Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA)

 - Class of 1923

Page 23 of 54

 

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 23 of 54
Page 23 of 54



Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

WHO’S WHO NaniR Nick Name Pastime Appearance Amhition Favorite Fx[ reHsiuii = 3 T3 O O “li a o M .S o V G b£) d •S s C 3 (V rez ' §5 b ) M ' G O H O OO! CO 5 S j- . a; i 0) o Ic t- s ® oO r- o o o OO r s : G 0 Wl 3 G - 3 •|S cS C 2 G CO y O m o G G2 0) CO G G G CG ft W) O O H E- O) b G rH O y O G S oj g (73 H O bJO OJ O o o o E- H H S -M G y G bJO O O rH S.g o C 02 S b: o ‘ G D o G G +J w x G tj W) lll-S G O I J:: ' G2 O G G y G G O) G O G CO G G ?r S S aiD ' G 2 G 2 (u bC(D r. a o o o o E- H o o CO G y S5 8S G G (V G B g 8 G G S ! G (U G G O O ' G G O) C CO G W)G 2 G CC O O C E- H y y X y G G G y G 42 y « G T -’ tJ y G O a G « m G .2 CO - - , G G ,73 Cu J?: 72 G CO y y rj .2 -G y y G N y G O ' y y be y y G 4-( y G G G y CO ? i ft a O) ' ' S-cB G y G ■o X y G y o G «G ' B y be G G G be G G o G y G G G G X. G y G G G a G G ' g G O O 15 O i5 72 y cu ce! o M o O m m 15 pq 15 X G G G y -G X OL G G ft W) .2 m -G ° G S C .G oo ' G CO C O be G .S 5 y ' g G -G O ft CO O 1 o b i y G G g’S- ' S-G •I 8-S CO CO S o O, G CO O g -G G T G O - B W) be-r G -S -S -G a:z: G G O 0 G o C 2 H PQ y 42 CO O G G ft’ P i CO G CO y be be G C be G be G S ' S 0 bi) CO N y 2 o S G y y G u o H 72 O y y G G G m H y . 1 :; c .t: - 1 J. o v. y S o co G j. G C y y G G 8 ' y y 2 y Eo G y - be 43 ' O w X y » G g .73 y •G O o rH CT 3 G o o “ a O G ■pq I ' l y G y pq pq K P O 55 pq W 15 O pqQ P-, o pq pq CO .2 o o O ' O G ill y G G O c £3 G y -o G dS G X G B B G y ' 2 2 ' - ' y y , y P5 G a G G CO y c G G CO et-i 5 O O G Q o Q o o G 55 G O 55 55 G Ph O G CLh PP 2 C PP a 72 G Gh qc oi pj’ cd 15 G X X i5 55 i XXXX d OPd 55 G d i5 PQ G w j:p 17 ,. Witham “Rose” Mischief Demure To be dignified “Let’s raise the dickens!

Page 22 text:

hour made the first Trans-Atlantic flight under Lieutenant Com. A. C. Read of the U. S. N., people were astonished. It seemed impossible that such a thing could have been clone. Then when the Italian triplane was brought before the public, they were duo for another surprise. Italy still has the lead in airplane building. Caproni, the greatest of all airplane builders, not being satisfied with the success of the triplane, built one of the triple tandem type; that is with two sets of wings, three decks in a set, which carried some forty passengers, but the latest in his line is the new novi- plane which is now under construction. This immense craft will be 72 feet long and will have the carrying capacity of a hundred passengers. The motive power will be supplied by eight Liberty motors having a total of 3200 horse power. The motors will be arranged in two groups, one on the front planes and the other on the rear; each group will consist of 3 tractor motors and one pusher motor. Now, comes the last word in development; the plane will be navigated in the same manner as an ocean liner, the pilot controlling from the “bow”. It will be steered either from an enclosed cabin or from an ex- posed “bridge”. In fact it will be the Leviathan of the air. Caproni intends to cross the Atlantic in thirty-six hours with this new type of machine. How can we doubt the success of this plan? He has already established regular passenger routes in Italy. His planes have carried as many as forty passen- gers before. Barring accidents, we shall no doubt be visited by the mons- trous air craft in the near future. We have all seen skiing parties en- joying themselves flying down the larg- est hills in this town at breakneck speed. Perhaps we have wondered at the skill of the skiers. What should we think if we should see motorless airplanes glide from these same hills into the air soar- ing like the birds; hundreds of feet above our heads? Yet in Germany and France the people have witnessed this very thing. Gliders, as this type of plane is called, have become a fact. Men have learned to build planes that will be propelled only by the natural elem.ents. Hun- dreds of these planes have been tried. Some obtained the height of a thousand feet, more reach five hundred feet, some only a few hundred feet; all, however, succeeded in gliding. This new branch of aeronautics has been termed a “new sport”. It is a sport in every sense of the word. It is a battle of skill, ex- perience, and nerve against the elements of the air. We have noted the great development in aeronautics in the past 140 years. Things that before were thought hardly more than a dream have been ac- complished. And as yet we have not touched the real importance of science. We seem on the verge of greater things. Let us hope therefore, that the United States will be foremost in the field of aeronautics in the future. James Burke. Woman’s Invasion Into Politics A century ago woman was considered to be quite inferior to man. The bare suggestion that she go into politics or even be allowed the privilege of voting would have raised anger, contempt, or at least amusement from husband, father, or brother ; anger that she should want to interfere in men’s af- fairs; contempt and amusement that she should think she had brains enough to play the political game. Gradually, however, woman began to 20



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THE DEVELOPMENT OF AERO- NAUTICS. With the swift passage of time, new inventions and new sciences unfailingly creep into our lives, some perhaps un- seen and unnoticed for a time but grad- ually the best and truest fight their way to the front. Among the foremost of our new sciences is that of aeronautics. It was in the middle of the eighteenth century that men began to experiment with the science of fight in the air. Perhaps be- cause of their close observation of na- tural life it was first proposed that wings be strapped to the flyer. This idea soon proved itself impracticable, for it was found that man was not powerful enough to propel himself through space. We are all familiar with the legendary failure of Darius Green. Then, probably through the results gained by the experiments of Henry Cavendish in 1776, proving hydrogen gas seven times lighter than air : and of Tiberius Cavallo in using this new gas to raise soap bubbles, Joseph and Stephen Montgolfier, managers of the paper works at Annonay, France, utiliz- ing the theory of the suspension of the clouds and the ascent of smoke, suc- ceeded in raising a balloon filled with rarefied air, generated by the burning of moist straw, wool, and rags below the mouth of the gas container. This feat set Paris in an uproar and the Mont- golfiers were allowed to demonstrate the capability of their invention before the King of France in court at Ver- sailles, in September, 1783. Strangely enough the brothers did not have the confidence in their invention to make the ascent themselves but sent up sheep and ducks in the carriage of the balloon. Soon after this ascension Professor J. A. Charles, a teacher of National Philosophy in Paris, rose from Champs de Mars in a hydrogen gas balloon at a rate of 3,000 feet in two minutes and fell in three quarters of a hour some fifteen miles from Paris. There is a somewhat interesting story connected with the journey of Professor Charles’s balloon. Of course it was sent up with- out a human occupant; so when the craft landed in the field of a peasant, immediately the whole neighborhood was aroused and flocked to see this strange monster of another world, as they thought. They did not quite dare a ' proach the thing, however, and for some hours stood at a distance to ob- serve it. Then one of the men, a little bolder than the rest, crept up to the bal- loon and fired at the gas bag with his shot gun. The bag began to collapse and the crowd rushed at it with their pitchforks and scythes. The remains of the balloon were tied to a horse and dragged over the surrounding country. After that experience the King issued an order to prevent such a thing’s hap- rening again and had the nature of the strange craft explained to the people. These balloons of the Montgolfiers and Charles represent two principles of elevating power: one, the rarefication of common air by heat; and the other, the use of a gas lighter than air which would be almost continously buoyant. The fire balloons of the Montgolfiers gave way to the gas type in time and coal gas was introduced for although its bouyancy was not as great as hy- drogen yet it was far cheaper to gener- ate. An attempt to combine these two types in order to obtain the power of in- creasing or diminishing the weight of the apparatus at will without unusual expenditure of gas was made by Pilatre de Rosier. On June 15, 1785, he at-

Suggestions in the Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) collection:

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926


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