to real music which is adapted to the occasion as well as to the pupils who pro- duce the melody. Some people take exception to Mr. Alexander's direct and rather strenuous manner. For that matter some will hate any one who succeeds or who believes more in service than in salve. But never a pupil has stayed with the game long enough to learn it who doesn't bless the day he came into contact with Mr. Alexander and his methods. Often auditors complain that they should hear more sound from a chorus of upwards of a hundred voices. He, how- ever, believes it better to subdue sounds in order to produce melody rather than explosions. Musicians are delighted with his public recitals, and in the light of this skilled judgment all the others should at least temporarily subside. We like his work. We like it now better than we did four years ago. And if we progress as we should we will like it even more in the future than we do now. THE DOVER HIGH SCHOOL ARTISTS' COURSE X I Under the auspices of the Dover High School musiggde- partment, a three-number course was presented this year which marks a distinct forward step in musical circles of this city and community. In these days of rag time and synco- pated jazz it is both refreshing and inspiring to see a fair-sized audience giving rapt attention to the technique of a master. Yet that is what happened in Dover this year and, let it be hoped, that is what will happen in each year to come. Good music, like good literature and good everything else, requires a cultivated taste. Yet this taste cannot be cultivated by the imagination alone. No one will learn to love Shakespeare by reading trashg nor will he learn to appreciate nectar and am- brosia-whatever they are-so long as he subsists upon tripe and wheyg nor will he learn to admire orchids while contin- uiug to feast his eyes upon pigweed. Miss Edna VerHaar, contraltog Maurice Dumesnil, pian- ist, and Madame Vera Poppa, 'cellist, comprised the course. All were artists of the highest order, but they were given to the local admirers at a popular price. May artists continue to come and may the public of Dover be unstinted in its gen- erosity in the matter of producing the price. We are always glad to see music lovers go to neighboring cities for the good things in music that are offered, but we should be glad to have them patronize the local good things as well. A piece of music exquisitely produced in any com- munity is an abiding benefit, for its influence far outlasts even' the remembrance of its producer. Let us again express the hope that this year's course is but the beginning of a per- petual reign of better things. JEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 5 If H X f H jg' . N, WXQIE? Q Sl 5 0: o 3 Q 3 Qu Q Ni fm 95 ww Kiwi ' x 5 FX , R4 B N U Q 5 6 5 Q5 5535 IEQQYQLSQBVIQ QQ EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE mfr wlfx, I' 'X AX .., Y ,WW gg 121 4401 'ix C A H G Lxfjqlz Q LZZJZ N N Qqxf Q Q , N ,1,-1,y, xx X r1mson an rey 5 .X x , 539332 M, am., E ,E E., G, Q. an EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE ., .i - f ' fx. ,ff . .ff , f 4J7.f'X -' . ! 1-'TV 4:59 4.27 'V 25 ?-' In -47 47 :v .if C Tl nil S O n G n 3 G re ,555-Ln an v--- at D cm mv ngfg-gg QF LQ E E E . E The H1-Y E E Last year this organization. which we consider the lmest El of High School organizations, inasmuch as it raises the phy- E sical. moral and intellectual standings of not only its own IE! memhers hut also the whole High School, and it certainly has EI accomplished these things. was organized in D. H. S, El The name Hi-Y means the High School Y. M. C. A. and is under the direction of -T. Royce Brown, local Y. M. C. .X. lil secretary. lil The officers elected last year were: Roht. Krantz, Presg EI -lohn Ricksecker. 'Vice-Pres.. and Curtis Peters. Sec. X Treas. lil At the annual election this year Francis. Ivor Goodrich and E1 Roht. Krantz were chosen as the respective olificers. IE' Meetings are held every Tuesday evening at the Y. M. C. E .X. rooms under direction uf the leader. .-Xt this meeting. din- ners are served. prepared hy the mothers of the members. lil The club is an organization which devotes itself strictly lil to service. Service is its motto and that it has lived up to it El can he seen hy the fact that in all its affairs. hoth social and EI moral. as its Bihle Study Course. given under supervision of IE Mr. A. D. Horton. all were welcome. E' The Hi-Y has gained much fame hy its introduction int' Dover High School of .Xthletic Banquets. They entertained lil both the football and haskethall men at such affairs this yea lil This organization held a county conference for older hov: EI in january and was instrumental in the forming of similar EI cluhs in New Philadelphia, Uhrichsville and Strashurg. lt IE has not only heen beneficial to the High School hut also to IE the younger hoys in the grade schools, hy the supervising haskethall, conducting hikes and other things of similar nature lil for these hoys. EI The Hi-Y has grown rapidly and instills its spirit deep in lil the hearts of all with whom it has come in contact and we are EI sure it will continue to grow and perpetuate its good work. IE E E E E E BEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE - , , 1 07 , 2 f-Nall I ll 7 Y 3iQS'35fq' Z T 'J Crimson and Grey Z' 0 lg' V- rXEfl J :An mu m cl-- -m cu:l:nn au cm cm noi 'G .f,1.ri4n im cm an Q M35 gp m gm ga fi! Q22 IISIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEEIEIEIEIIEIIEEIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIQIEI lil lil E lil lil lil El El lil IE lil IE E lil IE lil lil lil lil lil E lil IE lil E lil E IE IE lil lil lil lil E IE lil lil lil IE lil E lil El lil lil lil E lil IE E lil lil lil lil E THE Y. XV. C. A. The Girl Reserves of the Y. XY. F. A. was organized in November, 1920. In April, 1921, new ot-ficers were elect- ed. Pres., Kathryn Biglerg Vice Pres.. Margaret Hostet- lcrg Sec., Josephine XVible: Treas., Helen Maurer: Cabinet Advisor, Miss Miriam Bowman. In April, 1922. the fol- lowing were elected to the respective otticesz Josephine VVible. Pauline XXYHSSCIII, Margaret Ricl-cseckcr and Mildred Vorherr. The purpose of the organization is to uphold the ideals and standards of Christian womanhood and democracy. to create a spirit of service, and to promote high standards of honor in school life and personal living. All high school girls who agree to the above purpose are eligible to the club. The regular meetings of the organization are held on the first and third Friday of each month. and the Cabi- net on the second and the fourth Friday. Initiation and Recognition Services are held at the beginning of each school year for all new members. The club has enjoyed many social times. Among these was a Christmas party given by the Y. XV, for the Hi-Y on Dec. 16, 1921. The Y. YV. has not been idle and has been able to meet all expenses and at the same time maintain a large treas- ury. The girls sold candy at the football games and after school. Last spring the club gave an indoor circus which was a complete success. A festival is being planned for May of this year. Every year we send 40? of our dues to the National Board and at least S10 to foreign work. The girls made bed socks, night caps and tobacco pouches for the county intfirinary. A good share of our treasury is used in sending delegates to the state conference each summer. Last year it was held at Dennison College, Granville, and our Society was represented by Kathryn Bigler, Pres., Mar- garet Hostetler, Chairman of the Membership committee. and Helen Maurer, representative of the Program and Ser- vice Cornmittees. This year we expect to send delegates to the conference in XYestern -Pennsylvania. The society has created a spirit of service, democracy and cooperation among the girls and has helped to deepen their spiritual lives. The Y. XY. C. A. together with the Hi-Y was responsible in introducing chapel into the school. The Y. XY. has charge of chapel every Friday and have ar- ranged its own progranis which have consisted of music and talks by the girls. The girls have been striving constantly to live up to the purpose of the organziation. f zz? -ef 1 1 2 - X 'L35 2' QV' I fxjxtil i X , E E fm W ff E E Cflmson and GW? iywiimiaiiiqijiiiiiiiilisWill iii iiiil li Qrggggg Senior Calendar SEPTEMBER 6-l.e jour triste est arrive. Freshmen littler and scareder than ever. Seniors show they are hustlers by purchasing class rings and ordering commencement announcements first day. 7-Seniors removed from common atmosphere of Study Hall. Football practice begins. Coach Trautwein comes out in uniform. Now the boys know why Vilittenberg was famous. 9-Senior dance. 12-Monday is an unpopular day because it's so far away from Saturday. Many Seniors missing. 14-junior gets lost during music period. Can you imagine that. 15-First meeting of Annual Staff. 16-Misses Hawk and Bowman give tests. They should be- gin sooner. l9-.-Xnother Monday dawns and lol the clocks are running and only an hour slow. Earl Koos. an influential -lunior, who is a mechanical genius. fixed them. Seniors report that they had a good time at Sophomore and junior marshmallow toasts. 20-Clocks still running. Eureka! Earl has found it! Zl-Business Mgr.. Associate Editor and Editor make a busi- ness trip to Massillon. 22-Domestic Science class bakes tomatoes. No one was game enough to eat one, .23-Senior marshmallow toast. Hot Dogl It was well at- tended. Nearly the whole Hi School was there. 26-New football uniforms arrive. 27-First scrimmage. Despondent Senior tries to blow head off in lab. After explosion decided it is more expensive to die than to live. 28-First football casualty. Loessi comes to school on crutches. Mass meeting D. H. S. rooters. Cot Gettle. better known as Chicklet , elected cheer leader. 29-Excitement at noon. Very large package delivered to Hi School. Seniors think rings have arrived. Football men that rest of uniforms have come. but it was only Ben Miller's football shoes. 30-High School Dance. Fire at Klar's Meat Market. XVe suppose he will have a smoked meat sale Saturday. OCTOBER 3 K -l-Nothing happened except that the clocks are stopped. For good we guess. 5-Start of XVorld's Series. also of D. H. S. six weeks' exams. 6-Frank Grimm presents D. H. S. football team with 310.00 football. Nice we'd say. 7-Football rally. Freshmen marshmallow toast. Upper classmen didn't break it up. They couldnt nature beat them to it. It rained and rained and rained. S-Dover-26. Coshocton-0. Tag day. Rally in evening. Lots of Coshocton money was spent in Dover by tDover fellowsl. 10-Fair! ll-No 12-School 13-This 1-l-NVeek. 15-Dover-3.3. Millersburg-0. 17--First Chapel Service. XVhat did we do now? Senior rings arrive. 18W-Annual Staff fix up headquarters. 19--Many Seniors prevented from attending school because of rain. 20-Mr. Cartlitch, State Y. M. C. A. Sec.. spoke during chapel. Da.- VVhat did Mr. Cartlitch speak about this morning? Helen- I don't knowg he didn't say. , 21-Football rally. 22--Dover-l-l. Uhrichsville-3. That makes it three straight. 2-l-Dire forebodings are in the minds of many. Grade cards tomorrow. 25-Grade cards! XVe forgive them. They know not what they do. IEI E ia ia iii ei ia ei ra E iii ral :ai iii iii iii ei ia E ia iii iii ia iii ia ia uri ia iii E E E La 11:11 iii :ai ia ia was ia E in E ia ia E1 it-J ia :ai E ia iii iii E iaiiailaiuialaiiaimiaiaellaanmiiiaiiaiiaiaiiiiiaiiaiiaiutaiauuiiiuiaimoiaiiaieiiifiiiiimiaimri We XR if X , XXX XX X X ' f ,X ,ff X X eibfiffl - gggo3t3Q,LtTTFinwulllitiisiiiiiiiilmiiiiiiiiitfiiii it wt .BX it T X C H fn S 0 H Tia 9, i -'im im -an ahzzm EEIIEIIEIIEIIIIIIlilIEIEHEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEJIEIIEIEIEIEIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIQEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEIE IE lil IE lil lil lil lil lil IE! IE lil IE! lil E lil lil El lil El E lil E IE lil IEI E lil Ifll lil E lil IE El lil IE E El IE lil lil IE E511 IE! lil IE El. lil lil lil E lil lil lil lil E 26-No chapel. VVe must be good enough now. 27-Chapel resumed. Guess they decided we did need it. 28-Wonderful day. Many take much needed rest. 29-Dover-O. Steubenville-7. .Xnd we don't play them a return game. 31-Trautwein shakes up team. The day is cold and dark and dreary. NOVEMBER 2-Sang during whole chapel period this .X. lXl. Must be training our voices for a fire. 3-Team prepares to meet Wooster Friday. 4--Dover-O. XVooster43. Gut lucked but not outplayed. Of all the words of tongue or pen .-Xre these so meek and humlileg XVe might have won the game right tht-u Had not we made that fumble. 7-Better. 9-lfnglish. Eagle comes out. 9-+XVeek. Cold outside. Wariii in building. pleasant surprise. lO-Still warm. 11-No school. Dover-7. Akron South-13. lt was a great game. VVorthy of the day. l-l-Rev. E. NVeinland speaks in chapel. 15-Gloom. Bo Bassett reported out of Thanksgiving game because of injuries sustained last Friday. 16-XVe l7-Are IS-XVaiting 21-jimmy Hilton entertains U3 in chapel with his fiddle. Z2-Post holes dug and fence erected at Fairgrounds. Nearly all the Senior boys turn out to help put up fence. XYc wonder why? 23-It rains and rains. Field looks like lake. 24-D. H. S.-O. N. P. H. S.-13. The saddest words of tongue or pen. Are: it might have been It might have been. 25-No school. We are thankful again even if all our money can be jingled and we've all got a headache. 28-Blue Monday. tDarn blue in D. H. SJ .X novel and 73 Q-fxqev 2 17272 J gave a nd Grey hliil cm' cm W uuznzflgun an nail! mn 29-Tests. SU-Tests. DECEMBER l-Tests. 2--More tests. She gave ll: a test on Friday last, And darn it only half of us passed. 6-First basketball practice. Fifty out. 7-Une can almost pick out the fifty by the way they limp, R-XVe bought five packages of Red Cross seals or l50,000,- 0O0,000 rubles xvorth. '1iThe squads getting smaller. IU-Senior llance. ll-liasketball squad picked. Seniors well represented. 13-Basketball squad starts practice in earnest. l-l-Fifteen examples, that prove basketball is strenuous exer- cise, limping around halls. lf'-Coach Trautwein says it's good thing we play Strasburg l1UIl1ul'I'OW lllgllt. lo-Dover-39, Strasburg-IS. 19-Clocks start. llo an hour in a minute flat. 20-Our staff detective reports that all the teachers were in a good humor today. 21-Still in good humors. XVe know now. Santa Claus. Z3-Pretty near vacation. Many take day off to do Xmas shopping. Z4- 'Tvvas the day before Christmas. Football sweaters given out. Earl gets one too. XYe think Chicklet and Brownie should be considered, also. They at least exercise. VACATION 29-junior Dance. JANUARY Sgllany missing. Billy .lohns and Ress llros. gave away cigars. That accounts for it. -1-Attendance slowly picking up. 6-Savings accounts started. XVe'll all be john D.'s. 74Dover-13, Cambridge-22. Sophs have sleighing party. 10-First bank day. Miss Moore, cashier, Dutch Traut- wein, assistant. ll-One dollar and thirty cents deposited. 12-Senior sled party. Talk about rough riding. Jef f 1, X At. , p 45 A Zfw EQS Crhnson and Chwy QXSIXQ an cm an u-- QD cm an cm n.- V sl El El IE lil lil lil lil lil El lil lil lil IE! ELI IE! El IE IE IE! lil E lil lil IE! Ei! IE! El lil E IE lil El IE! EI L51 IE! IE IE E El lil lil lil lil IE! lil lil IE lil IE lil lil lil E IEIEIIEIEIIEIEEIIEIEEIITEJIEIEIEIIEIIEIIIHIEIIEIEEIIEIEEIIEEIIEIEEIIEIEIIEIEIEIEIEEEIIEEJIEL PREFACE THIS is the seventh edition of the Crimson and Grey. In this publication as in the ones before we have attempted to give an insight into the school life of D. H. S., to instill an interest in our High School, place her ath- letic achievements on record and to give amusement to the reader. If we have accomplished these aims we ask nothing more. The reader must remember that this is a student publication and must be read as such. The Senior Class and the Annual Staff wishes to thank the many stud- ents, the business men and all others who helped to make this year's book a possibility and a success. I umm Library CouniY P Qflilnwebster Streei PO Bw JON ,agar-2270 li mwuii .yy .in , ii 35 14? N 1 C T im 3 o n l l ll ixli fill! cm dt cm uxzrm un an cm hi il 'Q l3fHalf of Seniors missing. The other half weren't at the party. l-l-Dover-27, E. Liverpool-54. Something's wrong. 15-Dover-23, Steubenville-29. This is terrible. 17-Another bank day. Another nickle saved, 19-Uh! Boy! Tomorrow night. Z0-VVell this was the night. Dover-27. N. P. H. S.-29. The Phila. fellows must all carry a rabbit foot. 23-Gladys Davis comes back to school. Her hair isn't hobhed any more. 24-Cram. .25-Cram some more. 26-Semester tests. The melancholy days are come. The saddest of the yearg VVhat reason for this wail and woe? The Semester Tests are here. 27-Dover-19. Uville Hi-21. Can you imagine that? 30 S: 31-VVe rest our weary minds and await results. FEBRUARY 1-NVE GOT 'EM!!! 2-Hog day. Did he see it? 3-Dover-26. Akron South--42. Six straight. Well we beat Strasburg. -L-Dover-21. XVadsworth-17. XVe broke our record. 6-joe NY. wears a diamond on her left hand. So young. VVhat a shame. 7-She's changed it. All's well. 9-VVe're hoping for the best. 10-Dover-28. N. P. H. S.-26. R-r-r-Revenge is sweet. ll-Dover-35, XVellsville-AIS. XVe're going now. 13--Many imagine l.incoln's lfirthday should be celebrated today since it happened on Sunday. It was a nice day anyway. 1-l--Valentines Day. Many comic things seen around Hi School. 17-Dover-30. Massillon-19. Mr. Blackstone experiments. Experiment-NVhat injuries can be sustained by taking a step twenty feet long, straight down. 20-Mr. Blackstone absent. So are lots of others. 21-Still on missing list. Seniors give George Washington party in Gym. Kess plays Truth. Ask him. 22-George's birthday. Holiday. He lived and died not in vain. Dover-19, Canton McKinley-14. 23-The entire faculty is present again. 2-l-Dover-37. VVadsworth-14. 27-Mr. Kohr speaks in chapel. 23-.-Xnother speech. Mr. Hostetler. Another day we don't have to sing. MARCH 3-Dover-36, lVooster-17. 6-George XV. and Miss Knapp stage a little bout in main room. No question as to who won the decision. 7-Earl falls through window in the Commercial Room while throwing out his chest to show the D to better advan- tage. S- Diddy and joan sing f?j for us. 10-Dover-1-l, Uville-6. No. this wasn't a football game. 14-Junior Dance in Gym. 15-Dover-12. N. P. H. S.-19. Yes, General Sherman, it was. 16-We don't want to write anything about today. 17- Weari11g of the Green. Others besides Freshmen show this color in their exterior decorations. 18-junior Party. Those juniors are making a strong finish. 20-Earl now wears a little M inside his D. 2-l-Basketball banquet. Coach Boles of VVooster speaks. Maus elected captain. 27-George VV. comes on time and it's Monday too. 30-Ted .Ientes tells select few in civics that he thinks the fellow who invented near-beer was a poor judge of dis- tance. Too bad, Ted. that Miss Hawk happened to be among the few. 31-Some thoughtful persons distribute garlic and cheese fspecies limburgerj in main room. SPRING VACATION ' APRIL 10-Beautiful weather. Mr. Froelich very busy. It's a crime to make the telephone girls work so hard calling up our parents. ll-Miss Hawk and Dizzy Enck improve Federal Govern- EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Q z Q.: Q 2 E gi QS .EW li EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE ' ,m Xa ' ' 'A :Lag fx V' . gg 55345iiiiii.1iiiiiigwiiiiiiiiiigigii:xiflijii A ag, gg an E Crimson 6 ce EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E ment in Civics class. 12-Evangelists from our neighbor city across the flumen, en- tertain us in chapel. No converts reported. 13-Kess advises Stanley that it would be cheaper to get a hair cut than to buy a violin. l-I-Friday. Oh! XVhat a beautiful word. Boys on An- nual Staff take wet ride to Canton. Don't misunderstand us. We mean it rained. 17-Kid Barkett and Mosquito-Bite Eberwein stage a no- decision battle. IS-Miss Moore asks Ben to use word ruthless in a sen- tence. Here's the sentence. Every team in the Ameri- can League except the Yankees is 'Ruthless' Calendar goes to press. SENIOR PHILOSOPHY l Grass widows are not green. Placing Thanksgiving at the end of the Football Season was very thoughtful. A Harvard astronomer says he saw crops growing on the moon. They don't grow that fast here. It must be great to be rich enough to be able to afford a nervous breakdown. Charlie Chaplin is to be knighted. That's getting ahead by starting at the foot. It's easy to meet expenses, the trouble is dodging them. The way of the transgressor is barred. A movie is a long kiss preceded by a plot. Men's fall hats were felt. So were their prices. The proper chaser for moonshine is an antidote. Many men hang on a jury's words. Can School Teachers Marry? -CI-Iead-linej-Some can and some can't. Eating garlic will prevent old age. It kills 'em young. Our idea of incongruity is a Bolshevic running a bath- house. Ten quarts make a gallon when it's grapes. Some Freshmen graduate. Others talk back to Mr. Trautwein. They may have taken movie pictures of Congress but it and Grey zzz W. i- cm mu cuznfii nn --n ual' cm an 'lllllliubfi doesn't seem possible. 1Head1inel- Guntoting Decreasing. No room on the hip for a gun any more. As the bride-elect said to her friends, Say it with show- ers. .X fool and his Honey are not parted until midnight. Some fellows kiss their girls. Others don't shave. The biggest piece of money in the world is your last dol- lar. Ziegfield cut the price of his Follies. Other follies re- main the same. He who hesitates gets run over. Grass widows never go to seed. Nobody ever thinks a thing is too bad to be true. No matter if the world is round. you can live on the level. When a married man buys flowers the neighbors wonder what he has done wrong now. .lust when we were hoping the crime wave was over, oyster soup came on the market. Pershing and Chaplin were honored abroad. One for feats and the other for feet. A rolling stone gathers no moss but it attains a beautiful polish. Other wrestlers bar the strangle hold, why don't dan- cers? g A diving girl act makes a good showing. Counterfeit money is not counter fit. Congressmen donlt spend as much time delivering their speeches as the mail men do. In China talkative women are divorced. And still we send missionaries to China. America is bounded on the east. west, and south by a three mile limit. A good dancer is light on his partner's feet. Women cry for hush money. Reformers Try To Stop Smoking. -Headline. We sympathize with them. We tried, too. Putting on heavies is ticklish business. To see or not to see. that's the style question. Two heads are better than one except when buying hats. In sausage the butcher makes the ends meat. Some people go to the picture shows to rest their feetg G L Nw , ,W ,, 3, , ,VJN -- , 'f' A ' A X ' . if., ?'fi.'T...,. '- .,,, ,,, ,,, ,,,, ,En ,,, m, U, C T Z m 3 0 n C n C? G Te y is Qui iili i Jw I l ig ii Iiinllliillililhl.limitllilliilljlliiliqillilliiflQQT inf E others Iii practice reading out loud. D. H. 5. MUX IILb fiirls that look good enough In eat do eat, It isn't so much what they stand for as what they fall for. The people that are being fed sheep glands may get Ht-eeerl. li your girl says she can't sing di-n't make her prove it. Manv a crooked man votes a straight ticket. XYotilcln't it lie awful. girls, if the lvoys went into this disarmament matter seriously. There are thirty-tive million teleph-ine numliers in the If S. and think of the tronlile we have in getting one of them. A High School hoy's mind and a lligh School girl's hair are alike in one respect-the less there is of each the harder it is to make it up. Headline- Kaiser in delit in llolland fIloesn't that lieat the Dutch. Risky Business -Playing hookey on Friday afternoon. ' That's I-lim -Eddie Bassett. The Man Under Cover -lliding during a class. Trail uf the I.aw -lf. XY. ll. liiirliillg for the Man Under Li1iYCf. It Can't lfle Done -To have a hetter Hi school than D. H. S. .Xu .Xmateur Devil -George XY. The Ilome Stretch -'Iihe I.ast XYet'k. Golden lleart -Miss Knapp. l:irerl ft'anglit smoking in school. 'IX liashlul lioiiieou-liil 'lhonipson. All llolleil L'p --luniiir-Senior l'rom, Uh, -lo - Peck Reeves. The Iiasy Road -lflunking. The Great IWav -Graduation Ilav. '-Eyes .,f Y..mh '-in-Qslmmn. ' llrisoners of I,uX'L'U-fIlInl1 and Mildred. l'als -llilda Schluntlt. liirtlie. llelen Maurer. Something DiHerent -Spring Vacation. The S1JCllfl6l'Sn-YRIOSIUIUS 1.-Xsk liilly john and Bill Grimml I'artners of Fate -The Annual Staff. l.Xpologies to Longfellowp TH li D.X'l'Ii ln the hall uf Dover Iligh School, In the alcove by her locker. Stood a girl with eyes of turquoise. Laughter in her eyes of turquoise. .Xnd heside her stood her hero. Stood her handsome lirown eyed hero, XYatching her with eyes adoring. l'S.XI.M OF CHUM ETRY Eyes that saw naught else heside her, .Xnd her eyes were twinkling gaily .Xnd her lips were smiling sweetly. Then he spoke with accent eager. May I have a date tonight. dear? lJon't say 'no' cause I won't take it! And he moved a little closer. lives down cast and swaving lightlv. She stilled his anxious fears luv saving. . . - . . . 1 , v g Sure! Be up by seven-thirty! Then she tore his joy asunder. Oh! Gee-whiz! I got another! -K. I. B. '22 Miss Knapp is my teacher. I shall not pass. She maketh me to prove dense propositions. She leadeth me tu expose my ignorance before the whole class. She restoreth my sorrow. She maketh me In draw prisms on the hlacklioard for my grade's sake. Yea. though I study until midnight I shall gain nogemnetry. For the propositions liother me and collaries sadly trouble me. She prepareth a quiz for me in the presence of mine enemies. She giveth my paper a low grade. My temper runneth over. Surely. sadness and grief shall follow me all of my life. And I shall dwell in the class of Geometry forever. t.Xpologies to Davey UEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE mba, I 'A Crtmsorz and Gre may fflfv gggwi-.-g,T'Qf4TiQ?7f iniiiiiiiiifi.vW'eEi ' . 19 twill.iiiifi lgjiijiil is ii ii ii Q Ky EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE XX hy l Stwpperl Stimlqiiig .W My Experiences in .Xll'lKfI'lCZlH-- llealtliful lllethmls nf lieclticiiig' lYhy Kilt In-uw Up ,,,,,,.., - .. I ' i When I Grnw Lp ........,..... ,- Speeding Tltrougli Strasliurgu .... - The VVearing ofthe 'D' ---- The Fashion Plate ..... -- it .- ---------------ln M' E E lit H Ili REX' l ICXX lluw To lllay l3askethall ,,,, Hnw Tu l'3'ive a lfnrrl .e,,,,-..- V, Huw P0 Tlay F4nf,ntlvall ,,,,.,.,,,,,, ,,,, ' 'Mean' C'l1ei'uh The Deyelnlnnent uf the Klnstache ,,, Tarzan ............... - ......................... -----Inhn XX:1ssiner ---,lJmnet llarkett ---,--------llen Miller -m lJntcl1 'l'ranlwei'i ------.Xdrian l.elmld l7anner Blclieeye ,--- l5izzy lfnrk ----Culyer Hair ,----Ted .lentes ---------Earl limos ---Mildred Everett :X Maker of Historyn ..... ................. lX Iiss Hawk The Seats of the Mighty ................ , .......... - J 'sses Hawk's and lmw1nan's Rooms Kess IE The Eyes nf the XN'rn'lcl .... ...,. S peaking lglefnre D. H.. S. L'lfVhen a Mans a lXlan --- ,f,ff.....,f Eddie Bassett lil i'XVhen XVe're Married ,..,f.... -Y ......... Becky lil llnw to Teach ,.A,,,,,,-,,,,.... ..... E thel Keifer lil Sleep and lts Benefits til llealth -- ..... Sam NVeinlanCl E My Beauty Secrets ,,........... ....... E dith Lohrman IE The Knockoutu--- .... ......f..f,... G eorge NVenclling EI The Fighting Chance .,.,f........A.. To Graduate wr Not The Price .................. Grades in the Semester test lil The Charge of the Light Brigade ,,.... East Ghio Gas Go. EI Ohl Skinneyu ..........a,Y .. .....f, ..... I iathleen Dalzal EEEEEEEEE EE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E l l The Broken Heart ......,...... - A Dog's Life .... - The Kid ..,.... ------Eclna Fauser -,,-Gretchen Hawk --- Nipper Neff Cecile MCecil Stocker. UT IIITS 1 Pl V122 Listen 'lima This Ihe Shrek -Wilt-nrliui AI, XX illiinghliy I .Xin't Nnlmrlys lJarling -l'anl lmcssi. Tell lX'le. lllr. VVeegy -'IM lflnnk nr Nut 'lin lflnnl .T nlit '---Cilaflys l'utt'hner. All That l Need --lr, Credits. Bly Klan -llerkv. Chernlmine ff Mean Cherub Chasing the Chickens --Paul Neiman. My Gal lrene - Vicks lfintiin. Peggy -Margaret Hustetler. Ruse TQOOITIH-ROOIII 3-L Taxi -Howard Gilihs. XYimrlerful Girl -Clara Reeves. mx? nuth and l3eauty -f-Edith laihrinan. uck Me To Sleep -First Period. Ma -Edward Bassett. Rosey Cheeks - Dutch Miller. Some Doll -Bernice Kemherlie. Get Off My Foot - Bo Bassett. Leave llle XVith a Smile -E. XY. B. Gretehen's llreani XValtz -Gretchen Hawk. lVearing uf the Green -Freshman Class. Long Buy - Dizzy Enck. Jimn1ie -Kathleen. l'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen -jinnnie lNlary AlXlai'y Streh. She ls My l.laisy f Cot XYhistling Pete -Curtis Peters. Sweetheart -Margery Marshall. DID YOU KNOXV THAT .... Cot likes ........,,........ chewing gum. Kess likes XValnut Street. Loessi has dates. Adrian Lehold made a good basketball mascot. Glen can dance. Bo likes to go to Dennison. Harold Bowen rides on the l'hila. cars a good deal. George XYendling is late every morning. Earl Koos is a chemistry whiz. got a D and admires the eighth grade. The Findly Twins are like Mike and lke. Dizzy Enck and Alton Seibert attempted to raise eyebrows on their upper lip. HQSO4 will remove spots at once.-task Gretchenl Earl Koos fell through a window in the Commercial room while displaying the aforesaid D, Limburger cheese and onions cause a disagreeable odor. Es- pecially when used to scent the Main Room. lt took some scents of humor to enjoy it. Dutch Miller is taking an association course on Life of a Minister. Cal Miller likes a certain bob-haired miss.-4No. Cal, we won't mention any names! VVe have a truant officer who attends to the naughty absent High School boys and girls. Dutch,' is a fine coach and a good sport. Mr. Blackstone broke the standing jump record.-He jumped straight down for eighteen feet. -lesse James rode a horse. Rost. our engraver, don't, but he should. Mart can surely draw. The Basketball girls. their coach, and Bus Beers look sweet in their white sweaters. Dorthy and Pauline study. 'l'heodore Koos has red hair. George XY. said. 'iliill ine. boys. but don't muss my hair. Diddy Rosenberry sings. Marjory Marshall goes in for Alumni entertainments. His name is Paul. Curt visits N. P. H. S. Friday afternoons. The Senior class is popular with the Deis Fertig Co. Love with some girls is like a flat tire-one big blowout and they'll leave you flat. Gladys Davis had hobbed hair. now she hasn't.-1How do they do it?j Brownie was a great cheer leader. He made us laugh even in the face of defeat. Mr. Moose teaches Commercial Law. Oliver Bair toots a mean clarinet. Eddie Bassett could play football-lNeither did we.J Miss Hawk and President Harding run the United States Government. Counting fish from the Creek Bridge has taken the place of the once popular sport of counting the constellations. Did you know also that putting out an :Xnnual is some jobs. 5 a g. Q x U ll .. ll 9 i 5 S l H a nl Wg WU Q Nl 5 90 O 3 Q U QQ Q xl Q e ua J '. ll B. Q al gi V as Ear liken Qfos E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE if 1 ff C . N fkf-wuz fa- , V, ,I - Q 1'i ', ,'1,iN:,' ,111w,,'j: Q '15 Tim 63 G fm: MI up :JY-ff' 1 fgigiiiw 1 -1, iiwy, X' it i - ii. i .l.... i l i..i it S O H an My it i il .. ..uTrZ lm:ii iiiii A' sv E E POEMS E E E S Mary had a little dimple Lurking near her chin. S Therefore Mary never misses Any chance to grin. El . E E IE .XS l'l' VVAS NOT XVRITTEN El .-Xt evening when the lamp is lit E To movie plays my parents flity lil They do not sit at home and sing. EI But every night are on the wing. E E E E IE 'Twas the night before payday, and all through my jeans l hunted in vain for the rice of some beans. EI v l -P EI Not a quarter was stirring, not even a jitg The kale was off duty, milled edges had quit. E Forward, turn forward. O Time, in thy flight! Make it tomorrow just for tonight! E E E E EI Old Father Hubbard E Went to the cupboard EI To get himself a drink. 'E VVhen he got there The cupboard was bare, E So he took it at the sink. E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Q H H Q5 u 'N EN 1 H N U Ulf B QEUE2 gli? H 4-ff-r'-'H ..,-f- --.- UQQQEG QR ,:..- -- '! Qzfjgg ff -'C..,-L: 'yn r::? 'EE25 Wm Zyjid j L 3702 frfrgfc ,. .... ,,,....., f---'-'- ',.,,, 3:64 fviam SATS: :'7 Q'7 Q fv f,,? .,g,.-, 1: 22 :QPZL-. AQ,-' 4-14 THQ ...Zn ', L 'I 5fvE2 : : 2nHf' 'Hiw ref: N- 9-AT-IS-'. ...-4T.- Ugg-bl. Hz.,-N93 :VI ' B 1.59-U, ,QL:j,.. M W... L ,-bps--4 y ... WHL yr---:J wi :Z fo f- :1...'f-5 re 2 'r'... fl- ...V : ..fj,- Q, 125':,':. 71:02 ffqgfz, 25:5 O .h 11- J.: -1,,,3,- -f,-' gvqfi '.EE: 2-,LMZ g-LQ :,f,c.2 :S ,-,N . -A ...P-J -.N-1 -, --, 1059 :ang vfOf,, .,Z-5 353, --NA.. ,-,-:J- wgf-fe ::::.4 1-.-L, :4 '- -rm, fv..'T'-'- rc--:' fr PT- Q .,.1 1 .-, fb , -,nan-.1 .npr-7 4 Q.: v,,..q-1 551.7 5-Om pq-5, pwcf Uvgw- eww, 3 ...V ' -i..-1 --.HF f-,ft - - Q no moi! ..4. -J - - ,.-f 7- .. 125. ... I Gown -f.,4m ,- .-v----Ez 1.7 54 an 5S'v.' ' 4 fE'Q aw: H26 Nmw 'D-:Za rm M52 Q -1 ,, A , F .... rvcjfg S L. gf rw.: rn-'-1: 'I mm- ri UQ gn 'S'..'T' WCB'-DJ In V' rv : O mm Shiv- QQ, 2. 'D .T T17 5 ,.. .4 1 2 r M . DHD, gulf: E. 'if-x fl 5' M, Q5 UN 'lfl ,-,Q H.. aa! E VI A B gji L5-Q g, Q AX UAAM EWU nifq, E gif F5157 ga f Q! EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Q X IEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Y if , M A 1 1 0 122 awfsfii - 44 22,5 f I aEiXQiQI7IllllllllmllillllWllllllllllllfihl ' ll I .E ' Crm 8 O n G nd Grey I lt.. lm nzuii- .. Q .,.. I. V V W I5 E EI See the nohle Freshman. E Behold his face as fair. 'El How green he isg How fresh he isg El His dome is full of air. E E IEI Little words of wisdom, lj-I Many words of bluff, IE Make the teachers tell us. El Sit down, tl1at's enough l E E E When to English class I go, A little prayer I mutter low. E I say in accents soft and deep, E Now I lay me down to sleep. E E There, little Vampire, E-I Don't you cry. You'll vet his class ring El Bve and bye! IE . . E E 'Twas a rainy morning On Wednesday' last. El VVhen our test was given E And half of us passed. E EI SLIGHT MISUXDERST.-XNDING El n She said, I'm from Providence. IE-I Are you ? my bored reply. EJ she looked atine disgustedly, EI And answered, No, R. I. E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Ti ,W Ii g., , TW I' ?4 ' ' ' 'TQFEPN Crimson Biili.i'hg'l,l'l1i'..h ii, Jin an U 1 ,uf my 1- id' ME xg, Q, THE ALUMNI AND XVH,-XT THEY ARE DOING Carl Antonelli-XYorking at Reeves Mfg. Co. Helen .-Xmos4Now Mrs. Kramer. Henry Buerkle-Retired. Francis Butscher-Now Mrs. Newland. Arden Cotterman-NVorking at Spence Hardware Co. Henry Cox-VVorking at Reeves Mfg. Co. Alpha Crawshaw-Studying to be a nurse at Ohio State. Loyal Davidson-Building school house at Wintield. Anna Funkhouser-Clerking at Tuscarawas Dry Goods Co.. New Phila. Zelda Gibbs-W'orking as stenographer. Leah Gordon-At home. Verna Hawk-XYorking at Reeves Mfg. Co. Stella Hines-Stenographer for E. C. Seikle. Beatrice Humrighouse-At home. Eda Kuerleber-At home. Rhea Lohrman-Stenographer for Reeves Bank. Lester Mason-NVorking for Deordorf Hardware Co. Victor Maurer-Making Peerless Flour better. Norman Millican-Working for the Exchange National Bank. Mary lXIilliner-YVorking in New Phila. I.eola Needs-Hello girl. Lydia Pfeiffer-Attending Co. Normal School. Katherine Potschner-Stenographer at Dover Mfg. Co. GHC? GTGJQ 'Q' lh',wg'ii: will-ijm'i,lf,Fiq'i iq, 'Hii'i i' 7 X WW ggi111lilii.ililiili'iiliil1lr is i iililliiiii ini. iIi'iiiz'1iiiiill'iilim i-iiiilli illiiiilliii iii! Josephine Rinderkenecht-Stenographer at Deis Fertig Co. Agnes Sipe-Viforking in Dover. Aletha Smith-Stenographer for Community Dis. X Mortgage Harold YonKaenalf.'Xttending Ohio State. Clara Wveber---Now Mrs. Russel Kreiter. Vincent VVeher-VVorking at the Dover Post Office. .Xllen .Xustin-Representing D. H. S. at Michigan. Hazel Blickensderfer-County Normal. Grace Brunner-Attending Co. Normal School. Catherine Hayes-.Xt home. Yernice 'Ienkins-Stenographer at llover Mfg. Co. liathildas .Ie1'gensfStenographer for lmniel Feed Co. Ruth LePage4With Florence at Ohio Lf. Karl Schlundt-Mechanic for XVeaver Garage. Josephine Scott-Stenographer for A. B. Klar. Florence Shumaker-VVith Ruth at Ohio U. Walter VVeinsz-Clerk at Senhauser Clothing Co. Dorothy Beller-Attending Miami College. Thelma Hawk-Attending Dennison College. Pauline justice-Studying to be a nurse. Stockton Ream-Attending Ohio State. Herman Seikel-Attending Ohio State. Robert -Ientes-Attending VVittenberg College. Harold Stout-Preparing' to enter Annapolis. Dale Marshall-Attending X'VittCIllJC!'g College. Adda Vickers-ls now a native of Reno, Nevada. Rob't. 'Weinig-Attending 'Wittenberg College. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE y E, EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 3 Q kr mfkvfxfz i 0 ff? , zvifv - : 'V A Fw N 'A 1 'U C ' J G Itffz 2 Xa' Z LiQ4fiQskW Mm Y n -nznn an cm ugki T2 nl-L S O n G n T Q y cm - n:m: an c:-- u Qi YQ EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE4 SR X Q I .7 jf, 5109 I To gf? 'r RX,,wL:,ji i .,,.f- C o K T iw F? HU 2-r ii' GQQ?27 'M : 4 J jiiigg 'Mage Egg? mf Tuul' Um 7 M S X -' W Ala ,FEW iff EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE xref' 'QC JG KJV Al Q EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E Lf f 1, ,ll -17 VQNZZQN ll l QVXIV rimson an fe'?r 4 ZF, -QQ !NhWWWMmNWmfwMMMWWmLwmQQf Qggwn ,,,, mmwg m,M mlgimg K Tel DEDICATION TO lhe members of the Faculty ot Dover Hlgh School. Cheerful and wlllmg helpers ol the stuclents. This Crimson and Grey is Respectfully Dedicated by the Class of 1922. .Xfter a long silence IXSIIDIQ lXlf11IUl.X'l'ION They were nestled in the hack seat. Including Interesting Items of lnsignihcant Importance. he said: He- Yon are the lmreath of my life. She- Really? Then see how long yon can hold your lireatltf' F-ierce lessons I--ate hours L'-nexpected company R-ot prepared K-inked ont. Miss Ilank lexplaining that the Supreme Court never holds sessions until all meniliers are present!- They never open until they have a full house. jim- Did you ever read I..,.iking' IZaekward? Loessi- Yes, once in an exam. and they took my paper from me. Fresh One- Mr, Alexander. why du you keep time with your heel when you sing? Alex.- Because I have music in my sole. an ing .Xre you comfortable. dear? 'Yes. Love. Cushions are cozy and soft ? Yes, Darling. Yon don't feel any jolts? No, Sweetest One. And there is no draught on your back? Xo. Sweetheart. Then change seats with me. Miss Angel- Caesar sic decat de curne gesse lictumf' Bob K.-1translating!- Caesar sicked the cat on the cur guess she licked him. Miss Moore- XVl1y do we always speak of a blush creep- oyer a girl's face? Curt- If it went any faster it might raise a dust. Skinney Hilton-texhibiting a new pair of socksl Clayt K.- Say, Skinney, how much do those hose cost ? Skinney-- Fifty cents a foot or a dollar a pair. Bo- Is it your ambition to die rich ? Cal.- No, to live that way. EI I EI a lil EI n lil lil f. I El I lg a a I lil a El N E E H E a E P I E IE! 5 S? rm E E 2 I-il Q lil nf E Q., IE C5 E 3 151 ie. E W, lil 593 E AAI a ntiglg E I E nil lil JZ Lil nal EI EI IE E IEIIEIEIIIJJIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIIEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEfQi 5E3gE,QtltTW' iiiliilr itil it lil lllhlyfgllllli ir in nw ll ll lil C T 1 m S O n fgi G E lil George Rice- I wish I were a turtle. EI Ben M.f XVhy? EI Geo.- He's got a snap. E E E He- Ah, je t'adore! ISI She- Aw, shut it yourself. you left it open, E E E IE-I Edith- Are you fond of indoor sports? E Cecil- Yes, if they know when to go home. E E E lil Peg- Cheruh. you are just like Venus de Milo. El Cherub- XYhy. she has no arms. IE Peg-A'Have you? E E E E I I'll bet it was a slippery day when the prodigal son came mme. El How come, old dear? lg lVell, it says his father ran out to meet him and fell on his neck. E E E E E31 Miss Angel- ls anyone here absent? E E E flyw, 7 A .7 Ve an fi' Grey ll llllgll .:E.1.W.lll Miss Bowinansfsareastieallyl- l'm not disturbing you, am I? Student-1thoughtfullyp- N-oo, but you might speak a little lower. lt keeps me awake. She- NVhat a Finely chiseled mouth you have. lt ought to he on a girl's face. He- XVell. l never miss an opportunity. Stanley's Motlier4 .-Xre you first in anything in school? Dizzy-- Sure, First out of the door when the bell rings. Miss Bowman- Leave this room. Riceyfuliicl you think I wanted to take it along? .1 Skinney Hilton- After all, fools are amusing. l ivoift want to live after all fools are dead. His brother- You won't. Miss Knapp- How many seasons are there ? Ted- 'I'lirec, Football, hasketball and hasehallf' EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE VN 'l P5 5 212 ff 4-ff eo - 'bfi-13 2? li ef , X fofid y cm nz: un:u.n nz an un cm uggzy C T1 rn S O n a n 3 G Te y 'Sega cm an cniiii cm inn li ' u.u:dh'li 'iiiihiiiiidii cidzii 'liiln KW E Doc. Goodrich- Get my kit. quick! Some lady tele- Miss Hawk- NYl1y did the Crusaders remove their shoes lil phoned in a dying voice that she can't live without me. when they neared the Holy Land? lil Mrs. G.- Just a minute, that call was for Ivor. Ted N.- So the Turks couldn't hear them coming. E E E E . , . , lil Miss Hawk- XVhat important date do you remember Miss Hawk-lIn History!- Joan of Arc was very cool 'EI in Ancient History? while she was being' burnerl at the stake. E Skinney Hilton- Mark Antony's with Cleopatra. 'EI E E Mart G.- Do you think that I ever can do anything E l'auline NValters- How dare you swear before me? with my voice ? Red Glitzman- How'd I know you wanted to swear Alex.- VVell, it might come handy in case of Ere. lil first. lil E E E Fanner- Say, Glenn, what is meant by the breath of Alton- Woman is more beautiful than man. E suspicion ? Gretchen- Naturally lil Glenn- The one that has cloves on it, my hoy. Alton- No, artificially. lil E E E E the 535: theDli2Hy?our watch stop xx hen you dropped it on Pigks-UQ? yolkcare for Com on the ear? H E Mr' ylackstone-usurelyn Did you think it wouid go nn Miss B.- I don t know. I never had one there. IE through? Q E E E Glenn NV.,- That girl of mine sure can love some. Edith- If you hold a telephone receiver in your hand E Curt- I'll say she can. can you get 11 Shock ? Glenn- What's that you say? Cornelia- That depends on who is at the other end of EI Curt- I-er-I mean can she? the line. IEI E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE IEHEIEIEI :Aff QYXIW 4:-'f 41 ff? Qvffr' . Oyf-X57 ' AFM Kal ' X Y X Cmmson and Gre TTB QW Q lf? N. , gifs? , m m an UU-'JU --D ai X ma ami y jjfigytn cm am un an cuznn an X 'N Wm: s X43 El D.H.S, MUSICAL 4 , , ,M0.1fsw1 ,- -f E11 wfewo :W f.Ni,1'nfY..'2'iT Lf . of ' IE 2 us! Fo! I I KTWMHI ANIMAL- JUST If ' T mv, HIS U U'-' -fm-. , f-N f H 1' Xu LVULE mu. E, ,, ln., .AL I E 1 ,y .x xzsnsn A f -I - fi-J - :N n 1 n El W? EORQE L sing. ,' qxwmg ' asm 'cezzw L J FN? TAANRSF-323: ANU HER f El bg -?'6E 'U? 'l wr I Jmvgisos V nzfwfonslarfnd HIE mon sflu. I :Emo fy, E! X: EQIUY5 A MWKE 6 VEC ms GIRL Wu, gpm.-HQRN 0 ' EI ' ON 'MS NEW ws AL'L 'RgBonue1' ' VA-jg 'fl .-23: gs JAKOPHDNE- Fog N1 H515 fx Hp.: V' .1 as gag El -1- .i.o.:gf2EQ7-X 4:1 5 , V 1 LU 9 - .- , My H , El A A' LIf7l:F Q0-FBHLL n I Ou DONT SEE E .if -. 'EVP' Nf I F AXLY Sums OF X EI :,gg-ig ' fa Mr l 5v UNE f x W 9 W4 Sppmc -ASK 50,0119 Y -5 .nw A C? A fn: 'AIQQ rue D-H. s. anus- IE 966 fs ' T1 man ' J-gg ,QP THEY fise mem , V, '9, - 4 -' 1: N ' IEI Z, ,g 71415 :MEAE Tue ELEVENS WW' : Y A91 DW gf E552 - I on .-, Z 11 qx 4 n . El .7, wfcuns car - L - Wm L -- f-- N ,.A- ..F1-QT' .vl.,, ' 'W' BOBFED -- -lf? ' I ' U ' ' lil f 5-mfr? ' ' 53- ai 4-31:-J J., I IE 'um 5 navfs SA 5 TRUE 5 ' - A E UF' HTERT ,N fMf- Qjzf, ,,,, LDVEKJEVEA Rur-19 sxvmmn- I El 'ozwzsaz f - W mm ww W 4, Q IE' AX JJ . vm? 4547 'I V pgmrnud -' f- 5 ' , TE AN IE 1 a Nw Q ummm L' g A A! g IJNVERNDB EVEYSNGS if ' ' UN N - -9.2 1P i.- X 5 w vgfff A - ILE ' lil ,- D--..fl ' -x .fliiixfi A 7 '16 ga Z3 QED mme HARD STUDY 'H ' .--1. v - f' El 1,,,,. x Q mmf' -0 U HUD I fy, r g E! g J, L ans K. PAUL Y- ' N - ' 4 ----f- 1 , , E .-me inc-QD ' -mg ogy AFTER 2 O QU wa-40 - p, BLMKST NE EI Tusk C015 OUT -me vm-:ce ,mpg me JMP- i 5,7 NNE mc Recaep - 30 F77 2 klfij I-.lil Fw ATHI-WCS DOWN, V 3 'T' EI BUT W .S AN - 'f , 7 5 N I -V I, ALVAMCRICA k o 4 .- 115 E' f M wwvfff- i',53,31'7ZZ Z me Loggi IE' -1 2 CEOINRICE N HN lm EI 7-,E VM-My U-mm Sw wH0 PR95 QW' , IIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIEI EIEHEIEIIEIIEIIEIIEHEIENE!l-QIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIIEIEIIEIIEIEEIEIIEIIEIIEEIEIEIIEIIEJIEIEIIEIIEIEIEIIEIEJIEIEIIEIIEEIIEIEIIEEIIEIEIIEIIEIE Miss Miller-f XYhat is the highest form of animal life? Dutch Miller! .'X giraffe. Clarence Gintz- Have you seen the dancing fool ? Margery Marshal- Do you mean Glenn F Kathleen- -lim had his arm around me tive times last night. Clara- Some arm. Mr. Blackstone- XVhy are you tardy? George XY.- The hell rang before I got here. XYindy+ He was driven to his grave. Brownie- Sure he was. did you expect him to walk ? XVaiter at Studey's-- Tea or coffee? Miss Moore- l'7on't tell me. lot nic gucssf Haug-lwho sat down next to a slightly intoxicated manj -- Do you allow a drunk on this car? Conductor-flow voicej- It's all right so long as you don't get noisy. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE -1 i E B U X l E il Q il S l B E n l he o :H 5 0.5 O Zi Q 3 Qs cs 'I Q YQ. iff Ui E H Q All HJ r . E1 gill . I of ev? li?qf5SsQt E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE Miss Atkins- XVhat do you think of the Turkish atroci- ties ? Earl Levengood- I don't know. I never smoked them. Peg- Uh, I believe in S1Jl!'ltllHllSlll now. Mary- VVhy is that? Peg- I had a date with a dead one last night and tonight he called me up. Miss Bowman- Now give an example of how circum- stances alter cases. Loessi- XYell, Milwaukee isn't tamous any more. Cal Miller- I've certainly got to take off my hat to that girl. Cherub- XVl1at did she do to become so great ? Cale 'Nothing. you poor fish, l gotta be polite. Mr. Blackstone read the following excuse. Please ex- cuse my son VVillis for being late as he shaved for the first time this morning. Miss I3- What edition of Hamlet did the Seniors' use last year? Bo-l'Shakespeare's. I 1-'xr' 1 If 122 fvfmjl N - A zzz ff f . iiDtltL...Ml...'illFi'fllillllflliliHl llill U....l Y ll... T V ...P CMH S 0 n 'I nd GW? .... ... .. ...Q fi .... 3... TQ AISI QQ , E EI i Edithj'lXVhat would you say if XVillard asked you to go Russ- Sure was embarrassed the other night. Made a EJ lor a TICICPY hreak in front of my girl. El Cecil- I would say it was an opportunity to he em- Paul N.- Uh, chagrined? E braced. Russ.-UNO. She laughed. E E E E SCENE ,XT THE LAKE. VVIND DLOWING HARD. EI She- Kiss me- Y - A Earl- Your lips are just like rose petals. IE Us-'il Canlt- 'UW Wmfl blelf' falld In ml' m0Uth-H .Xgnes+ l3ut, really, Earl, I must say good night now. EI blle- Swallow lt- YOU need lt- Earl- I.et's say it with flowers. E E E E Nipper-'4'I'he more I study Solid Geometry the less I seem to know about itf' lil Miss Knapp- I see you have been studying a great deal. AND THEY KILLED LINCOLN El Miss Knapp-- Do you know your geometry ? lil Harold M.- Yes, ma'am, it has the cover torn off, a lot S of ink spots on it, and my initials on the front. lil Clierub- Will you buy a talking machine? El Customer- No, I married one. E E gl Ben- I can't get my locker shut. ' E Miss iwtiiief-'fxxflm great man has done more for his Coafhn Take out You' Shoes- country than any other? S Eddie Bassett- Santa Claus. E E El The Patient-- What's your specialty, Doc ? Mayor- Did the prisoner offer any resistance ? lil Doc 'Shumacker- Appendicitis. Cop- Only a dollar, your Honor, and I wouldn't take E Patient- Seems more like a sick line to me. that. E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE ' 45 10 QF? Crimson . xgf cm am -- cm an cn: cm u, -45 Civic lliol. 'l'eacher- The ancients considered the liver the seat uf2lff6Cllul1. XYhere do we consider it now f Bright Senior- The knee. Miss Moore- Are you chewing gum ? Bo Bassett- Yes'm. Miss M.- Then give it here. Bo- Oh, wait till tomorrow and I'll give you a fresh piece. ' Curt.- XVell, what did you say to that new girl you saw last night? Al- I asked her if I could see her home and she said she'd hring me a picture of it. Kess- Do you know Tony very well? Mart.- Yeh, he sleeps next to me in Commercial Law. Soph.- You want to keep your eyes open around here. Fresh.-- XVhy? Soph.- Ilecause people'll think you're a darn fool if you go around with them shut. VVhat do you think of Scott's 'Ivanhoe ?' I like his Emulsion hetterf' - V, QW ,YQTH ,f X if .H -311 0 f' 5 Grey 61 I wing It 1i..Qwi..MiiiQe22l6a W EQ N Miss ll.- Descril'ie the Knight in Chauncer's Prologue. .Xrlineghl-Ie loved chivalry. Miss B.- I-Iow was he dressed? Arline- I-le had on his regular lklnight clothes. QHIERITS UNE FOR FRENCH STUDENTSI Miss A.-- XVhat does 'rien' mean ? Stanley-It means nothing to me. Miss A.- Correct Ruth Z.- Yesterday you laughed your head off when Mr. Moose told a joke. and today you didn't even grin. Mildred E.- VVell. I got my report card yesterday and found he hadn't raised my grade. E. NV. B.- I fell off a twenty foot ladder today. S. O. M.- You might easily have broken your neck. E. XV. B.- No, I was just on the second rung. RUDE VfXLENTINE, who took the role of the third horseman in the Rex Inhad supper-spectacle, The Four Horses VVith Apoplexyf' is resting at Goat Island before tak- ing up the Filmizing of a new thirteen reeler The Shriekf' adapted from the book, Little NVomen. hy Loose Awquit. He will take the part of Musta Been Woozie. the great Shriek. Others in the cast include Sarah Desert and the Ku Klux Klan. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE EMIS EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE X W WW W fa 5427! Qmfxi' - 0 zzz Z! 2,-.ff Q l ll Ln! ui:l:n-- Y :bl cm Y cm u g C TZ rn S O n G n 3 G T Q y lilkiipsn --u --nzm un an au l cm an ' ll ua Kg, IE IXCIDILX l OX :X CABUII, TRIP He held his tace against her face A She seemed too peeyed to speakg lil H r t . lfbtkblour' I f d But finally she hlurted out: EI arry riec o iss me. re use . HY-Oung man' I like your Cheeky, lil 2nd Hour. E Harry again tried to kiss me. I again refused. lil 3rd Hour. El Harry says if I don't let him kiss me he'1l tip over the canoe. El Fanner- I'm going to church. El S V h ljtlni HOIFY' b h Dad- For Heaven's sake. IE axed t e canoe, t e unc and ot occupants. Fanner-i.YeSSir.U E' , E E E Edie-'f,1i Marjorie one Of your frlelddslw ?,, How did the cook strain her voice P El Ceelle- Yes- What has She been Saymg about me- Banding out the grocery boy through the screen door. E E , E IE said Mart. as he left the syncopatic arena, have --I feel as hard as nails, s eppec on someo ie nes girs in is own. . ' El t l fd l t I th t The drunken husband said. EI And so his little wifey lil Hit the nail upon the head. E E El qal.i lfJid you get that outline? El LO-KP es' the halrdest pffrt' He11's belies, said the preacher as he gazed on the E-I Cal- VVhat part is that? Chorus girls E-I Bo- Oh, I found someone who has Finished it, now, all ' I have to do is write it out. E E lil I held a hand last night. so dainty and so neat lil Soph.- I-low do you like your algebra teacher? I thought my heart should burst, so loudly did it beat. E Fresh,- Cant give him a thing. I pressed that hand against my breast, my blood began to lil Soph.- I couldn't either till I started to copy my prob- sing. E' lems- I laid it on the table, Four Aces and a King. E E E EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE 5 25, ,, av , 1 . ANZ! N M W N xgziffx -ff, I W H1 1 EJVJ X I cm AQX5 C T Z m 3 O n G n 3 G T Q y t.Ggi2g'ii.1i.ili guwlil'l11l'Mi1'ill.i.iiL'l'1ll:il il1iili131ii iIflU llllilliililiiwigilg'llgllliilllllllillllllWfa'Ef,J0 cm cm -'-- can un cn: u - - WD U' N-f ,H SAVE THE SURF.-XCE .XND YUL' S.-XYE ALL Miss Hawk- IYhat are the Russian Steppeslu Hilda Bechtel- That's when you stop and drag the other A Tragedy In Three Acts. foot UI' father 5l0WlY'u Act 1. Evening. Girl's Boudoir. Pretty girl using lip stick pro- fusely. Actl IJ ' l'klJi'-llgl S'l l l I Q Night. XYentz Hall. Pretty girl and foothall hero. Frat. men?-v U Mm Um lim 151 two mlm out me ,ext dance. Sure. they turned me out my first year. Act 3 ' ' Morning. Hospital. Foothnll hero patient. I'ainter's colic. Soher- l'x'e come to hail you ont. SUZIIQAIIII jaily- You dnn't-hic-need to hail me-hic-out. I'1n not full. Said the GOLIIHSII to the Galosh: How my envy for you rankles! XYhile I warm a 1nan's exterior You warm the girl's ankles. Said the Galosh tu the iioulash: I ani useful though l'1n crudeg But I wish that I were you, old dear- You're always getting stewecl Have you an opening for a bright. energetic high school Graduate P Yes. and don't slam it on your way out. Husband, said Mrs. Blackstone. suspiciously. Yes, my dear? VVho is this Violet Ray you are always talking about? A TXYO-Ll N li JOKE Her line. His line. Miss Bowman- No one ever heard ofa sentence without a predicate. Bright Soph- I have. Miss B- VVhat is it? Bright Qne-- Thirty days. She wrote to him and said. Dear Tom- XVon't you invite me to the Prom? If you're too hashful. I've got Jack. Fine! Bring it all. dear, he wrote hack. EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE gy: X EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEQ
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