Richmond Hill High School - Archway / Dome Yearbook (Richmond Hill, NY)
- Class of 1925
Page 1 of 60
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 60 of the 1925 volume:
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june, 1925 l , THE DOME OPEN ALL SUMMER Those Who Come to BROWN E'S EESSFEESE BRGOKLYN from Greenport, Sayville, Baldwin, Rockaway, Freeport, Lynbroolq, Patchogue, Rockville Center, Farmingdale, and many other Long Island towns are wise enough to get a GOOD EDUCATION while they are getting one. A They have a great school to hack them when they want a position, They, of course, get SPECIAL STUDENT RATES on the L. I. on NO BRANCH IN JAMAICA GPEN ALL SUMMER I Telephone Richmond Pfill 0326 fi Q . . A A ,IVIEINERT 6: RIEIVISTADT V Confectionery and Ice Cream y H Richmond Hill, N. Y. I YYYYYYN WW, , A W ,mlm THE DOME Pag 1 A WORD TO THE WISE IS SUF F ICIENT ! Buy Your Snappy Summer Apparel at ALF REDS Aft ,, is Sport Suits, Grey and White Flannel Trousers Priced Very Moderately Alfrrifn Qllnthvn Svhnp I I3-I 5 JAMAICA AVENUE, OPPOSITE GARDEN TI-IEATRE Telephone Richmond I-Iill 5194 Please Mention THE DOMEH when Patromzing Our Advertise Page .2 C i C D THE DoME If QUALITY counts-if PRICE is a factor-and if COURTESY is desirable A you have three strong reasons for trading with us for our three watchwords are The Best Goods - The Right Price - The Square Deal The GARDE Richmond Hills Best and Foremost Store HOMEIVIADE CANDIES FRESH EVERY DAY We carry the Finest Advertised Brands of CHUCOLATES, BON'BONS and HARD CANDIES Our Home-lVlade Candies Cannot Be Beat We Use Only the Purest lngredients in Making Our Candies If you have yearned for lee Cream cle luxe-something richer, more sub' stantial, far beyond all former satisfactifins-here it is in the GARDEN CONFECTIONERY It fulfills your desire, it brings with every hite a fresh realization of ice cream supreme COME QNE - COME ALL I I 3-I 0 jamaica Avenue, next to Carden Theatre Richmond Hill, N. Y. ,i ' - Please Mention MTHE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers THE DoME 'T YES! WE PRINTED THIS BGOKI Complete Service Under One Roof Linotype Body Matter Composition Linotype Display Composition I7 ine I-Iand Composition Fine Cylinder Press Work --- I'IaIftone and Pour-Color Process Automatic job Press Work High Speed---I..oW Cost P ine Quality Precision Book and Pamphlet Binding Machine Folding Lowers Cost fprinting Jobs don't come too intricate or too big for JQSEPI-I HOLMES PRINTER I I5-I0 jamaica Avenue, Richmond I-Iill, N. Y Telephone Richmond I'IiII I266 Please Mention TH DOME when Patrom'zi'rzg Our Adve 1 Pg - Page 4 THE DQME BRQWNES ' BUSINESS SCI-IGOL I JAMAICA JAMAICA AVENUE, CORNER 150th STREET I I New Classes in All Subjects forming Now I JAMAICA I A DISTANCE NO BARRIER, FLOWERS BY WIRE EVERYWHERE 64, Q MEMBER Fa.omsT's TELEGRAPH DELIVERY I I Please Mumim1 TIN DUMP, when Pam ,mg Om' Aclvcv'tiseYs THE DOME Higgs Class, Fraternity, Club, and Society Pins ffff Rings and Keys ffff Medals Prize and Loving Cups ffff Plaques, Trophies, etc. DIEGES 8: CLUST , MANUFACTURING SPECIALTY JEWELERS WE INVITE CORRESPONDENCE PERTAINING TO SPECIAL ORDER WORK 15' JOHN STREET NEW YORK Please Mention THE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers Page 6 THE DOME BROOKLYN LAW SCHOOL announces that COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Through the Extension Department Will Offer Collegiate Courses at BROOKLYN LAW SCHOOL Eagle Biiilcling, 305 Washington Street, Brooklyn Enrollment Limited Successful completion of these courses will satisfy the collegiate prefrequisite for ad' l mission to the Brooklyn Law School in September, 1926. 1 I Applicants for admission to these courses should file certificates of previous scholastic work as soon as records are available. Application and records blanks may be se' cured at the Columbia University Extension Otiice, Brooklyn Eagle Building. The Brooklyn Law School accepts all students who successfully complete the courses oiliered by Columbia University. Registration begins Wedncsdziy, September 16th, 1925. Classes begin Thursday, September 24th, l9Z5. I All inquiries should be addressed to COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY EXTENSION 305 Washington Street, Brooklyn GIRLS' CENTRAL SCHOOLS Open All Summer l l SECRETARIAL SCHOOL l , 32nd 'Year . I fl I THE SUMMER SCHOOL l OPEN JULY 6 l CmfWeelqs' Courses, Special I , p Rates l l DRESSMAKING l MILLINERY HOME NURSING FRENCH FLOWER MAKING COSTUME DESIGN ELOCUTION FRENCH CONVERSATION TYPEWRITING. SPECIAL SUMMER COURSE l TRADE COURSES OPEN , TRADE MILLINERY . BEAUTY CULTURE l , Ask for Summer School l Folder FALL COURSES Secretarial School f3'Zd Yr., opens Sept. lfZf7fl5 Trade Classes open Sept. 28. Dressmalging, Millinery. Rcgiste1'Early. Classes Limited. -if 1 Trained Attendance School English, Literature 1 ' h lState Certificate! 1 cnc I'rae1 ical Nursingr Spanish Home Nursing Italian History, Unile1lStatcs History, Modern Social Usaires I' ' ' l't Beauty Culture School tlllth Yearl Tea Rnnm Management Professional Candy Making usona 1 y tlridor Course! Every-day Speaking Voice Cestume Design Psychology Personal Finance Every-day Law for Women Practical Politics Par iamentary Conduct f M t' s Poster Advertising French Flower Mzxkinyr Interior Decoration Dressmaking, Home Millinery tllomel o ee ing C k Social Hygiene Real Estate Voice Violin Piano oo ery Practical Advertising English, Elementary English, Intermediate English. Pace and Pace English for New Americans Organ English, Business Dramatics DAY AND EVENING CLASSES These courses beginning about October first are open to all girls ancl women. Check any course about which you wish special information and mail to . DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION 376 Sehermerhorn St., Brooklyn f'l'wo Blocks from Nevins and Atlaniie Subway Stations anal L. I, R. R. StaLionl Please Mention HTHE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers 'EI-IEEDOME Ei I E I E do PQQQ Tel. Richmond Hill 4059-W I y MISS DUNBEAITS A SECRETARIAL WINIFRED R. DANN 4 SCHOOL I Intensive Business 'Training for I Teacher of music in I High School Graduates Richmond Hill High School I I INDIVIDUAL ADVANCEMEINIT I9I 9 - I925 Superior Positions Pupil of Secured HENRY I-EVE-Y IPiH110J Every 1924 Graduate R. HUNTINGTON WOODMAN qofgany WCM Placed PRIVATE INSTRUCTION I Catalogue on Request IN PIANO AND ORGAN I I 86-190 -Ioralemon Street 8552 I l2th Street Brooklyn, N- Y- Rlchmond HM' N' Y' Af Bm Hall fm. Triangle 7420 Telephone Richmond Hill 10358 I ' FASHION SHOE SHOPS High Grade Shoes , 901 I jamaica Avenue Near 91st Street Woodhaven, N. , , Y. ,- f I7 SPECIAL SALE i A 4 During graduation month on Bicyles TITCS and Accessories I 0 EWUBWM I in Buy in a real bicycle store where you can be taken care of We sell Blaclc Beauty Emblems, Columbia ancl several other makes. Old hizurrlef fuken -ll 1 trmle. HOWERFORD SALES CO. I06-I 2 Jamaica Ave., nr. I07th St. Formerly 916 Broadway, Brooklyn Please Mention HTHE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers han: Nemtnn Zffailnr Ghz Hirst Zfather uf flbnr Srlynul Burn Zliehruarg Sth, 1351 Hrinripal nf Zllirhmunh Hill High Sfrlpnnl frnm 1558 in 1517 Bivil April 151, 1525 1101 101 1 1 iuiuinuui iuiuiuiuioi 1 1 8 TI-IE DOME Jane, 1925 ON THE CITY WALL By DEM1TAssE HE outermost wall of the city of Noone stands silveregrey in the moon' 1 --.. light. All that can be seen is a straight sweep of wall and a purple velvet sky, flecked here and there with a tremf bling star. To the East, that is, straight beyond the wall, over the desert, faintly looming shadows of a deeper purple betray the Eastern mountains sprawling along the opposite edge of the desert, hundreds of miles from Noone. The deep night silence is suddenly broken by a brazen gong in the Northernmost temple, dedicated to Sbotoe, and a voice inf tones: Voice: It is the Hfth hour of the night. It is the iifth hour and Noone stands yet on the edge of the desert. 1A chorus of priests from temples all over the city rises in faintly heard murmurs as they bow before the grimacing stone gods over the altars. The priests in the nearby temples are chanting more distinctlyj Priests: O, ye gods of the city of Noone, Yaguth and the little Kitsan and Zeelig Moorst, Shotoe of the jadefcarved eyes and the sleepy Elmuth Noy, hear Thy priests and grant their prayers, oh most mighty and puissant Ones. , , Withhold Thy doom from Noone, or if it strain at the leash, toss it the crumbs of other cities of unbelievers. But let the golden Noone stand in her might, for yet a little while. Stay Thy hands, oh ye heavf enly Ones, who stride over azure oceans with a step and lean from Thy jade thrones this little while to bless us. We pray Thee, keep that Fate growling hut a little longer ahout Thy garment heins. Let only the ravenous years devour our city. We ask all this, we so much smaller ones, and pour out offerings for prayers already granted and we burn spices to the granting of our prayers tonight. f'I'he priests fall silent and nothing is heard but a faint crunching, the sound of I .I it the sentinels as they pace the walls. Now and then a tiny clink tells that some .soldier has set his spear and shield on the ground and is now leaning on them and looking, perhaps over the desert, perhaps over his city. Suddenly Montrore, a sentinel, enters from the right. At the same moment, the captain, Gort, enters from the left. Both men are clad in short pale fawn-colored tunicsg Montrorels bordered with browng the captain's with purple. 'Their knees and legs are bare and they wear high-laced sandals. Both carry tall spears and oval bronze shields. On their heads are closeffltting casques of bronze and from the leathern girdle about each waist, there hangs a curved silver-hilted sword. Seeing Montrore, Gort inclines his head slightly and continues a slow heavy march to the center. There thc two meet, stop, and greet each otheizj Gort: Ah, Montrore, it is heavy and hot tonight. Ivlontrores Ay, hot and heavy, yet the sky looks cool. fHe gazes raptly at the purf ple heavensj I should like to sleep once on a small soft cloud under a royal purple canopy. Surely there dreams would be beautiful. Gort fdisapprovinglyj: Hush thee, Montrore, only the gods and their Chosen Ones may sleep there. Montrore: It is a wearisome task, to patrol these walls for a hidden danger that mav not be known. Gort: Thou art new to the work. Nay, I find it very pleasant to Watch the dawn slipping shyly up over the purple mountains in the East. Montrore: Ay, the dawn is a marvelous sight, but a friend to converse with, to dis' cuss the dawn with, 'tis even hetterf' Gort: I do not say that there is not some truth in thy words. But the city must he guarded. Montrore: Yes, the city must he guard' ed, fHe pauses thoughtfully, staring over the city. Suddenly he turns to Gort and asks in a strangely intense, yet puzzled mannerj But why must the city he guard' ed? Why is a city so great a thing? If Page 10 riisinoivis people refused to come to Noone and the camel tracks were covered with desert-dust and the roads from the inner lands were overgrown with weedsg if the dwellers stole away one by one till naught was left but the hollow marble shell and no soul to the city at all, why, then it would be no matter what her doom. Gort ftugging at his grizzled beardj: Of a truth, Montrore, thy words puzzle me. But thou art very young and thou canst not understand how grievious a thing is an abandoned city. Montrore: But if the city has been for, ages doomed to a secret and terrible doom, what matter if she be deserted? Are not the people the city? ' Gort: Ah, no! Wouldst thou willingly leave the little green and golden garden by thy father's home to be despoiled by Time and the Winds? Thinkest thou the King would leave his jasper palace, ceiled with gold and lapisflazuli, or the jade and crystal grottoes by the sapphire lake? Thinkest thou the priests would abandon their great gods of chalcedony and rose quartz and emerald, or even the little onyx god, Kitsan, who sits by Yaguth's left foot and stares all day at the purple mountains? , Ivlontrore fthoughtfullyj: No, there is wisdom in your words. And yet-methinks -if they had only courage to tear up the old things, journey to the West, or even over the desert to the purple mountains and there build a new and undoomed city-why then- 4 Gott fsnorting at his arguments, : Why then, if the people make the city it is doomed yet. I tell thee, Montrore, no matter who may come to live within the city walls, all, all, are doomed with Noone. Montrore: Well, 'tis a right awesome thought. Gort fronclusivelyj :HA terrible thought. Montrore flocking over the city before lzimj : They know and yet they leave not. Gort: They know and they dare not leave. fSilence for some time until Montrore speaks., Montrore: It must be a fearful thing to wear the golden diadem of Noone, turquoise encrusted though it be, and believe that your poor city ..... tHe sighsj Gort: I would not sit on Agonidan's throne, if the great ivory idol, Elmuth Noy, should step down himself from his carved ebony dais and lead me to the chair of state. Montrore: It is a terrible thing to believe your city is doomed unalterablyf' Gort: It were not so awful were the pro- phecy a new one, made by some enthusiastic devotee. But to know that for ages, your city has been fated to an unspeakable secret doom, and to wait and wait for the doom to fall, with the knowledge growing stronger year by year ..... fWords fail the sturdy captainj Montrore: The belief. Gort furmoticingj: Nay, I would not be Agonidan. He grows daily paler and leaner and the silver and amethyst arm' bands jangle loosely when he tries to smooth his fretted brow. Even he is certain that the doom is soon to fall. Montrore: And yet he will not leave his city. Gort: If I were king, I should not abanf don my city. There is something that binds men to their cities. Montrore: It is useless to rail against the gods and yet .... Gort: There is no yet. The gods are harsh and cruel if aught offend them. And who can tell what was the crime of that far off first king of Noone for whose sake the prophecy of doom has been handed down since time almost legendary? Montrore: The gods are hard, it is true, but sometimes in the dawn hours, they are exceedingly gentle. Perhaps they regret the doom foretold and heap these joys and riches upon Noone in sorrow, and as a little compensation for the fate to come. All the beauty that is hers! Surely, if the gods hated Noone, they had not tinted the slender spires with the caressing opal dawnflight, nor sent the faintly perfumed breezes whisf pering over the gardens. They had rather deprived her of the flowers and the blue sky and the rosefflamed sunsets and the little playful winds of early morning and sent instead, a copper sun in a pall of grey and black starless nights and heavy breezeless mornings. But there is so much beauty sent to Noone. Gort: The gods are not for us to underf stand. Montrore: I often wonder what the gods have meant. I cannot fathom them and their words. Their ways are not the ways of mortals and their paths seem all bound up in inconsistencies. They are pe' culiar rulers, the gods. We pray to them daily and burn spices and bowls of dried flower petals before them and they send us pleasant breezes. Yet if one little man do BASEBALL Ptxgu If init' littlu .1ut llllll is lll1l5lL'.lSll1Q m tliuir Cyvs, tlicii' pi'11pl1t'ts sity liis city is tl1111111c1.l ltiirvur. limit: l'1111tlvr i111t 11111 lcmg 1111 tlic giitls, lVl11i1tr11i'u. Tliiiila til tlic ii11pu11tl1i1g tltnim. ll' imc lxiisxx' ltt tltt' l1t1t11' wlicii it wutiltl l.1ll lY.11'i111u, tliu liigli pricst, wliwm .1ll tlic vitv l1t'licx'cs, l1.1tl1 tlt'Ql.1i'tml tl1.1t tlitf lk'UI'y gwtl, ljlmtitli Niwy, xx'l1ispci'utl tu liim mint' .1l txviliglit tl1.1t tliu giitls .trr .1'wc.1ry ul Niitmu .mtl ltAtX'L' .1l1'u.1tly suiit lm' .1 litilt' urtisliiiig lwtii' tu lwriiig tl1t1 tliwiim 111 its tlxtwsfl lVl11i1ti'11i'cg And yvt tlit-ru is ll yuiiiig privst wl111 Q.1t'i'ivs tl1t' grtxtt c.1t'vt'tl latiwl ul' .1pplt'fgi't't'i1 'l.lklL' tl1.1t is yc.1i'ly lzim, l11ll tim tl11' lwrim lvl' tlit' smiwltiiig lwltititl ul' sg1ci'ilit'ct1 kitls, lwl'11i'Q tlit' Slltilll .1g.1tt' litlftll gml, lvliii Ltittvl. .mtl liis pi'i1pl1t'cy is tl1.1t tlic tl1111m tlllt lk' LlVCl'lLNLl. limit: Hu is 11111 .1 little inxttlf' Mc1i1ti'11i't': l ll2lVU l1L'Lll'Ll stixtngu sti1'1'ii1g wiwrtls wil liis. Ht' statiitls 1111 tlic stups ul tl11- temple tu Zuulig Mtumrst, i1t'.11' tlic wpcii ctwriici' til tht- m.11'lwt plxtcc .mtl c.1lls 1111 mcii tu lvviilxc tltc tluiim ul' gmls, saying tli.1t tlicy tliuiiisvlvus wliii l1.1vc willctl idols, C4111 .1ls11 will 2lQAllllSl ltltrls. lt is l1is lwllcl' llllll THE DOME mcii, l1llV1llQ t'i't'.1tutl tlit' gittls. mzty .1ls11 tlvs' truy tl1t'111.u Unit l1111'.x'l11't'.x.w1l1l5' xlitwlqutljz l3l.1s' plicmyl Ht-tml limi iwt, lNfll1l1ll'l!I'C1 lic is iiisamcl Ht' ltllh siiiiitxl .1g.1ii1st tlir gcitls. Zcclig Mtiimrst will sciitl Ll l1.1litflQss .ixv llQQlll1S-l liim tl1.1t it llldy smitt' liim tlt'.1tl lwy tlic Cll1'llCll.lll tl1111i'lw11st llll tlw tciiwplclu IVl11i1ti'11i't': NHL' s.1ys, .mtl l .IIN nut llltllll to lwliuvu, tl1.1l gmls' wills .tru mattlv lwy INUIIQS willing. mlllllll ws tliiiila tlic gulls will, tl111t tl1t'y sl1.1ll will, lwc.1t1s1' we lwlifvu lllL' tlfctl llllll lwiiigfi Unit: lt is vcry wiilitisiiig .mtl l1t'y11i1tl Ll tliitilvt liitlsti T1-ll mc 1111 11111112 I t'.1i't' 11111 lin' tlit' cvil piztttlc ul .1 gill m.1tltlt111ctI ii11lwt'ilc, Hu ll.lS llllL'l1xlL'kl tl1r gods .mtl tliis is liis INLlltlSlllNCltl. ll'1'1'l1.1ps sonic limi' lm l1.1s l.lll1 sciisvlvss .1t tlic luut ul' Mitt Litttwl, Lll'lll1liCI1 witli tliu lit1i1t'y1tl1icl4c11ctl wmv tl1.1t tlic mcii til' llimttitwsli lwring yL'.1I'ly t11 tlic city lriim tl1t'11' grcvii .mtl purple viiicyurtls in tliu ll1IlL'l'lAlIlklS ul tht' west' .1s Il tl1.1i1l4 ullicriiig tit tl1.1t tlivmity. N11 m41ttt'1', lic is ll liiwiulf' lVl11i1t1'1m1't': Hu satys tl1.1t mcii l1.1x'v lwruuglit tlit' tltium tl1.1t 11x'c1'l1.111gs Nuuiic, waiting m11mci1t.1rily to wliclm it, lwy tl1ci1' uwii lllllllilllg ul tlic gtwtls' willing. Tliv -A A THE DOME TPLQQ 13 city will stand if men will but put the doom thought from their minds and cease to brood on punishments of unseen gods. The gods we have made bring the doom be' cause through all these crowding multitudes of years men have by their belief willed the Gods to willing the doom and their accumu' lated wills have now gathered into a real doomf Gott: Say no more, Montrore, hold thy peace. That any man should speak thus of the gods! Montrore: But if he be a true pro- phet ..... Gort: Silence, Montrore! Take not man's gods from him, for how can a come mon mortal live without his gods? Montrore: Nay, I think as I have often thought, that there is truth and wisdom and deep thought in this man's speeches. Gort: There is no truth in the mouth of a madman. Moiitrorez So sayeth Carnoe, the king's high priest now. Once, however, when the mad poet, Esnoth, prophecied a terrible dis' ease that should slowly rack the bones of the nobles, for that they would not listen to his mad melodies, then did Carnoe praise him and cry aloud on the platform before Yaguth that the god had inspired Esnoth's madness and in madness lay truth. And Carnoe prophecied fearful tortures that he should save them from, for only a little tithe to the gods. Only a little! A price' less sapphire armlet from this princeg a bowl of clear carved crystal from that oneg a blue and yellow enameled chest from the Lord of Aetilosg from the Duke of Celimais, a golden goblet with a diamond studded band around the rim. , That was all for the gods, of course. All to propitiate Yaguth and the little onyx god, Kitsan, and his agate hind, Sarnti Nolt of the angry eyes. Nay, Carnoe knoweth who drinks the wine of Gootoosh from the sacred diamond decorated cup, who eats candied violet and rose petal from the crysf tal bowl. Gort fshoclqed and frightened by this disrespect for age and ranlqj: Montrore, thou art mad, even as Esno-even as this new priest is mad. I knew thy father in his youth and he was ever falling a-dream with strange wild fancies. And thou wast ever an aloof mannered youth whose soul went questing among strange stars, forget' ting the common haunts of men. Thy poesy has turned thy soul. Come, think nomore of this mad priest, Zahorta. Come, the dawn will soon peer cautiously over those dark purple eastern mountains, Even now the stars begin to pale. Let us speak no longer of strange wierd gods and of the willings of men. Let us talk of pleasant remembered things: of how the sun shone on thy mother's ebon hair, where she stood all robed in violet among the yellow daffof dils that grow near the gate, to bid you god' speed on your way to soldiery, Dost thou recall the soft wave on her left temple and the tiny tear that never quite touched her eyelash? Or if that, perchance, should sadden thee, let us remember the times when thou wert a little child with questioning eyes who sat on my knee and eagerly fingered my huntf ing knife and thirsted after tales of dragon' slaughtering. Montrore fsadly and painfullyj: Oh, my friend Gort, I cannot think of old re- membered things for the words of Zahorta. I mind me of the things he spoke and I cannot forget that I have created my gods. By night, he ofttimes comes along the city walls and, in respect of his madness, they suffer him to pass unmolested. I have hoped that he would come here some night and talk long with me and make clear to me all the heavy doubts which choke my heart. Of this one thing am I certain, that if it be true that we can will the doom away, I shall do all in my power to make men will. Gort funhappilyj: Alas, lvlontrore, that thy father's son should ever find his soul so perplexed with futile questionings! CHC rubs his hand over his forehead., Ah, the air is heavy in the hush. It is a menacing quiet. Montrore fsoberlyj: It is fraught with doom thoughts! QA. noise is heard off right and suddenly a tall dark young man enters from that di' rection. He wears a long flowing white robe and his feet and head are bare. His long black curls hang over his shoulders. Brilliant blue eyes gleam beneath heavy, beetling brows and he carries his head high, as a man with a mission. He advances to Montrore and Gort. 'It is Zahorta, the young rnad priest. Montrore cannot take his eyes from his facej ' Zahorta: The dawn comes soon, oh captain, and yet methinks the air is too heavily fraught with the doom thoughts of the people and their gods. Gort f-making a gesture of repugnancej: Oh, Zahorta, why speakest thou thus to all the people, destroying mans innerafaith - ' ef- .: J f Qi gd gi, ju JS: env?- Y 4 Q 'W ff- Q, QQ, P 4 s an a w A ,V , gf? . ,, ' y ' I. K WM 'fm .I,A X, .0 Q Y ' me A M K kf , Q , 'fit K t m,, In M ff A ...1 W ff E. 'A - I N ' ,g-ff it ff 5 4 V' ,, 1-.1 f M M I? D6 5. K iigkmfr' f . D ,A S , .gy . . , . i , X - L x K if K K M ,Ei fb 'W' 1 . 5V.' ' X 1, 5- A 3 . , . , W Y M 451 7 'M ' 'I W A '9- K +A , f 2 i i v l Q THE DOME Page 1? in his gods? See, here is Montrore, already deep in doubt, in a slough from which I cannot draw him. I pray thee, Zahorta, repent of thy sins, secret and whatever they may be, that the gods may forgive thee and restore to thee thy reason. Zahorta fgentlyj: Nay, captain, I have but recently restored myself to reason. I wish not to destroy man's inner faith. I try to teach him to build his own faith in himself. Gort falmost pityingly at the sight of so handsome a youthj: Thou art mad, mad with a madness beyond human understand' mg. i Montrore: Thou art not mad, Zahorta, or if thou art, then so am I, for I think I understand thee. Thy words have a sound as of silver and rippling fountains in my ears. Tell me more, oh priest. Whence came thy knowledge, inspired one? Zahorta: It came not but was engen- dered within me, by mine own soul, young sentinel. Montrore: My name is Montrore, pro' phetf' Zahorta: Montrore, in thine eyes I dis' cern a longing for that which thou knowest not. Montrore: Oh priest, my soul is troubled with stormy thoughts. I love my golden city, Noone, and its people and its fair green gardens. I love the palaces of onyx and chalcedonyg I love its little humble houses of oak and marble, and their dark mahogany doors. I love even the desert that laps hungrily at the far eastern edges of the high white walls. I would not have it pass away as a dream that one dreams in the night and, waking, remembers only faintly and as in a mist. Gort: Oh, they are mad ideas that he would tell thee, Montrore. Heed not his words, they cannot be true. Zahorta: Alas, Gort, I have striven hard to make thee and all like thee perceive the truth and yet ye believe not in me. fSudf denly in the dawn that has been struggling over the purple eastern mountains and now stands with upfstretched arms on the highest peak, his face glows bright and goldenj Yea: Noone shall fall and soon, and not of gods' willing but of men's fear. Oh, this I tell thee, that men shall never be free till they have thrown off the shackles of their godfwillingf' Gort: A man must believe in something. Zahorta: Then will man believe in him' self for in himself alone is there divine power and fire. When the day shall come that men believe in men and cease to worf ship idols, then the gods that slumber in their hearts shall rise and men then shall be gods and this world grown too small for them. Then shall they wander off to the far stars and the only one true godfheadf' Gort fshockedj: He is mad! He is mad! Montrore fin ecstasyj: Oh glorious inf spiration! Gort: Blasphemy! Blasphemyln Montrore: Oh, godffire, arise in my heart! Qzahorta watches them with a soft slow smile in his eyes. Suddenly faint cries are heard in the city. The three look over the city. Zahorta unhappily, and Gort and Montrore stunned., Zahorta fwhisbersj: It is vanishing in a mist and only I shall remain to keep the name of Noone from oblivion. fThe wall begins to crumble and with a terrible cry, Gort topples overj Zahorta: It is gone. fOnly a jagged bit of wall remains. Montf rore has fallen to his knees and gazes in agony at the spot where the city once was., Montrore fdullyj: It is gone like a morning mist. Zahorta fsadlyj: It was doomed of its own will. Montrore: Oh, my lovely city, where art thou now? Zahorta: Alas, they would not listen. Montrore: That little sparkle on the ground, there sinks the highest golden spire on Agonidan's jasper palace. Zahorta: They had saved themselves had they but realized. Montrore fmoaningj : My father's little green and golden garden, the daffodils and the green smilax - all gone - oh, my mother! Zahorta fkindly and sorrowful, as he lays his hand on Montrore's shoulderj: Cease thy weeping, Montrore, for there are yet others to be saved from selffwillcd doomsf' Montrore fshaking off the handj: Let them meet their fates. What matter to me who have lost the world? Zahorta: Wouldst thou have all man' kind suffer as thou? Montrore fweakening, or to speak more correctly, strengthening a littlej: L'Nay, but 'tis a fearsome thing. Oh, my father's little garden, gold sunlight and green smilax! My mother there among the daffodils! iiis DOME I MP ' W Phage 419' Zahorta: But there are other little garf dens that must not fade away. Nlontrore fstraighteningj: No, they must not fade away in green and gold. What would you? Zahorta: Come thou with me where manfwilled gods and manfwilled dooms yet threaten other golden cities. Come where heavy hearts still fear and doubt within their little gardens. Ivlontrorez This alone is left to me. Finis. PUPPY LGVE By MARJORIE SHINGLER ,lglsffr-2!!!l' Y mother and father were waxy both thorobreds. When I fn E was born there were two WI f others beside myself and 4 1 f both had been taken !'b F away by people who had tj' f come and I was the only ,I 'X X j one left. That was bee ,f cause my nose was not f ' -.- ' it sharp enough for a collie N and so I was left until Ny' x .alnslli one night my master brought home a big fat man who seemed enormous to me and being afraid of his stepping on me, I cried out. That drew his attention to me. My master and he spoke for quite some time and then 1 heard the fat man laugh and say, Well, I'lI take him if you will tell me where I can keep him in my bachelor abode. There was more talking, then some laughing, and then the fat man took me up in his arms out into the street and into a car. W'hen we stopped I was taken out of the car and into a house where there were two other men almost as fat as he. I was given some warm milk and shut into a room and was not taken out until next morning when I was given some more milk and then left alone. I'll never forget that day-it was full of terrors. I could hear a constant lapping of water and when I Hn' ally got onto a couch and then after a sucf cession of bumps got to a window sill and when I looked out I found that the house was not a house at all but a sort of boat not wholly in the water but the water was on one side of it. QI afterwards found out that it was a houseboatj That night the men came home again and later on a girl came with her motheri They fondled me and the girl kept me on her lap the whole time she was there and when she left the fat man who had brought me handed her a key and then she and the lady went away. The next day I was left alone till about ten o'clock when that girl who had been here came again and this time when she went away she took me with her. Pretty soon we came to a small house not on the water but near it and when the girl came up the path leading to the house two great big dogs came bounding down the path to meet her and she called them Stubby and Tyke and made quite a fuss over them. I cowered behind her legs scared stiff be' cause the only big dogs I had ever known were my mother and father. In a few days though I got to know the people in that house pretty well. Besides the girl and the two dogs there were a boy and that lady that I had seen that first day. There was always a crowd of young people there, be- sides. The dogs were Airedales, Stubhy and Tyke. I soon loved Stubby and my mistress whose name was Jean, but Tyke was differ' ent. From the first day he saw me he left me entirely alone and whenever I came near him he would walk away. One day I heard him speaking about me to Stubby and this is what he said: Ever since that little thing has come we have to stay at home. Our mistress thinks he is too small to take out and she thinks she can't take us and leave him at home so we have to stay home and keep him company. There was lots more that he said and I gathered that I was not as welcome as I thought and that in plain words Tyke was jealous because Jean gave much of her time to me and did not play with them and take them for long walks any more. As time went on it got worse. Not that Tyke was mean or hurt me. .lust the opposite. He left me entirely alone and if I came into a room where he was he would stalk out with his nose in the air and never would come near meg why he was this way I don't know because every' body said that I was the prettiest and anyf way my tail was longer than Tyke's. His was just a cut off stub andl think that that PLIQC l S TH E DOM E I MQW' .K-.f 'r. fy sf 5. WL-1 'N,- vvff XX .4- 'xx,.,.l --fx,-..X 'a-x Vw.A. IRWIN .om . should count for something. Stubby's tail was shorter stillg that was why they called her Stubby I guess. There was going to be a picnic for the young folks. I knew because I heard them talking about it but I was not going. The big dogs were, though, and didn't Tyke lord it over me then! Uh, to think that I had to stay at home was had enough but to have Tyke constantly telling me about it was worse. Wlieii the day came I hid so they could not shut me up and then I went down to the dock and waited until the boat with jean and her friends had gone and then I came out. The boy who lived next door just then brought up his sailboat and I jumped in. There was a girl in there I had never seen before and I almost scared her out of her wits, You should have heard her scream! She screamed so loud that jean turned around in her canoe to see what was the matter and then I almost gave up hope I f Lasse:-Q - of going because she called to them to put me back on shore. The boy, recognizing me, laughed and said, Oh, donit worry about your precious pup, We'll take care of him. Vxfhat he called me I don't know and anyway it sounded pretty terrible so I growled but he must have thought it a joke because he said to Jean, Hear him telling you about it? He surely wants to come. Well, there I stayed, and it was the funnif est sensation to go over the water without going under the way Stubby and Tyke did when they went in swimming. I had often seen the boats on the water but I never thought that I should be in one. Wheii the sailboat had stopped they lifted me out and there was Stubby waiting for me. How she got there I don't know. All I was thinking of was whether or not she was waiting to wash my ears. fThat's the only thing I have against Stubbyfshe insists upon washing me. I don't see why any puppy ean't have a good time without a great big dog running after him to try to wash him., Something smelled so good. I heard somebody call out, Coiled and another say, Hot Dogs! I wondered if they were going to roast me or Tyke. I only hoped it would be Tyke, but nothing happened so I felt a little relieved. Any' way, my thoughts were interrupted hy THE DOME Page 19 Stubby who wanted to show me how to dig sand crabs, and didn't we have fun until somebody called, Who's ready for a swim? Then there was one grand rush and Stubby left me to run barking after Tyke and all the folks. I found the nicest big wooly sweater that you could imagine. I rolled in that for quite a while till finally one of the boys fthe one that the sweater belonged to, I guessj came and grabbed the sweater away from me and seemed as if he didn't like me to play at burying his sweater. Somebody called, Dinners ready! and there was such a noise. They all gathered around the fire and started to eat and what they didn't eat! I had seen the fat men eat but never like this. I heard somebody call for spoons and then somebody QI think it was Jeanj wailed, Oh, I'm sure I brought them. They must be inthe canoe. Then that redfheaded boy that I like so much called out, There is nothing in the canoe, no spoons or cups either, Jean you're a fine one! Now what will we drink coffee out of? Then everybody laughed and then they did the funniest things. They used their hand and drank out of one big pan that they passed around. They gave us so much to Cat that I could hardly walk. I was lying down when I heard Jean call us but I was too tired and too full of eats to go with them. And so through a mist I saw Jean and the boy next door go off with Stubby and Tyke. They had pails so I guess they went for water. I was just lying down and enjoying my' self when I heard a scream and shouting and down the hill out of the woods ran two boys and two girls. They rushed past me and down the beach and into one of the canoes. They were pretty far out in the water when out of the woods came four more boys and girls. They also ran past me into a canoe and started after the others. Then I forgot that I was lazy and full. I got up on my feet and barked, I was so ex' cited. The Hrst canoe was way out but the boys in the second canoe were better paddlf ers and they were just behind them and both going fast. They chased them way up the river and then the unlookedffor happened. Those in the first canoe tried to put on a last burst of speed and they bent forward and to the left too much. Over went the canoe! Nobody seemed frightened about it though and everybody was laughing and just then Tyke and Stubby came back with jean and Ted. The dogs rushed out and swam around barking. I wanted to go too, but I remembered what the water felt like last time I was in it so I just stayed on shore and watched the fun. Then Ted and some of the other boys went out in a rowboat and towed in the canoe. But they wouldn't give those who had toppled it over a towg they made them swim, and when at last they came on shore, waiting for them were those who had been chasing them and in their hands they had the two pails of water that Ted and jean had got from the well in the woods. jean was vainly trying to get the pails from them but they would not give them up and when the others came out of the water they threw the icy well water over them and chased them back into the woods while jean and Ted looked at the empty pails and at last with a sigh picked them up and walked off once more in search of more water. This time I was not too tired to go with them and so I followed the other dogs, but as soon as Tyke saw me he gave one disgusted grunt and ran off up the path into the woods. Stubby was just about to follow him when she saw me so she stayed. It seemed to me that we walked an awful long time and my legs were just get' ting tired when we came to the well. It was very deep and along side of the well was a rope. It was very old, you could see that it was rotting. Ted took this rope and tied it to the first pail and lowered and when he brought it up it was full of water. This seemed odd, so when he lowered the next one I walked over to the edge of the well and looked down and watched it slowly brought to the surface. I put my foot for' ward to touch the pail with my foot, but just then jean called out. I thought she was telling me to come right over to her so I started over to her, but I never reached her for my foot never touched the other side-it just went down with a splash into the water at the bottom of the well. I thought it was cold when I went in with jean and the other dogs into the river but this was worse, it was like ice and I went down with my head under. That was terrible! I felt as if I was dying and when I came up I started my feet going as if I was walking and that kept me up and I saw the boy tie the old rope around him and saw Jean catch hold of the end and then I saw the boy start coming down holding on to the sides and keeping his feet braced on the stones on the side of the well. I cried out but then the water came over my Page 20 THE DOME head and when I came up the boy was reaching out to grab me but his foot slipped off the slippery rock and the jerk broke the rope and I was back in the water once more but this time tightly held in the boy's arm. He held on to one of the stones which just a few minutes before had held his feet. When I saw that boy's face I couldn't help it but had to bark out loud. He looked terrible for there was no way to get up with me in his arms. Of course, if somebody could take me he could probably get up, but the water was icy cold and his face was a dead white. He called to Jean to run and get help but she would not leave him. I cried once more and out of the woods rushed Stubby frightened by my cries, and that gave jean an idea. She called Tyke with all her might and then said, as if talking to herself, Tyke's been here twice today. He ought to know the way home. When Tyke came at last she pulled off her sweater and tying it around him said, Go get them, Tyke! and to her cry I added my plea by whining. At this Tyke came running over to the edge of the well, looked down and saw me, and instead of starting off for help he sat down at the side of the well for he thought that at last he could get even. He understood that if he went for help he went for me and the whiteffaced boy. He grinned, I'm sure he did, and all the while Stubby ran around crying and barking in a distracted way. Jean was frightened and angry. She picked up a switch and hit Tyke across the flank and kept commanding him to go, but this was only adding insult to injury and jean was at last too distracted to do anything so she sat down and cried. At last the boy could hold on no longer and let go and once more we went under and when we came up the boy grabbed the nearest rock and cried out to Jean, Oh, do something, jean. I can't hold on much longer. and Tyke, frightened at seeing us go under the water stood up and barked and I gave one last plea in a very weak voice that could hardly be heard. Then some' thing happened to Tykeg he did something very odd. He lifted up his head and let out one long wail that echoed through the woods and gone from his eyes was all the jealousness and hatred and instead there burned a tender light and he was off like a shot through the woods. He ran and set the camp into a terrible muddle. They ran shouting to each other and to the panting dog with the dirty trailing sweater and with him leading finally came to the well in time to see the boy's black curly head disappear once more. The redfheaded boy went down head first with the others holding on to his feet and grabbed mc and handed me to .lean and then in a few minutes I saw them lift up the boy from the water. That night I was given hot milk and see' ing Tyke lying on the sofa I jumped up and laid my head on his tummy. A little later Stubby came and also jumped up and I fell asleep with my head on Tyke's tummy and his snout on my head while outside the boy next door laid in the hammock with jean at his side and on the porch the red' headed boy read a story about the wild west, wishing that he could go out there and rescue beautiful girls instead of half' drowned puppies and boys. Hovtense Basqum, who wrm LL trip to Frame in the recent ovatofical contest conducted by the FTdHCO'AmCTfCdH Goodwill Society. OOO . A Ship Sets Ellnrth pn1n:1o1u1 1 1 1 1 1 1o1o1u1n1o1o1o1n1o1i14:1u1o1u141n1:i1:i1 1 1 1 q Knights faring fnrth with nnennhlaznneh shielh As white as rlnnhs that hrift hg like the snmu, illnr gnu must win gnnr lanrels as gun gn Anil with them heenrate the nirgin fielh. A hraue hut nntrieh lanre gnu hnlhlg wielii Anh nn gnnr fares shines a gnlhen glnw As if gnu saw the mount where smnetinnes hlnw Zlla1ne's tirkle winhs, a happg Zllate reuealeh. All time gun knights shall striue tn rearh gnnr gualg Zflar riff ani! mistg though the mountains gleam, lin hnpefnl gnnth, haw qnirklg wnn theg seem Ein knights with rnnqn'ring fire in the snnl. Neuer through the gears that gnnng hope gielh, Knights faring fnrth with unenihlaznneil shielh. Bemitasse. - X 1 I - I Q ACERNO, JOSEPHINE. 1.70.5 All-Round Athletic Medal, ANGER. DOROTHY BLANCHE. iD. B. fl., .-1. V. If., Posture Pin. Swimming Pins: Swimming, Captain: Dvmifassr, Dot, Dib.J Dome. Treasurer, Literary Editor, Hockey, Captain: Basketball: Captain Ball: Girls' Athletic Editor: Domino, Contributing: Editor, Reporter, Proof- Cnuncil reader: Junior Dramatic Club, 90, Secretary: Players' : G. O. Speaker. I 1fflllCf.L'l'7ll'SS, lilca' zrinr, iizI.o.z'ir'ulf's both tin' lialdvr and .- ' 1 . v Ihr' b1'hnlrI1'r. AHDERS. HENRY VV. Arista: Chess: Chemistry. On fhvir 014-11. mrrits, llIOlIf'Sf mr-n fll'l' dumh. AHRENS. JOHN H. tllvd, ClLo11.J Arista: Chess: Squad: Orchestra: Glee Club. Look thou but sz:-wrt, .tml I am proof against their M1.n1it11. ALLEN, KATHRYN. tKay.l Glee Club. Treasurer' ming: Tennis. Ili' to her virtues 'vary kind: Br lo har faults a liffir Izliml, ALLISON, HELEN. fAll1l.l Basketball: Swimming: nis: Captain Ball: Chemistry Club: Book Club. 'Tis liraufy truly blvnf rrlzosz' red and white Nnlure's own s'zl'r'f'f and l'lL'll'lli'Il:g hand laid on. Trafiic Guild: Senior Dramatic Club: Christmas Play. '2fl: Glee Club: Book Club: Chemistry Club: Debating.: Club, Secre- tary: Swimming: Tennis: W'alkin1:: Rirlingr Club: Dome, Captain: Lunch Room Staff: Representative for Publica- tions at Columbia Convention, Elmira College. '1'oujnurs l 'llurlur-r'.V BACKER, LOUISE. fffollcriz, I?uttvrrup.J End Ball: Swim- ming: Walking: P. S. A. L. Pins: Chvss: Clee Club: En- ncad: Secretary to Miss Barber: Mimeo1,rraph Club: Swim' Vice-President and C. O., Speaker: Dramatic Club. Nvrvr can anything be amiss Whmz simplenvss and duty tender it. Ton- BAER, CONRAD. CC701L'nif.l Orchestra. -, I like to 1ro1'I.: but there aw' things batter. NBARKER, ELMER. Baseball. .-lIiw'rLr'v of owviljiaiiovl, is 'not Tfsf. 21 BELL, JOSEPH. lJof'J. Wirwly and 8l0Il',' Hwy sfumblc' that run too fasf. BENNETT, DANIEL. Glvv Club: Christmas Play. 'Z2: Golf 'lk-am. City Champs: Traflic Squad: Silver Mcrlal: Major RH: Domino, Captain and Floor Manayxvr. .-I frimirl in owed is a frivnfl in dffvd. BERNBAUM, SIDNEY. lSidJ. God lofvvs an 'idle' rainbow No lvss than laboring spas. BERNSTEIN, LILLIAN. lIf4'1'uir'.J Girl Reserves: Glcc Club: Captain Ball. 7'l'llll'll!l hrr mrrrry laugh shi' l?0lIIl'S, mul lvalcvs l'uor Willy from his xlwcp. BIGALL, EDMOND. fEdrli1'.l G. 0. Canilidaiv: Iniormcrii- ali- Basketball: Varsity Basvball: Cross Couniry: Scarc- lary, Tlh Term Class. . . . . . Ho, poor rhilrl, .Ind 111' uol lo lliyswlf alrhorrrll. Bl.ANlTHl ORD. RUTH, lBln11c'lu'.l l'lay1'rs' Guilrl: Dram- atic' Club: 'l'f-nnis: Swimming. ,lrr you afraid lo bloom in crimson splvnrlor Imst flonrrmla' l'lHlll' and stool your lmari army? ISIENDAS. IVIATIIILIIA. Of lzrr who is silrni, mlughl shall ln' Slllfl. l4OlI.EAll. LOUISE ANNE. Cziyviain liamll Numvrzxls Swimming: T1-nnis. Tlurr' llll!lN Ihr prouliw of 1-vlfslirll worlh. BOOIVIER, SYBII.. Art Club: VValkim:. Thr lmsums of fha' Wim' Ilfl' Ihr tombs of flwwp suwrvls. IZORNSTEIN. SOLOMON. lSol.l Civic Club: Late Session Baseball. . , . . . Oh, rarr' Thr' l'1'f1rlpif rw, if Im! brains rrfro flll I'l'. BRENNAN, THOMAS. l'I'rmr.l Varsity Football. I am not only willy nlysolf, but ilu' cause of wit in olluzr rncn. BRETHAUER. LOUIS. Cross Country: Tennis: Annex Service Club: Indoor and Outdoor Track. l lm:l5 of fool llrnrl 11ui1'l.' of miurl Such a man is hard to jimi. BRUEGGEMANN, MADDELINE. lBrur'y!li1'.l Emi Hall: Captain Ball: Basketball: VValking: P. S. A. I.. Pin: Type Award: lVIimeo5.rraph Club. llorlfl I I1l'T'L lvl your hrml I.:1:.ofw llmt your fool's uslrlrp. BURKE, MARIE. Basketball: Hockvy: Captain liall: Playors' Guild: Book Club. lfwmfty zrillmuf gram' is flu' hoof: 'u'ifh.oul thu' bull. BURKE, NORMAN. i7'ommy.l Ilramativ Club: Clicvr Leader: Annvx Glue Club, Prvsirlvnt,: Main Glm- Club. Socrelary. Thr grrulrsl fool run dsl: nlorr llmn Ihr wisrsl lllllll run ar1su'1'r. BIIRROWS, GLADYS. HiI1uldy.l llramalim- Vlulw: lllI'lNllIINf, Play '21: Swimming: Tennis: Glow- Club: Type- Axvzwd: Domino. 'l'rvasur0r: Trainim: Ss-bool, Shi' is o muiflwn fair to sw, Im'r'u'm':'.' Trust hrr :wtf SI11' is fooling Iliff. HUSICK, EDVVARIJ. Socul-r: lmluor 'l'r:u'li: lull-rc-lzzss Rasr-ball. lllvllwuylll I hvarrl ll 'ruin' cry, Slap no umrf', ' HYRNE, VVALTER. lll'ullu.l Arista: Bank: 'lll'2lllll' Squad: Conimurro and lndustry Club, Tr:-asurn-r: Chr-ss Club and Team: Inlorclass Baseball: Non-Atblutic Awarxl. Thr pofwrr of ihozlyhl, flu' magic' of Hu' mindf CAMERON, ROBERT. II2ob.l Arista: Chess Club and Tc-zun: Chemistry Club: Rook Club. Brforr' such- YlIl'l'll5 all olvjrviiorls fly. I I 22 CAPILLO, ANGELA. 1.-lngie, Cappif-.J Glee Club: Captain, Ball: Civic Club: Posture Pin. Many un'u.'inged angwls walk the earth. CLARKE, GERTRUDE. 1Grrt.J Tennis: Swimming: Basket- ball: Girl Reserves, .il lruo zrorls of art. COHEN, MEYER LEWIS. lMike.H Inter:-lass Baseball: Junior Dramatics: Junior and Senior Glee Club: Boys Glee Club. .ls he thinlrrth in his heart, so hc ix. COMFORT, HERMAN. The world knows nothing of its greatr'st mon. COZINE. GRACE. lBobs, Babbie.b Dome: Swimming: Basketball: Captain Ball: Secretary to Mr. Valentine' Service: Spanish, and Dramatic Clubs, at 5I. Looe at first sight keeps tho divorce courts bu:-ry. CRABB, DEMA. lllrznj Glee Club: Players' Guild: Tennis' Swimming: Captain. Ball. Knowledge comes but wisdom lingers. DAIBER, EDWARD. Arista, TraHic Squad. He has common sense in a most uncommon fashion. DANIELS, ARTHUR. K.-1rt.J Debating Club: Orchestra, President: Dome Staff: Dramatic Club, Secretary. The more wr study, the more we discover our ignorance. DATZ, BERTHA. 1Dutcs, Datsy, Bert.J Captain Ball: Girl Reserves: P. S. A. L. Pin: Daddy-I.ong-Legs. Not all that is said in the parlor should be heard in the hall. DEMPSEY, DANIEL. Lunch Room Staff: Junior Dramatics. Alicv, zvhcru art thou? DIAMOND, ELIZABETH. ll?1'Lty, Di1ny.l Captain, Ball: Walking: Secretary to Dr. Gaston. A raw: jewel. DICHTER, PAULINE. flliclnl Book Club, Treasurer: Civic Club: Girl Reserves: Junior Players: Swimming: Captain Ball: Blue Ribbon. A child in the house is a zoollspring of pIf'f1si4i'z'. DILLMEIER, WILLIAM. lPiclclws, Eppicj liasebnll: Annex Orchestra: Annex Glee Club, Secretary. Always resolute in most r'.4'trc'n1f's. DILTHY, GLADYS. lGlad, Gladdicj Captain Ball: Ten- nis: Hockey: Walking: Ennead: 2 Royal Awards. life wonder 'whcthvr it is hcr beauty or hor rolor s1'l1.r'nl1's that catch thc cyv. DIXSON, ROBERT. lBob.b Varsity anal Intermediate Bask- etball, and Baseball: Varsity Football: G. O., Secretary: Ice Hockey and Swimming Teams: Swimming. Manager: Domino, Circulation Manager and Sports Editor: Con- stitutional Revision Committee: Pageant 'Zi : President of Class 6 times. Nono but the brcwz' deserve the fair. DREHER, ADELE. Art Club: Glee Club: Tennis: Basket- ball: Girl Reserves. She who hath an art hath f'U!'i'yll'lll'?'t' a part. DRUCKER, HARRIET. lllarry.l Swimming: Tennis: CHI!- tain, Ball: Walking: Basketball: Girl Reserves: Players' Guild: Service. Spanish, and Dramatic Clubs at 51. Fare thve well, Pzcnthesilia! EISENHARDT, WILLIAM. tBill, Willie, Eisifnl lnierelass Baseball. How sleep tho brave .... 23 DUNN, FLORENCE. tl rllzi1'.l Captain Ball: NValking Club. Nl!llLl'iIfl is impossible lo IL wvilliny lLl'l'll'f. ENGLE, JOHN. l1wfty.l Annex Soccer: Bank: Rank Cap- tain. TI11' lLv11.1l loolrs all Tiylzl. l frmnlm' wl1f1l's ln. it! EVANS, DOROTHY. FABER, ROY. Orchestra: Dramatic Club: Glee Club. Short and sweet t?J FIDELER, LILLIAN. tI l1l.l Captain, Ball: Swimming: Riding: Glue Club. If you would 7'l'llll praisr, you must sow the sards. Gentle 'zrords afml us1'j u.l rlwfls. FINCH, RUTH. LBir1ly, l!11f11s.l End Ball: Tennis: Captain, Ball: Swimming. Bs: good, su'1'1't mairl, and lrl 11'lzo will llc 1'la111'r'. FINKELSTEIN, HAROLD. .lzlzlglvzq by thu pi1't11r1', son11'I1o1ly put ll p1'r:m1i11:nf rrimp LIL his Jaw, loo. FREI, GILBERT. Huylzozlsc' l alzl1's, No. XTIMBIIIIZSI: ffllfi' lllrrf' wus ll lilllr' lroy and lm .lI,ll .'l YS rlill his l.11ll11. GANZ. MARTHA. 1lllarfy.J Swimmingr: 'lll'l1lllS1 Ihmla Club, Shu 11'l1o 11'oes wo ill 1:1111 l141l'4' no for. GA VIN. THOMAS. ll'lfl12 pants a.l'1' all riylzt in sunrmrr, lull in frinlrr -- Hi'-1'-1'-1'-1'l GILMARTEN, MARGARET. tlWUl'jll1'.l R1-porters Club: Enll liall: Walking: Shnrthaind annl Typo Awards. lL's ll. misc' 11'1n'ul llmf girls up lwfozw' llm a'11rl11 hlrrl. GREEN, MORRIS. l 'rwvcl' inlrull lo div from 0r1'r11rorl.'. GREENBERG, MATILDA. lTilly, Ma.lfy.J Arista: Girl Re- serves: Glec Club: Players' Guilml: Hook Club, Treasurer: Captain Ball: End Ball: Basketball: Trallic Squad: Pus- ture Pin: 3 Blue Ribbons: Type Awaril. lliligeuvc is lln' nzoflzcr of good lzlclc. GREINER, EVERETT. Traflic Squad, Civic Club Sl. Many an opportunity is lost ll'lLilL' we stop lo ilzlnlr. GREIG, JAMES. tJl'Ill1.J Bank: Spanish Club 51: Daily Sheet: Assistant. Iillanagei' Frvshman Basketball. A strong, silent man, 11'il.l1. Tlt'l'l'l' 11. smilr, cvrn for Willfn' G. Stefinnlelz. GRIMIVI, MARION. Arista: Sword Soc-ioty: St-vretary tu Mr Valentine: Swimming: Captain Hall: Huckuyg Basketball Captain: Swimming' Pins: Girls' Alhlrtic C1uun1-il: 'l'ralli1' Squad: P. S. A. L. Pin: All-Ruuml A1hl1-tic Modal. ll'1'll dom' is hrttf r llmn 11'1'll srzirl. GUENARIJ, EUGENE. l!.'1'n1f.l Fmulluzill Tvam: Rillv 'l'o:nn Captain: Rills' Club, l'r1-si1l1-nl. Miss llIz11'I.11ugl1li:1. wus his lvV'lllL'Sl8. IIACK, CHARLOTTE. ll'11t, Cll!ll'll'1l.l II1x1-kvy, Minor l.s-t- tcrs: Captain Ball: Swimming: 2 P. S. A. I.. Pins: Teln- CELVVICKS' CLINTON, lllfftyly A,-Ma: GI00 Club: Chess nis:: Baskctball: '1'raulc: Art. Club: Girl R11s1-rvvs: Girls' Club and Team: Varsity Football. Thr Ising rurnzol bw lulrmz. Athlotic Council. The lwiyhfizcss of lwr I'l1l'1'l1' would SlLUHLl' thw slurs. 24 HAMMERSCHLAG, MARCUS EDWARD. l.!nl.'wy, 1L'fl.J Baseball. Liltlv Samson. HANSON. JOSEPH. And yd a hoprful glory Clivlgs 'rounfl you as you. demo. HASLINGER, EVELYN. Players' Guilll: Ts-unis: Iflncl Hall: Riding. Slhe who dors no morn' lfllfllll ulwlhvr is no lwllwr than another. HEIBER. ELINOR. i1fl.l CbL'ruisll'y Club: Tuuuis: Blue Ribbon. Zralofus, yet vnodvst. HOFFMAN. IRMA. Captain Rall: 'FUl1I'llSIl':llll Hall: Swim- ming Pin. Grrfat 1n0dr'sly Uflrn hides yrrrzl mrril. HUSSMAN. ANNA. l.'1'll7l.l Tennis: lluvlwy: Vaplziiu Ball: End Ball: All-Round Athletir' Medal: Swimming Pin. Hide' not thy talrnfs: thru for nw' rrvn' marlr. Whnf gomfs n sunrllnl in the slmdwf IRWIN. VVILLIAM ST. AUGUSTINE. llivlljllf, H1'lI.b Soccer: 'l'l'ar'k: Ari Club: Al'lSl2lI Bluu- Ribbnn: .luninr Orvhz-islra and Drzlmalic' Flub: Annvx Glvm- Vlub: llfnnv. Thr soul is fruln yrvnt llml riws triumpluzully lzzzmoroux ovrr ils malrrial llisrzdvavlluyfrx. JAMES. EDWARD PROBYN. r.lfw'. -lifwwfiwl Sw11HiHl1 Club. Sc-r'1'etal'y: Hunk: Junior l'lziyc'rs: Club: Srn'vic'f' f'ivic' Vlub, I l'L-silivnl: Domino, C'il'vulu1irm Mamiya-1' 511 f'hPn1istl'y Club: Arista: '1'l'allic- Suuzul: Spanish Pin: Blur' Ribbon. .l lang drawn out affair. IAMGOTCHIAN, ARCHIBALD. l.lrr'lLif', Jllrfnl Rillc Club: Radio Club. lfaspln'rry.' JOHNSTON. EVELYN. fJahn.'ny.l Girls' Alblvlic Council: Iiaslacilmll: Captain. Ball: Swimming: Hockey To sw hm' is to love her. KAISER, WILLIAM. Urlill, Cacsazzj Tcnnis Tvamz Rillc Club and Team. .I short saying oft coiztains mwrh wisdom. IQATTAU. FERDINAND LOUIS. llf'r'r1ly.l Bunk: Chess Vluh and Team: 2 Blue Ribbons. ' Little lJ01l7CigLlTCltl'Sj Little grave-Violets. KATZ, OSCAR. 10. KJ Latin Club: 'I'n-aflic Club. Tlu' desire of lmowlrdgc in nrrrss mused man lu fall. KICRN. ANITA. lN1'r, Kirldo.l Glr-0 Club: Elirnemlg Mimmr- irrayrb Club: Tcnnist Semwvtary in Miss Vmwhvvs. Silvww' iw not always a ximz of 'zrixdnmf lull lwalrlaliny is rzwr u fully. KINIHCR. ALICE. 1.10.5 Swinuniugr. Glr-v Ulub. I :mul lu low' you buf il's all mv-r, all 0:-ur now. RING, HARVEY. Rifli- Club: llmuinu S2llI'hI'll?lIl. Non. Vlmrpus lllwlllix. KREIGER, Rulh. IH0lrlzlf', l.'nfus.l Swinnnim:: Tvnnis' Riflimz. Thr!! :rho lznfzrv nulliiug to lu: l7'0IlfllI'fl n'iIlL shrill 1zf'1,w:r lruou' lrouhlv. KUIIENKAMPFF. MARION. fT'u'lul. Tvnnis: Czmlain Ball. .I lzlifhz' lzvari 1:1u.l.'f's zz blooming risugv. KULENKAMPFF, MILDRED. f'l'win, lllillyl. Tennis: Culi- tain Ball. Tallfiml is not zeloqzwnt. LARCOM. RUSSELL. flhzstglj Varsity Baslcvtball. Uh. Slw-p. it is II lnlfwswrl llciny, lu'l0'1w'rl from pola' tu 11010. 25 --,.M. ,- -,, . --- LARGEMAN, HELEN. Junior Glee Club anil Dramatic Club: Glee Club: Dramatic Club: Shakespeare Program: Bank: Arista, Leafler: Gray Captain: Tennis. Captain: Debating Club and Team: H01-key: Swimming: Basketball: Captain Ball: G. O. Speaker: 23 Blue Ribbons. Your deeds arf' lrnown in 'words lhat lfindlr' glory. LEAF. ABRAHAM. lAI1:'.J Orchestra: Annex anfl Main. For 4lis1'o'rrls malcrf the slrwirst airs. LEVINE, ISADORE. tI1l UilfIl.l Varsity Soccer: Dramatic Club. 51. bimplir-ily is a virtue Io ln' highly prizrfl. LEVINE, LIBBY RENEE. thililums, l,ibs.l Hockey: End Ball: Tennis: Captain Ball: Swimming Pin. Hill Ilml I am forbid Tn tell Hu' sevrwls of my prison house, I ruuld 0. tale unfolrl. lill'lHlCRMAN. GERTRUDE. tfIr1'l.l liillllil Nlilm-ugraph Club. View- Presirlent: Sc-ere-tary tu lVlr. Award: Promotion Sheet.: Blue Ribbmi. Fnin leoulrl I rlimlv, but Hull I lffll' In full. lVleeball 1 Type IIOESCH. l R1GDI'lRlCA MAINE. Cnmnleree anll lmlustry Club, Pre:-iflenl: Dome, Cireulation Manauer: Arista: Dramatic Club: Book Club: G. O.. Speaker: G. A. A.: Walking: Debating.: Club, Viet- President: Debating Team '25, l,!'P'S1'I'1'P'!llIf'I' is n 1f0lllfI'll l'll'fll1'. LOOS. WARREN H. lll'r11'r1'n H, llrrrvlirlyl. Sul'Jl, lflllfll' llorur-w.l Book Club, Secretary: Debatim: Club: Dome, Alumni Notes: Dl'2Il'!11flilf' Club: Christmas Play '24: Shakespeare Proyrram, .lrlam and Eva. Fm' l'm fo he Qurrri of tllz' May, MnllL4'r, I'n1 In 111' Qiuwri of Hu' May. LUCHOW, IRMA. Girl Reserves: Players' Guild. Oli 1 rui'l!l, thy numv' is l4'0IHflIl,l LUTZ. DOROTHY. tII0du.l Bank: Civie Club: Captain, Ball: End Ball. ,tssumr u. virtue, if you haw' if Hof. MAC DONALD, GERTRUDE K. tfllrlc, G1rrI.l Hut-key: Cap- tain Ball: Tennis: Girls' Athletic Cnuneil: l Swimming: Pins: Trainimr School, If l Cd-'lllf 'llllllfl' Ihr goal, I piel: a :nun .-ind pass thf' ball I0 hifnz who ran. MARGULIES, BERNARD. lH1 r71ir', Ilr'urj1.J Butt newly come M110 our midst, lu' leurrs us mm' in Junw. MATTHEW, ELIZABETH. llflzulz, lfvllgf, lllullyj Glu-e Club: Players' Guild: Swimming: Training Srhuul. Thr' fiiwlmss ylllhl I'I'Il Izvl' 1'4'lrr'I mln' rzlmul lirr mul swqil rvyally out of Ihr' umm! salmi. lVlA'l l'HIESEN, ALVENA. tl rnw.l Swimmiugf: llueltey: Basket Hall: Captain. Rall: Girl lim-seiwt-s. SIU' vrislirfl lu do :rlml sim slmulrl, .lnrl slu' dirl as mln-IL us slir' enulrl. MAX, PEARL. Tennis: Training Selwul. .fl penny for your Hl0llgIlfN. MUKAY, URSULA. Captain Ball, 'l'rainim: Selmnl. .l maid to l w'fun1' unrl In 1 anu' unlsnnirri. MCLEAN, RUTH. tlllue, Ifr'd.l Arista: Tennis: Swimmiuyr: Glee Club. .l ll'll.lNlH'l'I'fI smzy. MCMAHON, WILLIAM. tMae.J Chemistry Club: Debating Club: Dramatie Club. Hs' run dress, diizlrv, and lmu' In ilu' lurliws reilh jll'ilt'i'. MEAD, EDYVIN. tlffI.l Chess Team anrl Medal. You Clllllf tell u lmul: by Ns c'orr'r. 26 IVIEUSBACKER, HAROLD. tMoosr'l. Traffic Squad, Suvh Iitilf' fhilzys ara great to littlz' m1'n.l PEASE. HORACE. fillH'l1-hdilll, I'0r0u:v.l Civic Club: Junior Dramatic Club: Dome and Domino, Captain. I ' Night aflirr 'n.igh.t, he sat and bl1'a1'1'd his ryvs with books. MILLER, ALFRED. I ALJ Chemistry Club: Rifle: Track Cross Country: Freshman Baseball. Thy morlwslyfs u f'rL'i1.dlf' to thy meril. MOLTER. BYRON. tl rrml.'b. l'l'hf1 url than silrnl, u'1i4'rr fliyswlf L-4 1'0111'm'1lr'd? MONTUORI, CAROLINE. 1f'arol.J Captain Ball: Tennis Girl Reserves. Thr good lfftle had girl. NORDQUIST, MARGUERITE. tMaryy, Miz'lr0y.l Tennis Walking: Captain Ball: End Ball: Hockey: Bank Capl tain: P. S. A. L. Pin: Mime-of-rranh Club. Shr d be chm'cl:f'd for .sil1'1Lf'e' but nrvri' ta,J'r'd for speech. NUTTER. RICHARD. tlliclr Nuts. Arist , J a 1 Traffic Squad : Domino, Captain: Book Club: Blue Ribbons: Glee Club, Annex ami Main. 'Tzs youd-will malcvs irltwlligrnce. NYHOLM, GERDA. Arista: Bank: Mimeograph Club, President: Type Award: Blue Ribbon: Posture Pin: P. S. A. L. Pin: End Ball: Promotion Sheet: Daily Sheet. .luszrefr in om' 'll'0l'd,l Sho cannot. ixlov Club: Type Award: Secretary to Dr. Gaston. Lillh' drops of luafer, littlv' !lI'lLl'lLS of sahdf'--f IYHARE, KENNETH. Rifle: Chemistry Club: Traffic Squad: Baseball Salesman. lluppy in spin' of his rllrvs. PAC!-IT, MORRIS LEO. tDoz'., Moral Orchestra, Debating Club: Chemistry: Players' Guild: Chess Club: Secretary to Mr. Atwater: Tratlic Squad: Domino, Captain and Reporter. Gather ya 'l'0Sl'l71ldS while: ye may. 0G.UROFSKY, FANNY. f0gie.J End Ball: Captain Ball: PHILLIPS, ALFRED. Dome. Athletic Editor, Advertising Manager, Business Manager: Freshman Baseball: Track: Football, Manager: Representative for l'ublic-ations nt Cornell and Columbia Conventions. lfif'lzn1m11i's Irish lfosv. PICKETT, EVELYN. Qlfm-, Piggyj Swimming: Tennis: Captain Ball: Basketball: Glee Club: Reporters' Club. You say that you haw' gow' all thru Thr book: but has it gom: thru you? PILTZ, LESTER. lI'lf'ats, I.cs.l Domino, Captain. Floor Manager, Assistant Circulation, Circulation Manager: Glee Club: Blue Ribbon. PURVIS, ELIZABETH. Captain Ball: Basketball: Players' Guild: Book Club: Swimming: Tennis: P. S. A. L. Pin: Annex Glee Club: Adelphi. Ilwr 'voice was wrvr Nuft, gmlllr' and low. QUEENAN, REGINALD. tlfvy., lfr-ngiexl Swimming Team: Basketball Band: Chemistry Club: Assistant Editor .lunior and Senior Chemist. A fiery hvarl, a fwarm heart: An ull rotmd goorl j'1'llou'. RATKOWSKY, LORETTA. Training Sc-hool. .lt gvntlv, qufvt maid, in sooth, lVhv svrlm hrr way in silrwrwf. RESCOUSIE, BLANCHE. Lunch Room Staff: Reporters' Club: Swimming: Tennis: Basketball: Captain Ball: End Ball. 27 RIBAKOFF, SIDNEY. Qlfiblryj Chess Team: Traflic Squad. There is always work and tools to 'worlc withal for those who will. ROBINSON, HELEN. Domino: Junior Dramatic Club, Secretary: Junior Glee Club: Hockey: Tennis: End Ball: Swimming: Senior Dramatic Club, Secretary: Shakespeare Programs: Daddy-Long-Legs: Birol's Christmas Carol. All are not saints that yo to church. ROSATI, ALBERT. lRosie.J Chemistry Club: Indoor and Outdoor Track. Handsome is as handsome does. ROSS, WALTER. lRc'd.b Reporters' Club. Nothing is enough. RUBSAMEN, HERBERT. iHerb., Ruben? Arista: Orchestra: Glee Club: Players' Guild: Dramatic Club: Pageant, 'Zl: Civic Club: Radio Club: Soccer: Cross Country Team: Tennis Team: Debating Team: Debating Club, President. Cha sera sera. SALMOWITZ, SYLVIA. serves: Reporters' Club: Riding Club: N. Y. U. So wise, so young, they say do ne'vr live long. Captain Ball: Tennis: Girl Rc- chestra, Vice President: '21: 4 Blue Ribbons. Charms strike the sight bill nufrit wins flu' soul. SAUERBRUN. MILDRED. lMil, Millir, fllillir-vnI.l Tennis: Swimming: Glee Club: Training.: School. I ,l cherry nraill with a happy smile. 'l'h1z givw' of glafl'm'ss all the lrllilv. SAUL, EVERETT. Clfcdj Book Club: Chemistry Club: Chess Club: Traflic Squad. As to my principles, I glory in, having nothing of flu' sort. SAUERBRUN, EVELYN. lE'L'.l Glee Club Presidvnl: 01'- Arista: Captain Ball: Pageant SHEIBER, WALTER. Cliurlie, Sheba, Sheilc.J Interclass Baseball: Golf, Captain. Blessed is he who hath. found his work! SCHIFRIN, CELIA. lfici, Ceil.J Glee Club: Captain, Ball: Basketball: Tennis: Swimming: Walking: Riding Club: Cornell. 'Tfwould do no harm to stop and thinls, before you put yum' 'words in ink! SCHIMMEL, SYLVIA STELLA. Captain, Ball: Girl Re- serves: P. S. A. L. Pin. Silence is a iiirtue practiced by 'many men. SCHLUETER, FLORENCE. fFlo., Flossie, I 'udyie.l End Ball: Tennis: Swimming: Walking: P. S. A. L. Pin: Girls' Athletic Council: Secretary to Miss Perry. Hu may not score and yet he helps to win Who makes the hit to bring the runner in. SCHMIDT, ANNA. Arista: Captain Ball: P. S. A. I.. Pin: 5 Blue Ribbons. Late, lutv, but never too lute to enter. SCHMIDT, KATHLEEN. llfarul Captain Ball: Basketball: Tennis: Posture Pin: Glee Club: Book Club, Secretary. .elmbition cometh to the best of men. SCHMIDT, JEANETTE. CJ4'an.D Arista: Bank: Mimeu- graph Club: Secretary lo Mr. Meehan: Book Club: Civic Club: Reporters' Club: Oflice Club at Annex: Captain Ball: Stenography Award: 3 Blue Ribbons. Ili 'rmzvvr rains but it jI0lLl'S. SCHOBEL, IRENE. End Ball: Hockey: Bank: Commerce and lndustry Club: Junior Dramatic Club 5l. Shri rhattrrs, z-l1.afff'rs, as she guts, II1'r blue ryvs river duneiizg. SCHRAMM, GEORGE. tllamj. Radio Club: Chemistry Club. I Slurn, men. with empires zn tluiir brams. 28 SCHUSSEL, BEATRICE. tlfwal, B1'cLtt'iz'.J Secretary tu Mr. Dann: Mimeograph Club. Secretary: Coninu-ree and ln- dustry Club: Type Awards: Promotion Sheets: Swimming: Walking: Tennis: Captain Ball: Enfl Hall. Work, u'm'l:, by the fnlvs lmu' she flows 1l'orl.'.' SCHWEITHELM, MAY. t.'lluisi4'1'.3 Give Club: Captain, Ball. Such a gentle Juliet, SECOY, GRACE. Dramatic Club: Give Club: Committee. Laughter and Joy inrarmilu. Class Day SEIFRIED, HERMAN. tIir'awvt'rl, Higgiaj Spring Play '21, lfettrr little talmzt and much pzirposv, llum and liltlv purpose. Orchestra : murlz- tulvnt SHINGLER, HERBERT. tllw'lw1'lo.l Chemistry Club. What is mind? No fllLllftt!l'. Wlitit is niczltcr? Nrvw' mind. SILLIMAN, GENEVIEVE. tflei1.J Glen- Club, Vice Presi- dent: Orchestra: Ennearl: Tennis: Arista. She wort' 0. spell of lrir'l.'li'ny notes mul rlrliraffa fantasirs. SIMONSON, ELIZABETH. tllwsliej Arista. Ser-1'etai'y: Cleo Club: G. 0. Cantliflatu 25: Captain Rell Team: Tennis: Hockey: Basketball: Captain Ball: P. S. A. L. Pin: 5 Blue Ribbons: First Yi-al' Art Medal. She was u phantom of clvllylil. SPIEGELBERG, WILLIAM. lSpivyirJ. Baseball: Arista: Christmas Play. llis lilllrf body lodged ii mighty mind. SPURGE, VVARREN. fS1rurrag1', Bzul.l All Scholastic' S00- cer Team: Manager Interclass Baseball: Hockey Team: Bank Captain: Pageant '21. The llllllpll little moron, Hz' dovsift give a rlani I wish I were u- moron ---Perhaps inrlvvd I am. STEINBOCK. MARY. tllflaie, Str'iuy.J Art Club: ll. O. Reln'esentat.ive: Girl Reserves: Tennis: Riile: Basketball: Athletic Awards: Players' Guild. These thought may sfarllrc zrrll but 'not usfznmrl, STILSON. EARL. thllilts., Oil, liiy Boy.J Dome and Dinninn Staffs: Clee Club: Arista: Dramatic Club: Civivs Club: Debating Club and Team: Blue Ribbon: Pageant. '1Jl: Winner of Harvard Scholarship. Magnum corpus 'inagiiitudi'n1'm animi imlimf. STRAAT, HAROLD. Chemistry Club : Orchestra Z Arista Z Tratiic Squad : Blue Ribbon : Alexancler Drawing Mt-tial Z years. Thou, living ray of li7l.ll'llC'l'lllfll fire! STONE, ROBERT JAMES. tSlony, Ivory, I'1'lzl:lf's.l Orrlies- tra: Glee Club: Dramatic Club: Christmas Play '23: Domi: and Domino Captain: Annex Handball and Basket'- ball. Who said Zuziif STROH, ROBERT. tlfolz, Ill'0f1'SS0l'.l Dramatic Club: Shakesnearu Program, ,-iduvm unrl Era. ls that e.1'pr1'ssio11. safzcrniile or axininw? STRONG, VVARREN. tl'Vll'1l'l'll.l Bank, Vice President: Service Club: Civic Club: Spanish Club, President: Junior Playors. President: Traffic Suuail. Arista: 2 Blue Ribbons. Better be :rise and loolc simple Than look wise and bc simple. TAYLOR, EDWARD REED. Civics Club: 'l'rafli1' Mayor 905 Bluu Ribbon: R, H. in 3 1-Z years. A pvrpf-tual fountain of good sense. TERIVIAN. GEORGE. Interclass Baseball. A little pinclwri by want of mirth. THIES. HELEN. Cleo Club: Reporters' Club: Tennis: Walking: Blue Ribbon: Type Award: Secretary to Miss Richardson. Come, give us ll, taste of your qualify. x l 29 THURSTON, JEANETTE. tJraw.l Girl Reserves: Book Club: Arista: Blue Ribbon: Swimming: Captain, Ball: Basketball: Tennis. llzfr 'uffwr f1'ni,lni'n.ity is hor most rfharming attribute. VAN MOLLE. ALICE. tAl.J Junior Glee Club, Prvsidvnt: .lunior Dramatic Club: Book Club, Vice President: Bank: Arista, 'lll'l'2lSlll'0I'I Senior CIBC Club: Senior' Dramatic Club, Prusidont: lllldlijl-IAOFIfl-I1l'gS, flrlam and Eva: Shakespeare Progrraml G. O. SlPC21lM'l': 3 Blue Ribbons! Posture Pin: Swimming: Captain Ball: Tennis: Girls' Athletic Council: Vice President Sixth Term and Senior Class. Shz' 'wallrs in Ilfllllfjl lilcc the night. VAN NOSTRAND, RICHMOND. tRICH.7 Intermediate Baseball City Champs: Varsity Soccvr. All Scholastic Soc- cer Team: Varsity Basketball: lntcrclass Baseball. Fm' Iirvrl ami Iowa and had my fling. WVALBANCKE. MARION. Civic Club: Book Club, Secre- tary: Bank, Vice Prvsidcnt: Freshman Rcgristrat ion: Late Passos: Arista: Tratlio Squad. Thr' fair, the rhasfr, tha i'nw'p'r1'ssi1Je sho. WALTERS, MARGARET. tMargi1'.l Captain Ball: Report- ers' Club. Not IL day 'lfilllillllf its 11611-f1'Ilt'IlIl'7lt to relate. WARDELL, EDNA. Girl Rc-Servos, Pri-sirlr'nt : Posturo Pin: Captain. Ball. Nr'uM11'ss is uw assrli of grr'nh1r'ss. WATTERSON, ELIZABETH. tlValIJ1.J Captain Rall: T071- nis: Swimming: Girl Rose-rvos. Sfill 11-atm-s 'run deep. VVEARE. DORIS. What do you 'nralrr those' vycs at 'nw for? WEINSTEIN, MARY. tMarg.l Service League: Mimeograph Club: Secretary to Mr. Wood: Civics Club: Captain Ball, End Ball. 5 Four out of jivr! and Margfs the lurlsy mtv! WERNER, RUTH. tIi'uthi4', Rufus.J Captain Ball: Basket- ball: Swimming: Girl Rosvrvvs: Book Club: Posture Pin. And along canm Ruth. WILLIAMSON, MARJORY. tMa1'j, Williiul Gle-0 Club: Girl's Athletic Council: Sword Society: Eigrht T1-rm Trvas- urer. The best of girls, the bvst of pals. WINNE, MARGARET. tI'eggy.J Glue Club: Girl Rose-rvcs. The part you play, however small, ls greater far than novm at all. WOLF, FLORENCE. tWolfi11, I lo.l Bank: Book Club: Mimeokrraph Club: Arista: Scarf-tary to Miss Hubbard: Captain Ball: 5 Blue Ribbons. A fame' tongue is a Tarn thing. WRIGHT, MARCELLA. tllflarcr, Marsj Ti-nnis: Book Club. Vibe president: G. O. Reprcsentativo: Glve Club: Arista: Z Blur: Ribbons. 'Tis wrll to bn wise, YANUCK, JOSEPH. tJou, Yanmhl Players' Guild: Dom- ino: Interclass Bascball: Traffic Squad: Domino, Captain Ill: that lrlllsllflflif is im 1'0uylmr'f'l.'. YODER. RALPH WICKERSHAM. tl'ifl1lwr, Wir'l.'ir'.l Civic Club: Radio Club: loo Hockoyg Football: Bank Captain lIlti0l't'l2l.SS Baseball. Tflllwllf Iilrv murdrr srwnis IN'I'llXi0'H0lljl lo rim in fumilfrs. YOUNG, FRANK. tC'hi1:l:.l Chemistry Club. Spurlos Vcrsrnlct. ZERWECK. CHARLES. Thr' amply vvssul makes thr' grfatest noise. 30 THE DOME F M Fu FF Y 3 QB111' Gllaza Fresihent SENIOR G- 0- WALIJRON. JOHN. fRed.b Varsity Basketball: Varsity Football: G. O. Candidate: G. O., Presi- 1 dent: President of the class, six, seven and eiizht. Tmu' up on. thu Irrass bands, here comes Johvmy. l 3 WILL OF THE CLASS f or JUNE, '25 Drawn up in behalf of the Class by Md7'j' Steinbock. I mhpypag, we, the Senior Class of june, 1925, of Richmond Hill High School, being of sound and disposing mind and memory, do make, publish, and declare this to be our Last Will and Testament, as follows, hereby revoking all other and previous wills. FIRST: After we have been properly and royally buried, and our funeral expenses and other lawful debts have been paid, we do give and bequeath to the Senior Class of january, 1926, our deepest and heartfelt sympathy. SECOND: We do bequeath to the faculty the unrepudiated credit for our extensive suply of knowledge. THIRD: To Mr. Steinmetz, we do gladly give and bequeath a booklet containing a picture and a detailed account of the Inerits ol' each and every Democratic President of the United States, FDIIRTI-I: We, the departed pupils of Miss Leete, do leave the hope that our for' tunatc successors will remember not to for' get to remind her that she has forgotten to give an advance assignment. FIFTH: Miss Elizabeth Simonson does gladly bequeath her water wave combs to Mis Emma Steinmetz with complete instrucf tions as to the use of these beautifiers. SIXTH: Mr. John Waldron does bequeath his football togs to Stan Hemley in the hope that his successor may attain equal summits of athletic fame. SEVENTH: We, the Senior Class, wish to console Dr. Corson over the loss of his darlf ing, Dorothy Anger. We are positive that the devotion of Mr. Bernard Brown will fill the gap in Doc's heart, EIGHTH: Mr. Robert Dixson leaves the K original copy of his book, How I Obtained That School Girl Complexion, to whomsof ever it may concern. He also wishes to as' sure you that this is not an advertising scheme and that he is in no way connected with the Palmolive Company. H NINTH: Mr. Ralph Yoder does bestow JEWEL VAN PRAAf'1V'f'e'PTf-Wim the privilege of wearing a mustache IJAVID BAKER, Secretary l .lol-I N WALDRIIN, President Page szi THE DOME upon Mr. Maclntyre. May this masculine adornment improve Mac's appearance as it did Mr. Yocler's. TENTH: To Mr. Flint, we bequeath all such relics as we may leave behind us in the shape of castfoff gym shoes, deceased chew' ing gum, hairpins, cuff buttons, cigarette stubs ftwo blocks from the school of coursej , broken test tubes, useless Latin ponies, and rejected class songs, to be auctioned off in the first September Assembly. We wish the proceeds to be donated to the Voorhees' Fund for Buying Latin Ponies for Needy Students. ELEVENTH: Mr. Harold Finkelstein does generously leave his curly locks to Mr. Al. Hoffman. To him that hath shall be given. Mr. Irwin, acting on the same principle, is at present searching for some worthy person to whom he may leave his nose. TWELFTH: We, the Seniors, do bequeath the privilege of hanging out at the Greek's to anyone who has not yet discovered a bet' ter place to rest between periods. LAST: We do hereby appoint Miss Mac Laughlin our lawful executrix, knowing that she will fully appreciate the honor. In witness whereof, we have hereunto subscribed our name and allixed the seal, this twentyfseventh day of June, nineteen hundred and twentyfiive. THE SENIOR CLASS or KL' Sul JUNE, 1925 WI-l0'S WI-IO AMONG THE SENIORS Elizabeth Simonson .......,......,...,... ........,,,.... M ost Popular ..........,. .,.......... J ohn Waldron Grace Secoy ....................... .................. J olliest .........,...,.. .............. E arl Stilson Dorothy Anger ........... Dorothy Anger ,..,,,..... Elizabeth Simonson .,.. Frederica Loesch ..,........,. ..,.. . , Frederica Loesch .......,,,.,. ,.......,.. Dorothy Anger ............, Elizabeth Simonson .,.. ......................Neatest............. ........,.,..Bus1est.......... .,.........Wittiest..........,... ,.,., ..,,,.... B est Looking .........,, . ..., Most Extravagaut ....,....,.. ,. ,,.lVIost Corlcelted ........., ,, Best Dresser ...,....,, ,. ,, ..........,Alfred Phillips ..,........Robert Stroh ..........Robert Dixson .Charles Zerwick ,...,..,..Robert Dixson ,.,.,,......Byron Molter ..........Herman Comfort Herbert Rubsamen ..........,,.Horace Pease Evelyn Sauerbrun ........i. .....,...,. B est Dancer ............,. .,.......... Ruth McLean ..........,.,......, .,,,..,.., M ost Modest ..........,.. ....... Marjory Williamson ,.,,.... ...,.,i.... H ardest Worker ........, ...,..,,,.,. Josephine Acerno ........ Ursula McKay .......,.... Josephine Acerno ........ Ursula McKay .....,.....,. ,,...........,... Norsrest .......... .....,..........SLu1etest........,..... .......... Greatest Flirt ............ ..,,,,. . Most Basllful .,.,,.,..,,,, .. Evelyn Johnston .............. ,,,,,,.,...,,... B est Athlete .......,,,,, .. Nlarion Walbarrmeke... Most Conscientious ..., .,.,.. Most Digrtifeol .......... ,...,,i Alice VanMolle ...........,.. .,.,..,,...,. Marjory Williamson ......... ..,.,......... B est Sport ........... Bertha Datz ........................ .............. L aziest .,.,...,.. Gladys Burrows .,.......,..... Helen Robinson .i,....,.,..... Josephine Acerno ,...... Lillian Bernstein... . May Sweithelm ...... ,.,. Pauline Dichter ........,.,.,,. ,,,,,,,...,,... Helen Largeman ...,..,,,..., ,,,...,,,,,, Jeanette Thurston ,,.,..,......,. ,..,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,..., Helen Largeman ........... ..........,DairLtiest............. ..,.........Li1zeliest.....,....,,.. ....,.........Silliest.........,.., . Most Serzous ........,.,., .. .. ........,. Has Done Most for R. H ............. .. Most Clulclzslr ..,,.....,. ............ .Most Masculine ...,........,, .,,.,,. Most Fernmme .......................... .. Stilson Herbert Rubsamen .....Robert Cameron Alfred Phillips .,....,.,Edwarcl Busick .,.,.,.i,.John Waldron .,..,...,.John Waldron ....,.,.Arthur Daniels .,.,George Schramm ......Walter Schieber .....,.,,,.,.Daniel Dempsey ..........Warren Loos ,, ...... Norman Burke ..,..Robert Stone ,..,..,....,...John Ahrens ..,Eerdinand Kattau .,,,Tho1nas Brennan .............Warren Loos .........,John Waldron THE DOME OUR SEN IORS WHITE OAROO . . ,...,.... . . .... . . .,..,.,,, .... . .. .. .. .The Senior Clas DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS . , ,,,. ...A New Sclwul THE BEST PEOPLE . . .. . .... . . Us CAPE SMOKE THEY KNEW WHAT THEY WANTED.. .. .. .... .. -. N w .The Beanery The Faculty THE CIUARDSMEN . .. . . . . Arista THE STUDENT PRINCE-. . .... .. ,WuId1'fww1 PUPPETS. . . ...Cl O. C.Jjj'i1'er.c SO BIG ............. .. . .. .... .. . .Spiegelbevg SKY HIGH ....... .... . .. . ...Daniels THE HANDY MAN . . .. ...... Stone THE IRON HORSE . .,,....... Kattuzfs Biryfle THE SWAN.. . . . ..... .... LUESCIL THE SAP ........ ....................,...... . .. .... .......Lo0s THE NIGHT HAWK.. .. ,.... .Rubsamen THE COMPLEX ......,.................. . ..... . ..... D. B. A. WHAT PRICE GLORY? ...,,. ....... .,.,......... .,,.,....... ...............,......... . ......... ........,... W e I I , WdIdTLJ71? I mTPa ge I S QUEENSBORO TENNIS CHAMPIONS, 1925 Page 34 THE DOME Srninr Issue Zinn: Nineteen Ewvntg-five .0 ah? Staff N. . . Y L EDITOR ....,...,.. ...,..,,...,....,..,A...,,,,,..,..,.,.. D . B. Anger l X FICTION ..,. .,,.. . . .,,. ...,......,.............,..,, I alia Best , ,Q VVVV , ART ...,...,......... W. A. lrwin ,. gskleyji Reynrlglds I war o ri erg PW, jjj, POETRY ,............. ..,,....,.. B rurio Fischer x-'- XS f HUMOR... .. .... .. .......,.............. ...Edward Hellmann 'ir' ' -'iq H 'Ted Simonojf fr r f . , ,,,' --. Business Staff ... 6 lf' MEA 'I BUSINESS MANAKQER ........................ Sam Shapiro . ' 1 1 CIRCULATION ..........,..........., ..,........,.,.. H arry Casagrande I ,,0W,i,.,I QD CIRCULATION AssIs'rANTs: Frederica Loesch, Har' mwwgilff 5 old Hyman, Irving Elfenbein, Harry Silverstein. A ANNEX: Kenneth Maby, William Schugert, t ory , -,,-H 'AS William Schmidt, Michael O'Connor, Wi iam f x Laletiri, Milton Richards. R .tif ' 'Q 'P SECRETARIES .................................,......, Alva Wojitrnan 'W ' ' Dorothy ewes 'Wm N TREASURER ..........,................................., Gussie Schifrin a ssfFl'lw.5oiilW., ff 1 MM Pda ' gg 'sf' ASSISTANT TREASURERS: ............. Madelarjie Knight ' Ethel ear IIIaHmwTHli4ILiJuticiI1i3HooLTx Mmacrhompm CUT CLERKS .......... ........... H arol Root NEW YORK CITY sg David McKrgght AUDITOR ..,............. ........,., W illiam Dir el Guunjgggwdminome Y , I ADVERTISING .....,... ........... I rving Elferibein s n ifumaaomi ix llaouis Botwinicli as - A nna. Weiss ADV. ADVISER ......,............................... Robert H. Proctor ' mum! FACULTY ADVISER ............................ Livingston Carson FTER the recent issue of The Dome, one of our favorite members of the faculty suggested that we be a little more inspiring in our choice of material for an editorial. Acting upon his advice, we culled several noteworthy and inspiring sentiments from various sources and sat down to write an editorial. Something had gone wrong. We never wrote that editorial. It is not in the nature of the present Do-me editor to utter inspiring sentences. We are too much of an Ibsenite and altogether too much of a Shavian. While our theories have not yet reached Schopenhauerian tif the adjective exists, and there is no good reason why it shouldn'tj pessimism, we have not yet reached that sublime state in which we believe that this is the best of all possible worlds. We, rather, recommend that every man take for his motto, Let us then be up and doing, With a heart for any fatef, Note that last line well. With a heart for any fatel. Who, after reading that, could have accused Longfellow of being an optimist? We would say with him that one should not look forward for the best but rather be resigned to accept the worst. A sneaking suspicion comes to our mind that we are unconsciously trying to be inf spiring in spite of ourself. Ah, well! Blame that on our English teacher. As he sows, so shall he reap. l.T,,,,.i.,. NOTICES FOR CLASS DAY JUNE 25,1925 My View of the Courses of Study in the R. H. H. S. ALGEBRA-A study which, if omitted, would ma' terially increase the number of fifth termers. BIOLOGY-'A study of bugs,by bugs,and for bugs. DRAW'ING-YA course strongly recommended by the Higgins Ink Co. and the Kohinoor Pencil Co. ENGLISH-A subject especially recommended to those who ain't got no education . FRENCH-A remedy for catarrh sufferers. GREEK-A study of weird looking symbols that will be of great service to anyone who joins a college fraternity. HISTORY-A subject by which one may learn whether jamaica was discovered or just nature ally happened. LATIN-A dead language which is interesting to immortals only. MAT1-I.?A common method of reducing a large class. SHORTHAND-A long, complex, complicated, conf fusing, timefconsuming manner of saving time. SPANISH-Those who are unable to speak with the facility of a matador and wish to do so are urged to take Spanish. QConsult Webster's for matadorj TYPEWRITING-A study indulged in by slow girls in order to become fast. MORAL: Don't study your lesson, lessen your study. Advised by GRACE SECOY. .-..-..-..-. NEW Hion Sc:HooL roa R1oHMoNo HILL was the slogan twentyffivc 1 years ago. and with it came victory and a fine commodious new school. How different Richmond Hill might be today if the High School EE i had not come. The large families that sent all their children to this E1 E neighborhood school might not have done so had the school not been here. It was the proper thing to do in Richmond Hill to be gradu' ated from the High School. and then, most likely, to take some years in a normal school, college. or a university. So the Donalsons, the DeLanos. the Murrays. to say nothing of our faculty members. Mr. Steinmetz, Misses Dickenson, Anshelm. VanGasbeek, and Gertzen. went to the local school and then on to college. Many of them would have gone anyway, true. but the fact that the school was here made High School training possible for scores who other' wise would have cut school days short. Thirtyftwo years ago there were two High Schools in all of Brooklyn where there are twelve now, and in one of these Mr. Isaac N. Failor was a teacher of Mathematics. He did not like to live in the city for he was an out of door man so he moved to Richmond Hill. He saw an opportunity of service in Richmond Hill. and soon ref signed his Brooklyn position and became Superintendent of Schools here. In the most modest way. quietly and without any display, he organized the Richmond Hill High School and watched its growth carefully during many years. Mr. Failor, more than any other one, fixed the traditions of our school which still hold true. The friendly relation between students and teachers: the notion that students will willingly and successfully take care of themselves and welcome the sort of school discipline they help administer: this, and an insistence upon scholarship nrst, and publif city as a second thing, still mark the school. We cannot emphasize here too deeply the indebtedness of Richmond Hill to Mr. Failor, Principal Smith of Woodhaven. a very able and successful school man. tried to perliorrn the same service for Woodhaven. and failed to accomplish it. Greenpoint is even yet without its High School, and Corona lost its to Newtown, How much of our pride in Richmond Hill as a community is a direct result of Mr. Failor's success in establishing this school! Those of us who have been righting so hard for a new building for the school have been inspired by the success of those who inaugurated it. We have felt that it would be unfair to take this school from the center of the community that had the courage to do the pioneering and let it go to some nearby community that never had to struggle to secure and maintain it and might not appreciate it for its true worth. Our school is a big asset to the community in which it is located. It not only provides opportunity for the youth of Richmond Hill, its chief purposeg but is a real community center. Our school activities, commencements, concerts, and dramatics furnish the Hnest type of worthfwhile entertainment to adults as well as to young people. In addition. as a lecture center and a place for all sorts of community activf ities it provides a common meeting place for all races and creeds. Our present build' ing is now totally inadequate for the demands our greatly increased population is making upon it. For this reason. with many others. the whole community is marking this silver anniversary of the founding of the school with a determined. uphill. winning Hght for an adequate. modern High School plant. This plant is to be placed. we are told. in the heart of the community that has always shown its appreciation of it, and that richly deserves it, good old Richmond Hill. IRVING A. HAZEN, Principal. In J 1, o1o1o1n1o1u1n1n1o1o1: 1 r 1 c 1 nic 1 0111: 1 91411: 1 oi Page 36 THE DOME BENEATI-I THE DOME By BRUNO FISCHER i----------i NDER the hot, blazing sun our 2 - 5 P. T. teacher drills us. The 2 2 perspiration streams from 2 -our brows and our aching 5:5-T5 muscles refuse to respond. - - - -' Finally, with a merciless smile on his face, he makes us run around the block. We come staggering back, ex' hausted and hotter than ever, and play soccer or basketball for the next half hour. vk as as vis vk If all the teachers gave extra periods the way the P. T. teachers do, we have a notion that we would spend most of the day in school. wk vk as bk wk It wouldn't be a bad idea if we had an indoor baseball team. Then some of our dance floor artists could do their stuff be' tween innings. ik ak vs as wk And the voice that was softer than oatmeal said, Lo, 'tis the teacherg be not afraid! For many terms without avail, 'Thou hast tried to pass but didst always failg Behold, it is here! These marks in pink Portray your thickness when you think. wk vis vk vs vk We ought to have a good track team. The baseball players get enough practice running around the bases. Well, so do our opponents' fielders for that matter-chasing balls. vk vs vs wk vk And say,- we aren't so dusty in tennis either! vk vs vs vs vk Maybe we can't win every championship, but enough to satisfy anybody. wk as as as as Like a monster he lies in wait: If we step an inch from the path, If we come but one minute late, 'Then we feel the weight of his wrath. There is no escaping his grip, No moment when danger is passed, For even the best of us slipf Detention will get all at last. vs wk vs as as The height of affluence: the fellow who puts a nickel in the Dome and Domino conf tribution box. Those notebook rules! those notebook rules! How many a tale they tell to fools, Of school, and home, and work that night, All spent to keep that notebook right. And so 'twill be when I am gone- Those notebook rules will still keep ong While other bards as had as I, Witli frantic quills will rave and cry. vk vk vk as as We wonder why the people who usually knock the Dome and go about telling the world how bad it is, are the Hrst to buy it? We're glad they buy, anyhow. vk vk vs vk vt shoes and bruised ankles By the dusty seen around the school, it is apparent that we will have an excellent soccer team next term. vs as vk vk vk We think that languages were made, To help the pupils fliink their grade. We are not so much overjoyed at the thought of vacation or at the fact that there will not be any school, but how our hearts are filled with rapture at the realizaf tion that there will be no more homework for ten whole weeks! Big things out of little ones grow. First a fence, then a sidewalk. It is obvious, therefore, that at this rate we will ultimately get a new school. wk vs vk vs vs We are modest, but we are forced to ad- mit that this column was somewhat of a success during these last two terms. At first it was merely an experiment, but it has gradually become a permanent feature of the Dome. We will try to do our best to improve it. vs as vs wk wk It seems as if a wave of humor has come over the entire school: the Dome, the Dorn' ino, and the students. The new building is the standard school joke, assisted by the fence, the sidewalk, and numerous minor ones. Gay's epitaph would apply very well here: Life is a jest and all things show itg I though so once, but now I know it. PRQPS and PAINTS, ANNEX 56 ORCHESTRA, ANNEX 56 37 Page 38 THE DOME TO ......... As a potter who slowly moulds his clay, And shapes it as he will with nimble hands, It takes the forms and features he com' mands, So can I shape all that you do and say, And like a reed you bend beneath my sway: You harken eagerly to my demands, And wander with me thru illusion's lands-- And ever do I show and lead the way. I think myself the master yet a slave At times I am, for as I pluck the rose, Many a time its sweetness masters me. And as a vessel sails upon the wave, Unknown to it with wind and tide it goes- So Slave and Master both come down to thee. B. F. UNE JOURNEE Through the vast labyrinth of my life Wanders my frightened soul. It tries to reach, this way or that, Some shining light, some goal. The lifefmaze leads sometimes 'neath skies Ceiled with a friendly blue. The goldenftinted clouds, the rays Of sunshine enter through. Into the heart somewhere within. I laugh a while and sing. It is a living, moving joy, A gracious, happy thing, But most of all the ways are dark, Hemmed in by narrowing walls. The sky is hid by old, black trees. A stifling stillness falls, Lifted sometimes by muttering winds That wail through bleak, dank fens Where strange, brown pools lie mournfully Or trickle towards the glens. Sometimes the branches toss apart. A sad moon in the sky Drops down a glance, aloof and cold, Where my soul goes wandering by. A comet dashes, headlong, mad, A flash of orange light, A knifefthrust, cutting keen and deep, Through silent, lonely night. My soul, the while, goes timidly Beneath the darkling trees, Touching the slimy, fungused bark, 'Dreaming of azure seas. A. V. B. MAY MOOD When I walk by the old, accustomed places I seem to see your footprints in the grass, And I bow my head at thoughts of byfgone hours That rise before me as I slowly pass. I remember that you used to turn this corner And I would watch you almost out of sightg I remember how my heart was strangely happy, E Although, for you, I wept sometimes at night. Oh, I remember but the days seem so long past Though that was May and this is May again, But through a whole long year of absence, tell me If I see not your face, dear, can my love remain? It is only the remembrance of once loving That brings these poignant strainings to my heart, Light Hngers trailing gently o'er a faint wound That long ago Time healed with subtle art. A. V. B. TULIPS Tulips in the garden where the sun shines bright, Laughing, nodding, dancing in the golden light, Purple, rosefpink, crimson, yellow, and pale white. Tulips in the morning, gypsies bright and SHY, Flaunting brilliant colors to the sumrner's day, Whispering to the grasses secrets of the May. Tulips in the afternoon, g-rrmdes dames of old, Stately in their brocades of applefgreen and gold, Smiling at the stories the courtier wind has told. Tulips in the moonlight, etherealized and strange, Turned to dream-like spirits by a ghostly change, ' Spirits faintlyfcolored, from a world beyond A our range. A. V. B. BANK BOOK CLUB GIRLS' COUNCIL, ANNEX 56 39 i M' of I ' 'WTTT Patronize 4 I A Paper for People i Our g Wlzcw Think They Advertisers HA Pape? to Stick TON Think X Vot.YiOll55- GAL. TWT Edited by-BEN LIEBLETIXI TT I PTT Paiceiilisss Y if NONSENSORIAL K DUMBNUTS As we set here in our swivel chair. munching a pretzel which is seriously affected with a cur' vature of the spine, the follow' ing is brought to our attention. Some enterprising genius in our midst has succeeded in combinf ing the milk weed and strawberry plant, thus solving a great agrif cultural problem. The result is a large tulipflike plant in whose petals are enclosed one pint of cream and straw' berries. This youthful prodigy has been at work for the last six weeks in our physics laboratory trying to affect a cross between the much abused banana and a pineapple. A great future is predicted for this promising ju' venile Luther Burbank. WHAT IS A KISS? A kiss is a noun used as a conjunction. It is never def clined. It joins similar elements. It is more common than proper. It is sometimes followed by an exclamation. It is used in plural numbers and agrees with you and I. Quite a stir was occasioned in one of our clubs the other day when a student swallowed a 55 bill belonging to his classmate. Artihcial respiration had to be applied to the classmate. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS FROM ABROAD Yes, Lord Helpus, the Liberty Bell is the dismissal bell. Write again, Count Meout. Your letter shows you to be one of great intelligence. Yes, the present Fly Paper is the best humor the Dome ever had. WORDS FROM THE LIPS OF WISE GUYS He who cuts and gets away will live to cut another day. See that man? Well, sir. he landed in this country with two bare feet and now he has milf lions. My word! He must be a regular centipedef' Uhr Ghrarle by UNCLE BEN Dear Ben4What is a vice' president?-Conn Victt. Dear Conn-A vicefpresident is the chief executive officer of a disorderly society. Dear Ben--I have been conf templating following your exam' ple of going without a hat. Is there any advantage in doing so? v-Anxious. Dear AnxiousfYes, it will cut down overhead expenses. Dear Ben-What is political economy?-Hazel Nutt. Dear Hazelfljolitieal economy means getting the most votes for the least money. Dear Uncle-Wlmat is the easif est way of driving a nail without smacking my fingers?-Sonny. Dear Sonny-Hold the ham' mer in both hands. Said a bald headed man to a waiter bold: See here. young man. my cocoa's cold. He scornfully answered: I can't help that: If the blamed thing's chilly put on your hat. WANTED-WA man on a farm. Must speak German and French and understand cows and horses. . Glyco Hair Tonic+guaranleed to grow hair on a door knob. -Adv. LYRICS FOR THE DUMB It moves me considerably. said the paralyzed man at a char' ity dinner. My hair stood stiff with fear when the ghost approached. said the bald headed man. My spirits have been low' cred. said the man after taking his whiskey into his cellar. Sign on Klu Kluxer's office: Out to lynch, will be back at two. By BRowNARo BERN Pretty Dot English, our cash' ier in the beanery who can change dimes into nickels so fast the buffaloes think it's a stamf pede, is leaving us at the end of this term. Photographer ftaking picture of father and college soul Perf haps it would make a better pic' ture. my boy, if you were to stand with your hand on your father's shoulder. Father: The picture would be more natural if he stood with his hand in my pocket. I cannot eat with cross eyed girls For it always seems my fate Vxfhenever one beside me :ails She eats out of my plate. I sneezcd a sneeze into the air. It fell to earth. I know not where. But hard and cold were the looks of those ln whose vicinity l 'ksnozcfl EDUCATED CREVICES tWise Crackxj All is not gold that's a filling. Wlmeii rising early be a birdf not a worm. He who laughs last doesn't lbuy the Fly Paperghe borrows lt. Mr. R.: l'XVhen are Algebra symbols used? Stude.: Algebraic symbols are used when you don't know what you are talking about. OUR WAIL Getting up the Fly Paper twice a term is no picnic. If we print jokes folks say we are silly. If we don't they say we are too serious. If we publish original matter they say we lack variety - -if we publish things from other papers they say we are too lazy to write. If we print poetry they say we are mushy: if we don't they say we are coarse. If we tell the truth they say we lieg if we don't they say we should be jailed. So what in thunder are we to do anyway? vu, Wir vi ,I-'-. 'vt iii? 'lb'-r., W a ll!-t.w, Q ww 6713 S 1f4t4,, 0 1 if lk 0 45- P4 1 0,10 spam , Q 9 My f PL4 y 'Wax Q mimi 55 Wgwn ww il - ' O7f3kffa5ffJii FRU VI LWYUNSIF W ws .iff JJ A Muff mm R Krnxarr 1 ..,, ,.,,. 1 F 'Mx ruurullimumaar we Z5 , em' 255 Y ,fr Rive ' L C r w ' f l , 1- .U , if ffl ff: , , 1 aff' ll 6 xx N. fl I, Ml 3, 1.3 . 1:55. . :W-.xf., l?4 I 5 1 'J . yn - ka.: Q . I vt ,Fi-3 N, ,lla 4311, V .. f 1 , 55 . i riff R' ti .K YA-I r L, -,,iJ'V1'!,ax - Rib,-1- lf r..- i . 'J A V. -1. -V 'WS4r'1f?iE,-' D '. ' ' -215-'Q f- 2pe.uLee f-59 l,,r an 5 1, 5?,,,-J i,.,t.,m N H v -3, ' . - W Wy! 1.5 ' Ji., 4 f-an-M. f , rp, , .15 bf- fe ' f 'Wl,f31i'JQlA if 1' t 'If 4 .f x -:'. , i' 'I , f 1 - - xx-X ' r .., , F. Ny: . ,.- , .mg-'rwkyhi 44X at, C ' Q. ff-iilgkie '1 ' , . of -FESTLQ ' f f '+' ' -- A 3 H1255 C pjp .3352 , FEA , ,555 F5 'f.e-QW 57 g5 'Gfj gp- QI 'ZQVW ' ' ' fi V sl ,uf 40: , 4' V- i C f ' , 1 ' ' ,s elf J ng E: V.. , -tv ., v. i s ifiz., ,wi -t--ws if - QV' ff in ,A .I ,pi - ', ,eyffe g fj' M' 3:-liaiwf-f 'tt fl-1 .zu ariiwfx v ' T ' - --ai., ' an -W . K- - ,Koi N' '- g. ' 'ft' . aa, -'A fl -iratl, 'S- 'Rw- .if ' i 11 , N . 'pl 'F .nh 'gf , i WV CMJNSIEUR KERKOFF'S ww hmiepf- 5515665 Ypazqzzezf MONSIEUR KERKOFFS new Champ:-Ebfufer Paquet of toiletry treasures contains dainty samples of his masterpiece, Parfum Djer- Kiss, and of Djer-Kiss Face Powder, Djer- Kiss Cold Cream and Vanishing Cream f in tubesl and a fragrant miniature satin Sachet Pillow. To receive it, simply fill in the coupon below and mail with 25c in stamps or coin to Monsieur Kerkoff's New York aztelier at 13 West 54th Street. KERKOFF, Perhzmenr ment. H53 15 West 3-ith Street, New York I enclose 25c. Send me, ifyou please, Q your new Champ:-Elyria: Puquet. .JW nam: .Addren Ury- Stale 41 Page 42 THE DOME THE SLOW TOWN DAILY EXPRESS SCORES A GREAT SCOOP OF FOREIGN NEWS. fAs usual we are LAST again in scoring a great scoop. This time it was a great piece of FOREIGN news in the form of the following account of the great charity baseball game played at Golden City, Canarsie, for the benefit of the Home for Legless Tables.--Edj I By PIERCE ARROW MACKTRUCTK fDajfy Correspondentj The greatest event since the Oshkosh post office was robbed of seventeen cents' worth of two cent stamps, took place at Golden City, Canarsie. This affair was the great charity baseball game which was sponsored by John D. Stoneguy, the great philanthropf ist, who led the contributors with a donation of an anonymous check for SO00,00I,.OOO1. This was done because of his modesty and it was with difliculty that the donor was traced and publicly thanked by the Board of Mis' trustees of the Home for Legless Tables. Golden City, for all its name, was a bit tarnished and dull, until the day of the game, when the home brew flowed freely and the city brightened perceptibly. The day of the game was bright with the sunshine, to say nothing of the aforemenf tioned moonshineg but as an added precauf tion against rain the old oalqen bucket was hung up to catch the drops and the spec' tators were supplied with sponge cake with which to dry themselves in case of a prof verbial shower of canines, felines and equesf trians. The early arrivals at the field were enter' tained by Israel Murphy and his famous Hat Band, who rendered George M. Cohan's hit, Deutschland Uber Alles, Mel. A. Chrino's People Who Live in Tin Houses Shouldnlt Throw Can Openers, and John Philip Snoozer's Africa, the Black Diamond Gem of the Ocean. Upon the arf rival of the distinguished spectators, the The array of Summer clothes you will see at MILLER BROTHERS is the jfinal result of months of intensive study and preparation. Every suit and topcoat we show is worthy of the New 'Yorkers critical requirements in style, fabric, quality and ser' vice. There is a right style and a right pattern here for any man. The COLLEGIATE and ENGLISH models are the pace makers. Extra trousers if you want them. S25 and up. MILLER BROTHERS 78 Belmont Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. Please Mention NTHE DoME when Patronizing Our Advertisers THE DOME hand played The Boston Sha Creamed Banana, which was a signal for even the crowd to rise to a man. When the Big Shots were settled in their hoxes the chief umpire cried, Play hall! As General Mortality of the Navy rose to throw out the first hall, somehody very ausf piciously opened hostilities hy heaning him with a popfhottle. As the General was he' ing carried out, the hand very appropriately rendered Nearer, My God, to Thee. Needle was announced as the umpire on hases. He was sharp enough, hut he only had one eye and he came in for some sharp criticism from Knife, manager for the Arahf ics and Fork of the Romans, which were thc names of the contesting teams. Judge Ment was the umpire behind the plate and nohody questioned his decisions. The game hegan with the Arahic nine at hat and the Roman nine in the Held. The Romans started with Horn playing first, Fiddle playing second, Drum heating around third and Brakes as shortfstop. Corn was in right field, Beets was in center field and Garlic was in left Held. Smallpox was catching and Cigar was in the hoxg and he had plenty of smoke. Glue got stuck up at hat first and he pasted one against the fence. Ax next up. chopped one on the nose: and Sawdust filled thc hases. Barhcr was safe hy a close shave and thc hascs were still populated with one run in. Orange peeled oil' a ringing hit, hut was retired hy a triple play executed hy Horn, Fiddle and Drum. Horn led off for the Romans and hlcw one out ot the lot for a homer. Fiddle hit a screeching wallop to right, and Balloon who was pitching for the Arahic nine went up in the air. Balloon was relieved hy Cherry who was wild, hut effective in the pinches. Drum heat out a hunt. Corn got socked in the car hy a wild Cherry drop and the hases were full. Beets came to hat and was frightfully red when he hit into a douhle play, and the score was tied with men on second and third. Garlic, next up, couldn't smell the hall and he made the third out hy whifhng. Thereafter the game was colorless until the ninth inning when Red halted for Cherry in the Arahic's half of the inning. Red singled and Clue, who followed him at hat, promptly advanced him hy sticking a nice sacrifice into deep center. Ax took a mean cut at a fast one and Red streaked home from secondg hut the hall seemed to get there at the same time and the play was cfin Upporfunizy io 'Travel to m1dfi'o-m UB' 1 Era? I in Comfort and Congenial Company - That European trip! Now you can take it at hardly more than the cost of staying at home. The Cunard Vacation Specials have made the dreams of hundreds of teachers, students. professional people, college men and women and kindred spirits come true. over and back-two delight' iul ocean voyages. pays all transportation and hotel charges on a nip oi aboutrhreeweekstolmndon and Paris and back. S155 pays the aanatianac are 226 Great Britain, Ireland and parts of the Continentg a wide choice ol itineraries. S pays for a brief tour ol Longer tours arranged at correspondingly reasonable rates. RD IAL5 CSSQPEC I . VACAT 1...':z'.z::?F.i:a.i particular service the Third Cabin accommodations on a num- ber of Sailings of our leading steamers. The accommodations consist of comfortahle,well-ventilated private staterooms for two or three per- sons: many bathsg large dining hallsg lounges and librariesg plenty of deck space for exercise and recreationg excellent, abundant menus. Full information and sailing schedules on request. Reservations may be made now. THE WORLD'S FASTEST PASSENGER SERVICE DE LUXE CUNARD cmdANCHORlfines 2S.Bx-oadway New York or Branches and Agencies Page 43 Page 44 T T T T THE bows so close that Judge Ment awarded Red a verdict of onefhalf of a run. Thus the Arabics went into the lead. Steak batted for Sawdust but was out by a raw decision. Ax was now on the third sawdust pile, and Lemon came up to bat for Orange. Lemon assayed a squeeze play, but he soured it up hy fanning. The Romans came to bat determined to win. Brakes slipped, however, and lifted a high oneg but Grass had to cover a lot of ground to get it, Cucumber got up to pinch hit for Corn who had retired from the game because of his sore ear. Cucumber singled, but was pickled between first and second. Rubber batted for Beets, and stretched a single into a double. Spider caught Garlic's ily in deep center, which proved that his feet were not overgrown with cobwebs. Thus the game was brought to end, the Arabics winning by the score of IM against 1. There had been some heavy betting done on the game. Egg went broke while Soap cleaned up. Besides the game, there was plenty of exf 1 , ONE X SUM Oli l- THEDOME PM TAPS eitement in the stands. Peanut got roasted for arguing with De Bate because Light had been put out for using some burning words. But Peanut's friend, Cabbage, had a good head and kept still. Knickerbocker Ice kept cool until the fifth inning when he was hit by a popfbottle, then you ought to have heard ice cream. Outside of the ball park some excitement was caused when Bread was arrested for ALUMNI JANUARY ze. Jeanne Shaftel is a stenographer in a brokerage concern. Mildred Neumann is a secretary in the U. S. Steel Products Company. Flo Worts is attending Maxwell Training School. Bella Levin sailed for Europe in May. Kitty Kaiser is a secretary in a real estate ofiice. Harry Edwards, Ronald Atwater, Lee Schoen, Tommy Black, Jack Snook and John McDermott are in the financial section of the business world. Roxanna Thurston and Beth Hendrickson are at Adelphi. Harold Jenkins is at N. Y. U. Sydney Weisbarth is working in a real estate oiiice preparatory to entering Cornell Law College in the fall. Dorothy Strohman is taking a course at Drake Business School. Ken Wilsciii and Louis Milarta are emf ployed, at Bell Laboratories. Najebb Haddad is employed. In the recent elections at jamaica Train' ing School, Marion Hannan became Vice' President, and Emma Cahill, Treasurer of the Freshman Class. Dot Murphy is now at St. Josephs Coll lege for Girls. Mildred Von Drehle is at the New York School of Eine and Applied Arts. Flo Ebbers is taking up Art at Cooper Union. Edna Taplin, Estelle Holder, Rosemary Loth, Renee O'Neill, and many others are at jamaica Training School. Dot English, Dot Brummer, Dot Jax' heimer, Marion Van Deusen, Adele Jacob' son, and others are taking P. G. Courses JUNE 24 Fred Plate is at Dartmouth. Charlie Neppell is a gentleman of leisure. Dot Bayley, former G. O. President, has loafing around. But my friend E. Z. Mark was impatient and said, Lettuce go hornef So we departed, just as the Tree family was about to leave, and while every foot of ground was kicking about the raw decision of umpire judge Ment in awarding that half run to the Arabic nine.. fflie author wishes to thrmk Wctt.sun and Fraser for their kind lielpj ff--EIBXVARD Hin.1.MAN. NOTES a leading part in the musical comedy to be presented soon by the students of Connecti cut College. Mary Storer, also a Richmond Hill grad, is in the chorus. Isabel Cortada, Julia Feichter, Hannah Goldman, and Stella Slattery are at Hunter Eleanor Ball, Edna Otten, Beatrice An- drews, Bee Kellogg, Flo Chambers, Eleanor Gray, and Helen Maybeck are at Jamaica Training. Evelyn Hunt is at Smith. Muriel Brunner is at Heffley's Business School. Helen McKiernan is at the New York JUNIOR G. o. JEANETTE VALENTINE, VicefPvesidem Page 46 THE DOME School of Applied Design. Earl Herbert is at Springfield. Harry Eberlin is at Jamaica Training. Marion Sunshine is at N. Y. U. Elsie Spoerl is at Radcliffe. Rudolph Brodman is at Union College, Schenectady. Bob Green and Kenneth Fink are at Stevens Tech. Richard Jeffcott is working. M. L. Finch, Jr. is on the way to owning the Maxwell House Coffee Company. Granget Kammerer is at Cornell. Jitz Manuel is at Wesleyan. Taylor Le Count is at Colgate. Mildred McQuilkin and Catherine Sim' onson are at Ohio State. Elmer Richardson, Bob Carmichel, How' ard Matson, and Arthur Bantel, are in the business world. Anita Stockwell is at Miss Gibbs' Secref tarial School. Larry Weber is at Amherst. JANUARY '24. Sam Watson is with the Electric Com' pany in N. Y. Edward Seibert is now cost accountant with the American Chicle Company. Lila Martirri is now in the business world. Evelyn Handley is with the Bankers' Trust Company. Wally Sofileiss is doing a little business driving Chevrolets from Tarrytown, N. Y. Dorothy is Miss Manfred's secretary. William Riley and Charles Kane are em' ployed in Wall Street. Ted Luebbers is also employed. Gertrude Dezendorf, Marion Manning, Violet Masset, Ruth Keifer, and Edith Clark are at Hunter. Joe Burke is at Columbia. Ira Deggenhardt and Ernest Fintel are at Cornell. Sylvia Kossack is also studying there. Grace Congdon is at Adelphi. Lena Arkus is at Pace and Pace. Hilda Geigerich, Helen Hasset, Helen Herting, Florence Stelz, Muriel Iles, Lillian Heller, and Irene Meehan are at Jamaica Training. Margaretha Seigman is studying music at home. Charles Strong is keeping books for Borf den and writing for the McClure Syndicate. Edna Vogt, Betty Ramsay, and Vivian Bonetti, are studying at N. Y. U. Harry Frank, Milton Popper, Howard Connaughton, and Charles LaFrenZ are also studying there. Harriet Weslock was attending business school, according to the last news of her. JUNE '23. Edward Stern and Herbert Grover are at Columbia. Albert Ecke is at Bowdoin. Artie Segall has switched from Dartmouth to Michigan. Fritz Kortlucke at Dartmouth has recently been elected to Delta Kappa Epsilon. Jane Thomas attends Miss Noyes Dram' atic School in Boston. Kae English is studying music. Willie Feurbach is at Lehigh. Charles Roemat is at C. C. N. Y. Everett Miller, Allison Taylor, Jerry Peffert, August Carle, Beatrice Drayton, and many others are working. Erwin Vollmer will enter Dartmouth in the fall. JUNIOR DRAMATICS, ANNEX 56 THE DOME Page 47 illinrkrihgr 'iluainvnn Svrhnnl Cates Avenue--Ralph Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. One block from Gates Avenue L Station PHONE BUSHWICK 0935 DAY AND EVENING COURSES COMMERCIAL -- SECRETARIAL STENOGRAPI-IIC OPEN ALL SUMMER 'Thorough Instruction in All Commercial Subjects The Kind That Brings Results For Detailed Information ff Write, Phone or Call ---1 3 Enroll N0w.f ST. JOI-IN'S COLLEGE SCHOOL OF LAW Under the Auspices of ST. JOI-lN'S COLLEGE, BROOKLYN Pursuant to permission of THE REGENTS of THE UNIVERSITY of the STATE of N. Y. OPEN TO MEN AND WOMEN EXPERIENCED FACULTY FULLY EQUIPPED LIBRARY Located in Terminal Building, 50 Court Street, Brooklyn s First Year Class begins September 28th, 1925. Requirements for admission: Law Students qualifying certificate, issued by Regents. I Classes limited-applications considered in order of their receipt. Provisional rcgis tration accepted, subject to cancellation, from students expecting to complete requircf ments by September, 1925. Sessions: 4 to 6 p. m., 6 to 8 p. m., 8 to I0 p. m. For particulars apply to MATTHEW F. BRENNAN, Registrar GEORGE W. MATHESON, Dean 5U Court Street Brooklyn, New York Please Mention THE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers Page is TT O THE DOME kr Xa nl , gd' lim N, 'Z' BROOKLYN NEW YORK JERSEY CITY 1 , Le To A ,- E -L... -,,,,, ,VY ,,-.- ,,. Y L, , 717W -.V illiarquanh Summer Svrhnnl Cocducaticmal ALL HIGH SCHOOL SUBJECTS BASED ON REGENTS' REQUIREMENTS ACCREDITED WORK Pool Gymnasium Cool Classrooms W - . CENTRAL BRANCH Y. M. C. A. 55 Hanson Place Brooklyn, New York Please Menticmn 'TTHE DOME' when Patronizmg Our Advertiser. THE DOME Page 49 Telephones WORTH 873'7f8f9 Typewriters Rented Special Rates to Students AMERICAN WRITING MACHINE CO. 32I Broadway New York City Telephones Cumberland 3720 ff 3721 BOROUGH PHOTO ENGRAVING CO. INCORPORATED Line and Halftonc Plates ff Ben Day Color Plates ff Art Work THE SPERRY BUILDING 36-48 Flatbush Ave. Extension Brooklyn, N. Y. 1 I i,.-..,-,,,-,,,,.. .W fir . f i.-...H Y Telephone Richmond Hill 871 NICHOLAS P. DONOHOE Suecessor to STUART Ee? DoNoHoE PLUMBER, STEAM and GAS FITTER fohhing Attended T. Estimates Given 31 I Park Street Richmond I-IiII, N. Y. Telephone Richmond Hill 0338 THE FLUHR FLOWER SHOP .Quality and Courtesy Always Hillside and Myrtle Avenues, at I I7th Street Richmond Hill, N. Y. Please Mention HTHE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers l -..,, Page 50 THE DOME Everybody Eats at . . . GOLDBERCTS fOne block from schoolj STUDENT LUNCI-IES SERVED FROM I0 TO 5 Hot Dogs Refreshments Corner I l2th Street ancl 9lst Avenue Pastry Richmond Hill Gre S li o rt-lg-sg-1 Holds the World's Championship for Speed and accuracy in Shorthand Writing World's Champion for 1923-1924 Charles L. Swem, who was for eight Vears private stenographer nnd reporter to Woodrtiw Wilstmn. World's Champion for 1921 Albert Schneider, a graduate of the New York City High School of Commerce. Now a mem- ber of the shorthand reporting staff ofthe United State Congress. New York State Champion, 1924 Martin I. Dupruw, graduate, New York City High School of Commerce. Gregg Shorthand wins because it is easier to learn, easier to write, easier to read - and is the swiftest of all systems. THE GREGG PUBLISHING COMPANY 20 West 47th Street, Telephone: Bryant 7020 Ii 'l 'ne st:H AMERICAN 3 SAXOPHONES Jan old as 'rs on X Ts l TERMS lx... i. Slip! ,U 'AE ' 4 't . ii? 2 , wa. vm, S vicar MW N f ' M, 2. A Kf .Fvf :li EAS Y it iw: Yf9,GFNfM LA E. .arm ii fllfi diss , .J Im? r- K' S . 4 'tg Learning to play the Saxaphone is so easy that itis fan, especially if you own an easyfblowing GRETSCI-IfAMERICAN. And once you'11e learned to play, you will be ready to get your share of the big money that Saxaphone players are earning. ASK YOUR DEALER! C. FRANCIS JOI-IANSEN J eweler The 'l'own's Oldest Iewelry Store l 0603 jamaica Avenue Richmond l'lill, N. Y. Please Mention THE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers THE DOME Page S1 Telephones Richmond Hill 86568637 ff Lynbrook 3155 Established 1888 JOHN J. LAKE at son The Largest Paint and Wall Paper Store in .Queens Borough jamaica Avenue, corner I 16th Street 88 Atlantic Avenue Richmond I-Iill, N. Y. Lynbrook, N. Y. JFK k if HIIFIII SIHO0I NOW IN oUR New HOME We Mosr Accsssmuz f LOCATION N IN anooxum 541 FULTON STREET Co DeKalb Avenue PHONE TRIANGLE I22l ALL COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS ISAAC PITMAN xg OR GRECG SHORTHAND Same Management, Same Standards THAT HAVE MADE I-IEFFLEY SCHOOL W FAMOUS Size? 25541 , 7111? F Ti 5. 5 -Am rs-' I ., - 'QQ its gliit X , , 'I 1? E W? Q- J 1-I-S wx I . 3 x , , '122i. iWTi ' L Nfl 1 Nm fl? fgili' ix I-ik '- M' , H JS: xc N D X 'T sl , ,. 4 - 'QW 'Pima Q I. LYS n f' Qsjqtz - ' 5' . A v f 91- Iv as-Lg , Q 1 It ' ' . 7 'I I 1 J. 'YY 7 Q! I hge' , 9,1 5 L :Is , 3 FOR FORTY YEARS THE LOUISE STUDIO Instruction BALLET NATURE SOCIAL DANCING Member New 'York Sotiety 'Teachers ol Dancing 82 Union Avenue, Dlzunaiczi, L. I. Telephone jamaica 7048 I'Ul'ILS MAY RIiLlIS'I'ER AT ANY TIME ,Y , v Telephone Richmond Hill 1034 I-I. G. MAYBECK Manufacturer of HIGH GRADE AWNINGS AND WINDOW SHADES 131 I9 jamaica Avenue Richmond I-Iill, N. Y. Please Mention HTHE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers . THE NEXT STEP Page 52 THE DOME Telephone Virginia 0932 i EDWARD B. POWELL INCORPORATED Sporting Goods and Stationery l IOZ3 Jamaica Avenue Richmond I-Iill, N. Y. . Near 11 ltli Street - - Y .-.WL-.T-F.-.-.-,YW if--1-W --Y -.-.i.A.., in your career is choosing a profession A College Training in Engineering or Clieniistry equips the young man with that special knowledge essential to leadership in the industrial activities of our nation. The Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn offers the following courses to high school graduates: CHEMISTRY: Four years, degree of B. S. fBachelor of Sciencel. CifirzMir:Ai. ENc:iNianRiNr:: Five year. def glee of Ch. E. lChemical Engineerl. Atlivu, Enuinerzninuz Four years. degree ul C. E. lCivil Engineerj. Eiizfzrizitzat ENt:iNiatRiNf:: Four years. degree oi E. E. lElectrical Engineerl. Mr'r1HixNic:AL EN1:INiir1RiN4a: Four years. degree ol M. E. flvlcchanical Engineerj. Also graduate courses leading to the dc' gree of M. S. fMaster of Sciencel. Wi'ite for the Seventieth Annual Cataf logue and illustrated bulletin: address ERNEST J. STREUBEL, Dean To High - School Graduates- Whatever you plan to do after graduation-whether you plan for college or business- your mental development must con- tinue. Pace Institute is a distinctive private school of professional grade. Day and evening courses in Accountancy and Business Administration prepare high- school graduates for immediate earnings in business and in Accountancy. Many graduates who have acquired experience are now treasurers and controllers of large corporations-others are in success- ful Accountancy practice. Fir-ld trips tn the ofhces and plants ofthe large est organizationsin NewYork City areaunique characteristic ofthe work ofthe Institute. The Registrar is always glad to confer with high- school graduates and their parents. Pace institute 30 Church Street New York 99 Livingston Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. FOUNDED 1888 NEW YORK PREPARATORY BROOKLYN SCHOOL NEW YORK SCHOOL Cor. Franklin and Jefferson Aves. 72 Park Ave., bet. Tliirtyfeiglith Two blocks from Fulton St. and Thirtyfnintli Streets BOTH DAY AND EVENING SCHOOLS Chartered by the Board of Regents EMIL E. CAMHRER, A. M., LL. B., Principal Prepares Specially for I. RECENTS QUALIFYING CERTIFICATES II. COLLEGE ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS III. GENERAL EDUCATION Summer Term Opens june 22nd, 1925. Send for Catalogue and Further Parliculars Please Mention HTHE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers THE DOME Page 51 The Best in Business Education Write or Phone for Information TOWNSEND SCHOOL 8904 JAMAICA AVENUE, WOODHAVEN N Y Phone Richmond Hill 4732 All Commercial Subjects M. A TOWNSEND Principal I will study and prepare myself and when my chance comes I will be ready. -ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Salary and Advancement Y Depend on Preparation GIRLS' CENTRAL SECRETARIAL SCHOOL W 33rd 'Year 'Trains GOOD Secretaries Stenography, Touch Typewriting, Bookkeeping, Office Practice, Busi' ness English, Filing, Personality, etc. C Summer Entrance Dates - July 6, 8, I3 Typewriting: Intensive sixfweeks' course fspecial ratesj morning session Aslq for Secretarial School Catalogue CENTRAL BRANCH A Y. W. C. A. 376 Schermerhorn Street Brooklyn, New York C2 Blocks from Nevins and Atlantic Subway Stations and L. I. R. RJ AFTER GRADUATION WHAT? Why not make your living by play in' stead of work? Enjoy life as you go and give pleasure to others. Be strong and healthy and make others the same. Keep yourself well and teach others to do Iikc' wise. Such is the work and life of n Physical Trainer. SAVAGE NORMAL SCHOOL For Physical Education Established 1890 Prepares men and women to become supervisors, directors, and teachers of phy' sical training and hygiene in colleges, schools, clubs, playgrounds, industrial or- ganizations ancl private institutions. The course includes instruction in athf Ietics, gymnastics, games, dancing, swim' ming, community dramatics and the like, together with the necessary courses in an' atomy, physiology, hygiene, psychology and education. The strongest faculty in this country. See catalogue. Increasing demand for 'Teachers in this work. Salaries better than for grade work. CLASS LIMITED. REGISTER NOW FOR CLASS STARTING SEPT. 14th For Catalogue address Registrar at the School or Dr. WATSON L. SAVAGE, President 308 West Fiftyfninth Street, N. Y. C. Telephones Richmond Hill 24190156 UNDERWOOD BROTHERS Electrical Contractors We Specialize in Residential and Industrial Wiring l I4-06 Jamaica Avenue Richmond Hill, N. Y. Please Mention THE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers Page 54 THE DOME YY W V g V f mini, , V . . V f,,,,,,,, ,C Telephone Richmond Hill 4860 Phone 0316 Richmond Hill W LIIRILJQ' GEORGE E. CRANE, R. A. ARCHITECT 871 1 f 1 14th St., near jamaica Avenue Richmond Hill, N.Y. Dr. H. j. HEMMINGER Optometrist ancl Optician Repairing Done While 'You Wait 110f17 jamaica Ave., near 111th St. Richmond Hill Telephone Virginia 7 723 ERENE'S BEAUTY SHOPPE Specialist in PERMANENT WAVINC Marcelling ff Manicuring ff Hair Cutting ff Face Massaging 104f18 jamaica Ave., Richmond Hill Telephone Richmond Hill 757 T. O. HERRING Photographer Home Portraits and Views, Cameras and Supplies, Commercial Photography PORTRAIT STUDIO! l13'rH STREET and JAMAICA AVENUE RICHMOND HILL, N. Y. ....g4I1LB.,,, ve . , Telephone Richmond Hill 4208 F ELDIVIAN BEAUTY PARLOR INCORPORATED 11906 Jamaica Avenue Richmond Hill, N.Y. INSTALLATION ENGINEERING INCORPORATED Specialists in RESIDENTIAL HEATING Grand Central Terminal 11 North Fifth Avenue, Mt. Vernon 8716 f 116th Street, Richmond Hill Tuning and Repairing D. HENRY, Prop. HENRY'S SOUTH SIDE MUSIC SHOP Everything Musical 118f05 Liberty Ave., Richmond Hill Telephone Virginia 6425 Over Thirty 'Years in the Drug Business F. E. NIBLETTE Pharmacist ancl Chemist 101st Avenue, corner 97th Street Woodhaven, N. Y. Telephones 0088 and 2347 Richmond Hill Prescription Delivery ' Please Mention HTHE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers THE DOME E R ii msheage ' HENRY H. OTTMER Pharmacist 10644 Jamaica. Ave., cor. 107th St. Richmond Hill, N. Y. Phone Richmond Hill 10202 RICHMOND BAKERY CONRAD GEBHARD, Prop. Bakery and Lunch Room 11 1f04 jamaica Avenue Richmond Hill Long Island Telephones Richmond Hill 988 ff 1760 JOSEPH P. SLENSBY ATTORNEY and COUNSELLOR AT LAW Savings Bank Building Richmond Hill, N. Y. l Furs Repaired and Remoclclled a Specialty I Telephone Virginia 7275 THE WESTERN SHOP High Grade Ladies' Ready to Wear I and Furs l l Ladies' Ei? Gents' Garments Made to Order I We Also Do All Kinds of French I Dry Cleaning and Pressing I 10808 JAMAICA AVENUE, NEAR IOSTH ST. RICHMOND HILL, N. Y. l Tclephune Richmond Hill S659 BORIS WINOKUR Dealer in Diamonds, Watches and Jewelry Repairing a Specialty 1l7fl2 janiaiczl Avenue, opposite Myrtle Avenue junction I Richmond Hill, N.Y. i J. C. WETJEN, Inc. formerly at 113-09 jamaica Avenue Richmond Hill invite you to their new store l14fl4 Jamaica Avenue, next to Bank of Manhattan Co. Tel. Virginia 9084 VOGUE KIDDIE SHOPPE A Store of Remarkable Most Complete Departments of V Value vIc:TRoLAS RECORDS y RADIO KODAKS I . MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS I '05-l' Jamaica Avenue SHEET MUSIC I Richmond Hill, N. Y. Please Mention THE DOME when Patronizing Our Advertisers Page sa THE DOME P A I N T D E V O E Always the same I t never fails N one better T ry it. D o you know why? E conomy. Very good reason Q rcler it now E very can all paint MARTDJAhMEYH jR,CO. CTI-IE. QUALITY PAINT STOREJ At The Gateway to Richmond Hill Myrtle Avenue, corner l I7th Street fPa1k Stfreetj Telephone Richmond Hill 1966 ,, W , Y - 1, IN BUSINESS FUR YOUR HEALTH jOSH4lltKETHER DRUCSTORES Twentyftwo 'Years at This Spot Should Mean Something Jamaica Avenue, at l l ltl1 Street New Store at Jamaica Avenue and Park Street Please Mention THE DOME when Patffonizing Our Advertisers THE DoME f'fl1um,. 1925 In Defense of the Flapper In every generation the rising young woman has come in for a goodly share of censure. But, perhaps, never before has the world been as merciless as it has been in its attack on the presentfday flapper. Granted that she paints and powders and even smokes in publicg granted, also, that when she feels she's being watched, she does all sorts of foolish things, this does not make her any naughtier under' neath than her very own mother was when she dared to don bloomers and ride a horse astride. The girls of today are a bouquet of buds of which the great Gardener can well be proud: For today, in every business house, you will ind these muchfmaligned flappers carrying on. And al' though the casual onlooker may say that it is only detail work they attend to, it is very often true that a big business is built up on a sound foundation of details properly placed in their individual niches. Much credit must be accorded to those excellent schools that are responsible for the high class training that prepares their pupils for the great adventure of business. For instance, let us peep into the Drake Business School, which is situated at Bedford Avenue and Fulton Street. The principal of this school is Dr. U. B. Soule, a university graduate, a teacher of many years' standing and a writer of no mean ability. When a pupil applies for admission, whether he be a grammar school, high school, or college graduate, he must undergo an examinf ation by the Doctor, who is then better able to advise the student as to the classes in which he should register. Unusual attention is given in this school to English in general, and syntax in particular, so that when a graduate enters an oilice he becomes more than a mechanical machine. Perhaps that is the reason why many business men give preference to Drake School graduates. The students receive thorough instruction in all the commercial subjects and, besides, they are trained in all the 'little things that, added together, make the perfect and priceless secretary. If, therefore, you have been wondering just what to do, whether you be a merry little flapper or a more sedate college graduate, you owe it to yourself and your future to get into immediate communif cation with Dr. Soule. This, of course, places you under no obligaf tion whatsoever. -from BROOKLYN.LIFE. DRAKE BUSINESS SCI-IDOL Telephone Prospect 7486 Positions Guaranteed Please Mention 'LTHE DOME when Patvonizing Our Advertisers
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