Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH)

 - Class of 1935

Page 1 of 136

 

Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1935 Edition, Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collectionPage 7, 1935 Edition, Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 136 of the 1935 volume:

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W W H W ,H-Q, Q .W A SL., ' 1-15... ,- W 5- - .LL . . -., QAM? DLE. E'3lLF2?.3 5... n: , -g WW. THE ECHOES Edition of 1935 C4653 Published by the SENIOR CLASSES OF WARREN G. HARDING SENKDR HIGH SCHOQL Warren, Chic RUTH HUTZLEY ELIZABETH SELKMA Editors CLARA NIAE HICKOX NIIRIAM SCHRADER Jxxisfant Editors ROBERT LIND CHARLES STROTHERS Business Manager'.v ROBERT TILTON JOHN HELDACK ,Jrt Editors Laying the Corner-stone of Warren G. Harding Senior High School June 23, 1925 DEDICATION To our coach, Pierre F. Hill, in ap- preciation of the splendid work which he has done toward leading our school to higher triumphs :md achievements in athletics, we dedicate this volume of The lful1of'.v . The ECHOES 1-At the Lake. 2- Nutz . 3-Sweet and Low and Miriam. 4-Lunch Hooks. 5-Office Gals. 6-VVhen january l935'ers were kids. 7-That Dunphy Smile. X-Back Again! 9-Tragedians? 10-VVhy Boys Like School. 11-Our Gang. 12-Janitors. 13- Echoes , 1+-Leek friends. 15-Hertz! X Lois. 16- Cards . 17-Miss Bowen. 18-Cook Forest Vil- lains. 19-W. H. S. Annex. 20-Carolyn Spain. 21-Zoo Bugs. 22-jolly juniors. 23--Mr. Kreidler. 24--Hulme and Company. Page Four we 01: 'VHS 'UI Q? 'KSA '-17' X fx V!! + f f ff DUCQ f f IION was f 64? wQ f MV K W F4 P ' I 'W' ..6,6- , , ' T 'X G I ww FIU W A ,V M., I, ,M ,sv ' gi A12 M, 2 lm- x ' f Inq. V5 - aff ,L V- EV 65.1, Mwjf?gW , .' ' W ,ff ,gi ,M Mt il .z'j,,1q.gf1gfg.u' , '13 J 'Dy j ji' ,.f.f,f: ! '5Lfl:,j: .- EL,2f7'f -' I5'P'3Q7f' Wy! ilwF1'3'F:f' g 'J A f r , .. 1 If Gd : Q Z Isa 1 ff 3 I -x f , V .1 ' , 1 V . v I V, D JW ff WIS if f ri , f' OP 'rf X Iwi? L' ,Mx Y j I f ,I E f' 5 f 4 I, ff fe ,, L . f I X f R U L5 SUPGRINTENDENT DIRECTOR 0f5f+'00 ADMINISTRATION The ECHOES N BOARD OF EDUCATION H. H. '1'URNER, S11f1f'1'i11lz'111lz'lli L. O. XVURTEMBERGIQR, Iliwfinr of Srlmnlx RIABEI, C. VVoI.rffa, Iy1f'l'k-T1'l'l'!IS1lI'l'I' LVN N B. IJANA JOHN XV. Hrcsmzs, l'rf.viflw11 NI,xR:1f. Nba.-xl. XLXRTIN, five Pre.vif1w1 HOMER C. Romxs A. H. TROXEL Pugzr Six The ECHOES MILTON MOLLENKOPF Principal I S The ECHOES THE FACULTY -IIfANNIf'I I'If RISUUIN Dean nf Girls O. A. LO VICT I IJFIIII of Buyx Row tive-G. F. Henry, C. F. Scheig, H. L. Cuwden, YV. S. Garrett M N Fltl era VI r ' F R. Glass, U. IC. Nickel, K. I.. Krulier. Row four--U. A. Lovett, I. Ii. IN1zlsaz1r, M. U'Rourke, F. M. Newton IH Iadtlltk X I Iiatlluk Q XX IIIILUII w ,UI R. M. Crawford, C. K. VVc'lwlw, II. H. Alden, Al. G. Hickox, II L Ilu Row three-J. T. Yost, C. F. Cnrlett, R. B. VVheeler, Risdon, A. I Ihm I I IL u j Yan Metre K. Bowen, M. A. Ilennir-nn, VV. Hemphill, VV. YV:lters, M. S 1 ate lx I NIIQIIILIX C H C ule Row two--I.. C. Hatfield, Ii, L. Kaufman, Ci. F. Kerr, H. M. Iiiclglex u ct I7 YY Ma s berry, Ii. Iioley, E. Van VVinkle, A. M. Ezltnn, D. M. Yost, A M Cha CI Row one-VV. I'. Sullivan, H. H. He-tyler, VV. B. Class, M. Mnllenlum c iran c Nut in picture-R. 'I'. Daily, G. II. Lynn, A. M. Porter. Pagf Iiigfhl , : f O E OP THE 'ww ' 4 A ' NN ' gT'5'f'f'1r W m f:Ke1 1 F' I lvll 4' Wo- 'gfi if f 35242 In ff ' JMD I rigid i'1'Qfs,q.vm ,,i'f1g2,g A ff, , 7 y , , 44 ' +I ..4- W ' 74 4 X a l I y W ! X. f ff 7 ni J ' V . Nw gl f xii 'W 5 ww' U K555. NN X NOD? 59 59 -111357 Ni ' ,, ., .RXAXE CLASSES The ECHOES IHNUHRY CLHSS Sponsors DORIS W. MALMSBERRY RAYMOND M. CRAWFORD W. SCOTT LONG, Jr.-Student Council President- Here's to our prexy, wise and severe: also our classmate, bringing good cheer. Newton, Iowa, 1: Honor Society, 2, 3: Student Council, 1: Booster, 1: Hi-Y, 2, 3: French, 1: Bibliophiles: Dramatic, 2, 3: Phi-Chem, 2: Echoes: Prom: Senior Play Committee: Zoology, 3. Treasurer, 1, President, 2, Staff, 1, 2, 3: The Wet Parade : Michael and Mary : Growing Pains : Senior Play. JASON MOORE-President- Perhaps his heavy duties have kept him close to earth. Honor Society, 2, President, 3: Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Booster, 1, 2, Treasurer, 3: Hi-Y, 2, 3: Aeneid: Bibliophiles, 2, 3: Phi-Chem, 2, 3: High Lights, 2, Editor, 3: Monitor, 2, 3: Prom: Senior Play Committee: Senior As- sembly Committee. JOHN MATLAGO-Vice President- Better be small and shine, than large and cast a shadow. Honor Student: Honor society, 3: French: Frolics, 2: Band, 2: Civics: Phi-Chem, 2: rom. HELEN MOCK-Treasurer- She's witty and she's wise. Honor Student: Honor Society, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: French: Bibliophiles: Glee, 1: Echoes: Prom: Civics. ISABEL HOGAN-Secretary- Of all friends, what a friend I Eriindshfp, 3: Dramatic, 2: Neo-Lits: Senior Play: High ig ts, . MABEL ADAMSON- One of the really nice girls. Friend- ship, 1, 2, 3. SYLVIA AHO- Merry, witty, ever gay. Friendship, 1, 2: Spanish, 1, 2, Vice President, 3: High Lights, 2: Class Volley- ball and Basketball, 2. JACK ARMSTRONG- Music it was that came from heaven. Glee, 1, 2. 3: High Lights, 2: Monitor, 2, 3: Said Pasha : Girofle-Girofla . MARY BADIN- There is no wisdom like franknessf' Dramatic, 2, 3: Cinema, 2: Class Volleyball, 2. VERNE BAILEY- 'Tuck' is ever happy and gay. Booster, 1: Lettermen, 1, 2, 3: Monitor, 1, 2, 3: Track, 3: Class Bas- ketball, 1, 2, 3: Cheerleader, 1, 2. MILES BALDWIN- A smile that quickly captivatesf' Class Secretary, 2, 3: Honor Society, 2, 3: Hi-Y, President, 3: Spanish, 2, 3: Bibliophiles, Treasurer: Glee, 1, Librarian, 2: Phi-Chem, Vice President, 2: Echoes: High Lights, 2: Moni- tor, 2, 3: Prom: Zoology, 1, Treasurer, 2, President, 3, Staff, 1, 2, 3: Senior Play. GAIL BALL- The kind of girl you'd tell secrets to. Friend- ship, 1, 2, 3: Zoology, 1: Neo-Lits. JAMES BALLi I worship the Wonders of this world. Botany, 1. LYDIA BARNABO- A carefree, sporting girl! Friend- ship, 1, 3: Basketball, 1, 2, 3: Class Volleyball, 1, 2, Base- ball, 1, Basketball, 1, 2. MARGET BARTHOLOMEW- My kingdom for a horse! Honor Society. 2, 3: Student Council, 3: Frolics, 3: Booster, 1, 2, 3: Friendship, Cabinet, 1, 2, Vice President, 3: Phi- Chem, 2: High Lights, 1, 2, Editor, 3: Prom: Zoology, 1, 2, 3, Staff, 2, 3: Neo-Lits: Senior Play. ELIZABETH BELLAY- You can never tell what she'll do. Dramatic, 2, 3: Cinema, 2: Class Volleyball, 2. RICHARD BJORSON- Good things come in small packages. Zoology, 1. IRVIN BLAND- Frank and fair: on the square. Aeneid: Band, 1: Phi-Chem, Secretary, 2. Page Ten IHNUHRY CLHSS ADELA BOBBY- The mildest manners and the gentlest heart. JANE BOLES- Wherever mischief be, there too will you Gnd me. Booster, 1, 2, 33 Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Prom. THOMAS BRDEK- All things come to him who waits. Glee, 1, 2, 3. DOROTHEY BRILL- She comes and goes as she pleases. Friendship, 1, 33 Dramatic, 2, 3. ROBERT BURGESS- Worry becomes me little. Orchestra, 1, 2, 3: Band Minstrel, 13 Band, 13 Cinema, 1. STEVE BUTCHKO- A hard fighting athlete. Lettermen, 1, 2, 3: Football, 1, 2, 33 Monitor, 2, 33 Baseball, 2, 3. BEN CARGO- To be, rather than to seem. WILLIAM CARNAHAN- He is a student who burns a lot of midnight oil-in automobiles! Student Council, 1: Glee, 1, Vice President, 2, 33 Tennis, 1: Monitor, 1, 2: Said Pasha. FRANK CERNY- What better fare than well-content? Industrial Arts, 1, 2. CATHERINE C0NWAY4 0ne you must know to like. Friendship, 2: Basketball, 1: Class Volleyball, 1, 2, Baseball, 1, 2 , Basketball, 2, MARJORIE COPE-- Quiet, studious, and full of fun. Friend- ship, 1, 2, 33 Aeneid: Glee, 13 Monitor, 33 Prom: Honor So- ciety, 3: Neo-Lits3 Senior Play. JACK C0PELAND4 He knows what he says, believe it or not. French, 3, President, 23 Monitor, 2, 3: Prom. EARL CRAVERf He is not the kind that stays quiet. Let- termen, 2, 3 3 Monitor, 1, 33 Baseball, 2, 3: Class Basketball, 1. JEAN CREASER- A woman's hair is her crowning glory. Student Council, 1, 2 : Friendship, 1: Glee, 1, 2, 3: Basketball, 1, Prom: Girof1e-Girofla. FRED DAUGHERTY- Oh, for the life of a sailor! Frolics, 2: French, 2, Vice President. 3: Phi-Chem, 1, 2: Echoes: Monitor, 2, 33 Prom: Senior Play. SAMUEL DAVIE4 A man's man. SAM DeCAPITO-- Inches do not make the man. HENRY DENNEY- An athlete, quiet and modest. Moni- tor, 33 Class Basketball, 2. HAZEL DeVOE- A grateful mixture of sweet, seasoned with a little tart. Booster, 1, 2: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: Orchestra, 1: Class Basketball, 13 Zoology, 1. MARION DRAVIS- A charming friend to all is she. Hon- or Society, Treasurer, 3: Student Council, 2, 3: Booster, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Aeneidg Echoes: High Lights, 2: Zoology Staff, 1, 23 Senior Play. W GENEVIEVE DRENNENe She has a certain dignity, com- bined with the greatest jollity. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Echoes: Prom: Class Basketball, 1, 2, Volleyball, 1, 2: Neo-Lits. Page Elwrn The ECHOES The ECHOES IHNUHRY CLHSS RAY DUNPHY- A little nonsense now and then is relished by the best of men. Spanish, 35 Physics, 35 Monitor, 3. MURIEL ECKMAN- One who does as she chooses. Friend- Shlv. 1, 2. 35 High Lights, 2, 3. MARCUS EDWARDS- Take life easy-What's the hurry ? Aeneid5 Monitor, 85 Zoology, 1, 2, 3. ROBERT EUSTACE- A lively, jolly chap. Glee, 35 Phi- Chem, 15 Monitor, 15 Track, 1. MIKE FABRIZIO- Quiet, but he doesn't say all he knows. BRUCE FAILS- What he will do, he will do: and what he won't, he won't. Booster, 25 Monitor, 3. ANNE FALLON- Serene, sweet, sincere. French, 35 Phi- Chem, 2. HELEN FERRANCE- She stood for simplicity and unaf- fected air. GEORGE FERGUSON- A high-stepper that usually man- ages to reach the goal. Senior Play5 Monitor, 35 Modern Bookshelf. ROBERT FINI- And to his eyes there was but one beloved face on earth. Frolics, 15 Hi-Y, 2, 35 Lettermen, 2, 35 Tennis, 35 Monitor, 1, 25 Basketball, 2, 35 Baseball, 35 Class Basketball, 1. FLOE FOSTER- Always ready to do or say the kindest thing in the kindest way. Honor Society, 2, Vice President, 35 Student Council, 2, 35 Phi-Chem, 25 High Lights, 25 Mon- itor, 35 Promp Zoology, 2, Treasurer, 15 Senior Play. NORMAN FOSTER- Even though vanquished, he could argue still. Frolics, 25 Cinema, 35 Dramatic, 1, 2, 35 De- bate, 1, 2, 35 High Lights, 1, 25 Zoology, 15 Monitor, 1, 2, 35 It Won't Be Long Now. EMORY FULLER- As silent as a sphinx. Monitor, 3. MARIE GARDNER- Gentle in her manner. DOROTHY GOLDNER- Mirth, admit me of thy crew. Friendship, 1, 2, 35 Class Basketball, 35 Volleyball, 2. SYLVIA GOLDSTON- A little learning is a dangerous thing. Friendship, 1, 2, 35 French, 35 Honor Society, 35 Bibliophiles5 Dramatic, 1, 2, 35 High Lights, 25 Wet Pa- racle 5 Michael and Mary 5 Senior Play. DOROTHY GORSE4 Everyone likes her, that's plain to be seen. Friendship, 35 Aeneid5 French, Secretary, 35 Echoes5 Monitor. JOHN GOULDTI-IORPE! Hark to the rhythm of the drum! Frolics, 1, 25 Orchestra, 1, 25 Band Minstrel, 15 Band, 1, 2. LUCRETIA GRIMA-- She never did have much to say5 we all agree that she's O. K. Friendship, 3. MARTHA LEE GROVE- It's nice to be natural when you're naturally nice. Vandergrift, Penne., 15 Class Secretary, 15 Student Council, 1 5 School Paper, 15 Friendship, 2, 35 French, 35 Dramatic, 2, 35 Phi-Chem, 25 Echoes. HAROLD GUTELIUS- Magnificent spectacle of human happiness. Monitor, 2, 3. Page T 'wel-ve IANUARY'CLASS MARGUERITE GUTI-IRIE- Sober, but not serious3 quiet, but not idle. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Senior Play. JOE I-IAPGOOD- For he's a brave, bright fellow, with eye and conscience clear. Student Council, 2, 33 Hi-Y, 2, 33 Aeneid3 Phi-Chem, 23 Monitor. 2, 3. HELEN HARTWELL- Blithesome and gay, that's her way. Rayen High, 13 Glee, 13 Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Aeneid. HELEN I-IEATI-IMAN- There's nothing so sweet in life as love's young dream. Friendship, 1, 2, 3. GORDON HERBERT- I hurry not-neither do I worry. Frolics, 2: Orchestra, 1, 23 Band, 1, 2, 33 Monitor, 13 Class Basketball, 2, 3. CLARA MAY I-IICKOX- To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. Honor Student3 Honor Society, 2, 33 Friendship, 13 Dramatic. 1, 2, 33 Glee, 2, 3, Librarian, 13 Phi-Chem, 2, 33 Echoesg High Lights, 2, 3: P1'0lTlQ Bibliophiles3 A Full Houseng It Won't Be Long Now 3 Michael and Mary V: Wet Parade. WILLIAM HOMER-'Tm not a politician, and my other habits are good. Lettermen, 33 Football, 23 Monitor, 1: Basketball, 2, 33 Class Basketball, 1. GLEN HUNT- A man of nice perception. RUTH HUTZLEY-- He is a fool who thinks by force or skill to turn the current of this woman's will. Honor So- ciety, 2, 33 Booster, 33 Friendship, 33 Aeneid3 BibliophiIes3 Orchestra, 13 Dramatic, 1, 33 Growing Pains 3 Glee, 13 De- bate, 23 Phi-Chem, 23 High Lights, 1, 23 Zoology, 3, Presi- dent, 1, Secretary, 2, Staff, 33 Prom: Class Basketball, 1, 3: Echoes, Editor3 Senior Assembly3 Senior Play. LAWRENCE IMBURGIA-- An independent fellow with a grave and sober air. Band, 1, 23 Zoology, 2. WILLIE LEE JOHNSON- She hath a quiet, understanding smile. Honor Society, 2, Secretary, 33 Frolics, 2, 33 Class Baseball, 1, Basketball, 3. BILL JOSEPH- I chatter, chatter as I go. Band, 2, 33 Zoology. 1, 2, 3, Staff, 23 Physics, 3. VERA KAGY- Dance, laugh, and be merry3 but be also innocent. Dramatics, 1: Glee, 1, 2, Librarian, 33 Phi-Chem, 23 Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Volleyball, 1, 23 Senior Play. GERTRUDE KASKI- A sincere smile, an understanding heart. Friendship, 23 Spanish, 1, 2, 33 Class Basketball, 1, 2. MARIAM KENNEDY-- Life's a pleasant institution3 let's take it as it comes. Friendship, 1, 23 Aeneid3 Orchestra, 13 Phi-Chem, 23 High Lights, 2. ROBERT KERSHNER- Silence is one great art of conver- sation. Industrial Arts, 1, 2. VIRGINA KIMMY- A good heart is better than a thousand heads. Spanish, 2, 3. WILLIAM KINCAID- I never let my school work interfere with my education. Champion High, 13 Glee, 2, Vice Presi- dent, 3. RUTH KING-f Quiet, but watch out! Friendship, 1, 2, 3. KARL KIRK- Happy-go-lucky, fair, and free. Alliance High, 1, 23 Student Council, 23 Booster, 1, 23 Hi-Y, 23 Ten- nis, 23 Football, 1, 23 Track, 1. ROBERTA KIRKPATRICK-- An umpire in the matter of taste. Friendship, 1, 23 Dramatic, 13 Echoes3 Zoology. 2, President, 3, Staff, 2, 3. Page Thirtwn TheECHOES l The ECHOES IHNUHRY CLHSS MARTHA JANE KITCHIN- Oh! That someone would listen to my chatter! Friendship, 1, 3, Spanish, 3, Dramatic, 1, Class Basketball, 2, Neo-Lits. CLARA KIVISTO- A lovable maid of temper serene. Zo- ology. 1, 3, Staff, 3, Class Basketball, 1, Volleyball, 2, Neo- its. DONALD KLIPPEL- The sweetest hours that e'er I spend are spent among the lasses, Ol Frolics, 3, Orchestra, 2, 3, Band Minstrel, 1, Band, 1, 2, 3. IREN E KONOPKA- Modest, shy, and quiet is she. Friend- ship, 1, 2, French, Orchestra, 1, High Lights, 2. MILDRED LARNER- A quiet girl hath hidden knowledge. Friendship, 1, 2, 3, French, Orchestra, 1, 3, Prom, Neo-Lits. GRACE LEPOLA- A smile for everyone she meets. ROBERT LIND- And then he would talk! Hi-Y, 2, Treasurer, 3, Spanish, 2, 3, Bibliophiles, D1'amatic, 2, Glee, 1, Debate, 1, 2, 3, Echoes, Monitor, 'Senior Play. JUANITA LOUCKS- Hither and thither-but whither 'I Frolics, 3, Friendship, 1, 2, 3, Aeneid, High Lights, 2, Class Easketball, 1, 2, Volleyball, 1, Prom, Zoology, 1, 2, 3, Neo- its. CARL LUNDY- Oh, why should life all labor be 7 Hi-Y, 2, 3, Letter-men, 2. 3, Football, 1, 2, 3, Monitor, 1, 2, 3, Basketball, 1. ANGELINE MARKAKIS- What are blondes compared to this brunette? Orchestra, 1, 2, 3. JOHN MARKAKIS- He's the very best of chaps. Glee, 1, 2, 3. MARGARET MATTSONe An aspect of attractiveness. Basketball, 1. HOWARD MATZ- Fight, smile, and fair play make men for the world of today. Glee, 2, Lettermen, 2, 3, Football, 1, 2, Monitor, 2, 3, Basketball, 3, Baseball, 2, 3, Class Bas- ketball, 1, 3. JOHN MAZARIK- None but himself can be his parallel. VIOLA MIKOSH- A maiden never bold, of spirit still and quiet. Basketball, 1, 2. RUTH MILLER- Ever joyous, happy and gay. Friendship, 1, 2, 3, Dramatic, 1, Basketball, 3, Prom. JEAN MITCHELL- A twittery, giggly, little girl. Friend- ship, 1, 2, 3, Glee, 1, 2, High Lights, 2. VIRGINIA MOON- Blondes have a way with them solely their own. Booster, 1, 2, Friendship, 1, 2, 3, Dramatic, 1, 3, Treasurer, 2, Glee, 1, 2, President, 1, Basketball, 1, Senior Play, Senior Play Committee. HELEN MOORE-- Thy smile like sunshine to many a sun- less heart. Friendship, 3, Aeneid, Class Basketball, 3, Mon- itor, 3, Senior Play. BERNADINE MORRISe Nothing is more charming than the coloring of happiness. Honor Society, 3, Friendship, 1, 2, 3, Spanish, 2, 3, High Lights, 2, Zoology. 1, Secretary, 2, Stadt, 2, Editor. 3, Neo-Lits, Senior Play. DOROTHY MOSER-- Gentle and demure, with a retiring grace. Page Fourteen IANUARY'CLASS PAUL MURRAY- With all good grace, a gentleman. Mon- itor, 1, 2, 3, Zoology, 1, 2, 35 Glee, 1, 2, 3, Overtime: Said Pasha. HAROLD MYERS- Ladies take care, his voice is seductive. Monitor, 1, 2, 35 Class Basketball, 2. JUSTINE McCONNELL- A jolly good wrt and a jolly good sport. Friendship. Secretary, 1, 2, Vice President, 3: Booster, 1: Prom: Basketball, 1, 35 Civics, Vice President: Class Baseball, 1. DONALD McDERMOTT- A quaint fellow in a droll sort of way. Debate, 1. WILLIAM MCNUTT- A man of pith, might, and muscle. Lettermen, 3: Football, 2, 3. HERBERT McQUINNEY- Enough of words. Class Bas- ketball, 3. VICTOR NATALE- God bless the man who invented sleep! Class Basketball, 1: Monitor, 2, 3. LILY NYLAND- Tho' her hair is black as night, there's never a spirit so bright. Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Baseball, 1, Volleyball, 2, 33 Senior Play. IRMA ODEN- Fashioned so slenderly, young, and so fair. Friendship, 1, 2: Zoology, 2, Treasurer, 3, Staff, 33 Senior Play: High Lights. 2 3 Echoes: Class Baseball, 1, Volleyball, 2. NICK 0LLISi I say not much, but think more. Spanish, 2, President, 3, Monitor, 2, 3: Senior Play. EDYTHE ORR- Still waters run deep. GEORGE PANTELAKIS- Coal black hair and jet black eyes-a handsome hero, all realize. Glee, 1, 2. EFORGE PARIS-- Would there were others like him. ee, 1. ELAINE PARKER- My mind to me a kingdom is. Class Basketball, 3. WALTER PARKS- Happy as a lark-gay as a June day! Hi-Y, 3: Senior Play. WILLIAM PARKSf A friend of the human race. Phi- Chem. 2: Zoology, 13 Monitor, 1, 2, 35 Track, 33 Class Bas- ketball, 1, 2. GEORGE PIPENUR- Men of few words are wise. GENEVIEVE POULTON- She was ever fair and never proud. Frolics, 2: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Glee, 13 Zoology, 1: Class Basketball, 3: Prom. DELMAR RECTOR- A boy, light-hearted and content. Lettermen, 3: Monitor, 1, 2, 3: Basketball, 1, 2, 3: Track, 3: Class Basketball, 1, 2. ROBERT REICI-IARD- A man's a man for a' that. Glee, 13 Monitor, 1. LUCY RITCHs Quiet and business-like. High Lights. 3. Page Fifteen TheECHOES The ECHOES IANUARY CLASS JEAN ROGERS- A perfect woman, nobly planned, to warn, to comfort, and command. Booster, 1, 2: Friendship, 1, 2, President, 3: French: Orchestra, 1: High Lights, 1, 2: Dra- matic, 3: Prom: Honor Society, 3: Neo-Lits. KATHERINE ROSENBERGER- A quiet, sincere lassie. VELMA RUSCITTI- Like a violet by a mossy stone, half- hidden from the eye. PAUL SALEN- Of stature tall-I hate short men! Hi-Y, 1, 2, 3: Band, 1, 2: Monitor, 1, 2, 3. HILMA SALMINEN- Only by her best friends her true worth is found out. Friendship, 2, 3: Spanish, 2, 3. JOHN SAVU- There is a twinkle in his eye, which speaks of mischief by and by. CLEONICE SCARNECCHIA- I-Iark! Do I hear angels sing! Frolics, 1: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Dramatic, 1 : Glee, 1, 2: Prom: Senior Assembly Committee. CHARLOTTE SCHMIDT- Buxom, blithe, and debonair. Friendship, 1, 2, 3. HERBERT SCHRYVER- Who fits reason with pleasure, and wisdom with mirth. Honor Society, 2, 3: Student Coun- cil, 3: Hi-Y, 2, 3: Band, 1: Phi-Chem, 2, President, 3: Moni- tor, 3: Senior Assembly Committee: Senior Play: Echoes. ROBERT SHRIVER- While we live, let us live. Hi-Y, 2, 3: Dramatic, 1, 2: Phi-Chem, 2: Monitor, 2, 3: Senior Play. FRANK SIMON- Springs up for athletics like our fore- fathers for liberty. Lettermen, 2, 3: Football, 2: Baseball 2, 3. GALEN SIMON- Men of few words are the best men. Phi-Chem, 3: Monitor, 3. DOROTHY SLEEe Prepared for anything. Spanish, 2, Treasurer, 3: Glee, 1, 2. EVELYN MAE SMITH- Who wins a smile from this fair maid is for his efforts well rep-aid. Frolics. 1: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Dramatic. 1, 2, 3: Glee, 1: High Lights, 1: Class Basketball, 1: Senior Assembly Committee. CAROLYN SPAIN-e She may be quiet, but never is she idle. Friendship, 1, 3: Dramatic, 1. HENRY SPAIN- Free from care. Monitor, 1, 2: Class Basketball, 1. IVAN SPRAITZER--f'The best of sports this man is known. Frolics, 1, 2: Booster, 1, 2: Glee, 1, 2: Lettermen. 3: Monitor, 2, 3: Golf, 3: Class Basketball, 3: Zoology, 1, 2. ANNA SUCHIU- Her heart is light and gay. Zoology, 1: Class Basketball, 1, Volleyball, 2. ROBERT SWAIN- The architect of his own fortune. French: Glee, 1: Phi-Chem, 2: Zoology, 1, Stai, 1, 2: Prom: Monitor, 2: Neo-Lits. ARMAS TAIPALE- An athlete supreme. Lette1'men, 2: Industrial Arts, President, 3: Track, 1, 2, 3. PAUL TAKACS- Not all great men have been scholars. Frolics, 3: Monitor, 1, 2, 3: Class Basketball, 1: Prom: Senior Play, Page Sixteen IHNUHRY CLHSS ROBERT TAYLOR- Ambition is his middle name. Stu- dent Council, 2, Frolics, 1, 2, 3, Booster, 1, 2, President, 3, Hi-Y, 3, Glee, 1, Monitor, 2, Prom Chairman, Class Vice President, 1, Senior Play. MARGARET THOMAS- Very quiet and sedate, when you know her, she's just great. Dramatic, 2, Glee, 1, 2, Spanish, 2, Secretary, 3. JAMES TI-IOMPSONf No one ever stepped on this live wire. Booster, 1, 2, 3, Spanish, 2, 3, Class Basketball, 1. RUTH TI'IOMPSONf A beautiful maid, happy as a lark. Friendship, 1, 2, 3, Neo-Lits. ROBERT TILTON- So I accepted the 320,000 and purchased the apothecaryf' Honor Society, 2, 3, Frolics, 1, 2, 3, Booster, 1, 2, 3, Hi-Y, Secretary, 3, Aeneid, President, Bibliophiles, Dramatics, 3, Phi-Chem, 2, 3, High Lights, 3, Zoology, 1, 3, Staff, 1, 2, 3, Vice President. 2, Monitor, 1, 2, 3, Class Bas- ketball, 1, 2, 3, Prom, Echoes, Lettermen, 3, Football, 3, Senior Assembly Committee. ANN TOSKAS- None knew her but to love her, nor named her but to praise. Friendship, 1, 2, 3, Aeneid, French, Bib- liophiles, 2, Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Volleyball, 1, 2. LOIS TUCKER She laughs and talks the whole day long. Honor Society, 2, 3, Student Council, 1, 2 , Booster, 2, Friend- ship, 1, 2, 3, Aeneid, French, Bibliophiles, 2, President, 3, Dramatic, 2, 3, Echoes, High Lights, 1, 2, Senior Play Com- mittee, Senior Assembly Committee, Michael and Mary : Growing Pains , Senior Play. WILLIAM URMSONf I never trouble trouble 'til trouble troubles me. Spanish, 2, 3. MARY FRANCES WEIRICK-- This happy little lass created fun in every class. Frolics, 3, Booster, 2, Friendship, 1, 3, Treasurer, 2, Dramatic, 1. RAY WESTOVER- Clever men are good, but they are not the best. Monitor, 2, 3. CHARLES WHITTIERf An industrious chap, who finds his pleasure as he works. Booster, 1, 3, Hi-Y, Vice Presi- dent, 3, Glee, 1, Monitor, 1, 2, 3, Class Basketball, 3, Prom. BETTY WILLIAMSM A peppy maiden, dark and pretty. Booster, 1, Friendship, 1, 2, 3, Dramatic, 1, 3, Growing Pains , Senior Play Committee. FRANCES WILLIAMS- How sweet and gracious, even in common speech. SYLVIA WILSMANf Her sunny locks lie on her temples like a golden fleece. Spanish, 3, Class Baseball, 1, Volley- ball. 2, Basketball, 1, 2, 3. GEORGE WISE- Such calmness bespeaks an even temper. Zoology, 1, 2. RUBY WOLFE A dependable lassie. Dramatic, 1, 2. WILLIAM WRIGHTf He takes a lot of kidding, but he hasn't much to say. Phi-Chem, 2, Industrial Arts, 1, 2, 3. GEORGE YOHEMf Lank, lean, and likeable. Glee, 2, 3, Dramatic, 3. JOSEPHINE MARVINf She flies with her own wings. Friendship, 1, 2, 3. DON HOLLIS'-'f Care rests lightly on his shoulders. Zo- ology, 2. 3. Page Sewlzlrrzz The ECHOES The ECHOES IHNUHRY CLHSS PLHY THE RETURN OF PETER GRIMM By DAVID BELASCO Directed by O. A. LOVETT C A S T Peter Grimm , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,, M iles Baldwin Frederick , W . ., . .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Scott Long james Hartman ., W , .,,,, ,,,, ,,,,,,, F r ed Daugherty VVilliam ,, , , ,,,,,, Bobby Harm and jack Boyd Catherine , ,,,, ,,,, , , Virginia Moon and Lois Tucker Dr. Andrew McPherson ,,,, ,. ,,,, , , ,,,...,, ,,,, ,,,,,,, R obert Lind Rev. Henry Bartholommey ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,.,,,, R obert Taylor Mrs. Bartholommey , H ,,,,,, , Sylvia Goldston and Ruth Hutzley Col. Tom Lawton W - , ,, , ,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, , George Ferguson Marta ,, ,,,, , Bernadine Morris and Margaret Mattson Clown , ,, ,,,,,,,, , ,,,,, VValter Parks COMMITTEE : Virginia Scott Long. STAGE: Robert Shriver, Helen Moore, Lily PUBLICITY: Nick Ollis, S T A F F Moon, Chairmang Lois Tucker, Betty VVilliams, jason Moore, Robert Tilton, Paul Takacs, Managersg Marion Dravis, Floe Foster, Marjorie Cope, Promptersg Nyland, Marguerite Guthrie, VVardrobe. Isabel Hogan, Managersg Marget Bartholomew, Robert Tilton, Irma Oden, Vera Kagy, Herbert Schryver. SCENERY: Mrs. Gates and the art classes. Rather than relate a synopsis of this well-known Belasco play, let us jot down those high- lights in production which impressed the audience. Read and enjoy again Cin your mind's eyej these choice bits: The atmosphere of other-worldness', made convincing by clever lighting effects. . . Little Bobby Harm who almost stole the show from our veteran actors. . . Scott Long displaying his- trionic versatility by playing the part of a crafty, treacherous bad man for a change. . . Bob Taylor, so naive and innocent, flourishing under the thumb of that strident wife CSylvia GJ. . . That ir- resistible pair of comedians, Bob T. SL Ruth H. . . Milesy winning laurels for his splendid portrayal of Peter Grimm, in life and in death. . . Lind as the Doctor who made even the au- dience interested in his queer notions. . . The lovers CFred-Ginny-Loisj, who added the neces- sary romantic touch. Page Eighlren IHNUHRY CLHSS The ECHOES I-Vera Kagy. 2-Muriel Eckman. 3-Gail Ball. 4-Hilma Salminen. 5-Anna Tusliua. 6'-Mildred I,8I'l1t'1'. 7-jean Rogers. S-Margaret Thomas. 9-Miles Baldwin. 10-00116- vieve Pnulton. 11-Mabel Adamson. 12-Juanita and Bud Lmlks. 13-Dorothy Slee. I+-Malv garet Mattson. 15-Gertrude Koski. 16-Cleonice Scarnecchia. 17-Glen Hunt. 13-Edythe Orr. 19-Lucy Ritch. 20-Sylvia VVilsmun. 21,--Marjorie Cope. 22-Ile-len Hartwell. 23-Mariana Kennedy. 24---Ruth Hutzley. Payf Nfrzrlvflz The ECHOES IHNUHRY CLHSS 1-HazelDeVoe. 2-Sylvia Goldston. 3-Helyn Fuaselman. +-Clara Kivisto. S-Bolffaylor. 1'-Helen Moore. 7-Bill joseph. S-Chas. VVhittier. 9-Hill Wlright. 111-Ruth Thompson. 11-FrancesVVilliu1ns. 12-Scott Long. 13-Billllrmson. 14-MargetBartholomew. 15-,lean Mitchell. 16-Virginia Moon. 17-jack Copeland. 18-Genevieve Drennen. 19-Fred Daugh- rrty. 241-Irma llden. 21-Ray Dunphy. Z2-Bill Kincaid. 23-Bob Swain. 24-Carolyn Spain. Zf-Ruth King. 26-Bernadine Morris. 27-Bob Fini. ZX-Helen Mock. 29-john Gouldthorpe. 30-Virginia Kimmy. 31-Marie Gardner. 32-Margaret Guthrie. Page Tfwrnfy JUNE CLHSS The ECHOES Sponsors MARGARET A. DENNISON H. C. VVAGNER JOHN HELDACK- Efficient to the nth dexzree, as all presi- dents should be. ---Student Council President-Pittsburgh, Pa., 1: Class president, 1: Baseball, 1, 2, 3: Basketball, 2: Lette:-men, 1, 2, 3: French, 1: Monitor, 1, 2, 3: Chemistry, 3, Secretary, 2: Bihliophiles, Treasurer: Prom: Honor Society, 3: Hi-Y, 3: Echoes: Senior Play Committee: Class Basketball, 2, 3: Track, 3. MATT PALOVICH-- He has honored us: may we honor him. -President-Senior Play Committee: Honor Society, 2, 3: Hi-Y, 2, 3: Spanish. 2: Lettermen, 1, 2, President, 3: Chemistry, President, 2: Football, 2, 3: Monitor, 2, 3: Base- ball, 1, 2. 3: Track, 3: Prom: Class Vice President, 1. WENDELL FRANKIE--- Few men have his athletic ability. - -Vice President-Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Glee. 1, 2: Monitor, 2, 3: Prom: Track, 2: Stunt, 1, 2, 3: Book Shelf: Senior Assembly Committee. HELEN LINDBERGI-If Ancl she danced! fSecretary - Honor Society, 3: Frolics, 1, 2, Chairman, 3: Booster, 1, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: French: Echoes: Student Council, 2, 3: Neo-Lits: Monitor, 3: Class Basketball, 2, Volleyball, 3: Prom: Senior Assembly Committee. CORNELIA POREA- Hitch your wagon to a star. -Treas- urer-- Honor Student: Honor Society, 2, 3: Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Booster. 1, 2, Secretary, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, Cabinet. 3: Bibliophiles: Echoes: Prom: Intramural: Class Basketball, Volleyball, Baseball, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: Senior Assembly Com- mittee. ELIZABETH ABRAHAM- Sacred is the name of friend- ship. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Class Volleyball, 3: Prom. FRANCIS ADAMS- Let us do or die! Industrial Arts, 1, 2, 3: Phi-Chem, 2. MARY AHKIM-f She does a quiet thing in a quiet way. VIRGINIA ALLENf The perfect type of athletic girl. Basketball, 1, 2: Intramural, President: Class Volleyball, 1, 2, 3, Baseball. 2. MATILDA ALLISON-- The reward of a thing well done is to have it done. Friendship, 3. MARY ATKINf Patience is a necessary ingredient of genius. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: French: Orchestra, Vice Presi- dent, 3: Band, 1, 2, 3: Class Basketball, 2. RUTH BAILEY Good nature and good sense must ever Join. ILA MAE BAKER- All that is beautiful shall abide. FRANK BARFAY- So quiet, we hardly know he's here. ROBERT BARHOOVER- -- The more we arprued the question, the more we didn't agree. Spanish, 3: Glee, 1: Phi-Chem, 2: Zoology, 1, 2: Monitor, 2, 3. HARRY BECKMAN-- On their own merits modest men are dumb. BETTY BEDFORDf- For truth is precious and divine. Friendship, 3. JOSEPH BELLAY- To climb steep hills requires slow pace at first. Class Basketball, 2. Pagf T-afnty onf TheECHOES TUNE CLASS GRACE BENNETT- Above our life we love a steadfast friend. Friendship, 1, 3. HAROLD BERKOWITZH- Let me do it. Honor Society, 2, 3: Frolics, 1: Aeneid: Dramatic, 3, Secretary, 1, 2: Cinema, 2: Zoolofy, 1, 2, 3: Glee, 1: Debate, 3: Phi-Chem, 2: Moni- tor, 1, 2, 3: P1'om: Hi-Eco-Sy: Neo-Lits. MILDRED BERNACKYs A pleasing countenance is a silent commendationf' Friendship, 1, 3: Zoology, Staff, 2, 3. MARTHA BIANCO-- She carries her smile about with her. JOSEPHINE BICKEL - Meri-ily, Merrily, shall I live. Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Baseball, 2: Intramural. JOHN BIGG Never a word speaks he save when there is need. CHARLES BLOUNTf T0 win without boasting, to lose with- out excuses. Zoology, 1, 2, 3: Phi-Chem, 2. ELEANORA BOCHNIAKf Nor bold, nor shy: nor short. nor tall-a nice minszling of them all. Friendship, 3: Class Volleyball, 2, Basketball, 1, 2, Baseball, 2. MARY BOLDAN ff The will is what counts. Friendship, 3. MARY JANE BOWENf My heart is ever at your service. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Phi-Chem, 2: Class Basketball, 1, 2, Base- ball, 2, Volleyball, 1: Intramural. EDGAR BOWER- A real live-wire. ROBERT BOWERSf Concentrated pep in a neat. artistic package. Class President, 1: Frolics, 2: Booster, 1, 2: Hi-Y, 1, 2, Treasurer, 3: Aeneid, Princeps: Book Shelf, President: Monitor, 2, 3: Lettermen, 2, 3: Class Basketball, 3: Baseball, 2: Student Council, 2: Prom. JANE LEE BRAGUE-''Dependability and amiability are a valuable combination. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: French: Dramatic, 1: Phi-Chem, 2: High Lights, 2, 3: Hi-Eco-Sy: Book Shelf: Honor Society: Prom: Senior Play Committee. WILSON BR0GD0N4 His football feats are known to fame. Lettermen, 1, 2, 3: Football, 2, 3: Baseball, 2, 3: Class Basketball, 2: Track, 1, 2: Monitor, 3. HERBERT BROWNLEE- And so the duty done, he turned once more to fun. Monitor, 2, 3: Industrial Arts, 3: Stunt, 1, 2, 3: Prom. RAY BROWNLEEW- Write me as one who loves his fellow- men. Stunt, 1, 2: Prom. CHARLES BURCH-J'ThousIhts are miyrhtier than strength of men. Monitor, 3: Class Basketball, 3. MARTHA BUR1CKf Her hair was not more sunny than her heart. Pittsburgh, Pa., 1, 2: College, 1, 2: Big Sister, 1, 2: Aeneid: Civics, 2: Class Basketball, 1, 2, Volleyball, 2: Friendship, 3: Prom. RICHARD BUSCHAGEN- A gentleman makes no noise. Phi-Chem, 2, 3: Monitor. 1: Class Basketball, 2. EUGENE BYERS A youth light-hearted and content. ROBERT CALLAVVAY- He's :rot rhythm. Cleveland, Ohio, 1: Monitor, 1: Stunt, 1, 2, 3: Industrial Arts, 2, 3: Frolics. 2, 3: Class Basketball, 3: Senit-r Assembly Com- mittee. Pagn' Tfzcfnly-tfwo IUNE CLHSS MATILDA CAMPANA- Pleasure is ever in her hand or eye.. Friendship, 1, 2, 3. ANITA CANZONETTA- Nothing can bring you peace but yourself. Spanish, Z, Treasurer, 35 Zoology, Z, Monitor, 3: Senior Play Committee. RUTH CARAWAY- A sweet and charming girl. Friend- ship, 1, 2. WRAY CARAWAY- f Napoleon was a little man. CARMELLA CARILLIO A rhapsody of words. Friend- ship, 1, 2, 3: Dramatic, 15 Glee, 1, Z. ALBERT CASAVANT--4'Bold of his speche and wys, and well ytau1,rht. Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, Band, 1, 2, 33 Monitor, 3: Track, 2, 3: Stunt Club, 2, 3. CHARLES CASSIDY- Says little but accomplishes much. Aeneidg Monitor, 3. ROBERT CASSIDY- To be efficient in a quiet way is my aim throuprhout the day. Zoology, 23 Class Basketball, 2: Hi-Eco-Sy: Senior Play Committee. CLIFFORD CAVENDER- The play's the thing. Frolics, li Stunt, 1, 2, 31 Stafre Electrician, 2, 3. EZRA CHAUWICK An honest man's the noblest work of God. OLGA CHAPLEY- She can cheer up the grloomiest places. Friendship, l, 2, 33 Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Volleyball, 1, 23 Prom 3 Hi-Eco-Sy. JOHN CHICKERNEO lf football were music, Chick would be a whole brass band. Lettermen, 1, 12, President, 33 Font- ball, 1, 2, 33 Monitor, 1, 2, 33 Basketball, 1, 2, Captain, 3, Baseball, 2, 33 Echoes, Honor Society, 3. IRIS CHRISTIE The hand that made you fair hath made you mood. Friendship, 1, 2, 3. MARY CATHERINE CHRISTOPHER- Live, love, and laugh. Pueblo, Colorado, 1, 2: Art League, 1, Vice-Presi- dent, 25 Literary Society, 1, 2, Glee, 33 Prom. CHARLES CLARK- A handful ol' good times is worth a bushel of learning. Monitor, 2: Promg Book Shelfg Class Basketball, 3. JAMES COLE-f-t'Beau Brummel could learn from him. Student Council, lg Frolics, lg Class Vice-President, 2, 3: Booster, 1, 2, President, 3: Monitor, 2: Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3: Hi-Y, 3: Book Shelf: French. GERTRUDE CULLINAN--- This fresh young: World I see, all made it seems for me. Friendship, 3: Phi-Chem, 1: Prom. VERA DASCOULIAS-- Her eyes were of that dark hue, wherein lies deepest attraction. Middleboro, Massachusetts, l, 2, 3. VAVARA DATISH It is the mind that makes the body rich. Honor Society, 2, 35 French: Dramatic, 3: Phi-Chem, 25 Class Volleyball, 1, 2, Baseball, 23 Hi-Eco-Sy: Senior Assembly Committee. PAUL DAVIS- A big lad, strong at work or play. Foot-- ball, l, 2. 3: Monitor, 15 Basketball, I: Track, 1, 2, 3: Let- lermen, 2, 33 Senior Assembly Committee. CARMELLA DQSANTI V A little work, a little play. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Spanish, 2, 3: Hi-Eco-Sy. Page Tmcfnty-Ilfrrr The ECHOES TheECHOES TUNE CLASS MARY DeSANTlS- It was her thinking of others that made you think of her. Friendship, 33 Spanish, Vice President, 33 Hi-Eco-Sy. BELVIN DORSEY- I am at charity with the world. WILDA DOWNS- Her smile is always welcome, and her words are full of wit. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 French: Orches- tra, 1, Secretary, 2, President. 3, Echoesg Class Volleyball, Basketball, Baseball, 1, 2, 33 Intramural, Stunt, 2, 3, Neo- Litsg Prom: Senior Assembly Committee. STELLA DUDA- Good nature, ever bubbling o'er with smiles. Friendship, 1, 23 Class Basketball, 1, 2. EMOR DURKIN- Why should I struggle with the world's troubles? Lettermen, Ll, 3: Monitor, 33 Baseball, 2, 3. ALMA ENGLE- Her ways are ways of pleasantnessf' Friendship, 1. 2. 3: Glee, 15 Class Basketball, Volleyball, 1. EDITH FERRELL-- She's dainty and she's pretty. Friend- ship, 2, 3. HELEN FLETCHER- Ever level, ever true, to do the task she has to do. Friendship, 2, 3, Phi-Chem, 2, Echoesg Class Volleyball, 23 Hi-Eco-Sy: Neo-Lits. NICK FOGOROS- As merry as the day is long. Baseball, 2, 35 Class Basketball, 3. DOROTHY FORTNEY- In her quietness there is charm. Zooloily, 1, 23 Friendship, 3. HOWARD FRAZIER- A generous grin is his trademark. Zoology, 1, 2, 35 Phi-Chem, 25 Spanish, 2, 3, Band, 13 Prom. HELYN FUSSELMAN- More modest than the well-known violet. Class Volleyball, 1. KENNETH FUSSELMAN- From a dark spark may burst a mighty flame. Industrial Arts, 3. HELEN GARLICK- Gracious in manner. Class Treasurer, 2, Friendship, 1, 2, Cabinet, 33 Dramatic, lg Aeneidg Frenchg Honor Society, 33 Book Shelf, Vice President: Phi-Chem, 2: Echoes: High Lights, 2, 33 Prom: Senior Play Committee: Hi-Eco-Sy, Senior Assembly Committee. NORMAN GARNER- No man was ever wise by chance. Orchestra, 1, 2, 33 Band Minstrel, 13 Band, 1, 2, 33 Phi- Chem, 1, 2, Zooloi-ry, 3, Stall, 1, Z3 Monitor, 1, 25 Class Bas- ketball, 25 Prom. CHARLES GERSTMEYER' V- Let the world slide. Glee, 1, 2, Monitor, 1, 25 Phi-Chem, 23 Dramatic, 3. AUDRE GIESCHEN- Her heart is like the moon, ever changing, but always there is a man in it. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Frolics. 33 Zooloiiy, 3. HELENA GILBERTf Labor is the law of happiness. Aeneid: Spanish, 3. EUGENE GOMSI Reading maketh a full man. Band, 1: Frenchg Bibliophiles: High Lights, 3: Monitor, 33 Prom: Hi-Eco-Sy, Vice Presidentg Honor Society, 3. ROBERT GOOD-- Here's to the boy that does the work. Dramatir, l 3 Frolies, 1, 2, 3: Booster, Z, 33 Zoology. Staff, 3: Prom: Monitor, 3: Senior Play Committee. GRACE GOULDTHORPE- Nothing endures but personal qualities. Glee, 1. Librarian, 2, 3, Friendship, 3. Page Twenty-four IUNE CLHSS LORRAINE GRANT-- A lady serene. Friendship, 1, 2, Vice President, 3: Glee, 1: Frolics, 2, 3: Echoes: Booster, 1, LZ, 3: French: Prom: Book Shelf, Treasurer. REINO HARKONEN - I make it a rule to believe only what I understand. JEAN HARPSTERf Active always, talkimr ever, merry and witty, decidedly clever. Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Booster, 1, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, Secretary, 3: Glee, 1: Dramatic, 1, 2, Vice President, 3: French: Echoes: Prom: Book Shelf: Senior Play Committee. WALTER HARRIS- A songs is but a little thing and yet what joy it is to sing! Glee, l, 2, 3: Said Pashau: Dorothy . GEORGE HAZUDA-- A willing worker. JOHN HLAUDY- He was a gentleman on whom I built an absolute trust. CHARLES J. HILL- A sublime disregard for labor.' NICK HINGEL- A miser with words. Orchestra, 1, 2. VVYNIFRED HOCKENSMITH- As well to be out of the world as out of fashion. Friendship. 1: Zoolofly, 1. LOIS HOFFMAN- She sets her mark high and then at- tains it. Spanish, 2: Botany, 1. LAURA JANE HOOPES- She sings so sweet: she sinus so low. Frolics, 2, 3: Booster, 3: Friendship, l, 2, 3: Book Shelf, Secretary: Glee, 1, 2, Treasurer. 3: Stunt, LZ: Prom: Dorothy, ROBERT HOVVK-- Always full of fun and ready for a good time. Monitor, 1, 2: Industrial Arts, l, 12. ALBERT l-IOWLAND-'AA tall man may accomplish much. STEVE HOYNOS-f A quiet, 1'eserved sort of fellow. Monitor, 3. MAZIE JONES She speaks, behaves, and acts just as she ought. Hi-Eco-Sy. VELARA JONES- She trips through all her busy days cloaked with a gay expectancy. Honor Society, 2. 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: French: Echoes: Prom: Neo-Lits: Hi- Eco-Sy: Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Baseball, Volleyball, 2- Intramural. VVARREN JONESf Study is the least of my worriesf Monitor, l, 2, 3: Stunt, 1, 2: Class Basketball, 1: Wrestling, 1, 2. ALBERT JUKES- The power of thought, the magic of the mind. Zoology, 1: Industrial Arts, Vice President, 3: Track, 1, Z, 3: Hi-Eco-Sy. THOMAS .IULIANf A prince of a fellow. IRVIN KABAKOV- He would argue for a week. Phi- Chem, 2: Monitor, 1, 2, 3: Basketball, 2: Baseball, 2: Prom. EUGENE KALE- When joy and duty clash, let duty go to smash. French: Phi-Chem, 2: Monitor, 3. PIIHF TfLL'1'71lJ'-ffm' TheECHOES TheECHOES TUNE CLHSS LENNARD KARHU- A loving heart is the beginning of all knowledge. Orchestra, 1, 2, 3. AUBREY KEICI-I- A proper man as one will ever see. RUDOLPH KIEFER4 Life is anything but monotonous to him. Monitor, 3: Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3: Industrial Arts, 3. MARIAN KEITI-If Her mirth the world required. iPhoto does not appear here.J HELEN KIGHTLINGER- Victory belongs to the most perseveringf' Monclova, Ohio, 1: Friendship, 2, 3. VIVIAN KING- She laughed and the shadows departed. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Basketball, 1, 2: Class Basketball, 1. EVELYN KLINE- It's not what we stand for, but what we fall for. Frolics, 2: Booster, 2: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Dramatic, 1. IRENE KOIVISTO---- A maiden with a cheery smile and a happy personality. Honor Society, 2, 3: Spanish, 2, Sec- retary, 3: Class Volleyball, Baseball, 2, Basketball, 2, 3: Intramural. HELEN KOVAL- That inexhaustible good nature. Friend- ship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: French: Bibliophiles, Treasurer: Monitor, 3: Prom: Hi-Eco-Sy, President: Honor Society, Vice President, 3. LAWRENCE KUJALA- A man 0' independent mind. FRANCES KUREY- A woman's work must never cease. CELESTE LAPR0CINA4 She lets her actions speak for her. French: Hi-Eco-Sy: Honor Society, 3. DOROTHY LAUFFER- So tender and so good to see, be- cause she is so sweet. Greensburg, Pa., 1: Jeannette, Pa., 2: Grex, 2: Math. 2: Friendship. 2, Treasurer, 3: Glee, 2, Vice President, 3: Echoes: Hi-Eco-Sy: Dorothy : Honor Society, 3: Senior Play Committee: Frolics, 3. JAMES LAUFFER- - An affable and courteous gentleman. St. Petersburg, Pa., Newlensburg, Pa., 1: Jeannette, Pa., 2: Phi-Chem, 2: Zoology, 3: Monitor, 2, 3. AUDREY LAW- To those who know her best a friend most true and hearty. Friendship, 1, 2: Class Volleyball, Basketball, 1, 2. ALLEN LEDGERWOOD- Lank, lean, and likeable. Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Band Minstrel, 1: Monitor, 1: Industrial Arts, 1, 2, 3: Senior Assembly Committee. ELEANORE LEIBY-- I don't like dates-in the package. Friendship, 1, 2, 3. FRANK LEON- Slow but sure. Golf, 2: Class Basket- ball, 2, 3. WESTLEY LIMBER- Happy am I: from care am I free. Frolics, 2. JOSEPHINE LORETOf Little deeds of kindness, little words of love. French: Glee, 1. JUNE LOWMILLER- A dauyrhter of the gods, divinely tall and most divinely fair. Honor Society, 3: Frolics, 2, 3: Booster, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, Cabinet, 3: Bibliophiles, Vice President, President: Glee, Librarian, 1: Echoes: Moni- tor, 3: Prom: French. BERNARD L0WRY4 A smile for every occasion. Leavitts- burgr, 1, 2: School Publication, 2: Track Manager, 1: Dra- matic, 1: Glee, 2, 3: Football, 3: Basketball, 2, 3: Class Base- ball, 2, 3, Basketball, 1, 2: Prom. Page Tfwmty-:ix IUNE CLHSS LILA LUOMA- Her wealth is perfect ease. Class Basket- ball, 1, 2, Volleyball, 1: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: French: Echoes: Neo-Lits, President: Honor Society, 3. MARY LUTTON- She is certain to be seen wherever fun and mischief beam. Haddon Heights, New Jersey, 1, 2. DOMINIC MACK- He's got those dancing feet. Industrial Arts, 1: Glee, 1: Monitor, 3. DANNIE MACKLIN- There is wisdom in a quiet heart. ALLYN MANDEI,- In harmony with everyone and every- thing. Youngstown, Ohio, 1, 2, 3: Amicitia, 2: French, 1, Z, 3: Honor Society, 3: Friendship, 3: Bibliophiles: Dra- matic, 3: Senior Assembly Committee. REVA MANN- Modesty is her forte. Dramatic, 1, 2: Glee, 1, 2, 3: Phi-Chem, 2: Cinema, 2: Friendship, 1. SOPHIA MARTO To judge the maiden right you must know her. DORIS MASTERS- Self conquest is the greatest of vic- tories. CHARLES MAURER- A man, like a watch, is to be valued for his manner of going. Frolics, 3: Booster, 2, 3: Spanish, 2, 3: Prom: Book Shelf: Zoology, Staff, 2, Vice President, Editor, 3. MARY BELLE MESSERSMITI-If True as the dial of the sun. Zoology, 1: Promg Orchestra, Librarian, 1, 2, 3, Sec- retary-Treasurer, 3. EDGAR MILLER- A man's happiness-to do things proper to a man. Cambridge, Ohio, 1: Chemistry, 1: Torch, 1. THE ETNA MOHERMAN - She laughs and the world laughs with her. Friendship, 1, 2. MARJORIE MOORE- Nothing is impossible to a willing heart. DORIS MORRIS- Originality is being one's self. Ellwood City, Pa., 1: Honor Student: Class Basketball, 1: Hockey, 1: Honor Society, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: French, President: Phi-Chem, 2: Echoes: Zoology, Staff, 2, 3: Class Volleyball: 2: Monitor, 3: Neo-Lits: Stunt, 2: senior Assembly Com- mittee. ANNE MORRISON - Her smiles are as plentiful as the sands of the sea. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: Glee, 1, 2: Phi-Chem, 2: Basketball, 1, 2. HAZEL MOSELEY- She hath a voice of gladness and a smile. Friendship, Book Shelf. 1, 2: High Lights, 2, 3: Hi-Eco-Sy: JANELLE M0SER4 She hath more business in ia day than others in a lifetime. 2: High Lights, 1, 2, Society, 3. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: Phi-Chem, Editor, 3: Book Shelf, Secretary: Honor ELLENER McBRIDE - Truth and industry doth kindle honor's fire. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: Orchestra, 1, 2, 3: Phi-Chem, 2: Class Basketball, Volleyball, 2. DOROTHEA McCAULEY- Her friends are many. ROSELYN McCLEERY- Queen of girls. Honor Society, Vice Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: French: 2, 3: Dramatic, 1 : Echoes: Prom: 3: Student Council, 2, 3. rose of the rosebud garden President, 2, President, 3: Bibliophiles: Friendship, 1, Chemistry, Vice President, WARREN McDERMOTT- I am sure care's an enemy to life. Monitor, 1. Page Tfwcnly-.relvfn The ECHOES I 1 Pagr Tfwrnty- TUNE CLASS JUNE McELRA'IHf 'VVhat Paris is wearing. Vienna, Ohio, 1: Basketball, 1: Class Basketball, 13 Baseball, 13 Glee, 1: Cheerleader, 13 Debate, 1: Class Secretary. 1: Track, 1: Athletic Treasurer, 1: Prom: Dramatic, Vice President, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Frolics, 3: Senior Play Committee. ETHEL McGUFFIE- So earnest, so diligent, withal so sweet. French, Orchestra, 1, 23 Class Basketball, 2, Neo- Lits. WILLIAM lVIclVIAI-IONH - Were silence gold, he'd be a mil- lionaire. Student Council, 33 Aeneidg Honor Society, 33 Phi-Chem, 2: Echoes, Prom: Monitor, 2, 33 Hi-Eco-Sy, President. RAY McNAMAR--- For the more a man knows, the more worthy is he. Gary, Indiana, 1 : Track, 1 5 Glee, 1: A Cappela Choir, 13 Band, 13 Orchestra, 1: Neo-Litsg Zoology, 1, 2, 3. LOUISE NADER- Vivacious--loquaciousf' Honor Society, 33 Frolics, 33 Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneidg French, Vice President, Debate, Secretary-Treasurer, 3: Echoes: Monitor, 3: Class Volleyball, 3, Baseball, 2, Basketball, 33 Prom: Bookl Shelf, Hi-Eco-Sy, Secretaryg Chemistry, 2, Intra- mura . ESSIE MAE NICHOLS- Nothing there is that bothers me. RUDOLF NISKI- But all the pleasure that I find is to maintain a quiet mind. Dramatic, 3: Glee, 1. RONALD NOLAND- A lion among the ladies. Cumberland, Maryland, 3, Lettermen, 1, 2, 33 Football, 1, 25 Track, 25 Class Basketball, 1, 2. FLOYD O'DONNELIf- When is vacation 7 Glee, 1: Phi- Chem, 1: Zoology, 1, 25 Prom. RITA PETIT- - Hi1:h-erected thouyrhts seated in the heart of courtesy. Akron, Ohio, 1: Dramatic, 1, Glee, 1: Class Basketball, Baseball, 1, 2, 33 Honor Society, 3: Aeneid: French: Bibliophiles, Secretary, Zooloty. Staff, Treasurer, 2, Editor, 3. CONCERTINA PETROCCO--- An ever faithful maid is she. Friendship, 23 Hi-Eco-Sy. CHESTER PHILLIPSf All's fair in love and football. Letterman. 3: High Lifrhts, 1: Z0oloIJY, 1, 33 Football, 35 Monitor, 1. HOWARD PHILLIPS- An honest man and a warm heart within. Glee, 3, Dorothy. MATILDA POLENA- Nay, not loveless, but loveable. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 French, Prom. VIOLA POPPAL- - As a pal she's first rate. Zoolouy, 2, 3: Monitor, 35 Hi-Eco-Syg Aeneid. ANNE PORA' From the crown of her head to the tips of her toes she's mirth. Glee, 1 3 Phi-Chem, 2: Hi-Eco-Sy. CLARE PORTER- I-Ie's ready for duty in all Sorts of weather. Frolics, 2: Dramatic, 2: Zoology, 2, 33 Bird, 1, 23 Botany, 2. KATHLEEN POWELL- Neat, not gaudy. Leavittsburg, 1: Basketball, 1: Track, 1: Dramatic, 1: Class Basketball, 2, 3: Friendship, 2, 3. DOROTHY PRETO--- Rich in good works. RAYMOND PRICE- For he's a jolly good fellow! Honor Society, 2, 3: Student Council, 3, Treasurer, 2, Frolics, 2, 3: Booster, 1, TZ, 33 Hi-Y, 2, Secretary, 33 Book Shelf, Vice President: Dramatic, 2, 31 Monitor, 2, 3, Prom, Senior Play Committee. JAMES PUMPHREY --- He was a verray parfit, Qentil knight, Frolics, 1, 12, 3: Booster, 1, LZ, Treasurer, 33 Hi-Y, 2, President, 3: Aencid : Book Shelf: Debate, 2 3 Monitor, 2, 3: Prom. fiyllf IUNE CLHSS JOSEPHINE PYTLIK- A love for nature and a friend to all. Monitor, 3: Hi-Eco-Sy. DOROTHEA QUINBY--- A merry heart doth good like a medicine. Friendship, 1: Orchestra, 1, 2, 3: Band, 3. GEORGE RADIK- The best laid schemes 0' mice an' men gang: aft a-fxleyf' Glee, 1: Phi-Chem, 1, 2: Monitor, 1: Bird, 1. EMANUELLA RAPONE - Sincerity is a worthy goal. Friendship, 1, 2. ROBERT READY- Friends many, foes few. Monitor, 1. DORGTHY REDMOND- Music is well said to be the speech of angels. North Central H, S. Chorus, 1: Friendship, 1. 2, 3: Band Min-strel, 1: Glee, 1, 3: Basketball, 1: Said Pasha. CHARLES REEDERS- I-Iere's a man with drawing power. Canton, Ohio, 1, 2: Sebring, Ohio, 2: Hi-Y, 3. BETTY E. REESf A merry heart that laughs at care. Frolics, 2, 3: Booster, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, Secretary, 3: French: Book Shelf, President: Glee, 1: Prom: Honor Society, 3. LAVERNE REMALIA- No one knows what he can do until he does it. French: Neo-Lits: Glee, 1, 2, 3: Monitor, 3. PAUL RENFTLE A Hood fellow, comic-ally serious. Aeneid: Glee, 1, 2, 3: Monitor. 1. HELEN RITCH- - To be merry best becomes her. Friend- ship, 2, 3: Hi-Eco-Sy. ADOLPH ROSENBERG- The same jolly fellow day after day. Monitor, 3. JHANNE RUBENSON -W Popular, p1'etty, clever, and witty. Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Booster, 1, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: French: Dramatic, 1, 2, Secretary, 3: Glee, 1: Echoes: Prom: Book Shelf: Senior Play Committee. JOHN RlfDINf As modest as he is intellectual. JACK RUHIrf A man he seems of cheerful yesterdays and confident tomorrowsf' Orchestra, 1: Monitor, 3. KENNETH RUPERT- A man we are glad to call a. friend. ROBERT SADLIER A pleasant chap, well-liked by all. French: Monitor, 3. SYLVIA SAKER- They are rich who have true friends. Honor Society, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: French: Dra- matic. 2, 3: Echoes: Monitor, 3: Prom: Hi'Ec0-Sy: Neo- Lits. VIRGINIA SAKER A charming: little witch with irreat black eyes. Honor Society, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Aeneid: French: Glee, 2: Phi-Chem, 2: Prom. ANTONETTA SARTORIO Always the same f always Mood. MIRIAM SCHRADERf She is a winner at whatever she plays. Honor Student: Class Treasurer, 1: Honor Society, 2, Treasurer, 3: Student Council, l: Frolics, 2, 3: Booster, l, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, Secretary, 3: Aeneid: French: liibliophiles: Glee, 1: Echoes: Monitor, 3: Prom: Senior Assembly Committee. Page Tacfnry-nim' TheECHOES The ECHOES TUNE CLASS ELIZABETH SELKMA- She is all softness and sweetness, love, Wit, and delight. Honor Society, 2, 35 Friendship, 2, 33 French: Orchestra, 1, 23 Echoes, Editor: Zoology. 1, Staff, 2, 33 Neo-Litsg Senior Assembly Committee. ELMER SENTNER- - Little said is soonest mended. GEORGE SEPANEKf Al1 great men are dying, and I don't feel well myself. Honor Society, 33 Spanish, 3: Glee, 1, 23 Zoology, 1, 2, Staff, 3, Monitor, 35 Phi-Chem, 2: Prom. EDYTHE SHAFER- - Illusions and wisdom combined are the charm of life and art. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Glee, 1, 2. JULIUS SILAGY- Worth makes the man. Industrial Arts, 1, 33 Class Basketball, 2, 3. RUTH SILLIT0Ef4'Deep brown eyes running over with glee. Frolics, 25 Booster, 1, 2, Secretary, 35 Friendship, 1, 2, 33 French, Echoes: Neo-Lits, Vice President, Intra- mural , Stunt, 2, Class Basketball, Baseball, Volleyball, 1, 2, 33 Prom. CHARLES SIMKINS--- Silence is more musical than any song. Aeneidg Orchestra, 2, 3: Band, 13 Monitor, 3. ALEX SIMON-f'A firm foundation for the team. Letter- men, 33 Football, 3. ZELDA SINGLETON- It's nice to he serious now and then. Friendship, 1, 2 3 Glee, 2. .IOHN SMITH- A man who counts his friends by all who know him. Winter Haven, Flo1'ida, 1, 23 Basketball, 1, 25 Tennis, 1, 23 Class Secretary, 1, Glee, 2, 3. ROSE SPAINf- A quiet little lady with manner quite sedate. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 French, Echoes. JOEL STAHL- He's a quiet fellow--sometimes. Youngs- town, Ohio, 1, 2, 33 French, 1, 2, 35 Monitor, 1, 25 Glee, 13 History, President, 3: Phi-Chem, 3. HESTER EMMA STEED-'4Her gay, laughing ways add mer- riment to every company. DELSIE STEELE- She moves among us with a quiet grace. HARRIETTE STEVENS - Everyone likes her, she likes everyone. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 French: Class Basketball, 2. CLAIRE STEWART- Once your friend, always your friend. Honor Society, 3: Hi-Y, 35 French, Secretary: Zoology, 1, 2: Monitor, 3. FRANK STEWART- Oh, silent dreamer. what are your inmost thoughts? Aeneid: Dramatic, 3: Phi-Chem, 2: Zoology. Staff, 3. CHARLES STROTHERS- Thy modesty is a candle to thy merit. Shreveport, Louisiana, lg Honor Society, 3: Biblio- philesg Echoesg Monitor, 3. STEVE SUBSTANLEY- He is the king among us. Foot- ball, 3. DONALD SWEENEY- A quiet but a learned lad. Honor Society, 3, Spanish, 2, 3, Phi-Chem, 25 Zoology. 1: Prom: Track, 2, 3. DORA LOUISE SWEET- Personality is a treasure-it is hers. Class Secretary, 37 Honor Society, 2, 35 Frolics, 2, 33 Booster, 1, 2, 3, Friendship, 1, 2, Vice President, President, 33 French: Bibliophilesg Echoesg Glee, 1: Prom: Senior Assembly Committee. Page Thirty IUNE CLHSS ELMA SWEGAN- Sugar and spice and everything nice. Friendship, 2, 3: Aeneidg F1'ench. MILDRED SWINFORD- The girl with a football complex. Friendship, 1, 2, 33 French. KI-IEVA TANASE- Small but mighty. Honor Society, 2, 3: Friendship, 2, 3g French, Bibliophilesg Dramatic, 3: Phi-Chem, 23 Zoology, Staff, 2, 35 Stunt, 2. BEVERLY THOMAS- An important link in our friendship chain. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Glee, 13 High Lights, 3. DEAN THOMAS- Cheerful all day long. Band, 1. LILLIAN THORPE- An ease of heart her every look con- veys. Friendship, lg Aeneidg Monitor, 3: Class Volley- ball, 2, 3. CLARA MAE TRILLOW- An addition to any company. Friendship, 1, 3. JOE VALSI--- Always a gentleman. Monitor, 3. ROBERT VAN AUKER- It takes a. man to graduate. ALBERT VAN HUFFEL- Yea, all men are dust-but some are gold dust. Aeneidg Student Council, 2. ISABEL VAN HUFFEI.f All faith, love and obedience to a friend. Frolics, 23 Friendship, 1, 2, 33 Prom. MAE VAN SICKLE- Hark, harkl the lark at heaven's gate sings! Glee, 1, 2, 3. JOHN VAN WYEf HapDy-20-lucky man. Frolics, 1, 2: Booster, 13 Monitor, 1. F MARGARET VENNITTI4 It's the sony: she sings and the smile she wears. Friendship, 1, 2, 3: French. NICK VIRCA- The personification of amiabilityf' NORMAN WARD! An argument was never won by being silent. Industrial Arts, 3. DELBERT WELLS- No legacy is so rich as that of honesty. Industrial Arts, Secretary, 1, Vice President, 2, President, 35 Class Basketball, 2. DONALD WELLS-- There is likewise a reward for faithful silence. Industrial Arts, 1, 2, 3. JEAN WHYTE- Blessed are the joymakers! Pittsburgh, 1, 27 Class Basketball, 1, 2, 35 Baseball, 2, Volleyball, 1, 2: Friendship, 3, French: May Festival, 13 Gym Exhibition, 2. JOHN D. WlLLIAMSf He has Worked hard enough. Class Basketball, 33 Industrial Arts, 13 Track, 3. MERLE WILLIAMS- It's such a good piece of luck to be natural. Zoology, 3. ' Page Thirty-one The ECHOES The ECHOES TUNE CLI-ISS ODESTER WINDOM- Silence never betrays you. Class Basketball, 33 Monitor, 2: Basketball, 2. LENORE WINGARD- She hath soft and pensive grace. Prom 3 Hi-Eco-Sy. GENE WISE- Brevity is the soul of wit. Frolics, 1, 2, 3: Band, Vice President, 3. EDWARD YAKOVAC- The mirror of all courtesy. In- dustrial Arts, 33 Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3. MIKE YANNUCCI- A ready friend. Monitor, 13 Zoology, 1: Industrial Arts, 2, 3. ROSE MARY ZAYEC4 Friendliness, her aim. Braceville, 1, 2, 3: Friendship, 1, 2, 3: Cinema, 21 Zoology, 1. IUNE CLASS PLAY THE FOOL By CHANNING POLLOCK C A S T Mrs. Gilliam ,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,.,i.,,,, J ean Harpster Max Stedtman ,,,., ,,,,. C harles Maurer Mrs. Thornbury ,,,.. , ,,,. Mary C. Christopher Joe Henning ,...,, ,.,.. H erbert Brownlee Dilly Gilliam ..,,..,, ,,,,,, . Roselyn McCleery Mr. Barnaby ,,,,,, Mrs. Tice ,,,,,,,,,,,, jerry Goodkind ,,,,, Frank Stewart Helen Lindbergh Raymond Price Umanski ,.,,,.,r,, Grubby ......,. Mack . ,..,,,,..,,,,,.,,,,,,,., ,,,, . . Mary Margaret Robert Barhoover Westley Limber Robert Bowers , Dorothy Lauifer Rev. VVadham ,,,,,,,, ,..,..,,,,,,,,,. J ames Cole Pearl Henning ,,,,,,,. ,,,....... J ean Rubenson Clare Jewett ,,,.,,.,,, ,,,.. . . June McElrath Miss Levinson ,.,.., ,..,,,,,,,. I ane Lee Brague George Goodkind ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,., , ,, Paul Renftle Mrs. Mulligan ,. ., .,.,,,,, Laura jane Hoopes Charlie Benlield ,,,,,,, ,,,, . .,,, W endell Frankie Mrs. Henchley .,,,..,, ,,,,,,,,.,,,. V irginia Saker Daniel Gilchrist ,,,,.,, ,,..,. . James Pumphrey A Poor Man .....,,,., ,, Laverne Remalia A Servant ,,.....,,,.. . ,,,,,,,, ,v,,,,, , ,,,., J ames Lauffer jimmy Curran ,,,t, Mr. Henchley ,,,.,,, Tony Molducca MOB SCENE-jean Whyte, Dora Louise Sweet, Albert Van Huifel, Eugene Kale, Warren McDermott, Irvin Kabakov, Harold Berkowitz, Donald Sweeney, Claire Stewart. STAFF PROMPTERS--Doris Morris, Elizabeth Selkma, Helen Koval. VVARDROBE-Cornelia Porea, Velara jones, Vavara Datish, Anne Pora. BUSINESS-Ruth Sillitoe, Managerg Helen Garlick. PUBLICITY-Robert Good, Manager, Kheva Tanase. STAGE-Ray Brownlee, Managerg Floyd O'Donnell, John Van VVye, Norman Garner. Directed by O. A. LOVETT, Dramatic Coach The Fool is considered one of Channing Pollock's best plays. Robert Cassidy Charles Clark ,. Warren Jones lt deals with a young clergyman Qplayed by James Pumphreyj who resolves to try What would happen now-a-days to a man who lived like Christ? Through a series of intensely dramatic incidents, he learns that such a man might lose the world, but would End happiness. Pagr Thirty-tfwo The ECHOES 1-jean YVhyte. 2-Carmella lJeSanti. 3-Eleanor McBride. 4- Nellie Porea. 5-julia McKnight. 6-Dorothy Lauffer. 7-Dorothy and Austa Goldner. 8-Jeanne Rulmenson. 9-Sylvia Saker. 10-jane Lee Brague. 11-Ann Morrison. 12-Mae Van Sickle. 13-Viola Poppal. 14-Edith Ferrill. 15-Miriam Schrader. 16-Helen Koval. 17-Ruth Sillitoe. IX-Doris Morris. 19-Mary DeSantis. 20-jean Harpster. 21-Mary Belle Messersmith. 22-lVlarjorie Moore. 23-Ethel McGul'l'le. 2+-Ruth Bailey, 25-Georgia Bowman. 26-D011 othyQuinlmy. 27-june Lowmiller. 28-Laura jane Hoopes. 29- Chicken Clark. 30-Helena Gillrert. 31-Dean Thomas. 32-Betty Rees. 33--Zelda Singleton. Pagff Thfrly-tl1rvr' The ECHOES 1-Toni Christopher. 2-Janelle Moser. 3-Roslyn MCCleery. 4-Anna Hawley. 5-James and Dorothy Lauffer. 6-Clare Porter. 7-Helen Fletcher. 8-Irene Konopka. 9-Hazel Nfoseley. 10-Paul Renftle, 11-VVilda Downs. 12-Clara Mae Hickox. 13-Lila Luoxna and Ingrid Selkma. 1-I-Marion Dravis. 15-Elizabeth Selkma. 16-Beverly Thomas. 17-Adela Bobby. 18-Velara jones. 19-Robert Bowers. Z0-Mr. Sullivan's son. 21-June McElrath. Pagr Thirty-four The ECHOES I-Norman Garner. 2-Dorothy Gorse. 3- 1unie lVIaurer. 4-Lois Tucker. 5-MQI'j' Francis and Edwin VVeirick. 6-Helen Mock. 7- Nellie Porea. 8-Some of the girls . 9-Eleanor Bochniak. 10-Louise Nader. 11-VVhoops, my clears! 12-Floe Foster. 13-Eu- gene Kale. 14-johnny Zofko. 15- Tuck Bailey. 16-Norman Foster. 17-Helen Heathman. 18-Helen Lindberg. 19- The Hartford VVits . 20- Johnnie McConnell. 21- Prexie . 22-Football hero and? 23-v-Bernard Lowry. 2-l-Nature Study Class, VVest jr. 25- Marty Lee Grove. 26-Ruth Sillitoe. 27-johnny Rudin. Pain' Thirty-fifve The ECHOES 1 2 B CLASS SPONSORS: Ruth B. YVheeler :md Harry L. Cowden. OFFICERS: Sollie Keller, Presidentg Ted Roderick, Vice Presidentg Jeannette Brown, Secretaryg Betty Reese, Treasurer. Page Thirty-six Wallace Adamson Donald Appleby Robert Ashelman Lillian Ashley Robert Askue Geraldine Aubertine Marion Bartholomew Jason Beach Wilbur Bear Kathryn Beck Henry Beers Robert Bell Dorothy Berg Lyle Biddlestone Frank Bishop Edward Bock Georgia Bowman Rudolph Boye Katherine Brooks Jeannette Brown Florence Bruce Henry Bush William Bustard Joseph Capak Wendell Chapman Mabel Chinnock Edith Ciferno William Cola Nick Comanescu Gertrude Cullinan Mary Damis Cora Jane Davis Ernest DelDuchetto June Derflinger Carolyn Doolittle Herbert Downs Bert Drennen Florence Ebert Clyde Elliot Herbert Falkinburg Alice Fenton Elvina Ferris lylargaret Fillmore lVIary Katherine Fischer Nadia Fiyalko Nlarguerite Funtjar LeRoy Gimbel Willard Gomsi Charles Gott William Green 12 B CLHSS Barbara Greer Edward Grgurich Archer Griilith David Griffith Ann Grumbling Angelo Guarnieri Louis Hageman Betty Jane Hawk Anna Hawley David Heckman Homer Higley Elizabeth Holenchak Nlargaret Homan John Hurton Spurgeon Illery Betty Jane Jastatt Russell Johnson Robert W. Johnson Mary Margaret Joseph Ann Kalafsky Robert Kale Viola Kalvesmaki Jane Keifer Jack Keil Clara lVIae Keller Sollie Keller Dorothy Kennedy Raymond King Rlike Kontos Ruby Krieger Alexander Kunka Alice Lake Nicholas Lardis John Lubianetzki Dominic Lucarelli lWary Lucas hiatt Luoma Vera Mahan lklary hdandrean John Manofsky Lena Nlarzulla George Mayers Carl lldazzochi Billy lWiller Lewis lklontgomery Mary Louise Morris Annabelle Moser Wilburn lWcCannon Rosemary McCusker Paul lWcGuane Frank Nolfi Page Thirty-seven The ECHOES Roy Palmer William Parker William Pipenur David Poole Harold Prentice Billy Qualey David Reamensnyder Betty Jane Reese Violet Reese Wilburt Rieser Sanford Rinda Margaret Roberts Ted Roderick Lois Ruby Marjorie Rucker Albert Rufo Ernest Sabo lllax Saddle Florence Sager Ray Sanfrey Orion Seabrook Ann Seko Louis Semrau Wilfred Simons Wilma Slafkay Catherine Smith Donald Smith Elmer Smith Ralph Smith Ward Smith Mary Jane Stan Helen Steele Doris Stiggers lvlildred Stuckey John Suchiu Milton Swanson Frederick Taylor James Thornhill Richard Ulam Viola Waring Thomas Waxmansky Arthur Weita Donald Welsh Joe Whitehouse Dale Williams Velma Wilson Milton Wolkoff Roselyn Wright Dorothy Younger Margaret Zeigler The EcHoEs 1 1 H CLASS SPONSORS: Carolyn VVhitcomlv and Harold C. Hulme. O1-'1+'lClLRS: John Busturd, President: Betty VVelvster, Vice Presiderltg Iwartha CZlX'IlI1Zll1Qll, Sccretzlryg xlilffhil '111'llI1'1bl1H, Treasurer. Page Thiriy-eight Welday Adrian Dorothy Alden Elizabeth Alden Catherine Alexander Ann Allen Betty Anderson Helen L. Anderson Helen Anson Joe Aubel Nick Baciu George Baehr Ethel Bethel Doris Mae Bettiker Jessie Bickel Victor Binben William Birrell Margaret Blount Stanley Bogden Frank Boich Joseph Bono Marjorie Botroif B. C. Botts Robert Bowker Alice Brooks Lewis Burfitt William Bush John Bustard John Butsko Elizabeth Calabria Elizabeth Calciu Harry Camp Myer Caplan Martha Cavanaugh Rebecca Cavanaugh Lee Chalker Kathryn Challenger Eva Chamberlin Margaret Chamberlain Danny Chegar Donna Clark Clarence Clegg Kenneth Collins Hoyland Colson Dan Cononico Lynn Cook Charles Cooley William Cooper Thomas Cowie Bertha Crawford Madge Cunningham Jennie D'Amico Mike D'Amico Bill Daugherty John Daugherty Helen Davis Ruthea Davis Thomas Davis Mary DeCapite Angelo DeJacimo Amelia DeScenna Mike DeVengencie George DeVoe Doris Dickson Marshall Dishong Jack Ditzler Anna Dobbins John Dorio 1 1 H CLASS Julia Druga Kathryn Dulaney Virginia Estabrook Anna Fagyas Mary Felton Myrtle Fenton Willard Fenton Albert Fillmore Floyd Fombell Albert Franko Nick Frenchko Stella Froncek George Fulton Michael Gates Evelyn Geaman Anthony George Joe Gmucs Arthur Gill Gretchen Goddard James Godfrey Austa Goldner Arthur Gray John Grima Mary Gurney Carl Haelling Jean Hall Oren Hankins Steve Hannishin Ruth Hardman Ben Harley Josephine Harley Betty Harmon Elsie Harmon Herbert Heller Vera Henry Robert Henshaw Elizabeth Herron Martha Hiljanen Charles E. Hill Donald Hill Reta Hill Ruth Hill George Hines Rose Hingel Winifred Hollis George Homan Irene Hotasky Edna Howk Doyle Hubbard Susan Hughes Ruth Humphreville Leonard Hunt Margaret lzant Glenna Jackson Lillian Jacobs Virginia James James Jamison Betty Jones Harlan Kagy Gus Karozas Elmer Kipella Aimo Kiviniemi Billy Klingeman Madeline Klugsberg George Knight Otto Koivisto Dorothy Kunkel Alice Lafferty Ruth LaPolla Alice Larner Pauline Lawrence Etta Mae Lear Anna Lewis Thelma Lillich Elma Loutzenhiser William Lucy Jospeh Lutton Jack Macrea Lena Maggiano Vincent Maggiano Barbara Manofsky John Marcello Mike Marcu Lloyd Marsh Alfred Mason Amaryllis Mason Adeline Mazzochi Rose Mehall James Meola Molly Minish Joseph Minotti William Moore Jane Morgan Jean Muter Ray McCreanor David McLean Marion McMahon Helen McMillen Jack McMurray Louise Nichols Marguerite Nichols Robert Nicolay Bertha Niemi Elizabeth Nilson Ralph Oates Harold O'Malley Joseph Ondik Charles Ormsby Octavia O'Tain Randolph Ott Pete Pacek Patrick Palmer Eli Pap Ernest Pappas Franklin Parsons John Parti Dorothy Partridge Margaret Patterson Joseph Perica Chester Pernice Nick Pernice John Petrilla John Pietila Margaret Pohto William Porteous Charles Powell David Pritchard William Rae Anne Ranta Eugene Ready Evelyn Reed William Reeves Lawrence Reynolds Edythe Rice Elizabeth Richards Richard Rogers Page Thirty-nine The ECHOES Mary J. Rose Anna Sabo Elizabeth Salcona Lilyan Salo Andrew ,Saluga Ronald Sauer Jack Sauerbrun Howard Scholz Annie Sebben Marion Sebben William Selby Selma Seppelin Anne Sesko James E. Shafer Beatrice Shirran Anna Silver Ted Simon Katherine Sisk George Smales Marcus Smales Genevieve Smith Noreen Smith Ruth Smith Dominic Sorro Mary Squirec Sam Stassinis Perthenia Stewart Pauline Stiles Vernabelle Stiles Joe Sulich Neal Suomi Eugene Swope Taito Taipole Jean Taylor Mary Thomas Hazel Thompson June Thompson Lee Thompson Harold Thornhill Frances Trainer Martha Trumbull Jane Tucker Violet Uitto Kathryn Ulam Anna Vario Helen Voytek Fleming Waddell Mary Ellen Wagar Jeanne Walker Ruth Wallace Abbie Ward Violet Ward James Was Betty J. Webster Hope Weir Wm. Edwin Weirick Robert Welsh Dorothy Weston Betty Jane Wherley Jane White Glenn Wildman Curtiss Williams Florence Williams Evelyn Mae Wilson William Williams Dorothy Woodworth Alberta Yakovac Ruth Zeigler The ECHOES 11B CLASS SPONSORS: xIZlI'iIll1 If. Hilwlvi' and Wfilcy lf. G:1i'i'c'tt. UFl lL'IfRS: Xlercicl Smith, llmsideiit: Leslie Shafer, Vice Presiclvntg Lily VW Seen-tziry 3 ,Iam-t QYl'OI1bl'I'QICI', ,ltI'C1lSlll'Cl'. Pagn' Forty 1 Elma Aalto Douglas Ackley Harmon Andrews Ralph Angelo Paul Angstadt Remus Antonelli Dorothy Armstrong Selma Ball William Ball Irma Biro William Blanchard LaVerne Bloomer Clara Bosso Mike Bostardi William Bowen William Boyle Lillian Bradley Hayes Brogden Joe Brzezinski Louis Bvlrgermyer Adella Burns james Byrnes Lucy Cardone Miles Cassidy Max Chandler Alexander Chry-at Howard Cleal jack Cole Mary Cook Robert Cooper Donald Craver janet Cronherger Paul Crum Roy Cummins William Cvengrosh Earl Daily Anna Daniels Omylan Danyluke Clarence Daugherty Richard Daugherty Roger Daugherty Agnes Davies Ellsworth Davies Catherine Davis Artis DeFoor james DeLeo Maryann Derville Ellsworth Deshong Charles DiAngelo Katherine Didich Joseph Dubasik Mitchell Duda Elmer Duncan Helen Earms Paul Eckenrode VVilbur Ellis Robert Engstrom VVilliam Engstrom Gladys Ensall Dorothy Evans Harlan Evans Donald Everitt Ralph Fabrizio Harold Fahndrich 11 B CLASS Nick Faniri Helen Fasock Edward Ferderber Mike Finta Anthony Flasck Raymond Flasck Maxine Fletcher Mike Gallo Thomas Garley Ann G-ay Gordon Gilbert Paul Gilmore Dorothy Goeppinger Sherman Gordon Ronald Griest Ann Griffith Cover Gritlith Dorothy Gross Helmi Gustafson Thomas Hageman jack Haig Dolores Hall John Hardman Sam Harrill Edward Harris Jack Harris Norma Hawkes Charles Heiple Lillian Hendrickson Waldemar Hermely Kathryn Hiestand Conrad Hilbinger Iack Hilton Robert Hirt Lloyd Hoffman Alice Horton Calvin Huntley Joseph Hurton Genevieve Hutchison Mildred Jacobs Alberta Jados Alvin james Charles johnson Robert M. Johnson David G. Jones Kenneth H. jones William H. joseph Wanneta Kale Mary Kanka Bill Kelley Katharine Kennedy Jack Kennedy james Kershner Donald King jane Kingdom Geraldine Kirk Robert Knoske Eleanor Lahna Sara L. Langer Edward Lenio Mary Lenny Stella Lesnoski Frances Lewis Grace Lewis Frank Liptak Steve Liptak Raymond Lonsway Mary Lymber joe Mahay james Mariano Peter Marshall Thelmer Marshall Henry Martin Eraldo Martini Toddy Ann Matlago Sara Marvin Francis Michael Laurn Miller Glen Moeschberger Jack Morris Thomas Moser jack Mullen WVilliam Murphy Frances Muzzy Fred Myers jean Myers Mary jane Myers Thomas McBride Eileen McClellan Leora McKinney Elmer McLain William Naylor Katherine Nusser Ethel O'Bryan Clara Oliver Warren O'Malley Margaret Opsitnick Mary Paris Dorothy Parlas Vivian Penner Bill Pentz Angie Petroco Dorothy Phillips Margaret Pike Dorothy Pohto Bernice Politsky Michael Prince Michael Prox William Queale Elizabeth Raeburn Alice Reeves Kenneth Rhine Charles Riflle Perry Ripple llll H'2l?IIlDl'l8lIl MAYVERA ZEIGLER Page Forty-one The ECHOES Irene Ritch Paul Rivers William Ronald Arthur Rosenberg Frederick Rowley Raymond Rufener John Sager Richard Sager Francis Sammon Mary Sandusky Virginia Sangster Frank Scarpaci james Sebastian Dorothy Sechler William Sekula Leslie Shafer Merrill Shafer Ruth Shakely Vera Sharpe Max Shuster Angeline Simoni Georgia Smith Margaret Smith Merciel Smith Margaret Snyder Melvin Snyder Richard Sowers Virginia Spier Denver Statler Chester Stein Mardy Stevens Eleanor Swanson Mitchell Takacs Anne Taylor Alex Tereba jean Thomas Fay Thompson Joseph Trillow Paul Troup Kenneth Tucker Michael Tvaroch Sarah Tyler Gizella Vargo Marie Verlenich Anita Villa Mary Voishan Ruth J. Walter Donald Ware Henry VVeil ,lean Weiss Lily VVesala Betty E. VVilliams Leo VVilsman Lola VVilson VVilliam VVoodland Carl Wright Thelma VVright Jacqueline VVrona Edward Yakiel Mike Zackerorf Frank Zeck Steve Zek Martha Zipf The ECHOES IOH CLASS SPONSORS: llarie O,Rourke and Dwight B. Lafferty. OFFICERS: Bill Nluir, Presidentg Walter Grant, Vice Presidentg James Good man, Secretaryg Tom Oswald, Treasurer. Page Forty-tfwo James Abrams William Adamson Laura May Allgood Eleanor Anderson Stanley Antonelli Kathryn Armstrong George Ardinger Dorothy Arntz Paul Ashelman Laura Atkin Wiliam Autio Marie Bacini Robert Baehr Raymond Balentine Lois Barbe William Barr Joseph Barrick Doris Bartholomew Thomas Basciano Ruth Basey Adolph Bates Mary Bayus Helen Bellay Rudolph Berkhouse Rodger Berry Mary Beskid Ann Bigg Julius Blakely Donald Bliss Kenneth Bock Mary Bogdon Geraldine Bold Mike Bonis John Bono Marie Boyd Harold Brantner John Brdek Eleanor Britton Betty Broadhurst Joe Bugzavich Hilda Burick Webster Bush Bessie Butler Doris Cahill Thomas Calabria Lee Callahan Carmen Campana Joe Campana Rose Candelmo Tony Cardarelli Isabel Carillio Gertrude Carter Alberta Cassidy Margaret Cassidy Donald Chamberlain Alice Clark Lloyd Clark John Cola Richard Cole Florence Cononico V Eileen Cook Carl Cooper Jack Corey Laura Coriglia William Cox Marjorie Cropper Patricia Dailey Lucille Daily Emily D'Altorio Albert D'Amico Walter Dean Sarah DeLancey Marion DeSavigny Emil DeScenna 1OH CLHSS George Detre Catherine Devenney Genevieve Dilley Helen Dobosh Carl Dolk Naomi Dowe Virginia Drennen Mary Drig Edward Duda James Dunphy Margaret Eastep Elmo Elliott Bernadette Eustace Donald Evans George Eves John Fabrizio Eva Mae Ferry William Fields Harry Filkorn Joseph Filler Clarence Firster Ruth Fleming Marjory Florence Julius Fodor Dorothy Foft Thomas Force Dorothy Ford Frances Foskie Harriet Foster Dale Fox Sarah Jane Fresher Inez Gardner Nellie Gepack Bernard Gnat Neil Golf Raymond Goff James Goodman Margaret Goschke Pauline Gott Burton Gozzard Miriam Gozzard William Graham Walter Grant Marcella Green John Greenlund Madeline Gregor Nelta Griest Yolanda Griffith Ruth Harner Bernice Harris Arthur Hathaway Richard Hatton Ray Hawley Eupha Haywood James Heathman Kathryn Heinhold David Helman Mary Alice Heltzel Helen Herst Eugene Hingel LaVerne Hoehn Peter Holko Jmes Holenchak Lulu Jane Jones Mary Jones Violet Jukes Catherine Kapouralos Ruth Karl Kathryn Keil Marian Kemm Shirley Kennedy Betty Kerger Margaret Kimmy Helen King Mary Elizabeth King Rose Knell Thomas Knotek Eleanora Knopka Mike Kokorcheny Ann Krasnofi Frank Krempasky Palma Krieger John Kubinski Rudolph Kubish Mildred LaClave Betty Lamont Charles Langer Janet Laprocina Madge Lashorn Coramay Lawrence Harold Leathers Violet Lecto Miriam Lehto Julia Lepola George Leposky James Lewis Patricia Linamen Grace Lisby Carl Little Robert Logan Gladys Lokey Lawrence Loomis Frances Loper Harold Lowry John Lozner Jack Lubert Helen Lundy Dorcas Lyons Carrie Mackey Virginia Madusjeski Dorothy Madvad Kathryn Magera Elizabeth Mandrean Rose Marcarello James Marlowe Mary Elizabeth Marsh Marian Marshall Martin Marshall Robert Martin Almerinda Martini Anna Marto Miriam Mattila Elizabeth Maurer Lois Jane Maus Gordon Max Irene Mazarik Edward Homrighouse Helen Mazzochi Glen Hubbard Mary Jane Mebert Emma Marie Hughes Richard Melvin Floyd Hunt Stella Jarzynko Sadie Jennings Paul Jenyk Mabel Johnson Raymond Johnson Rolland Johnson Ruth Johnstone Irene Meola Virginia Messersmith Frank Michael Charles Miller Mary E. Miller Virginia Mitchell Clara Moamis Helena Modic Paae Fortv-three Maxine Moerdyk Clyde Mogle Maxine Mogle Dorothy Mohr James Montecalvo Russell Moore Mary Edna Morgan William Muir Annetta McCorkle Betty McCorkle Betty McCracken Bernice McElhaney LeRoy McFadden Ruth McFarland Helen McGeary Richard McKay Dolores McMillan Ralph McMillan Mary McMurray Genevieve Nader Stanley Nastal Joseph Natale Raymond Nicholas Lucille Nickels Lena Nolfi Sam Noland Jeanette Nutter Flora Orlando Dan O'Rourke Thomas Oswald Marino Papalas Angelina Paris ' Joseph Pehanich Esther Pesonen VValter Petit Sadie Petrosky Pauline Petrusha Thomas Petty Jean Pfile Raymond Phelps Nicholas Pishotti Ethel Place Ann Polena John Polenychko Dorothy Pontus William Poppal Robert Porter Catherine Procopio Mike Pucevich Steve Pytlik Wendall Raimey Irene Randa The ECHOES Bessie Saker Helen Saluga Madeline Scarpaci Robert Scholz Margaret Schiel Robert Schillinger Leo Schyll Bennie Secrest Ronald Shafer Kenneth Shaffer William Shaffer Allen Sha.pe VValter Shaw Betty Shepherdson Anne Shriver Evelyn Simon George Simon Fanny Simoni Marie Simons Charles H. Simpkins John Siska Ted Smail Madge Smith Robert Smith Arne Somppi Agnes Sotak Frank Sotak Theresa Spano Eugene Sproull Donald Steelman Florence Stephenson Jeanette Stewart Virginia Stowe Mary Strong Betty J. Summerlin Ruth Summerlin William Swanson Douglas Tabor Betty J. Taylor Betty Thomas Russell Thomas Ruth V. Thomas Harold Thompson Nellis Thompson Ralph Thompson Harry Tomlin George Traveler Kenneth Trill Junior Tyrrell Carl Uitto Frank Ujfalusi Ruth Waid Marguerite Randolph Olga Wanco Frances Rapone Ruth M. Ray Velma Redmond Richard Reed Frank Reszegi Junior Reynolds Andrew Rimar Gene Ringler Sam Rinzella Florence Ritch Samuel Robinson Lois Rogers Stanley Roman John Ross Martha Rowan James Rowland Ann Rudin Jack Rudisill Page Russell Robert Ryan Frank Saboten Doris Ward Richard Ward Mary Elizabeth Warner Betty J. YVeeks Lillian Weita Theodore West Rutheda Whittaker James Wikolf David Wilkinson George Williams Richard Williams Weyman Williams Richard Wilson Robert Wilson Ruth Wolf Allen Wolkoff Lois Wurtemberger Rosemary Yarnell John E. Young Joseph Zofko Dorothy Zola The ECHOES 10B CLASS OFFICERS: President, Harris Martin g Vice President, Day Baughmang Secretary Dorothy Henryg Treasurer, Betty Glassco. Page-Forty-four Theodore Adams Katherine Alex Richard Alexander Robert Alexander Angela Allard Gladys Ambrose Betty Anderson Albert Andrews Arthur Anthonsen Lillian Antonelli Mike Artymowycz Betty Jane Askue Christina Baciu Katherine Barbe Charles Bartholomew Dale Bartholomew Howard Bartlett Richard Baskett Christina Battista Day Baughman Maurice Beach Sylvester Beasley George Bellay Helen Beskid Betty Biddlestone Familia Binhen Mary Biro James Bitner John Bizilo Joseph Bizyk Billy Blair Edith Boyer Ruth Jane Bratton Irene Brogdon Morgan Brogdon Grace Brooks Charles Brown Delbert Burfitt Fred Burnett Boneita Buschagen Otis Byrd William Calderwood Betty L. Camp Frank Capito Catherine Cardarelli Fred Carter Fortunata Cibella James Chengelis Mary Chizmar William Christie Susie Churman Mearle Collier Dan Comanescu Grant Conti Betty Copeland Reada Cornicello Charles Cosma Edith Cowden Elma Craver Ruth Jane Craver Evelyn Crawford Esther Crigler Jack Crooks Elmer Cvengros Dorothy Davis Willard Davis James Dawson Dorothy Dean Yolanda DeCapite Eddie May DeFoor 10B CLHSS Elva Derflinger John DiCenso Patsy DiCenso Evelyn L. Difford Lyle Dersey Louise DiPernia Anna Discerne Donna Downs Dennis Dowdell Pete Dragan Mary Drummond Helen Dulaney Elerbe DuPree Mary Eckenrode Isabella Edwards Owen Edwards Robert Ewing Nellie Fabrizio John M. Fabrizio Thomas Fagadore Edward Falkowski Joseph Fetchko Virginia Flora Samuel Foreman Barr Frampton James Fuller Paul Gallo Erma June Garstick David George Charles Georgevich Walter Gilmour Jack Gimbel Eleanor Gingery Betty Glasco Marion Glazer Virginia Glenn George Goldner Eulalia Gmucs Angelo Graham Irene Graham Annette Green William Grifhth Josephine Guerrieri Frances Gurganious Robert Haas Julia Haggerty Howard Hamilton James Harris Robert Harrison Julia Hatala Margaret Hawk Robert Hayes -V Ruth Hayes Richard Heasley Melvin Heath Bernard Heintz Dorothy Henry Virginia Herttua Amer Higley Dorothy Hillman Jack Hinkson Stella Hionas Neva Hoffman Katherine Hogan Anna Horton Ruth Horton Elizabeth Hoynos John Hrenko MaryHronchek Elna Huffman Lois Humphreville Mary Husted Clyde Jackson Thomas James Harold Jacobs Donna Jewell Mary L. Johns Booker Jones David H. Jones Marie Jutila Maxine B. Kays Gretchen King Margaret King Joe Kish Joseph Kook Jean Knepshield Andy Kolenick Mike Kowchak Mary Krnyaich Frank Kuriatnyk Henry Labuda Margaret Lansing Nancy Lapriole Thomas Lambert John Lawrence James Laycock Lynn Ledgerwood Robert Letlingwell Mary Belle Leiblic William Leon Betty Jane Lewis Thelma Lewis Virginia Lewis Jane Little John Little Ruth Logue Gladys Long Earl Loucks Albert Loutzenhiser Howard Loutzenhiser Paul Lubianetzki William Lubianetzki Lawrence Ludwick Arthur Lukens James Lunceford Murdeane Lundberg Reuben Mackey Urho Mackey La wrence Maggiano Mary Maggiano Dan Marcarello Frank Markefky Sevella Marlow Harris lVIartin Jane Martz Arvilla Mason Elvera Massitta Ruth Masterson Woodrow Mendenhall Richard Meredith Zigmond Meus Paul Micholovic Albert Miller Betty Miller Kathleen Miller John Millik Andy Molnar Charlotte Moon Harvey Morgan Mary Motz Page Forty-fifve George Mrus William Mushick Thomas Myers Agnes McBride Dorothy McCall Harold McClellan John McClelland Helen McCormick Chester McWilliams Robert McNutt Emery Nadzan Sophie Nastal Betty Jane Newhard Willie Nichols VVarren O'Bryon Annette O'Donnell Victoria Oltean Junior Orr Ruthea Mae Owens James Paden Kenneth Paden Geno Padovan Hugo Padovan Rena Padovan Austin Palo Mary Papalas Ruth Patchen Rex Pealer Robert Perrett Orlando Petro Stanley Pierson Dan Piljuga William Plevyak Betty Jane Porea Robert Potoczny Frank Potts Helen Jean Poulton James Quinn Janet Raehurn Clara Rarick Mary Raseo Velma Recser Mildred Reiter Rodney Reneer Edyth Riehl Magel Rieser Robert Ripple VViIliam Ripple Carmen Ritchie Wilma Rivers Dick Roderick Veronica Roman George Roscoe Mary Rosko Amarblie Rossi Anthony Rossi WVilliam Rowland Elmer Rufener Charles Russell William Sabath Elizabeth Sabo Louise Salvato Marjorie Sartorio Andrew Saxon Robert Schatzel Nick Schecodnic Elsie Swartz Ivadene Scott Rose Scrbek The ECHOES Robert Sepanek Angeline Setting Edward Sferra Dean Shallenberger Loring Sheffield Eugene Shellhammer Tatina Shiamone George Shimko Emily Sierachi Billy Smith Robert Smith Paul Sollitto Mary Spado Angelina Spagnnolo John Sparks Betty Spencer Marselle Sprague Clarence Spraitzer Margaret Sroka Pauline Stevens Jane Stevenson Marguerite Stiggers Ann Stocz Charles Stoddart Frank Stosik Margaret Sulonen Andy Susko Margaret Sypert Margaret Sweeney Dorothy Swegan Bertha Talkowski Nick Tambures William Taylor Edward Thirian Violet Thomas Hubert Thompson Frank Thomas Paul Thompson Angie Toskas Sam Trekur James Trevisani Norman Ulam Ioe Urban Elvira Vario Josephine Venetti Anna Vernarsky Kathleen Verra Lucy Vitello Harry Vlahos Renee Wolford Evelyn VValter Paul Walker Fred Wedman Robert Wellington George Welsh Robert White Lillian Whyte Margaret Williams Virginia Wilson Archie Wingard Howard Wisell Olga Wojtowicz Earl Wood Charles Woodcock Kathleen Wormly Leroy Wyand Rudolph Zakropek Clara Zeck Bertha Zunich The ECHOES W W amd www MW 6 6 6- i- ...-- - 4 fm f f, --i255'WQQQ 0 0? if 38: 3 :X X Q A ,SY gil 5 9 lm 2 3 E 5 Qi? T3 Q Uw rassfff N M fisilff fawffw W, ig Qi ? Q QM M Q7 4 Q! I I X D ALO ' X ii, 5 Q ' X S l-L! I , 4 --f : X Q W' gg? ,Q Q M -4 X - f- V X ' QXW., , Q5-If if-'E-if , pg QQ f 7 A 0 1- -'7- 'fJi v:'- Q - mu A- 7 Q5mggm,. '22:s2m:.:'SS:4 N 'JW 4 f -f - i. 'Dix sto 1-:4,'.f.fo:s:,Z'.. A 5-flu, 4 I WMM J .4 in f F F6529 1 LQMSQME 4 X WMV -- ,w QQWB f gf ff! 4' 9, N16 5 .J 1 X QLWWJ xy f H fvx, HU-L -W' My JG . we f f, ff'QavfENpf9 -fm CQSQSE ?JT?--x,EgfCSkNQ3 ,fammgs A qpqug rg Q v Z? 'iZ? L9OQQQ2VZ, 77TvQT S2265 X W, f f Ay p 5wEmgmQAW ww iE'UmxE'W, Q7 ww 9 7' 7' fk' Q ' I KY Q, X i X 513' egg wg W f A 'M' WJ 1' Wi' que . X N 5? f -ff-get sw New caqve jg? O I g o A .23 Z , 'N A f 'X xi A x LX 0 I v ,:.o.v4.:,:Qxa,? I , f f ,wuz sigeggr f I f R X A X I fx .- V jj nyjgfg Q KX f X4 f Q f' 6 me I 00 f f J 4- WN f x A'- ll q fx WJ V If G y 7 y 1 I I 0 3 4 Ii? 'IC Ax Il f , H qW'Mgmf!N v WQAQG f 'II qw, N . ,iff .,' , QM X WN Ax AA, -f 2 f' '3 7 k' ' ' X I ' A Y ' 41943 5525 ,mgnwffv ' f ' 0 Cla,--111.95 'fT:f ' aims, 1 X - .. X 2, 5'0 fy . ,sf -'I' I : ' N . Ji: .,.-, , V- ffl., 5, f Q W H A Q f m jf , ' A-. . , pdf, n -s - V, fl .,W:aQ: i r null' M6 'ik :J X fi TH E gw,+Mf Wy fww WMMOM 4 .-:4 7 ::, ' 1 V 1 Z- J A ' Xfi - ' 'L ' 7 , A , ff SEASON , OW Pay F ty.r1 1 'Wa . .. EW! .5-1--: 4.5. - v.,v' :.l,i:.:-.- 4 ,Q M A G3 5? f 55 1 'i ' 9 f Q x f' lx vw A' . I I ' V Ihv, fc! 5 gyg! f C ' f' fffflizl- 'f77 Y 272 ff' ff , x .,7 Jw ' ' W 'f'f'fLf:Q:1: .'f13V' ,fi , 'N 7 ' '41 F f OO Q 41 1 ff 7 BQSKETBQLL., O BQIEBQLLQ H T H L E TIC S K O DTRQC The ECHOES ATHLETIC BOHRD OF CONTROL H. B. TURNER RIILTON NIOLLENKOPF L. O. WURTEMRERGER PIERRE F. HILL BIABEI. C. VVOLFE VV. SCOTT LONG-JOHN HELDACK GEORGE BUCHWALTER RAYMOND HUGHES COHCHES . Row two-VViley E. Garrett, Kenneth L. Kraker, Roy T. Daily. Row one-Dwight B. Lafferty, A. Margaret Eaton, Pierre F. Hill. CHEER LEHDERS Shafer, Porteous, -I Srnirhers, VV. Smithers, Davis, Cooley. 1,ll!fI' FIlI'f.1'-Plflllf LETTERMEN The ECHOES Row three-Zofko, Finta, Scholv, Butchko, Simon, Crum, Homer, Boye. Row two-Brogden, Heldack, Bowels, Fini, Noland, Lundy, Bailey, Lucy. Row one-Spraitzar, Davis, Palovich, Chickerneo, Durkin, Rector, Antonelli. FOOTBALL MEN OF 1935 CLHSS l Row two-Chickerneo, Palovich, Adamson, McNutt, P. Davis, Phillips, VV. Brogdon. Row one-Simon, Butchko, Cononico, Sanfrey, Scholz. Page Forty-nine The ECHOES FOOTBALL TERM OFFICERS , Dan Cononico ,.,.w.. ........., C aptain Wiley E. Garrett .......... Assistant Coach Pierre F. Hill .......,.,.,.....,., Head Coach Paul Crum ,........, .,... .......,..ee.., . A Manager' Dwight B. Lafferty ...... Assistant Coach Robert Tilton oos.,,,,,,.. Business Manager RESULTS OF THE SEASON Warren ..,... 13 Erie Academy ....,... 6 Warren ,,.,.. 0 New Castle ............ 7 Warren ..,... 7 Youngstown East ,, 0 Warren ,..,e, 19 Youngstown South 13 Warren ,,,... 38 Salem .........,....,,r,.... 6 Warren ,...,. 0 Youngstown Rayen 6 Warren ,,,,,, 13 Sharon ....... ..., 0 Warren ,..... 14 Struthers ....,,,,,,....,, 0 Warren ...... 25 Girard oe,,.., ..,e.,,.., 7 Warren ..,... 20 Niles ,e...,. 0 TOTAL POINTS Warren ,,,,. ..... l 49 Opponents ,.,,.,,,..,,.,.. 45 Row four-Davis, O'Rourke, Finta, Cummins, Sauerbrun, Hubbard. Row three-A. Simon, Boich, Smith, Ashelman, Muir, Sorro, Ondik, Pernice, Fulton, Coach Hill. Row two-Coach Lafferty, Macrea, Millik, Rifile, Flasck, Bugzavich, DeVengencie, H. Brogdon, Natale, Minotti, Askue, Substanley. Row one-Phillips, Adamson, Chickerneo, Cononico, Sanfrey, W. Brogdon, Butchko, Scholz, ' Palovich, McNutt. Page Fifty The ECHOES FOOTBHLL SEHSON And were we proud of The Presidents this year? Proud of our new stadium too, and the huge crowds that packed the stadium fand bleachers, and cheered vo- ciferously. The Band! The North-End Boosters! It was a great season. Before a capacity crowd of 7,000, the Harding boys appropriately dedicated their new stadium by downing the veteran Erie Academy eleven. The line functioned per- fectly, with Scholz and Adamson out-standing players, while Brogden excelled in the ball-toting. The Warren team defeated Youngstown East after a terrific fracas, 7-0. ln this game, Cononico, star quarterback, turned in an excellent job of punting and field generalship. The Quakers were no match for the Prexies' speed and power. Early in the game they wilted, and our team rolled up a score of 38-6 against them. Several long runs by Brogden added thrill to the game. Before an enthusiastic Home-coming crowd and Queen Posy lVIcCleery, the Harding High gridders beat Sharon for the third successive year. Chickerneo and Cononico split the honors with their fine ball-carrying and defensive play. The Presidents added their fifth straight victory to their collection by crushing the powerful Girard crew by a 25-7 count. Sanfrey and Chickerneo gave splendid exhibitions of good football. The New Castle Red Hurricane stopped the locals' winning streak by handing them a 7-0 setback before a record breaking crowd. Battling at even terms for three quarters, the New Castle crew finally pushed over the only marker of the game. Chet Phillips, all-county guard, was the star of the evening. Warren's power proved much more effective than South's baffling aerial attack. The Prexies scored on a fumble in the first minute of play and finally copped the decision, 19-13. Sanfrey's alert diagnosing of passes featured in a torrid contest of bitter rivalry. The Hill-men suffered a severe blow when they were defeated by Youngstown Rayen. Phillips starred on the defensive and Chick , on the offensive, but Rayen's passing attack was too deceptive. The Youngstown lads scored in the final minutes of play on a desperate but well-executed forward pass. The Prexies resumed their winning streak by blanking a strong Struthers crew, 14-0. Simon's spectacular catch of a pass from Cononico led to the initial touchdown. The Struthers lineup consisted entirely of veteran material, but again the Presidents' power proved more effective. In a sea of mud, the Annual Turkey Day battle proved to be one of the most exciting and thrilling of the entire season. Niles was entirely outclassed but put up a remarkable fight. Chickerneo completed his brilliant career by scoring the three touchdowns, the first. the result of a fifty-six yard dash on the first play of the game. Eleven seniors wound up their football careers in this Thanksgiving fray. Pagv Fifty-one The ECHOES HOMECOMING SNAPS 1. Boosters. Z. The Kickoff. 3. Bob Taylor 4. Gin, Posey, -lean. 5. Cheer Leaders. 9. 6. Concessioners. 10. 7. The Bonfire. 11. S. Prexie Long. 12. Page Fifty-tfwo l Builder Uppers. l'etie jamison and Bruce Harmon. Cole's VVork Gang. Dr. Goodman, Coach Hill, Doc Kelly. STUNT TEAMS Row three-Mason, Coach Eaton, Hawk. Row two-Maurer, Dobbins, Dickson, Cavanaugh. Row one-Smith, Lewis, McCracken. The ECHOES Row three-Frankie, Burns, Cavender, Brownlee, Kale. Row two-Campana, Pietila, Kilpela, Calloway, Graham, Haig, Thompson. Row one-Shafer, Burgemeyer, Simons, Coach Daily, Filmure, Rieser, Hill. Page Fifty-fhrrf The ECHOES BHSKETBALL TEAM Row three-Coach Hill, Ripple, M. Brogden, Padovan, Davis, Bartlett, Huhhard. Row two-Daugherty, Sferra, Daily, McKay, H. Brogden, Perica, Lucy, Coach Lafferty Dejacimo. Row one-Noland, Marshall, Riflle, Chickerneo, Fulton, Taipale, Grgurich, Shafer. GIRLS' INTRHMURHL OFFICERS AND CAPTAINS Row two-Gustafson, Alden, Ranta, Wilson, Mattila, Keil, Lucas. Row one-Downs, Porea, VVesala, Allen, Coach Eaton, Lahna, Cavanaugh. Pagz' Fifty-four The ECHOES BHSKETBHLL OFFICERS John Chickerneo ,,,, ,. . ,,,v,,,, ,,A, , C aptain Pierre F. Hill ,F,,F,,,,F,, Head Coach Perry Ripple ,,M,,,,C,A,A,,C,,,,A,,C,,,,, Manager Dwight B. Lafferty .....,.,,,,, Asst. Coach Warren G. Harding suffered the most disastrous season in the history of the school. With only two lettermen, Coach Hill faced the difficult task of rebuilding a team capable of competing with the schedule set before them. Our opening game was taken by lylemorial in a rough and tumble affair, marked by the play of Fini. After losing to Chaney, the Presidents, led by Fini and Riffle, downed Youngstown East by a decisive score. Unable to cope with the sharp shooting of Rosselli and Desimone, diminutive Rayen forwards, Warren lost its third game. The Prexies lost its second straight game, but only after a gallant effort to over- come a 20 to 2 lead at the half, piled up by Girard. Akron Kenmore managed to eke out a victory, by overcoming the huge lead made by the Warren quintet. Struthers completely smothered the Harding team, 37-12. In a game marked by the offensive play of Fulton, Rifile, and Fini and the defensive play of Chick, Warren defeated a favored Niles quintet 30-20. This game marked the final appearance of Fini, who, due to graduation, wound up a brilliant cage career. Because of inability to cage charity tosses, Warren lost close games to Salem, East Liverpool, Niles, and Sharon. Each game was marked by the play of Riffle, Fulton, and 'AChick. Harding High finished the season with a victory over Brookfield. Thornhill and Chick made their final appearance on the Warren G. Harding court. The 'fPrexies', made a brilliant showing in the Ashtabula Tournament by defeat- ing Geneva in a fast game, and then walloping a favored Newton Falls team. Warren won the right to go to the Akron Tournament, being the runnerup in the Ashtabula Tournament, after being beaten by Conneaut. History repeated itself, when Akron North again eliminated YVarren from the Akron Tournament. GIRLS' INTRHMURAL HTHLETIC ASSOCIHTION There is much discussion as to what this word 'flntramuraln means. It comes from two Latin words: intra , meaning within, and murus , meaning wall. The as- sociation is called such because the girls are allowed to play each other only in the building and with no other schools. Miss Eaton is the sponsor and organizer of the club. Oiiicers chosen were: Vir- ginia Allen, President, Martha Cavanaugh, Vice Presidentg Lily Wesala, Secretaryg Eleanor Lahna, Treasurer. The object of this organization is to give the girls of the high school an opportu- nity to partake in athletics under wholesome conditions. It consists of about one hun- dred members at the present time. Under this association there will be basketball, baseball, and volleyball teams, also the stunt and ofiicial groups. Everything is done under the point basis, that is every girl belonging to a team will receive a certain number of points if she plays in a certain number of games. Each member of the winning team will receive one hundred extra points. Letters will be awarded to each girl who earns a required number of points. 12-A girls who have received three letters will be given an additional award. In the tournament the tall ll-B basketball team won the championship for the second time. The 12-A short basketball team won in its division. The volleyball tournament was won by the ll-A's. Page Fifty-jffve The ECHOES Row Row Ro w Row BASEBALL TERM four-G. Simon, Coach Laiferty, Finta. three-Rif'He, Daugherty, Fulton, A. Simon. two-Macrea, Zeck, Bowers, Durkin, Muir, Cummings. one-VV, Brogden, Chickernco, Heldack, Sanfrey, Palovich. TENNIS TERM Row two-Bush, Heckman, Bartlett, R. Thompson, Row one-Keil, Lucy, Shafer, Rogers, L. Thompson. Page Fifty-six Row Row Row Row llow Row TheECHOES TRHCKTEHM six-Luttun, Quinn, Macrea, Fulton, Noland, Comanescu, lVlcKay, Lucy, Coach Garrett. five--Hulmlward, Ripple, Natale, Riflle, VViIsman, 0'Rourke, Harris, Campana, Antonelli. four-Myers, Ward, Shaffer, VVilliams, Heekman, Palovich, Fahndrich. three-Birrell, Pishotti, Roderick, Davis, Fields, Russell, Hermely, Roland, Baker, Rossi. two-Nichols, Morgan, DeScenna, Chickerneo, Sanfrey, Sweeney, Taipole, Heldack, Mackey, Edwards. one-Casavant, Daugherty, Hamilton, Palmer, Illery, Brogden, Burns, Nloser, Jukes, Swanson, Moore, Detre. GOLFTEHM Antonelli, Caxnpana, Coach Kraker, Leon, Grgurich. Page Fifty-.vrfvrn The ECHOES INTERCLASS CHAMPIONS Page Fifty-right 11 A VOLLEYBHLL Row two-Coach Eaton, Hill, Weir, Niemi, Williams, Davis. Row one-Gurney, D. Alden, M. Cav- anaugh, E. Alden, Muter. 11B BOYS' BASKETBALL Row two-Davis, Daily, Coach Daily, Dejaeimo, Fulton. Row one-Lucy, Pietila, Grgurich, Lip- tak, Perica. GIRLS' BHSKETBALL Row two-11-B Tall Team-Fillmore, Lahna, Mebert, Gay, Coach Eaton, Bloomer, Chapley, Wesala, Shake- ly. Row one-12-A and 12-B Short Team --Grumbling, Funtjar, Holenchak, Lucas, Allen, Nader, Jones. MQNKE OF THE 55232 'E' if iffffqw su as Ewox f 'X XX 1-X 'MW 45453 if EA Vzgflff W! ffm W 1' 'ff ll: X I I X 'U l 4 1 X' fi x QI' ' EM' FF' 27 I 'A f Jsuui I ff ffiffg .s..- 1 , I f ' 'fl Q - I ?4Yk ' ff- - - ' , ' --Z f W, ---, Ming 3 1 1 :H lv. ,fn N - M Wi mr? ' an 9 'kb gf? - -' W ffllfg IIII Z E A W- f 7 '4i'f?5:Q'I-9? ff 'Q' gf! GW L 4: I f , f ' ,j FR 1 .pig ff ,E . 44 g I I nl , V qv I, Il: X, H1 . 5 I-ll ' STUDENT couNuL mow Somew H C T I V IT I E S The ECHOES Row six-I. E. Massar, O. A. Lovett, H. H. Hetzler, M. Mollenkopf, L. C. Hatfield, VV. S. Gar- rett, H. C. Hulme, D. B. Lalferty. Row five-R. M. Crawford, VVilsman, Petty, Cole, McMahon, Muir, Wells, Shafer, H. C. YVagner. Row four-Drennen, Heldack, Griliith, R. Van Metre, Keller, Pumphrey, Roderick. Row three-Sepanek, Palovich, K. T. McCurdy, M. O'Rourke, Hutzley, C. VVhitcomb, A. K. Bowen, J. Risdon, Kiviniemi. Row two-Biddlestone, R. B. Wheeler, A. M. Eaton, D. W. Malmsberry, G. H. Lynn, M. E. Hibler, E. L. Kaufman, M. A. Dennison, E. Van Winkle, D. M. Yost. Row one-Allen, Selkma, Morris, Luoma, Rees, Sweet, Lowmiller, Smith, Downs. COUNCIL OF SPONSORS AND PRESIDENTS The Council of Sponsors and Presidents consists of the faculty advisers and student presidents of all classes and clubs. It was organized three years ago to improve the coordination of extra-curricular activities. An annual calendar of events is constructed under its direction. The activities of each student are recorded and limited in relation to his scholarship. This year the group effected means of caring for a number of school projects financially. The organization meets on the first Nlonday of each month. O. A. Lovett is the Head of the Council, and H. H. Hetzler acts as secretary. The Student Council president may call meetings of the student presidents at any time. The Council hopes to render greater service to the school year by year. Page Sixty The ECHOES THE ECHOES STHFF Row Luoma. Row lNader, McCleery, Spain. Row ster, Grant. Row four-Garlick, Gorse, McConnell, Porea, Drennen, Sweet, Lowmiller, Schrader, Hickox, three-E. Kaufman, Fletcher, Grove, Tucker, Dravis, Sillitoe, Downs, Hutzley, Selkma, two-Jones, Mock, Morris, Saker, Kirkpatrick, Oden, Lindbergh, Lauffer, Rubenson, Harp- one-Strothers, Daugherty, Baldwin, Long, Ferguson, Schryver, Heldack, Lind, Tilton. THE ECHOES STAFF The addition of a literary section is the most notable change in the 1935 annual. An overwhelming number of poems and themes were submitted by students for publi- cation. The staff really enjoyed the work involved in selecting the best material of these student writers. Nliss Dorothy NI. Yost, who cooperated with the staff through- out, is responsible for the attractive arrangement of pages and design in this section. Faculty Sponsor .,,,t,,t,,,, . . ,t,t,t Emily L. Kaufman JANUARY STAFF JUNE STAFF Editor ...... . . . .... . Ruth Hutzley ,,,.. . .... Elizabeth Selkma Assistant Editor . .. , Clara Nlay Hickoxt. .. Business hfianager ...... -. Robert Lind Y, Circulation Nlanager .... Dorothy Gorse ...... Art . . ............... ......... , Robert Tilton . Sports .. . ............. ...........,... , Staff . .... . .... Genevieve Drennen Nlartha Lee Grove Lois Tucker, Helen lklock. .. hliles Baldwin, Irma Oden, .... .. Herbert Schryver, Scott Long, .... , Fred Daugherty, llffarion Dravis ...,.. Justine h'IcConnell. Roberta Kirkpatrick George Ferguson, ,, Page Sixty-one hffiriam Schrader . Charles Strothers .. William hlclklahon . , ...... John Heldack .. John Chickerneo Dora Louise Sweet, Doris hlorris . ,, June Lowmiller, Wilda Downs Jeanne Rubenson, Helen Lindbergh ,. Roselyn hTcCleery, Lila Luoma , Jean Harpster, Helen Garlick Helen Fletcher, Sylvia Salcer Dorothy Lauffer, Velara Jones ., Lorraine Grant, Rose Spain - .,.. Ruth Sillitoe, Louise Nader L ........... Cornelia Porea The ECHOES Row Row Row Row STUDENT COUNCIL four-Heldack, Price, Birrell, Hirt, Schryver. three-Mrs. VVehlm, Bono, Grima, VVolkoff, Marshall, Mr. XVagne1'. two-Cook, Morgan, Keil, Fillmore, Zeigler, Foster. one-McCleery, Lindbergh, Elliot, Long, Hapgood, Smith, YVesala. Spring election of NEVV members included-VVilliam McMahon, jane Kiefer, Betty Jane Hawk, VVilliam Parker, Jessie Bickel, Marie Verlenich, Clarence Daugherty, Fred Rowley, Charlotte Moon, Marge Sulonen, Richard Roderick, VVilliam Taylor. Row Row Row Row Row Ro w MONITORS six-Sepanek, Zofko, Edwards, Kelly, Brogden, Natale, Murphy, Craver, McMahon Lucy, Myers. five-Barhoover, Stewart, Butchko, Flask, Bostardi, Clark, Simon. four-Good, Julian, Daugherty, Copeland, Fuller, Dunphy, Thompson, Shafer. three-Marshall, Murray, Shriver, Bailey, Rector, Berkowitz, M. VVolkol'f, Lauder, Ollis Keller. two-Reese, Fillmore, Foster, Brooks, Gorse, Pytlik, Holes, Keifer, Nader, VVel1ster, Mo01'e Morris, Beck, Saker. one-VVhittier, Baldwin, Hapgood, Pumphrey, Price, Tilton, Long, Bowers, Schryver. Pagf Sixiy-Ifwn The ECHOES STUDENT COUNCIL The Student Council is composed of two girls and two boys from each class and a president chosen from the senior classes by the school making a total membership of twenty-five. The Council elects two sponsors from the faculty and this year re-elected hlrs. Clara K. Webb and Mr. H. C. Wagner, Whose untiring efforts have always been an inspiration to the organization. Among the many undertakings of the Council are listed the second-ha.nd book store, care of the cafeteria, and the monitor system. The Student Council Hand Book is distributed to each newcomer. The Council conducted the Armistice Day assembly and sponsored two dances during the school year. Funds were furnished for the Kent and Senior examinations. This organization also made a contribution to the Community Fund. Officers this year were: President, VV. Scott Long, John M. Heldackg Vice Presi- dent, Joseph Hapgood, Clyde Elliot, Secretary, Margaret Smith, Treasurer, Clyde Elliot, Ray Price. MONITORS The monitors, under the direction of the Student Council, continued the good work this year of maintaining better traHic conditions in the halls. This system op- erates during the home room period and the lunch hour, as well as regular class periods. The Council president appoints a chairman who supervises the students assigned to certain positions during one hour. These students are selected on the basis of their character and dependability. The chairmen serving under President Scott Long were: Robert Bowers, Claire Stewart, Joe Hapgood, Verne Bailey, Ray Price, VVilliam Lucy, James Cole. Those working with President John Heldack were: Ted Roderick, William lWclVIahon, Wil- liam Lucy, Louis Hageman, Claire Stewart, Raymond Price, Betty Webster. Page Sixty-three The ECHOES Row HONOR SOCIETY live-Vllolkofl, Berkowitz, Elliott, Price, Baldwin, Palovich, Copeland, Pippenger. Row four-Selkma, Daugherty, Sweet, Long, Schryver, Lind, Ollis, Hapgood, Heldack, Butchko l-ioderick, M r. Mollenkopf. Flow three-D. Morris, ROH8!'S,IiZllVCSlDZ1lil, Smith, Goldston, Koivisto, Kivisto, Fillmore, Hutzley Keller. Row two-Miss Risdon, Beck, Kennedy, Mock, Zeigler, Matlago, Dravis, Hicliorx, Cope, Harp- R 0 w ster, Tucker, Jones. one-Brown, B. Morris, Gabig, Schrader, Johnson, McCleery, Foster, Lindberg, Tanase Datish. ll 1 r w Row Row Row HENEID CLUB four-Berkowitz, Edwards, Bowers, Van Huflel, Simpkins, Pumphrey, Renftle, McMahon Stuart. three-S. Saker, Gilbert, Bland, Mcliride, Toslcas, Hartwell, Porea, Poppal, V. Saker, two-Gorse, Koval, Nader, Moser, MCCleery, Garlick, Brague, H. Nloore, Loucks, Petit Mrs. Webb. one-johnson, Mock, Tucker, Tilton, J. Moore, DeVoe, Hutzley, Schrader. Page Sixty-four v v The ECHOES NATIONHL HONOR SOCIETY Character, scholarship, leadership, and service are the four-sided standard upon which election to the National Honor Society is based. The gold pin that each mem- ber wears symbolizes that he ranks in the upper third of his class scholastically and is judged worthy in his general school life. Each semester from each of the three upper classes five per cent are chosen by a faculty committee, so that eventually fifteen per cent of the graduating class are in the Honor Society. Its purpose is chiefly to encourage general excellence among the members and the school as a whole. The officers for the year were: President, Roselyn lX'IcCleery, Ted Roderick, Vice President, Floe Foster, Helen Kovalg Secretary, Willie Lee Johnson, Kathryn Beck: Treasurer, lyliriam Schrader, William Porteous. Students elected to membership in 1935 did not have the opportunity of being in the picture of this group. Therefore, the names follow: 12-A-Jane Lee Brague, John Chickerneo, Helen Garlick, Eugene Gomsi, Helen Koval, Celeste Laprocina, Dorothy Lauffer, June Lowmiller, Lila Luoma, William Nlclylahon, Janelle lkloser, Louise Nader, Betty E. Rees, Sylvia Saker, Virginia Saker, George Sepanek, Claire Stewart, Charles Strothers, Donald Sweeney, 12-B-Dorothy Berg, Lyle Biddlestone, Betty J. Hawk, Jane Keifer, William Parker, Ann Sekog ll-A--Jessie Bickel, William Birrell, John Bustard, Eva Mae Chamberlin, Anna Dobbins, Austa Goldner, John Grima, Aimo Kiviniemi, William Porteous, Ruth Smith, Betty Webster. HENEID CLUB All 12-A students taking Virgil are members of this organization. The first semester the group, guided by Princeps Aeneas, Robert Tilton, enjoyed spirited discussions on the Origin of the World, speaking under their assumed names of gods and goddesses. According to custom each told a short history of the new character he assumed. At the Christmas season, a party at the home of the sponsor, Mrs. Clara K. Webb, was an added delight. For the first time in the club's history, all minutes were written and read in Latin by Scriba Jason Moore. Due to the large class this semester, not only gods and goddesses were chosen for names, but mythological characters also. The programs, with Louise Nader at the head and Robert Bowers as Princeps Aeneas, were carefully planned for each month, all members participating one time or another. Rita Petit performed the duties of Scriba. As a grand finale for the semester, a picnic was held as a parting remembrance. Page Sixty-five The ECHOES Row Row Row Row Row LE CERCLE FRANCAIS five-Selkma, Morris, Petit, Koval, Nader, S. Saker, Brague, Garlick, Stevens, Tanase four-Mckluflie, Kale, Sadlier, Matlago, Stewart, Gomsi, Schrader, Sweet. three-Keller, Laprocina, Jones, Spain, Rodgers, Mrs. McCurdy, White, McCleery, V. Saker two-johnson, Kightlinger, Downs, Sillitoe, Lindberg, Tucker, Grove, DeVoe, Hogan Goldston, Atkin. one-Luoma, Toskas, Mock, Daugherty, Copeland, Gorse, Fallon, Larner. Row Row Row Row Row LOS HMIGOS ESPANOLES tive-Cowie, Lardis, Dunphy, Keil, Lind, Poole, Saddle, Pippenger. four-Sepanek, Frazier, Alexander, Maurer, Alden, Baldwin, Keller, Roderick, Baciu. three-VValker, Goldner, Thompson, Mahan, jastatt, Shirran, VVitherspoon, Reese, Lear, Partridge. two-Kimmey, Koski, W'ilsman, Salminen, Koivisto, DeSanris, DeSanti, Gilbert, Canzonetta one-Thomas, Slee, Ollis, Mr. Hetzler, Aho, Morris, Kitchin, Stewart. Page Sixty-six The ECHOES LE CERCLE FRANCAIS llulti-colored balloons, grotesque costumes, masked faces, and lilting music announced the big event of the year for the French and Spanish Clubs, the Annual Nlardi Gras. The Grand Hlarch, as it passed Rex Les Shafer and the judges, brought to light the k'screamingly funny Dionne quin- tuplets Qsee belowj, the charming old-fashioned girl 1Ruth Smithj with David Copperfield CScott Longj, and the ridiculous half-man half-woman CPete blarshallj, to whom the traditional prizes were awarded. ' Meetings of Le Cercle Francais are held fortnightly at the homes of various members. Par- ticularly enjoyable was the program in which Lorraine Grant and Nlary Strong told of their school days and travels in Europe. This year a scene from 'lLe Bourgeois Gentilhommeu by lVIoliere was presented, de- picting the struggles of M. Jourdin CFrederick Daughertyj with the Nlaitre de Philosophie CHelen Mockj in his attempt to climb the so- cial ladder. Others participating included Helen Lindbergh, Jeanne Ruhenson, and lyliriam Schrader. Laura Jane Hoopes was master of ceremonies. Oliicers for this year included: President, Jack Copeland, Doris Mor1'isg Vice President, Fred Daugherty, Louise Nader: Secretary, Dorothy Gorse, Claire Stewart. hlrs. Kath- ryn lVlcCurdy is faculty sponsor. .LOS HMIGOS ESPHNOLES Los Amigos Espanoles, the Spanish Friends, is composed of students of Spanish from the ll-A, 12-B, and 12-A classes, who have a grade of G-plus or who are admitted by the sponsor, Harold H. Hetzler. Nleetings are held in the classroom on the first and third Thursday evenings of each month. Occasional meetings and parties are held in the homes of members. The purpose of the club is both scholastic and social. Programs consist of reports in Spanish on a variety of topics which supplement material discuwed in the classroom. Variety is added by vocabulary-building devices, such as games, songs, and cross-word puzzles, in Spanish. Each program endeavors to develop a unihed theme, such as typical Spanish fiestas and celebrations, national heroes, famous authors, celebrated artists. Refreshment are sometimes served by the social committee. During the first semester the club had two very enjoyable meetings and parties at the homes of Martha Jane Kitchen and Miles Baldwin, the latter being the annual Christmas meeting at which time Christmas customs of several lands were discussed. The outstanding event of the second semester was the third annual Mardi Gras sponsored by the French and the Spanish Clubs. The event of this year was acclaimed the most colorful of those which have been held. Balloons, French and Latin-American flags were featured in the decorations. The officers for the two semesters included: President, Nick Ollis, George Sepanekg Vice Presi- dent, Sylvia Aho, Diary De Santisg Secretary, llflargaret Thomas, Irene Koivistog Treasurer, Dor- othy Slee, Anita Canzonetta. Page Sixty-.vewen The ECHOES NEO-LITS- Row three----Ashelman, Berkowitz, Remalia, McNamara, Ott, Bustard. Row two-Fletcher Lindbergh, Saker, R. Cavanaugh, Selkma, Morris. Row one--McGuffie, M. Cavanaugh, Downs, Sillitoe, Miss Yost, Luoma, Whyte. BIBLIOPHILES-Row threef Strothers, Moore, Tilton, Lonpr, Lind, Copeland, Baldwin, Gomsi. Row two-Miss Risdon, Mock, Goldston, Hickox, Sweet, Schrader, Miss Bowen. Row one- McCleery, Porea, Matlalro, Tucker, Lowmiller, Heldack, Hutzley. MODERN BOOK SHELF'-Row three-Clark, Pumphrey, Cole. Row two--Nader, Brague, Miss Wheeler, Mc-sely, Hoopes. Row one Price, Rees, Grant, Rubenson, Harpster, Bowers. Pagr Sixiy-fight 'X 'L 1 'Q Q7E'1 i.f ,'fN f ,QF The ECHOES NEO-LITS The Neo-Lits, as the name implies, devotes itself to the reading and discussion of modern literature and was organized as a club early in the first semester. The membership was chosen from the upper three classes, based upon an average grade of G-plus or better in English. The charter members elected Marjorie Cope, president, Genevieve Drennen, vice president, and Clara Kivisto, secretary. When the club was reorganized at the beginning of the second semester, Lila Luoma was named presidentg Ruth Sillitoe, vice president and program chairman, and llrfartha Cavanaugh, secretary. Nleetings during the first semester were devoted to reviews of the classics soon to be presented in motion pictures-among them f'David Copprfieldn and Judge Priest. A miscellaneous program was carried out the second semester, devoted to the various forms of modern literature. An interesting meeting was given over to the study of negro poetry. ltleetings were held fortnightly at the homes of members. Dorothy M. Yost is faculty sponsor. BIBLIOPHILES The purpose of this literary club is to stimulate an interest in reading. The mem- bership of Bibliophiles is limited to twenty students chosen from the 12-B and 12-A classes in English Literature. The members must maintain an average of E in English. Bibliophiles holds its meetings every two weeks, gathering at the home of one of the sponsors for the informal discussion of literary lights, old and new. The club sponsors are Jeannette Risdon and Alice K. Bowen. Officers for the year were: President, Lois Tucker, June Lowmillerg Vice President, June Lowmiller, Catherine Smith, Secretary, John lVIatlago, Rita Petit, Treasurer, John Heldack, Helen Koval. The programs covered the varied interests of the members. Prose and poetry 'of Rudyard Kipling were discussed at the first meeting. The Christmas program was in the form of a social gathering at the home of lVIiss Bowen, with Christmas legends and poetry for the main topics. lllembers were privileged to attend the review of The Cloister and the Hearth given by Dr. H. L. Reid of Youngstown. Essays, poetry, and plays constituted the bases for the other meetings. Y MODERN BOOK SHELF The Modern Book Shelf is a newly organized literary club Whose membership is elected from Seniors maintaining G-plus or better in English Literature. The club is limited to thirty students, and its meetings are held every other Monday evening at homes of the members. The purpose of this organization is to create a greater appreciation of modern literature in both poetry and prose. A feature which individualizes the club this year is the purchase of two new books every month which will be given to the High School library when all of the members have read them. The sponsor of the club is Ruth B. Wheeler. Officers this year were: President, Robert Bowers, Betty E. Reesg Vice President, Ray Price, Helen Garlickg Secretary, Janelle Moser, Laura Jane Hoopesg Treasurer, Lorraine Grant, Jeannette Brown. Page Sixly-nine The ECHOES FRIENDSHIP CLUB Row Row Row Row HI-Y CLUB four-Taylor, Parks. Shriver, Cole, Keller, Elliot, Roxrers, Griffith. three--Mr. Lovett. Thompson, Stewart, Lind, Marshall, Reeder, Lundy, Birrell. two-Schryver, Salen, Heldack, Porteous, Palovitch, Roderick, Shafer, Lomr, Lucy one-Moore, Tilton, Hapgroud, Baldwin, Whittier, Fini, Bowers, Price. Pagzr Se-vfnty The ECHOES FRIENDSHIP CLUB ' The Friendship Club inaugurated this year a new system of organization in order to accommodate its large membership. The club is divided into three groups with three vice-presidents elected by the members as presiding oflicers. These groups are called Y's, Like Y's, and Other Y's. The president presides at joint meetings and special functions. Each vice-president has her cabinet which plans its own meetings and activities. The three cabinets meet jointly in an inter-club council which considers the problems of the club at large. Programs are planned with the purpose of developing the three sides of a girl's life as represented by the Girl Reserve Triangle-physical, mental, and spiritual. The Ring Group is a discussion group composed of 12-A girls who seek to find a deeper meaning of the G. R. Triangle. The club is under the direction of Opal Briley, Girl Reserve Secretary. Sponsors are lwrs. Isabel McFarland, Carolyn Whitcomb, and Helen Ridgley. Ofiicers included: President, Jean Rogers, Dora Louise Sweet, Yls-Vice Presi- dent, Justine lWcConnell, Betty Reeseg Secretary, Betty Reese, Roselyn McCleeryg Treasurer, Katherine Beck, Dorothy Laufferg Like Y's-Vice President Dora Louise Sweet, Lorraine Grant, Secretary, lVIiriam Schrader, Jean Harpsterg Treasurer, Betty Rees, Elizabeth Nilsong Other Y's-Vice President, June Mclflrathp Secretary, Betty VVebsterQ Treasurer, Virginia Lewisg Ring Group-Chairman, llrlarion Dravis, Cornelia Porea. HI-Y CLUB The Hi-Y Club, sponsored by O. A. Lovett, is always interested in the serious things of life, as well as the social. During the first semester the annual Hi-Y convention, held in Marietta, Ohio, was attended by Miles Baldwin, Charles Whittier, William Lucy, William Parks, Peter Marshall, James Pumphrey, Robert Lind. At the Annual Hi-Y Dance, held in December, everyone had an enjoyable time with the exception of the members who had to dolce out fifty-three cents extra. The members will probably always cherish the sweet memories of their trip to the sugar' camp. An unusually profitable experience was that of visiting the local fun- eral homes. All had an interesting time even though they were a bit frightened. The club believes not only in listening to speakers, but also in having interesting discussions among themselves on club affairs, individual problems, and community problems. This group of boys helped to sponsor the annual Youthls Conference which is held every spring at the Y. W. Farewell banquets were held at the end of each semester for the seniors. Oflicers who conducted activities this year were: President, Miles Baldwin, James Pumphreyg Vice President, Charles Whittier, William Lucy, Secretary, Joseph Hap- good, Raymond Priceg Treasurer, Robert Fini, Richard Rogers. Page Seventy-one The ECHOES Rn w Row Row Row Row BOOSTER CLUB live-Morris, Rogers, VVhittier, D. Smith, R. Thompson, L. Thompson, -lack Cole, bl. Maurer, Hageman, Mr. Cowden, Bowen. four-Beck, VVehster, Petty, S. Grant, Sweet, Lowmiller, Elliot. three-Mitchell, B. Maurer, K. Smith, R. Smith, Hughes, Dickson, Arntz, Heltzel, Hutzley. two-Davis, Brown, Matlago, Lindbergh, Schrader, Rees, Dravis, Sillitoe, Miss Maltns- lwerry, Miss VVheeler. one-'Price, F. Thompson, Pumphrey, Porea, Taylor, Jim Cole, L. Grant, Harpster, Rulvenson, Good. Row Row Row Row Row HI-ECO-SY tive--Berkhouse, Mr. Alden, Arclinger, Hirt, Bowen, Foster, Siska, MacMahon, Berkowitz. four--Biddlestone, Langor, Pike, VVeir, Moseley, Hill, VValker, Cunningham, Goldner, Selw- laen, Silver. three-Lahna, Gustafson, Brague, Maurer, Smith, Matlago, Cronlmerger, VVeiss, Datish, Chapley. two-Miss Van VVinkle, Jacobs, Hiljanen, Niemi, Thomas, lJeSantis, Petroco, Fletcher, Laprocina, Pytlik, Miss Lynn. one-Rich, Gaeman, DeSanti, VVesala, Pora, Nader, Gnmsi, Koval, Jones, Saker. Page Srfzmnfy-t-wo ':'?'W'5W'T'Qf 'Tfma' i ' 1:,' , - f' ' , v, ,' .5,.1.f The ECHOES BOOSTER CLUB With greater spirit and enthusiasm than ever before, the Booster Club started their Work at the first football game. The goal posts were decorated and throughout the stadium was heard the familiar Louis Hageman's cry of, Hot hot-dogs direct from the stand to youf' Concessions were sold at each game, with a different member of the club acting as chairman each time. The program for the Homecoming events was in charge of lVlarian Dravis. By a school ballot, Roselyn McCleery was chosen queen of the Homecoming, with Jean Rogers and Virginia lVIoon, her attendants. With the aid of the toWn's Boosters a gigantic bonfire was built in Perkins Flats to add zest to the Homecoming down-town rally. Besides these major projects, the Booster Club has been responsible for many other noteworthy activities around the school and town. By its diligent Work, the club was able to pledge fifty dollars to the Community Fund, help finance commence- ment necessities, and sponsor a Liquid Air Demonstration. Corridor duty at noon was capably managed by Robert Good. It engineered several clever pep assemblies, the purchase of a lost and found cabinet, and gave the ever-faithful support to each school project. For the amusement of the school the Frolics, an annual affair, was presented with an original cast and plot. This program was under the leadership of Helen Lindbergh, with Betty Webster assisting. Among the changes instituted in the club this year is a new method by which points are kept at a high standard. They are checked every five Weeks which makes it compulsory for each member to do his share of Work, if he Wishes to remain in the club. The high points worker for the first semester was Cornelia Porea. Boys rating highest the second semester were James Cole and William Bowen. The officers were: President, Robert Taylor, James Cole: Vice President, James Cole, Clyde Elliott, Secretary, Cornelia Porea, Ruth Sillitoeg Treasurer, James Pumphrey, Jack Cole. The club owes much of its success to the faculty sponsors: Augusta Barrick, Harry Cowden, Doris Malmsberry, and Ruth Wheeler. HI-ECO-SY CLUB Hi-Eco-Sy Club was organized this year for the purpose of creating active interest in social studies, such as History, Economics, and Sociology from which the name is derived. Its aim is to teach the members the ideals of good citizenship and to keep them posted on current events. The club is comprised of students interested in pursuing social studies, aside from the regular class-room recitations. It has sponsored such worth while events as the mock-election held last fall to in- struct students in fundamentals of voting. Due tothe club's efforts, the speech of Senator Robert LaFollette was heard by students at reduced prices. Members look forward to meetings expectantly, for the programs consist of music, debates, special reports, trials, Congressional sessions, and dramatized versions of the news. A cabinet, headed by the vice president, arranges the programs. Officers were: President, Helen Koval, William McMahon, Vice President, Eugene Gomsig Secretary, Louise Nader. Henry Alden, Gertrude Lynn, and Eleanor Van Winkle are the faculty sponsors. Page Seventy-three The ECI-IOES Row Row Row Row Row DRAMATIC CLUB tive-Kiviniemi, Selby, Hageman, Niski, Huntley, Mr. Lovett. four-VVaddell, Long, Tilton, Price, Poole, Berkowitz, Saddle. three-Smith, Blount, Latferty, Anson, Trumbull, Hutzley, Knoske, Nyland, Mibert, Smith Goldston. two-Mann, Chamberlain, Nader, Reese, Mackey, Bellay, Badin, VVinegard, Davis, Snyder Moon, VVilliams, Rogers. one-Strong, Cropper, Ike, Mclilrath, Foster, VVitherspoon, Harpster, Laulfer, Loutzen- hiser, VVilsman, Brill, Grove, Rubenson. GRCWlNG PAINSH Page Smffnty-four HDQRCDTHYH TheECHOES Row How Row Row Row GLEE CLUB five-Ulam, Renftle, Brdek, Collins, Remalia, Rowley. four-Schyll, Ackley, Powell, Smales, Harris, 1. Armstrong, Carnahan, Knight, Yohem J. Smith, Huntley. three-Patterson, Derflinger, Hawkes, Hollis, Trumbull, Hickox, Summerlin, Lehto Laurier, Loutzenhiser, Hall, Gouldthorpe, VVeston, Hiljanen. two-Van Sickle, Mzulago, M. Smith, Stevens, Ensall, D. Armstrong, Kemm, Mackey Mann, Doolittle, Simon, Lewis, Nolh, Kagy. one-Younger, Estalarook, Horton, Kiviniemi, Jackson, Hoopes, Selby, Shakely, Kincaid, Chamberlain, Downs. l l Row Row Row Row ORCHESTRA four-Smith, Nodine, Hirt, Bowen, Cilvella, Alden, Burgess, Gomsi, Simpkins, Askue, Garner. three-Blanchard, Mr. Scheig, Pentz, Rapone, McMurray, Atkin, Foster, Downs, Luoma, Gordon, VVolkoff, Rosenberg, Danyluk. two-Harner, McCall, MacFarland, liarbe, Messersmith, Markakis, McBride, Sauer, Heasley, Harold, Levininski, Suciu, Karhu, Bliss, Aubel. one-Thirion, LaPola, Quimby, Myers, Cook, Flask, Stewart, Fulton. Page Sefvfnty-.s'ix v 1 v The ECHOES GLEE CLUB Throughout the year, the Glee Club has participated in many school activities, including Baccalaureate Services, The Thanksgiving Service, and The Washington and Lincoln Assembly. During the celebration of Music Week, a concert was given at the Tod Avenue M. E. Church. A group of twenty-eight members also represented Hard- ing High at the N. E. O. T. A. meeting in Cleveland, singing with the chorus of five hundred students from Northeastern Ohio. The Opera given this year was Dorothy,', an English comedy opera. The prin- cipals were chosen by Carl F. Scheig, the director, from the following: Dorothy-Ann Allen, Kathryn Armstrong, Elsie Schwartz, Lydia-Eva lVIae Chamberlin, Laura Jane Hoopes, Phyllis-lVIartha Hiljanen, Dorothy Lauffer, Priscilla-Alice Horton, Elma Loutzenhiser, Wilder-Aimo Kiviniemi, James Trevisani, Sherwood-James Byrnes, Ben Harley, Lurcher-Douglas Ackley, Bill Graham, Tom Grass-Herbert Downs, Howard Phillips, Tuppitt-John Bizylo, Walter Harris, Bantam-James Bitner, Joe Mahay. Girls' Glee Club oflicers were: President, Virginia Estabrook, Alice Horton, Vice President, Alice Horton, Dorothy Lauller, Secretary, Eva Mae Chamberlin, Treasurer, Laura Jane Hoopes, Carolyn Doolittle, Librarians, Grace Gouldthorpe, Martha Hil- janen, Vera Kagy, Dorothy Lauffer, Ruth Jane Bratton, Gladys Ensall, Dorothy Part- ridge. Boys' Glee Club officers included: President, Aimo Kiviniemi, Vice President, William Kincaid, George Knight, Secretary, William Selby, Treasurer, Herbert Downs, Douglas Ackley, Librarians, James Bitner, Herbert Downs, Robert Lefling- well, John Smith. ORCHESTRH The orchestra is organized to promote interest in good music. As a new duty this year, it played for each assembly. The special programs in which the orchestra have had a part are: Senior and Dramatic Club Plays, Commencement Exercises, Union Thanksgiving Service, and The Community Forum. lt also helped in bringing The Singing Boys of America to this school. Under the capable leadership of Carl F. Scheig, the orchestra assisted the glee clubs in presenting the opera, Dorothy , The officers were: President, Wilda Downs, Vice President, Mary Atkin, Matt Luoma, Secretary, Matt Luoma, Marybelle lVIessersmith, Treasurer, Marybelle Mes- sersmith, Robert Hirt. The librarians were Joe Aubel, Bill Bowen, Marybelle Messersmith. Assistant directors were: lVlatt Luoma, Albert Casavant, Joe Aubel. Page Seventy-seven The ECHOES Row live-Hayes, Smith, Aubel, Williams. Row four-Summerlin, Daily, Russell, Cleal, Partridge, Gray, Drennen, Burgess, Daugherty, Phelps, Qualey. Row three-Crooks, Wilsman, VVright, Petty, Ronald, Dilley, VVilliams, Davies, Mackey, Cas- savant, Cibella, Chapman, Henshaw, Bock. Row two-VVolkoff, Bishop, Bartholomew, Ebert, Quinby, McLean, Hingle, Humphreville, M. Atkin, L. Atkin, Joseph, VVilliams, Horton, Mr. Corlett. Row one-Nolli, Gouldthorpe, VVise, Rieser, Trowbridge, Davis, F. Sager, J. Sager. BHND Under the able direction of Charles F. Corlett, our High School Band gave its support loyally during both football and basketball seasons. A feature of all field dem- onstrations was the two drum majors, Alice Horton and Alan VVolkoff. This year the band introduced a new method of making letters. ln the first year, all formations were made from nlocationu fstanding positionl. The second year, this was changed by marching into formation at the fifty yard line. This year,s innovation was the continuously Hmovingl' formation. While this type of formation does not per- mit the director to appear, it certainly shows marked improvement. Cn hflarch 22 a large and attentive audience attended the sixth annual concert. Qur band was assisted by the all-city instrumental group. The soloists from school were Albert Casavant and Leo Wilsman, both playing trumpets. The magazine drive conducted by the school to help raise funds for uniforms for the band proved a success. The band members greatly appreciated this timely assistance. Officers this year included: President, Wilburt Rieser, Bert Drenneng Vice Presi- dent, Gene Wise, Wilburt Rieserg Secretary, Arthur Gray, Frank Bishop: Librarians, Florence Ebert, Bert Drennen, Leo Wilsman, Ruth Humphreville, Nlarion Bartholo- mew, Howard Cleal, Raymond Phelps, Florence Sager. Page Seventy-vigil! The ECHOES Row three-Porteous, Grant, Ott. Row two-Gomsi, Mohr, Moseley, Garlick, DeVoe. Row one-LaPolla, Thomas, Moser, Miss Yost, Brague. HI LIGHTS STHFF The good plane Hi Lights made a perfect three-point landing after a successful cross-semester flight from September to June. Each Tuesday and Saturday evening the ship made a stop at the lVarren Tribune Chronicle to deposit her packet of school news. Janelle L. hloser succeeded hlarget Bartholomew as pilot when the plane took off for the second half of her hop in January. Passengers who Hew the entire trip were: Jane Lee Brague, Hazel hfoseley, Diary Louise Rlorris, Hill Porteous, and Eugene Gomsig while Walter Grant, George DeVoe, Randolph Ott, Ruth La Polla, and Dorothy hlohr came ahoard in January when Helen Garliclc disemharked. Beverly Thomas, Lucy Ritch, and Velma Ruscitti were the official typewriter mechanics for the crew. Flight Commander for the trip was Dorothy KI. Yost. Page Seventy-nine The ECHOES Row Row Row Row Row Row ZOOLOGY CLUB six-Heasley, Aubel, Frazier, Hubbard, Sepanek, Simon, Long, Baldwin, C. Cooper, Kale, R. VVilson, Edwards, K. johnson, Shafer. live-R. johnson, Elliot, R. Cooper, C. johnson, Higley, Bonis, Loutzenhiser, N. Thompson, R. VVilson, Ott, Ronald. four-Marshall, Blount, Schyll, Montgomery, Poole, Kontos, Martin, Wellington, Falken- burg, Statler, Porter, Biddlestone. three-Firster, Reed, Anson, Lear, Stowe, Newhard, Shaye, Horton, Armstrong, Doolittle, Smith, Poppal, Gustafson, Garner. two-Tilton, Hilman, Filmore, Mackey, Kiefer, J. Thompson, VVilliams, Alden, Tanase, D. Morris, Selkma, Schyll. one-Mr. Crawford, Loucks, Petit, Brown, Hutzley, Oden, Cavanaugh, Kirkpatrick, B, Morris, Maurer, Brooks, Ambrose, Kreiger, Mr. Hulme. Row Row Row Row ZOOLOGIST STAFF four-Garner, Martin, Wellington. three-Cooper, Maurer, Baldwin, Long, Tilton, Schyll. two-Mr. Crawford, Sepanek, Kontos, Oden, Hutzley, Mackey, Poole, Hatton, Mr. Hulme one-Brooks, Tanase, Selkma, D. Morris, Petit, Cavanaugh, Kirkpatrick, B, Morris. Pagr Eighty The ECHOES ZOOLOGY CLUB The Zoology Club in the short time of its existence has gained a membership of one hundred and has become one of the most active organizations in school. Soon after its inception three years ago the Club began a series of interesting, in- structive, and profitable activities. Many were the suggestions of interested students and of the resourceful sponsors, R. M. Crawford and H. C. Hulme. Among the various achievements are field trips to collect specimens, excursions to nearby parks fsuch as Cookys forestj, an annual trip to the Carnegie llluseum at Pittsburgh, buying books and periodicals for the school library, the publication of a club journal. Parties too are in order, especially the regular annual HalloWe'en and Inaugural. The most original work done is the Spring Exhibit which entails Work over the entire preceding school year in the zoology classes. The sponsors this year were able to collect materials in their travels throughout the West Cdesert, seashore, mountain, and forest, and in Florida. A fine collection of marine invertebrates is in the school laboratory. This organization enjoys immensely the motion picture record of its work. Since the beginning of the club, Mr. Hulme and student assistants have compiled a Hne footage of laboratory scenes, club activities, and animals. These are frequently used in club meetings and at the Exhibit. At times the club has financed the cost of getting special movies of zoological phases in desert, ocean, national parks, and Florida jungles, as well as the famous zoos of the United States. Officers this year were: President, Roberta Kirkpatrick, Lyle Biddlestoneg Vice President, Charles Maurer, Howard Frazier, Secretary, Nlartha Cavanaugh, Vera Sharpeg Treasurer, Irma Oden, Nlargaret Schielg Historian, Katherine Brooks, Audi- tor, Bernadine Morris. THE W. H. S. ZOOLOGIST The Zoology Club takes particular pride in its publication of the UW. H. S. Zo- ologist , for this is a rare accomplishment among H. S. Zoology departments. After the issues became popular with the whole school, the circulation leaped to as high as 450 copies. Of late the paper has included more of the general school news and is not so strictly zoological. Rita Petit served as editor for the first semester, and Charles Nlaurer has had the position for the current semester. Recently the various departments of editing have been organized under separate heads, and it is under these that the various contributors work. The W. H. S. Zoologistu is a bi-weekly twelve page paper which is mimeographed from stencils prepared in a school staff period. Mimeographing instead of printing has made possible the inclusion of art work and cartoons which would be too expensive otherwise. Page Eighty-one The ECHOES CHEMISTRY EXPERIMENTERS Row four-Parker, Larclis, Simon, Birrell, Rogers, Maggiano, Ott, Falkenberg, Cooper, Palmer. Row three-Biddlestone, Higley, DeVoe, Cooley, Buschagen, Griffith, Botts, Reeves. Row two-Green, Johnson, Kontos, Keil, Roderick, Angstadt, Bustard, Bono, Mr. Massar. Row one-Grimm, LaPolla, Larner, Mnter, Poole, Mcilleery, Patterson, Brooks, Kalvesmaki, Saddle. Row Row Row Row Row INDUSTRIAL ARTS five-Dulmasik, jones, Noland, Kilpella, Scholz, Williams, Bohyer. four-Michael, Elliot, Somppi, Lumas, Campana. three-Adams, VVildman, O'Malley, Reynolds, Prox, Bustardi, Ferderber, Smith, Beach two-Lowry, Calloway, NVright, DiAngelo, Wells, Qualey, De-lacimo, Sekula, Sebastian Balentine. one-Ledge-rwood, WVells, Mr. Kraker, Mr. Gass, Mr. Nickel, Cook, Bush, Rinda. Page Eiglzty-I-1:0 The ECHOES CHEMISTRY EXPERIMENTERS The Chemistry Experimenters, sponsored by Ivan E. lllassar, is open to all chemistry students. Grade restrictions have been banned in order to allow more stu- dents to obtain membership, particularly those having greatest interest in the subject. The activities of the club have consisted of demonstrations at each of the bi- weekly meetings, and of visits to numerous local industries. Visits were made to the Trumbull Cliffs Blast Furnace, City Water Purification Plant, Open Hearth Furnace, Glass Works, Youngstown Pressed Steel Enamel Works, and the Ohio Leather Plant at Girard. The completion of a periodic chart of the elements is one of the projects carried out. It consists of the elements in groups according to families with atomic weights, atomic numbers, and electron arrangement. Officers of the Chemistry Experimenters included: President, David Poole, James Shaferg Vice President, Nick Lardis, Alfred lVIasong Secretary-Treasurer, Jean Muter. INDUSTRIAL ARTS CLUB The club was organized to interest the boys in different kinds of industrial vo- cations and to acquaint them with conditions in industry and the requirements of dif- ferent types of work. The projects of this group correlate the Work of the different shops. Officers this year were: President, Lynn Cook, Delbert Wellsg Vice President, Delbert Wells, Albert Jukesg Secretary, Lawrence Reynolds, Leonard Hunt. W. B. Gass, G. E. Nickel, and K. L. Kraker, the faculty members of the Vocational Depart- ment, are sponsors of the club. Trips which the club made in the last few months included visits to The Republic Iron and Steel Company and The General Electric Company of Warren, Nela Park and Pitney Glass Works of Cleveland. Page Eighty-three TheECHOES DEBHTE Row three-Gomsi, Poole. Row two-Ardinger, Saddle, Kennedy, Blanchard, Berkowitz, Roderick. Row one-YVelwster, Griffith, Nader, Levy, Miss Barrick. TRLSQUHRE Row three-Mr. Cass, johnson, Filler, Secrest, Golf, Bowen, Clark, Sotak, Hogan, Rudesill Row two-Shuster, Andrews, Oswald, Martin, Porter, Russell, Rowley. Row one-Baehr, Quinn, Grant, jones, Everitt, Bono, Montecalvo, Stevens. Page Eighty-four The ECHOES y DEBHTE CLUB This season the Debate Club consisted of a complete list of new members. Much of their time was spent in gaining experience, and as a result of their great interest and continued effort in this Held, they expect to accomplish much next year. The subject for debate was-I'Resolved: that the federal government should adopt the policy of equalizing educational opportunity throughout the nation by means of annual grants to the several states for public, elementary, and secondary education. The officers were: President, David Griflithg Secretary-Treasurer, Louise Nader. Augusta I. Barrick is the coach. Although only one of the six State Inter-scholastic debates was won, the team ex- hibited marked ability in debating. The aflirmative team won the debate with East Palestine. The affirmative team also met Youngstown East and Newton Falls, while the negative debaters met Struthers, Salem, and Canton McKinley. Non-decision debates were held with Howland, Niles, Champion Heights, McDonald, Lordstown, and Waynesburg, Pennsylvania. TRI -SQUHRE CLUB - This is the pioneer year for the Tri-Square. It was organized, with W. B. Gass as faculty sponsor, to acquaint tenth grade boys with the school and with the Y. M. C. A. Any tenth grader whose grades permit extra-curricular activities is eligible to election. The club has a membership of approximately thirty boys. The meetings planned by program chairman Robert Martin were held every Wed- nesday at the Y. Each program, except the first in which the constitution was drawn, featured a well-known speaker. Among these were Mr. Milton Mollenkopf, who dis- cussed school activities, Dr. R. R. Rogers, who spoke on Social Hygiene, Mr. J. B. Kniffen, who explained letters and insigniasg Thomas O'Malley, who told of his ex- periences in aviation. Officers of the Tri-Square Were: President, Kenneth Jones, Bennie Secrestg Vice President, VValter Grant, Dick Roderick, Secretary-Treasurer, Donald Everett, Joseph Filler. Page Eighty-ji-ve The ECHOES Row three-Thompson, Pytlik, Bono, Nicholas, Shafer, Simpkins. Row two-Keil, Kemm, Harnar, Loper, Pesonen, Krasnoff, Foster, McCorkle, Henry. Row one-Hughes, Glassco, Mr. Hatfield, Cropper, Petty, Mrs. Van Metre, Tyler. GEQMETRY CLUB The purpose of the Geometry Club, which was organized in the fall of 1934, is to promote interest in the subject of mathematics. The club meets on alternating Thursdays, at the close of school. Its membership consists largely of tenth graders, since it is limited to those students making a grade of E in Plane Geometry. Although the majority of the program numbers deal with geometry, yet the mem- bers are permitted to present material taken from the other mathematical subjects, arithmetic and algebra. In this way, the relationships among these three branches are better appreciated. From the following items given on programs, one can readily see the large amount of material available for such a club: history of the origin of numbers and number sys- tems, the origin of geometry, history of famous mathematicians, ancient methods of ad- dition and multiplication, various methods of checking the fundamental operations, proofs of geometrical constructions commonly used, different proofs of well-known theorems, mathematical recreations using algebra and arithmetic, practical applica- tions of geometry in art, furniture, dress goods, architecture, agriculture, landscape gardening, automobile manufacture, a study of symmetry, a movie-tallcie showing the making of a Ford car, the close relationship between reasoning used in geometry and that used in drawing a correct conclusion in history, mathematical puzzles, a geometrical contest, short cuts in arithmetic, an excursion in numbers, a play which shows what would happen if there were no mathematics, a guessing contest which uses mathematical expressions. The officers were: President, hliriam Lehto, Tom Pettyg Vice President, Tom Petty, Kenneth Shafer, Secretary, Shirley Kennedy, hiarjorie Cropper. The faculty sponsors are Ruth Van Metre and Lloyd Hatfield. Page Eighty-.fix XAQVAE Qt: Tl-Ig -. S E E ? M , 1 gill, w i, -my , 1 t 'Q ,V X E mv' 3 S5 fag f , t-if 1 i MX X -- flf X x X 9 If fdfff ju 4 I 1 ff Q lx j X 11, , , I Y,6C -. i. , D GH, H ui H S HI Named in honor of the first high school publication in Worren in l904 ot which Earl Derr Biqqers was editor The CAULDRON THE CHULDRON ln the Cauldron the reader will find what is adjudged to be the best student writ- ing for the current year. The English department has long lamented that there was no channel for the publication of near-literary writing. Obviously it deserves a more permanent place than the newspaper. hiany high schools of the caliber of Harding publish attractive literary magazines, but it was believed too great a business venture at the present time. The idea for adding a magazine section to the year book grew out of a meeting of a representative committee early in the first semester. It is both permanent and attrac- tive and is provided at very little additional cost to students who buy the year book. It has furnished a subtle incentive to better student writing, although no competi- tive contests were conducted nor was any pressure brought to bear to produce writings aimed specifically at publication. All work is presumed to be original, and the selections are as varied as one would naturally expect them to be, growing out of regular class room assignments. Space has been apportioned fairly among the three classes. The selections were made Hrst by the teacher in charge, second, by a committee of teachers, Miss Jeannette Risdon representing the twelfth grade, Nliss Helen Ridgley, the eleventh, and bliss Dorothy Yost, the tenth grade. The final choice, however, rested upon a student committee chosen from the Echoes staff: Ruth Hutzley, Elizabeth Selkma, Scott Long, John Heldack, Doris lklorris, Genevieve Drennen, Cornelia Porea. It is, after all, a student achievement-one of the finest of the 1934-1935 school year. Warren G. Harding Exhibit at The Book Fair fHeld at Y. W. C. A., December 7-8, 193-lnl Page Eighty-fight ' ' ' ' ' ' 'fNf?fi5W725?'iW41' f'5f'f?f'fI55f?3+mISWQ5' I The CHULDRON By Anita Canzonetta, Twelfth Grade NE wonders at the beauty of nature when man is about. I have read poem after poem de- scribing the beauty of a rose, the sunset. Yet these same poets fail to see the beauty in man. Reviewing the braveries of Beowulf, I find there is many a Beowulf in our daily surround- ings. The man who has made his home his king- dom, his work his weapon against temptation, needs his pipe-a priceless recreation. He seems to be happy. He is happy. Yet when one delves deeper into the life of this man, one is taken aback to find the heart-break, the sacrifices he registers daily. Courageous? Self-sacrificing? Fortitudinous? The common man is all of these and more. Much more. He has struggled courageously for recog- nition, sacrihcing the little things which mean so much to him. He smiles when he'd much rather scream with inward pain when told, Nothing today. He patiently awaits that phone cally and when it finally comes, the work pays so little it makes one wonder why he refrains from laughing hysterically, instead of grinning quietly and nod- ding his head. How he could possibly say calmly, Beggars can't be choosersf' Courageous? Living through days of unseeing pain requires more than courage. Those in bat- tle have two uppermost thoughts in their minds. I either come out of this alive or else--. The common man fighting everyday problems isn't allowed to think. Optimism is law in his King- dom. Those who fail to keep it are branded Worthless. Self sacrifice? A man who is willing to offer his life fand many a time he has done so while do- ing work which endangers his lifej for the love of his family is a man. There might be at least one ambition in this man's life. Even after he is offered a chance to reveal whatever talent he pos- sexes, he hesitates. Success is seldom lasting. There is glory for a length of time-then oblivion. He may not be able to put aside anything for fu- ture accumulation. He daren't take a chance. for the family's sake. So the opportunity is cast aside. Oh, yes. There are men of this sort. They must be sure for their family's sake. Fortitudinous? Of course. A man of sacri- ficing nature is usually fortitudinous. He has learned to control his passions, to await patiently for the future, to thank God for his health and his home. I said above that he is happy. The pure joy of seeing others happy makes one feel that life is really worth living after all. Thus thinks the Common Man. lkfodern heroes? Millions of them. Just look around. A THOUGHT By Margaret Jean Blount, Eleventh Grade ll never came so very close to Death That I could see his fingers interlock With those of one Whom I hold dear. However, if God, in glancing o'er this world Of His creating, should decide To take to Him someone I loved greatly, I should like to feel that they Would not be so far away but what I could reach them when the longing grew- With God the medium. YES, ME! By Charles Cooley, Eleventh Grade ,X llANHANDLER of jaloppies . Monkeywrench twister of nuts. Doctor of wheezed-out cylinders. Filer of pitted ignition points. Fender unbender. Axle straightener. Tracer of loose wires and rotten connections. Remover of shimsg tightener of bearings. Greaser, lubricator, airer, 'ffill-er-up-ern. General mugwump of limping boats. Who? Me? Sure! John Brown, auto mechanic. MY DAD By William Carnahan, Twelfth Grade dad l have who is a friend of all, A truer man no one will ever know. A face, good natured, round as is a ballg To everyone a smile so broad heill show. Sometimes he gets a little tough on me, But as I later sum his reasons wise, He Wants to make me good as I can be So I can be a man none can despise. He works all day to make a home for us, And when at night I ask him for the car, He orders me at times to ride the bus, If journey is not taking me too far. His model at my side, I can't be bad. I honor himg l'm proud he is my Dad. Page Eighiy-nine The CAULDRON - fs. ,I ' .. If ff 7 A hw 4 Ax- ' f Xt' I , xg- ,A f N W ? .. 1 n 1 7' . . J V xl il If If - ' i 10 B ADVICE By Irene Graham, Tenth Grade Lo 10B,,' the l2A's shout, CThey love to see us burnj. But we can make them red hot too- Wait till we get our turn! We may be clumsy, finding ourselves In halls so large and ample, But, l2A's, show us how to act, You show us the example. Big shots pass us with nose in air And chests all puffed with pride, They think because they are 12A's We'1l open our eyes real wide. But take it from a meek 10B Don't chisel all the floor , But act more helpful and more kind, Then we'll respect you more. ARE YOU A RAINBOW ? By Toddy Ann Matlago, Eleventh Grade ifN one of New York's dance clubs a color organ is established. This gadget catches the orches- tra's sounds and turns them into color. High notes come out amber, bass notes red, and inter- mediate sounds split up between green and blue, in rapidly changing combinations on the white dome over the dance floor. Immediately one says, Oh, how beautiful! But it only beautiful be- cause of the color arrangements caused by har- mony. Our lives might also be beautiful, if we had this quality of harmony. Here is one person who is very studious, only his grades are considered in his high school life. In a color organ, he would be reflected as amber. Of course, amber is beauti- ful enough alone, but how much more striking it would be if some red, green and blue were mixed with it. Another student is reflected entirely in red. He slides over his studies and joins many extra-curricular activities. He, too, is one-sided. Then there is another type of student who is like a jazz band. He does much but works so fast that when he is finished, half the people do not even know he has started, and the worst part is that he has nothing to show for his work. In a color organ, he would be reflected as a painter's nightmare. If he ever wore the colors that repre- sent him he would make a grand circus freak. Why not strive for perfect harmony? After all, we have our extra-curricular activities to keep us from becoming bookworms, and we have our studies to keep us from becoming dull. Since We have no color organ established in our school, we must watch ourselves more carefully. No one will come up to you and say, You are be- coming a book worm, or, you spend too much time away from your studies. It is up to us to find out for ourselves what we are. The only way we can do this is by both studying and join- ing in outside activities. If you have time to care for each sufliciently, you can feel as if you are developing in harmony. However, if you find you do not have enough time to study, drop at least one club, on the other hand, if you have some time left over, adopt a club. We all wish to develop into perfect men and women, we do not want to be conservative or radical. The only way we can do this is by being temperate in all things and by using good, common sense. A NEW SCHEDULING SYSTEM By Hazel Thompson, Eleventh Grade lIUROWDS, crowds, everywhere crowds. Straight lines, wobbly lines, lines that seem a mile long. Crying students, laughing students, all running and dashing madly about. Pathetic girls with wide, innocent eyes, staring with horror at the mad jumble of nothing and everything. Tall, rough boys harshly shoving their way into long, twining lines. Teachers grinning sheepishly, teachers looking half-dead, making schedules, straightening lines, and shouting at crowding students. Red pencils, blue pencils, typewriters, and the buzz of voices, all making the noise more confus- ing. Burning feet, aching backs, and bruised arms felt and seen by all there. What's it all about? they ask. Somebody's clever idea of a new scheduling system. Horrors! A scheduling system! It's more like a massacre! Page Ninety The CAULDRON My By Hazel Thompson, Eleventh Grade !I'VE found her, Betsy Jane, I've found her. own, and I can't quite get my lips to turn up the Oh, I wish you could have seen her. She's per- way they should. fect. Lovely, blonde, wavy hairy light brown, Betsy Jane, she has the most gorgeous clothes, sparkling eyes, a smile that makes you gasp, and pearly white teeth- are all hers. A queen could not walk more perfectly, and she is as tall as I hoped-dreamed she might be. And her voice, Betsy Jane! What a lovely voice she has! A soft voice that makes you want to listen to her speak all day. And, Betsy, just think, I'm to have her to adore for a whole semester. She's my English teacher. Oh. how I'm going to love that class, Betsy! She'll make me love it. Oh, Betsy! I think she likes me. Today she discovered my dread for making speeches, and she said she was going to help me get over that nervousness. My themes, too. She's helping us all to improve our themes. She told us all about comparisons and descriptive words. I've improved my English. Did you notice that? She never speaks incorrect English. How do you like my walk? It's the way she walks, and this is the way she stands. I haven't got that smile right yetg she has a laugh all of her ROUTINE By Ruth Caraway, Twelfth Grade l!UP at se-ven, Off at eight, Study till after 'leven, Sure as fate. Horne at noon, Back before one, Time arrives too soon. Study has begun. Out before four, Horne before hw, Then siudy some more To keep memory alive. To bed at night Wake with the sun,' Then start again, Another day's begun. Day after day, Week after week, In the same old way Knowledge 'we seek. and even if I can't have any dresses or shoes like hers, I can keep mine neat and clean. I hope you've noticed that I shine my shoes and have been keeping my skirts pressed. llfIother was terribly shocked when she saw me mending my stocking. She wanted to know if I was ill or something. But she doesn't understand. Betsy Jane, she is perfect. I dis- covered today that she used to be a dancer. That makes her all I've dreamed of. I always loved danc- ing, and now, Betsy Jane, I have my chance to take lessons, because she is going to teach dancing at school. Just think, Betsy, my dreams are all coming true through her. I wanted to write interesting themes, and she taught me the art of using my -imagination. I want to be a dancer, and she is going to turn me into one. Then, Betsy Jane, you and I will both become famous. With a dress like yours, with just oodles of ruffles, we'll show the world that a girl and bed doll can do something besides just talking and looking brilliant. THE DIARY OF A SCHOOLBOY By Clarence Firster, Tenth Grade Jan Gess i will keap a diry. pop says he wisht he had kep one. i didn't i just sed shee coodent cook as good as my pet dog cood. boozy is still madd. Jan Had a fite tooday. i hadd two stand infi the k0ff1CI' 10 minutes four 50Ck1U Jan. 7. boozy is mader than ever amy fel inn a Billy Brant 011 the knows- E655 he snow drift an i puled hus owt buy hur won't bother mee enny more tho. heals She likes mee now, ,lim WCHf Skattiflg f00daY- .limmY fel thru Jan. boozy is so madd hee dont kno what Jan a thinn plase inn the eyce, and didd evee laff. Boozy is mad tooday. i went hoem with amy haris las nite and boozy gitts two dew cause amy tolled mee two cum two hur party an shee woodnt lett boozy cum. d ,H 1 k tt h Jan. 9. amy kissed mee tooday an i lett hur choo ma 1 Cnny one even 00 S a ur' my gum sum she liked itt reel good im Jan Boozy is stil mad i don't kare cause he'll g01Ud, two bye. hur, Sum g00ZCbCffYS- gitt over itt iff i gitt sum kandy ore b00ZYS mader 1 don t kare- goozeberrys' Jan. amy an mes engaged. i dont want two Jan Snowy as heck. got a lickin tooday cause any prisilla said i sassed her, butt Page Ninety-one leave amy long enuf two rite diry so i gess ill quit. boozys mader. The CAULDRON THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF AN ODD PERSON CA Dissertational Document of Much Evidencej By Georgedean Ardinger, Eleventh Grade XWHAT, dear reader, do you doubt that I am an odd person? Very well, let the facts be submitted to a candid world: I. I am the first first-born of our immediate family since its migration to these shores around 1793 not to be born at Ferncliff, our family home near Williamsport, Maryland. II. As if, dear reader, this wasn't enough of a cross to bear, they had to pick Christmas night, 1918, for my birth. But as that day is also mother's Wedding anniversary, we celebrate it on the 26th. I was born in Leavittsburg, Ohio. III. Woe of Woes! lf, and when, I become President, I won't have a house to point out as my birthplace, as it recently burned because a cat knocked over a box of matches. IV. If, dear reader, you still aren't convinced, here is the final proof. Caddie Allan Ardinger was my grandmother. Don't misunderstand me. Caddie, as I take the liberty to call her, was an excellent woman -- educated, dignified, portly, and graciousg still it was too bad when she made up her mind. She didn't care to have her heir grow up in his birthplaceg so SHE decided upon a charming estate of lyft acres on the River Road, that exclusive and beautiful extension to that fine, ADVERTISING TUB late this morning, and after a light break- fast, down to the office to set things right for the day. Then off to the golf course where I did meet my friend, John Shepley, and we did enjoy a most exciting round of golf, wherein, much to my enjoyment, I broke one hundred for the first time in my life. Then, while in the Club House, I chanced to pick up a golfing journal, and much to my surprise, I learned as I did leaf through the pages, that the reason I had never been in the nineties before is that I have been using the wrong kind of golf tees, and that furthermore, if I had been using a new make of golf ball, that I had never even heard of before, I would be shooting in the eighties by now. Pondering over this new idea, I did go to my down-town Club where I dine every day. All along the way l did see huge billboards shouting at me that I have been using the wrong kind of gas, that my brakes are no good, and that the car uses too much oil. By the time I did reach the Club, I was almost convinced that the whole car is about to fall apart. Dinner over, to the office, still Wondering if falling hair could possibly be caused by using a wrong kind of shampoo, as the man assured us aristocratic street of streets, Tod Avenue. There my parents and I, surrounded by our dog, bantam hen and rooster, ducks, rabbits, and my grand- mother, lived a happy and peaceful life until the crickets took the liberty to play their serenade un- der my grandma's chamber Window. So we moved. It did seem as if we had jumped from the fat into the fire. She next chose as our abode the southwest cor- ner of High and Vine Streets. We hadn't any more than got settled than the traffic began to annoy herg so she took me and off we went to Maryland. After a while we became homesick- so home we came. Upon my arrival, I found that there had been another arrival. I had a brother. Dear, dear reader, may you be granted freedom from these additions. Brothers are all right- when they are asleep. Mine is no exception to the rule. Shortly after our return, we looked about for a quieter location. We purchased our present residenc on Palmyra Road, right across from West Junior. This is the worst of all. In the daytime the students make too much noise, and at nights it's too lonely. Odd? Well, perhaps. But any- way, I'm rich with the wisdom of foretelling when a woman wants to move. By Joe Hapgood, Twelfth Grade over the radio at the Club. Then home, to have a quiet supper with my wife, then settling down in an easy chair in my library to spend the evening among my books, I did pick up a recent periodical. Glancing through the pages, I did come upon a picture of a speed- ing auto crashing through a bridge rail, and did learn that faulty tires were the cause of this acci- dent. From almost every page I did see faces haggard, tragic and haunted, beautiful but lonely girls wonder Why men call only once, the attrac- tive-looking bank clerk asks himself what makes Jones so cold these days. Here are business men who have been smoking the wrong cigarette, drink- ing the wrong kind of coffee, and eating the wrong kind of breakfast cereal, and are on the verge of a nervous breakdown. I did try to ignore these ad- vertisements, but the pictures are too large and too dramatic. When I at last did go upstairs, I did fully realize that I have had the Wrong life insurance policy all these years, that I must change my tooth pasteg and that my diet is altogether wrong. I am sure that I must have athlete's foot, and I probably have been using the wrong kind of soap, too. So to bed! None too pleasant dreams. Page Ninety-tfwo The CAULDRON STARS By Miriam Schrader, Twelfth Grade XWVHEN God has drawn his deep blue shade of night And closed the brilliant gold of day from us, He flings small windows wide and lets the light Of Heaven's splendor richly bless us thus- With infinite, glowing promises. MY LOVES By William McMahon, Twelfth Grade AFTER reading Rupert Brooke, I was prompted to list the loves of an observant coun- try boy: It feels good to get up early on a clear summer's day, While the dew is still on the grass and fog in the air, and go after the cows. Speaking of cows, there is no place that I would rather be on a rainy summer day than in a barn working with stock, there is an odor about a stable that I like. I like to live on a hill where I can look out over a valley and other wooded hills, and watch the thick fog disappear. I like to work with good, tame horses. I like to rummage around through old build- ings. I like a large dog and plenty of all kinds of stock and poultry. I like a large wood, because it seems to hold so many strange secrets which you can find only by searching. I like to gather leaves and nuts, and try to recognize various plants, trees, and birds. I love to hunt and fish, and explore forgotten places. I like to spend a little time in the cellar or milk house. I like to work in the harvest field. One day a couple of years ago, a friend of mine and I walked about five miles just to get to work in the hay- field. On a summer's evening when the work is done, it is great pleasure to walk around, watch the big moon rise, and hear the frogs, crickets, and the old hoot-owls. On a winter's evening I like to sit before a large open fireplace and eat pop-corn. During a winter's day I like to track animals through the snow. There are so many things that I cannot say which l like best. After all, what is there in nature that is not beautiful? DREAMS n What are they made of? By Nladge Cunningham, Eleventh Grade IIIVHERE was a child. She was a queer child. She liked to play alone. She had no favorite game-except to dream-except to wonder if she really would be a teacher sometime, as her mother wanted her to be. She did little except this. She had many friends, but no real friend-no friend to whom she might talk of her dreams. Then- There is a girl. She is a queer girl. She likes to be alone at school. She has no hobby, no fa- vorite amusement-except to dream and wonder -except to recall her childhood days and dream of the days to come-except to wonder if she really will some day be a teacher, as her mother wants her to be. She does little else. She has many friends, but only one real friend-only one friend to whom she can talk of her dreams. And then- There will be a Woman. She will be a queer woman. She will like to be alone, after school is over, and write. She will write to her many friends of her memories-Which she once Wanted to tell as dreams. TO MY FRIEND By Miriam Schrader, Twelfth Grade can I mold cold, brittle words into A definition of the warm, soft glow That you inspire in me? Small things we do Together, in charm and in importance grow. You never are at discord with my mood. If I am feeling gay, you laugh with meg If sad, you offer sympathy and food For happier thoughts. But, dear, you seem to be illost comforting to me when I'm reflective. We're reminiscent, plan ahead in leisure, We have a speech of eyes that's quite effective, And often We philosophize with pleasure. llfly past, my present, and future plans diverse Involve you, dear, you span my universe. Page Ninety-three The CAULDRON Presenting . . . . . By John Heldack, Twelfth Grade N ES, my friends, after much consultation with Dean Equinox and his associates, we have decided to add a new member to our ever-changing fac- ulty. Heretofore, in our recently established ad- visory board, we have functioned smoothly with just three members, Summer, Winter, and Au- tumn, but unfortunately times change rapidly, due to the never ceasing activity of the earth's ro- tation around the sun, and so we have added the new member to share the burden of carrying on Nature's beautifying process. Now confidentially between you and me, I'm quite sure it was im- perative for the faculty to add this newcomer. Which one of the present staff members could add another unit to their already over-crowded sched- ules? Undoubtedly their three month schedules are quite filled with the necessary fundamentals of their subjects. What are his qualifications did you say? Well, he holds the B. S., M. A., D., Ph. D., and C. D. degrees, not mentioning several honorary ones conferred by some of the highest institutions of learning in the world. What does this alphabet mean? I'll tell you. The B. S. stands for Beau- tifier of Soils. No doubt, you have never heard of this degree, but I must tell you his training was given in a most unorthodox manner. Master Architect is the literal translation of M. A. Wait until you see his wonderful designs, and you will unanimously agree to his worthiness. His Doc- tor's degree of Joy was conferred on him by var- ious colleagues for his researches and results in the above-mentioned fields. I personally had the pleasure of presenting him with his latest honors, the Ph. D. and C. D., which represent Doctor of Physical Education and Doctor of Culture. Any- one who has spent a week in exercising for ath- letics and digging a garden will understand his fittedness to teach these subjects. Fortunately we investigated his thesis before accepting him. Nowhere in my two years, study of English and American Literature have I found anything to compare with his thesis. Unfortu- nately his thesis was quite novel in form as it consisted of pictures of the beauties of nature. Too had we haven't a permanent record for fu- ture generations to marvel over. Their sheer beauty and intricacies of design were spellbind- ing to my colleagues, and I personally think it has raised the standard of their work. Another side to his versatile nature is that he is also known as a world-famous doctor. Where have I heard that saying, In the spring, a young' man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love, or Words to that effect? Each of you has probably met him once, each and every year of your life. What are you saying? I haven't introduced him? Oh! I'm sorry. Ladies and Gentlemen, in a most informal manner, I have tried to present to you one of the four Seasons, Spring! A MEDITATION By W. Scott Long, Twelfth Grade ID you never feel on a vigorous night, When the sky's all alive with celestial light, When the air is as cool as the brow of death, And the Winds flood the trees with a wild unrest ! That the heavens, the wind, and the atmosphere, And the oceans, the rivers, and lakes so clear, Are all just a part of that great design, That we, as mortals, can never define? Did you ever stand at the banks of time, And struggle, in vain, to conceive the line Between the empires of matter and soul, To determine for each its ultimate goal? I ascended a mountain and stood at its crest, 'Till the soul, bound within, broke out with its zest, And expanded unceasing, through all the wide space, To the ends of the realm that matter does grace. I pondered and troubled, attempting to see- When the light at last was shown to me. The elements, substance, matter, and name Were together, one and the same. Page Ninety-four SPRING By Donald Evans, Tenth Grade HE cheery spring is near us, And we welcome it with glee, The new birds make a great, great fuss, As they sing up in some tree. The buds on trees are sprouting, And the grass is growing green, If you should take an outing, New flowers could be seen. The clear blue sky is filled with kites, Of boys who love the sport 5 It keeps their minds off gangs and fights, And steers them to a better sport. For mine, I'll take the time of year, When the world is filled with song, And every heart is filled with cheer- Follow me, and you won't go wrong. ON ART By Robert Tilton, Twelfth Grade F art, that soon devours all my time, And does for me what something else will not, I cannot speak with words, unless sublime, With which the ransom of our lives is bought. The power of creation is a hymn Which blesses all the souls that it possess, And points the road of happiness to him, Who from the rut does climb when in distress. Belittle do I not the poet great, Nor any kind of author for his style, Nor they who only hope, and long, and wait, But still, is art: there's nothing so worth while To rid us of the grief our souls do hide, And of the thoughts that do our futures chide. WHAT COUNTS By Doris Morris, Twelfth Grade Little things Do mean so much To someone Who is blue. A lovely thought Means everything Inspired by One who's true. A lovely thought A cheery smile But best of all A friend in you. The CAULDRON MUSIC fAfter hearing The Singing Boys of Americanl By Margaret Blount, Eleventh Grade llflllusrci Soft, soothing music That fills my being with peace. I feel rested, My thoughts slumber. Music! Music that stirs my soul And fills it with a burning fire. I long for something,- Something I cannot grasp Intangible. I cannot stay here 5 I must go! Act! Music! Gay, lilting music That says, Be glad! You cannot be defeated! THOUGHTS By Helmi Gustafson, Eleventh Grade III often thought the yellow moon Was a huge rock in the sky Thrown up there by enormous hands To watch the clouds go by. I even thought the little stars Were baby rocks in view And some day would grow up, Just like the moon in yellow hue. THEN PLAY, O VIOLIN By Rita Petit, Twelfth Grade XWVHEN strains of melody make fresh the air Like lilacs after freshening April showers, And calm some ruffled sea of care Whose waves rise roughly high as towers, When bows do speak a language of their own, And sympathize with every human need, And comb the tangled hair that long has blown In adverse winds of ever-changing creed, Then never cease, O, violin, to play Those notes which penetrate celestial skies, Which speak a common language every day To poor, and rich, and everyone likewise. O, play the music that does raise the soul From this unnatural to its natural goal. Page Ninety-ffve 'vw-me The CAULDRON A By Betty Nfaurer, Eleventh Grade SEVERAL years ago, in a town in the mid- western part of Pennsylvania, on Hallowe'en Eve an elderly lady suggested to a few friends of her niece's a way to make a dream come true. She said if the girls followed her instructions care- fully they would dream of the man they were to marry. Girls, as it's Hallowe'en Eve and this is the only time this wish can be made, I will tell you how to do it. First each must cook an egg hard, then cut it in half, re- move the center. Fill this space with salt. And now, girls, this is where the fun really begins. 1'gsg,a.lw.,g61 f V 1 'NX ak Uri Each must eat that egg, shell and all, not talking or making any LF noise afterward until morning, -,J, ' 7 Q., and above all things you must ' drink no water. Just beforethe 'Sw ' just then the clock struck twelve. llfeanwhile Fit,' the cat had silently followed the girls up the stairs and had gone to sleep under the bed. Margy, feeling restless, dropped her hand over the side of the bed and suddenly screamed: Katherine, I've found my future husband. I can feel his breath on my hand. Katherine got up and pulled the cat from under the bed. Oh, it's only 'Fit', she ex- plained. But Katie remained si- lent through all this, and then both girls realized that they had broken the requirements and hastily got a drink of water. After the other girls had some- what quieted down and were not E so noisy, Katie fell asleep and w,,.fv dreamed she was riding on a train 1-F Q-'fr . 17,1 X 'Wim W' C' ' . ' ll ' f 7 7 :I , ' !I W . Y I I rf' -1:2 ,f stroke of twelve, you must walk upstairs backward and get in bed as the clock strikes,', explained the aunt. 'fThen your wish will come true. Gee, that will be fun, said Katie. I suppose it will be rather difficult, explained lVIargy. Well, I would like to see my future husband, remarked Katie. lt's well worth eating that eggf' Later the girls and Katie's aunt went into the kitchen and cooked their eggs. After fulfilling the necessary requirements, the girls started the ordeal. 'LGosh,' said lldargy, 'fthis shell is surely hard to get down. Well, I am going to eat mine, regardlessf, said Katherine. hleanwhile Katie was silently getting hers eaten. Soon afterwards the girls and Katie's aunt started up the stairs, the girls all going backwards while the aunt urged them on. All had to be si- lent while the girls made their wish. This wish was that they would see their husband-to-be in their dreams, handing them a glass of water. to another part of the state. While she was sitting there a rather stout man with dark hair and eyes handed her a drink of water. In the morning when she related her dream, she was laughed at by the other girls, as neither of them had dreamed. Yet five years later, on an entirely different porch from where she had related her dream, in a southern part of the state, she saw a rather stout man with dark hair and eyes coming down the street. Suddenly she explained to her sister, 'fWin, there is the man that handed me my drink of water in my dream five years ago. Oh, Katie, you are only dreaming now, said VVin. But as the mysterious man turned out to live across the street, Katie soon met him at a party, and her dream did come true, for three months- later she was wearing an engagement ring, and not many months afterwards wedding bells rang for Katie and her rather stout fellow with dark hair and eyes. THE AGE OF INNOCENCE loved to watch the snow flakes fall When they were large and looked like down, When God was hiaster over all, And ruled the sky with watchful frown. I thought the clouds were feather beds, The small ones, lovely pillows Whereon the angels laid their heads To dream of kites and willows. When earthly children played with beds, God asked the angel ladies To shake up all the feather beds, For making snug the angel babies. By lVIerciel Smith, Eleventh Grade Of course they did as they were askedg The clouds were shaken well, And as each one performed her task, Down to the earth the feathers fell. Some called it snow, but I knew well, 'Twas stufhng from above, Which told us as it softly fell, To the children, God sends love. When I would touch this feathery mat, It melted all away, So I thought Heaven must be like that- It lasted but a day. Page Ninety-.fix The CHULDRON By Ettamae Lear, Eleventh Grade IEALLING, falling-won't it ever stop? Why must this happen to me? God, I don't want to die! I won't die-but I will. I know I will. It's inevitable. Help! Help! Take it easy, old man, no one can hear you. Falling, falling-they say one's life passes in review when one is about to die. It doesn't! It doesn't! All I can see is Mother and Mary. Mary-what will she and Bob do when I'm dead? Poor Mary, only five years of married life-then this. Oh! God! save me-for Mary's sake, save me. I can't die! She needs me! I'm only thirty-five! The best years of my life are before me. VVhy won't this stick move? llflove, damn you, move! Do you hear me? What a fool I was to come up without a 'chute. Captain in the Flying Corps of the Army, and I can't even save my own life. Captain-ha, ha, that's funny. Now I know how those poor Huns felt when I shot them down. Poor devils. The Army, grand old Army. My obituary-I can see it now. 'fCaptain Stewart, gallant young Hier, dies when ship goes out of control. Captain Stewart was experimenting with a new army plane. The Army-grand old Army-ha, ha, ha, slaughter- house is more like it. The ground is coming closer, closer, closer. My God, here it is! I don't want to die! I donitl. Crash! The plane struck the ground and burst into flames. By Robert Hirt, Eleventh Grade !!!HIS is a tale that my great-grandfather used to tell about the worst fright he ever received. Abner Crockett, a miserly old fellow, feared and shunned by all, had been found dead, sitting in his bed with his arms clasped over his knees. As my great-grandfather was his nearest neighbor, he was asked to be one of three to set up with the corpse the night before the funeral. He dis- liked to do this, as old Abner's home was a lonely place, far back from the road, almost concealed by pine trees which always seemed to be moaning. Nevertheless, he accepted the unpleasant job as his lot. While the three men were sitting in the kitchen and looking in at the corpse occasionally to see if all was well, they uswappedl' stories about various subjects. Finally one of the men told a weird story about the dead coming to life and being buried alive, which increased the nervousness of my grandfather and sent cold shivers up his back. Just then the ancient clock in old Abner's kitch- en struck twelve, and his companions observed that it was my grandfather's turn to take a look at the corpse. After a brief argument, he took up the candle and proceeding up the hall leading to the front room where the earthly remains of the old man lay, silently cursing his friend for telling such awful stories on a night like this. Why, it's even got me all jittery. I can't even hold this candle steadyf' he said aloud. Just then a sudden gust of wind blew his candle out, not helping his nerves any. As he opened the door and entered the death- room, he struck a match to re-light the candle. As the match flared up, to his horror, he saw that the corpse was sitting bolt upright, staring at him. He yelled and dropped the match. Rushing for the door, he caught his foot in something fit was the sheet that had covered the body! and fell. As the two men rushed to the door with another candle, they saw the corpse sitting upon the stretcher, and my grandfather on the floor, strug- gling wildly with a sheet over his head. All three rushed from the house, jumped in a buggy, and drove like mad to town to get the un- dertaker to investigate. A pouring rain and mud- dy roads added to their misery. When the undertaker returned with them, the whole thing was soon explained. The old man had died in a sitting position, and when found was so stiff that in those days when undertakers were also horse doctors, store-keepers, and a few other things, they had to strap the body to the stretcher to keep it from resuming its upright position. just before my grandfather had entered the room, the strap had broken, and the body had again re- sumed its former position, the pennies placed upon the eyes in those days to keep them closed had fallen off, and old Abner was literally staring at the terrified group. llly great-grandfather then and there swore that he would sit up with no more corpses, and his friend never told any more ghost stories. Page Ninety-.refven The CAULDRON By Katherine Smith, Twelfth Grade Sunset and evening star .fnd after that the darkfn To me there is no more impressive time of the day than twilight time. When I think of the sun- set hour of the day, some of the happiest experi- ences I have had come to my mind. They are experiences that I can't very well share with others: it is difficult, somehow, to express feelings that you see in such changing glories of God and Nature working as One. Yet these scenes are living and lasting, not mere passing fancies. clouds pale in shades of pink and lavender are tossed in spiral arches to reflect the fast departing color. How swiftly the whole scene is changingg but as it lasts, it's there in majestic richness, with a vastness of living beyond the reach of human power to reach or reproduce-and that is what makes sunset an eternal thing of beauty. Therein, God brings each day to a fitting close with the expression of his love in a phenomenon I was sitting on the edge of a fishing dock that projected into an indigo seag a playful sea it was, talking, lisping to me as it lapped up and fell back at my feet. It was try- ing so hard to scale that wooden wall-a stubborn body of Water. How monotonous, I thought, and raised my eyes to a shimmering expanse of watered silk, green, blue gray, purple, blue, greenish yel- low off toward the horizon. There is the source of this mirrored beauty from a glorious array of color spanning the westward heavens. The sun has left the sky a huge paint box, and God begins his work on this mammoth canvas. The spirit of an artist, a master at his job, delicately unrolls ribbons of yellow, orange and cerise against crim- son folds and a Hounce of scarlet slipping into the sea. Up into that dome I gazed where cottony THE FOOTSTEP ITT was very quiet. The little church seemed softly to dream. The wind soughed faintly through the weeping willows, and then passed on to rufllle the ivy outside the small window. A little brown, some of them, for it was near the close of the season. Suddenly came a swish of wind, half wakening the drowsy atmosphere, followed by a swift run of steps. A young man ran stumblingly into the church, and fell panting before a small statue of Mary. He hugged her and laid his head convul- sively on her feet. O Holy Mary, Holy Mary, help me. He choked with an unseen tear. The heavy pound of feet and clank of armor were heard-they paused on the outside of the church and a scratchy, gruff voice said, He won't be there-he has probably gone past the crossroads. Let us not tarry. The man at the statue relaxed and laughed hys- terically, Good Arriusf' All night he stayed there, in the fold of Mary. When morning came he noiselessly went on his way. The little church more real than any indication of mortal affection. There are many ways in which God speaks through Nature 5 the roar of a water- fall, the clap of thunder, rustling of leaves in the woods, yet in the quiet of an ending day, God seems nearest to me. Be still and kno wthat I am God, He seems to say as I look into the sun-burst. Quietude brings peace to the restless one. A Power of At- traction is Where the beautiful in Nature abounds and it draws the human soul to a silent confession of humility, and finiteness of being. The measure of our ability for seeing God and worshipping Him there, can fathom pretty ac- curately our spiritual response to the Voice speak- ing through the golden mist of twilight. By Dorothy Berg, Twelfth Grade looked down and saw a footstep on the clay Hoor at Mary's feetg and the ivy leaves went on rub- bing their hands together and through the window came the contented clucking of hens. Years went on. The little church saw and heard many things. It heard the patter of little feet. It heard the heavy tread of old men, the gay laughter of children Hoating in with the breeze. It saw the weeping women, the funeral bier, the lilies. Calmly and sweetly did Mary look on. Her Son! Her Son! - and little children and big looked hushed on the imprint. Many more years went on. It saw many fes- tivals-much merrymaking, much sadness, but the footstep still was there. It heard the crank and cranch of brakes-ripping the drowsy con- tentedness. Voices. There, Mabel, that's the church. Isn't it delightful! So romantic, isn't it? They do say Saint Peter's step is still there since the time when he preached before his death. He was quite old then, wasn't he ? They walked noisily into the church. Page Ninety-eight The CHULDRON WOMEN'S CLUBS QA s.fa,ac.l Flight! By Eugene Gomsi, Twelfth Grade IIIHERE is no doubt in my mind but that wo- men's clubs are of special benefit to society. Con- sider the evidence. Who is it that sent two dollars and ninety-eight cents to Africa to help pay for the education of young heathen? Why, it was the Knit a Bit, Chat a Bit Club. Who was it that sent two bottles of castor oil and untold quantities of advice to the Widow' Savage's home when her boy Ezra was ill? It was the Plattsville Sewing Circle. Of course the advice, which was carefully followed, kept Ezra in bed for two weeks, what with being dosed by linseed oil, plastered with vaseline, and given Hetty Brown's own patent medicine, guaranteed to kill or cure. But that didn't matterg it was the Christian motive behind the affair which counted. Papers read at the Variety Club by that well- known social light, Elizabeth Katzenjammer, prove beyond the nth degree that Browning was a greater poet than Paul Bunyan and that Adolph Hitler has more power than King George. Im- agine in what state of ignorance our community would have remained, had it not been for the en- tertaining fyet so intellectual and educationalj readings by Miss Katzenjammer. The fact that Bunyan was a prose writer did not bother her, she drove her point convincingly home, leaving the other members without one doubt as to the evident superiority of Robert Browning. There are two classes of husbands, at least to my immature mind, who are the most fortunate. One is the bridge club martyrg the other, the ed- ucational club martyr. It is the second class that we are especially selecting as the object of our discourse. BUFF, A CAT UR cat, Buff, was one of the most precocious animals I ever saw. He Was one of a brood of four, and was given to me by a friend. Although his mother was one of the gentlest cats there ever was, Buff had pugilistic leanings from the start, and delighted in pushing his brother and sisters over the side of the box which was their home. One of his favorite tricks was to lie in the door- way so one had to step over him to get through. You could step on his tail and he would just roll over. With the dog it was different-if you came within three feet of her she would jump up and run away. Buff got used to extremes of temperature dur- ing the month he was with us. One time he Bill Smith is a model husband, or he would be, if it were not for occasional parties he attends without the blessing of his wife. Bill is a very fortunate man: Imagine his bliss, when coming home after a hard day's work, he finds a note, saying that his loving wife is at the meeting of the local Robert Browning Society and that he must go to the corner lunch wagon for dinner. Returning after a meal of hash, he discovers that his wife has enriched her fertile mind with facts from a reading given at the meet- ing. Imagine his unlimited joy in discovering that his little sugar plum knows how the Umbi- Gumbi tribe lives in darkest Africa. Also from the garden expert, she learned how to make the Wee hepaticas bloom three days earlier than usual. What does it matter that his meal of hash Was un- eatable? Was not his bride, the woman whom he took for better or worse, improving her mind? Bill Smith is divorced now: It was a case of hot meals or higher learning, and the latter won. In his Wife's charges, Bill was reported normal until she had joined the Robert Browning Society. When she entered the Garden Culture Club, he became moody and inclined towards sarcastic com- ments concerning her social activities. When she joined the Community Forum, he became out- rageous in his comments. Poor Bill, I wonder what changed his hitherto lovable nature. He was probably jealous of his wife's cultural advantages-so many men are. Well, I guess this proves my point. I must close now, for the infant is crying, and as my wife is attending the Lecture Forum, it is my duty to watch our youthful prodigy. Poor Bill Smith! By Albert Andrews, Tenth Grade crawled in the refrigerator when the door was open, and my brother closed it without seeing him. It was almost two hours before he got out. Another time when he got in the oven to get warm, somebody closed the door and turned on the fire. He started to meow,', but by the time he was rescued he was almost baked. The climax came when, for the second time in a week, he climbed up on the dining-room table and drank all the cream out of the pitcher. This, plus the fact that he was always tipping over the bird-cage, eating the goldfish, and fighting with the dog, made dad give him to the maid, who, I hope will take as good care of him as I tried to. Page Ninety-nine The CAULDRON LOVE AT SIXTEEN By Katherine Beck, Twelfth Grade li am tired tonight, happily tired in the thought of one more slender skein, barely visible in life's intricate web, woven not perfectly, but with ex- quisite hues produced only by the combined ef- forts of the master painters of Life. Strange to say, these painters are not common mortals, but are the stuff of life, tangible to no one, yet forcibly and emphatically existing in their very non-exist- ence. They are: aspirations, glory of achieve- ment, pathos, pulsating joy, remorse, resentment, compassion, and love 3 all dwelling wherever life is. Enough of such ramblings, which none besides myself will under- stand, and which even I shall not recognize when the inspiration dies. Let me say now as simply and as beautifully as I can what I feel about an emotion never fathomed by any man. Tonight when I seek repose I shall be alone with my heart, an hour sacred to me and existing only in the interim between the portals of consciousness and that time at which sleep sum- mons me to her arms. Nearly always my thoughts begin with a resume of the seemingly common events of my day in school, and then without even a hint of a conclusion to this subject, the thought, like a piece of feather-down drifting in the ether, is softly dropped upon my connections with the members of my family, and I thank God from the depths of my heart for giving them to meg then just as lightly it dissolves, leaving in its place a misty form gradually growing into the clear-cut figure of a youth just seventeen. Ask me not his name, for I do not know it. I only know I love him. He is my ideal if you will. His character, however, is not the assimilation of all perfect qualities. If it were such, he would not warrant MUSIC lil? life were just the drab repetition of petty joys and sorrows, success and failures, eating and sleep- ing, that makes us puppets of fate, it would be un- endurable-not worth the living. But in each one of us there is something deeper and finer than this, something constantly demanding expression, an indefinable something that we call Soul. Long- ing for music is a precious thing and should be cherished. It enables life to blossom into fuller beauty. lXIusic is the native tongue of hlother Nature. The song of the bird-the rippling brook-the thundering wave - the sighing breeze - all are my second glance. His weakness and errors en- dear him to me, but he must also have a sense of what is right. He is brave, jolly, peppy, hand- some, a true friend, holds his mother dear to him, and l glory in his physical strength. l see him at dawn, with his lilting walk, non- chalant air, and boyish smile, swinging his racquet, racing on the sand with the wind, or breaking the surf with his tan muscular arms. I see him at his books, constantly rumpling his hair and ab- sorbing What knowledge he can between thoughts of the great football game. On Sundays I see him at church, paying respectful attention to the sermon, but feeling more at ease on the hymns. Best of all I see him com- ing to me across an expanse of vel- vety grass made silver by the full summer moon. He is dressed all in white, sleeves rolled up and col- lar carelessly open at the throat. His intelligent eyes are lighted with a gay twinkle. He belongs to the outdoor world. I have loved him in the persons of many of my acquaintances, but they have not known it. The World has never known it. If it did, the sacred- ness of this emotion would be profaned. They say I am not old enough to understand real love, and doubtless they are right, but I believe that a young life is much richer, having experienced it as a clean surging fire. VVhen I am twenty-one I shall, I hope, learn to be more practical about this mysterious force, but now at sixteen it comes to me at dawn, sun- set, and deep night in the form of a strong spark- ling youth. By lN'Iary Jane Stan, Twelfth Grade her melodies. Yet glorious above all these glories is the power of man-made music. At the roll of the drums, the savage heart beats faster. At the trumpet's call, brave men march out to die. The mother croons a lullaby, and tired little eyes Hnd rest. As we listen to the harmony of an orchestra rising and falling in expressive melody, something is stirred within us, we are swept into unknown realms of romance, leaving behind all cares and worries of life. Music has spoken in her univer- sal language-the language we all love, the lan- guage we all understand. Page One Hundred The CAULDRON By Ruth Hutzley, Twelfth Grade K'The candle burns near the 'leventh watch: Our fling is almost doneg One last,-one lingering look around, And then we'll say 'Good byel' lfo many people, high school means books, mean teachers, long and tedious hours on text as- signments, along with endless home study. To some more inane souls who do not understand the social side of our honored institution, high school is a kind of kindergarten for over-grown children. Though there is a Hleetlei' of each suggested idea existing in the make-up of the school, I don't see how they become so exaggerated in our dear par- ents' minds, but that is not the point of this theme. For twelve years, I've been making new dis- coveries daily in school, and I've loved it. Now, nearly at the end of high school life, I am able to look back and know what it was all about -. For six years, we are trained for junior high school, during our establishment of three years in that institution, we are Qsupposedlyj fitted for high school. In high school, it is pretty much up to ourselvesl' whether or not we are trained for anything-college, life, business. For me, high school was the same thing as sun- shine for a newly emerged moth. Here I was given an opportunity to dry out my wings, and try them,-here I discovered what I Wanted to do and could do. Learning to cope with and ap- proach all kinds of people, learning to do all parts of all kinds of work, taking chances on asserting opinions and my own personality have been, what I consider, constituents of my education. All the time I spent on my texts and references have been just a peep into a magnificent world of dream, experiment, and knowledge. Never in my whole life do I hope to have as gloriously good times as I have had in my last two years in high school. Just why I have enjoyed them so, I don't know. Everyone seemed so ab- solutely grand in spite of worries, financial and otherwise. Though things looked pretty black at that time, when we look back, it was fun wor- rying. I never hope to receive from anyone so much attention, divided or undivided, given me at any time, outside of my dear parents. Three years ago I could not grasp the idea that Commencement was just the beginning of one's career. From my present position, I see that all thc admonitions dinned into me are true. lt is with a mixed feeling that I end my high school days. Some talk of post-graduate courses, but one cannot repeat his student days in a post- graduate course. When they are over, they are over. It is all-essential that the incoming stu- dents have the room, and that the out-going stu- dents start to learn to work. So, with a last fond look and glance at the beautiful and inspiring exterior of Warren G. Harding Senior High School, and a last roam- ing through the familiar, friendly, high halls Cso cool are they in the summerl, I leave in a ranking I had never dreamed of,-a worthy member of the January Class of 1935. BEAUTY JUNE TUCKER, Ta-fzffh Grade So often have I walked along a wooded path, Beside a restless sea, a quiet lake or stream, And noticed not the tender beauty they bestowed Upon the life that to each soul is but a dream. I watched a bird regardless of a raging sky, And paused not on his grace, but his anatomy. Then too, I touched the velvet of a blooming bud, And wondered just what use this thing could be to me. Then so my heart found not the beauty of a day- The pink of dawn that lights last ecstacies of night, The green of noon beneath the cool and shading tree, The stars and moon for which a lover pleads to fight. And then one morn a sun came up behind a hill. A hill-a hill of green and many budding trees. I saw a sky-for the first time-I saw a sky, Not as I saw before, but as an artist sees. FIRESIDE SOLILOQUY JAMES BYRNES, Elf-'vfnllz Grade llN the evening the mountains wear their most en- trancing aspect. The evening light-beams play like quicksilver on the ice-bound slopes high above meg the shadows of the night gather in the sylvan dells and glades. I walk in the calm, sweet beauty of my soli- tude, alone, except for a feeling of nearness to the lit- tle wild things that are watching me, I know. The wind sobs in the pines above, the spirit of the dying day is stalking past. The evening star rests in a vel- vet sky like a dew-drop on a black orchid. The beauty of all this holds me spell-bound. As I pause, weary, I see them, a large, magnificent buck and a small, fragile-looking, mouse-colored fawn, and they are together! It is not often one finds the adult male and the new- born of a species together, but there they are, drinking side by side. I stand and marvel until the buck leads the way into the dark lanes of the forest. I lie by my fire, now, and muse. Would that we were all like that great deer. We have the power to make others happy. Why don't we use it? Page One Hundred One The CAULDRON QUESTING FOR PERFECTION By Elizabeth seikma, Twelfth Grade IIUOLLECTING poetry is one of the most de- lightful hobbies one can have. Someone has said, Poetry is a captive of a picture, a song, a Hair in the deliberate prism of words. In that lies the key to the pleasures of poetry seeking. Someone with a gift of creating has made from mere words something that you want to treasure, something that is precious. So often that something is a thought that has lived with you a long time, but never quite uttered itself. Then, by chance, you see that very thought pinned down in black and white, and that brings the poem even closer. One short line from a well-known or unknown poem that may not mean a thing to another may mean worlds to you. In an entirely different mood, poetry may in- fluence you to try to express your own thoughts. At first it seems rather silly and your attempts, amusing. Time goes by and you begin to enjoy writing. It gives you a grand feeling inside. No one need ever know you write poetry. Let it be a skeleton in your cupboard. It's pure fun to sit down and, from nothing at all, write anything that comes into your mind-be it your aunt Susie's petunias or your pet peeve. Best of all is knowing lines by heart and, in idle moments, bringing them forth from the vest pocket of your memory and airing them. just to relax and think of all the lovely lines you know, scrutinizing them for the fiftieth time, gives limit- less pleasure. You need never be bored. Perhaps you see a lovely sunset, a perfection in roses, and can think of nothing more aptly said than the lines that unconsciously come to you. Then you think, Poetry is Perfection! RECAPTURE A FRIEND flUHILDREN have A so much fun dew-pearl Seeing things in rise known to none- ' Ny'mphs who dance ' A on shaded rill. star light Why can't I at hnd fairies still? sun down' -E. Selkma -E. Selkma GRATIAE If HANKSGIVING is approaching and again we are told to write themes on Reasons for Which I Have Personally to Be Thankful This Year. It has been discussed so many times in the past that it seems rather time-worn at first. But after contemplating this subject, I become aware of a new angle, the causes of thankfulness change from year to year. Last year I was thankful for many things, for which I still am grateful. I was glad that my par- ents were still living healthy lives, Q that we had salvaged what things we had been able to from the wreckage of the depression, that I was free from sickness, that school was really the wonderful thing that it is, that my clothes and food were adequate, that Warren's eleven smashed Niles' fThis year it'1l be a massa- crel, that in school I maintained my position, Page One By Jason Moore, Twelfth Grade whatever it might have been, in scholastic rating and extracurricular activities, that the United States was at peace with the world, that Nature still staged her annual Fall spectacle. Along with these holdovers from last year, I find new reasons this year for which to be grate- ful. First of all I think of youth, youth with its enthusiasm, friend- ship, responsiveness to nature, loyal- ty, humor, physical strength, jollity, and love. Next my mind turns to my dog. A. .s . t Q.. lim seventeen, but I still have those 'fLife's Darkest lVIoments'l when the friendship I seek is canine. There's no pal like a dog. I think of my unimpaired eyesight with grati- tude. And then - I remember Jesus and bow my head. is Hundred Two The CAULDRON By lsabel Hogan, Twelfth Grade lXvllliARY Maloney, the most beautiful girl for miles around and the belle of the ball, was genu- ine from the top of her golden head to the tip of her dainty slippers. Every inch of her five feet four was all that an artist would paint- llflary was as grand as she was lovely. To be near her is to admire her for the way she accepts life-and death. How many hours she has kept vigil by the sick bed, ever holding a moist hand long into the night. Even now she is administering by a bed--a pitifully hopeless bed-but never a word of despair passes from her The only girl in a fam- ily of five children, she grew up sharing and re- ceiving equally with her adored brothers. Inherit- ing her mother's gracious manner and her father's sincerity and patience, this slip of a girl started life, armed with many tools that cut an open road where it became tangled and narrowed as years rolled on. Even as joy and happiness were hers, so JUST MOTHER By Norman Garner, Twelfth Grade lliHE heart where one may safely rest, The love that always stands the test, The dearest in the world and best, Is mother . . . just Mother. quivering lips - she will stay on till the last. Past her Zenith of life, she has been able to shoul- der responsibilities as she did years ago, impressing us by her examples of pa- tience and courage that mark her for the woman she is. It is to her that we turn when in need of en- couragement and advice in our undertakings. We will never be too old to lay our troubled heads on her came sorrow and adversity, which she accepted like the soldier that she was, with a prayer ever on her lips to clear the way ahead. Now it is that with seventy-four years behind her, she is still mistress of her home, which even now roofs another generation. How great has been her influence in the lives of those about her it is for us to judge. Still a young girl in spirit, she never will reach that bored stage in life, while she can laugh and joke with all of us. With her presence, a gathering could not be dull-a good listener, and better conversationalist, this grand- mother of mine has held critical youth interested -a clever teacher beneath her entertainment. TEACHERS lf EACHERS are some very queer individuals who make up a large part of our world. I have met them in assorted sizes and dispositions. They are more tempermental than the month of April. They possess the ability to change your whole outlook on life. They can make you pessimistic, cynical, optimistic, happy, and every other way you ever felt. Small children observe the way their teacher wears her hair, how much rouge she wears, how red her fingernails are, and how she talks. Older students take her views on life. If she is a fatalist, they will follow her views, if she is an Epicurean, they will eat, drink and be merry for tomorrow ye may die. Some teachers' class rooms look like a museum, or an antique shop 3 others, like a cell in the county shoulder for her loving caress - our trust in her is greater than in ourselves. After fifty-one years of married life, she was as excited as a new bride when on her anniversary, with spirited heart she and the grand old man drank their toast, not for themselves, but for the others about them- to love, health, and happi- ness - even in the midst of tears. All that she means to me is deeper rooted than Words can tell. A beautiful life, reflected in a beautiful face, giving all to others, asking only love in return. To me she gave the greatest gift in her power- hly Own Mother. By Ruth Summerlin, Tenth Grade jail. Some teachers patrol study hall like sentries to quiet the noiseg others never notice it. Some teachers look like the last rose of summer: others like an art shop. Some laugh long and loud at silly incidentsg others ignore them. Some are broadminded only in the subject they teach. Some teachers instill a religious atmosphere in their classroom to the extent that laughter is as out of place there as it would be in church or at a funeral. Others consider a class is not a success unless there is a laugh. I have cited both extremes of teachers, but there is a happy medium, and it is this happy medium that makes school life worth while. Teachers are-well, just like people, that is-just like you and me, and it takes all kinds of people to make our world go round. Page One Hundred Three The CAULDRON By Kathryn Beck, Twelfth Grade lllHE ponderous velvet hangings of the great hall seemed to stifle my very soul. The deep still- ness in sharp contrast to the surging, rushing ap- plause of a thousand gloved hands a moment be- fore was deafening to my ears. Lingering sun- beams of the departing day ventured through the massive windows above the raised dais caressing the strings of a trayed peaceful content. The melody she played was haunting and wistful, soothing my broken spirit and restoring life to me. I felt an over- powering impulse to touch her, and as I put forth my hand to do so, she vanished, and a tall young man playing a violin appeared just beyond my reach. His eyes sparkled in ac- cordance with the animated rhythm golden harp and bathing its grace- FXS he was drawing from the strings, ful contour in a pool of liquid light. gli 295217 if and he made me laugh for sheer I was alone, terribly alone. Even i In AK joy. All at once a wild beating in the midst of a thousand-a mil- T rhythm drowned him out and hun- lion-ten million people this ach- I dreds of drums became visible. ing feeling filled my heart. I was gg Tramp--tramp-beat - beat - a infinitely small, yet everything mysterious compelling force existing with an overwhelming force was trying to crush that speck which should have embodied exultant life. Why, oh, why, must the soul be ground and worn to noth- ingness? I could endure it no longer. Sobbing convulsively I buried my face in my arms. Sud- denly the world began to recede, a faint breeze fanned my feverish cheeks, I could breathe! All about me was quiet and cool darkness, an ethereal atmosphere. A mellow light gradually filtered through the darkness before me revealing the golden harp. This time a young girl was seated beside it, softly touching the strings with delicate white fingers. Her rich, dark hair fell in thick confusion over her slim shoulders and her beautiful face por- from the birth of man driving him to war and deeds of daring. I love the sound, for part of my soul is savage. As the drums faded into echoes, I saw a shep- herd boy poised upon a lofty rock fluting a recep- tion to the dawn. His notes were silvery and airy and trickled elusively as a stream in spring. He imparted everlasting serenity to my world. A dark object loomed up before my vision, grad- ually assuming a graceful shape. It was the in- strument dearest to me: pearl white keys against ebony blackness--stillness+deep stillness. . . . I awoke from my dream and passed softly out of the great hall into the star-studded night- alone-but not alone. AN UNUSUAL REACTION TO A NOT UNUSUAL OCCURRENCE By Robert Lind, Twelfth Grade lE,VEN now I have seen a rat tortured, beaten and drowned to death. My stomach is quivering from the gruesome sight and my head is reeling trying to find justice in it, but I cannot. Why did that unsuspecting creature suffer such an ex- cruciating end? It was only seeking an existence and was murdered for it. Yes, it was caught by the leg in a steel trap, beaten and drowned. How could one creature feel justified in taking the life of another when it only took something to fill its belly that it might not die of starvation? That same animal, a man, would scream for mercy if put through the same agony. He, also, would squeal in pain as that rat did. He would shriek at the barbarism of such a heinous atrocity. But why? He killed another animal for wanting to fill its hungry belly. He caught that creature when it tried to steal a tomato from his steel trap. After it was held defenseless by steel jaws biting into its leg, he hammered the animal almost to a pulp with a shovel. He was still afraid of it when held pris- oner by a trap, so he used a long-handled shovel to pound it. Perhaps if he had been more brave he would have used a hammer. When he saw that pulp of flesh still able to move he was not satisfied to deliver it with one merciful blow. He had heard somewhere that drowning was an easy death, so he filled a bucket of water to drown it. He was able to say that animal was drowning an easy death while he stood and watched the breath rising to the surface of the water in bubbles. In its last convulsion the animal dragged trap and all to the surface and was able to breathe again. When the thoughtful man saw this, he ran and got a kettle of water and filled the bucket more full to speed the creature's death. He poured the water in and it gradually rose above the rat's nose and it soon drowned. He knew it was dead when the bubbles stopped rising. When the deed was done, that man felt justi- fied in what he had done. He, truly, felt merciful in drowning that rat. He felt happy because he had rid the world of a pest. Perhaps he was right, yet l felt like a murderer when I had been only a spectator and in my shame I felt an intangible superiority, all of which adds to my inexplicable reaction to the commonplace catching and killing of a rat. Page One Hundred Four HQME QF 77-IE Q l 1 i ,11, ,. A ,, f , , M 2 X 12. +4 ' a 4 ' 1 A591 J' W 'A . 5 V 1 XXW f RW ' 3 3' 2 F mg , , 52, fliiu I 623213: XJ ,,,Y 1 XV I 4, if V' dm 0,5 J MUQR ' ,,6f g'f Vx f f STE ECHOES E58 N800 L JUNE LH QQBLIOPW HDVERTISING Compliments of The Western Reserve Lumber Co. I C0 'PU 1e '5 of Miller 61 Brupbctcher East End Service Station FIOVNX East Market at B. 8: O. Tracks 373 High Street yvarrena Qhio TEXACO PRODUCTS phone 4242 Compliments of Gfhe ii-lalle g'E1irus.6Lu. P gn Onr' Hundred S SOWETHLNC' TO Cl-ITEER ABOUT N X fs -3 T X . ,X J x I ,-,i o ' l Q X X o Q l o,z,.gto. q,. ' :sf v.1014:sf,:,ozo,gofo:ozot4I, O Jog 6090600 A O 9 O Q V 9 Q 9 Q 9 O zgofgy v .,y4gv,sW ' 4fo:+:,',',0:0:ofo:o:.' usa QQQOOOOQ s.',Nnuo 'OOO' 90001.70 Q Q'.,.O.f.f. J x QQOOQOQQOQQQ Q O:9:':.0,OQ:,:JA .fan R'01w'o'o'to Q 4 o Q o , 93 A v Q 4 4 Q QQQQQOO ..-- M Osggo' '.',':':'z': w v l5'6'9v3's S 8 ,OANN A.-2-F non s'Q'g'g'Q'Q' 42? 490' 323 o90'o'o'g MIAA '. ' s9,A.6f6,A. -f-545,53 4353 .XM 1., I H any lMs4T'm'HVIi lhnllhll MINIMUM! DMU!! INHL UNDER-GRAD CLOTHES ton YOUNG MEN wuo WANWQ AUTHENTIC APPAREL FOR 1935 GRADUATES For any day and every dayeean Under-Grad will for Under-Grads are styled and tzulored the Way young men like to Wear clothes. single and double-breasted shirred-back coats--new style tricks you haven't seen before-cleverly pat- telrnedegand unexeelled in Value. TROUSERS TAILORED WVITI-I TALON PRINTZ II-', 1' 51:11, flIl,'I,fI'. ,l Sri' 'rl properly and smartly serve you. lt's your best bet-- The 1935 version of Under-Grad is n sporting one! PATRONS hir. and Nlrs. W. Scott Long Al Nicola P. G. Loughren CALENDAR CHRTOONS oEP'fEMBEQ Q- l f Qelfwee Gi 3f Katherine Brown Dress Shop ' w x ':k ',Q: George Aftoora 81 Co. V. if f QV! i Warren Meat Market vpESg:Ng.,? -92? X K 2 EQE F - : The Reale Beauty Shoppe l X 1 Adams Beauty Shoppe C12 .Z lI N l X ' fl ? f Hutton-Jones Electric Co., Inc. A 'J TQ C-,D 5 lf John D- Hall fi-S51-ecr'6ft'EL12l5AoERS,p' S. J. Brooks 061- I. WINTER cf6f3-f- x 11 -I?- . D c ffl Q .,-.. 2 Highland Dalry rg Ugg! Q, E I. A. Thoman Coal Co. LXQ glff h 1 . ffxx ' Everhards Pastry Shoppe fgf 1 Lui? E Ralph R. Speak, Judge of Nlunicipal op- 1-mmuq Court zooLoeuSr A 1 lp Al Paar's Drug Store A Friend 'wj A Friend 'S igflffisk W. H. Mounts Oil Co. 'Q EEL., E i 417 Nlr. and llflrs. I. Van Huffel , -AA-?l,?E?i'BgNg Klr. and Mrs. Lucas Rentfle Q37 Y -fe 2 1 I 2 e er ' 1 Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Heltzel WQVf5 Mr. and Mrs. John W. lVIclVIahon Q,2',,Q, xl Qi .Rift The House of Fashion ' -4 ll ll ' 4 'I J. N. Lardls 0 16 l LQNGA 74 W. W. Prentice f .jgV3,, 1 ' ' Tal4E: 'f Brown Derby x1QV7 ' N9 Q' ,,,-.:'?.'-7.1 . . . , 'i f V ' Q DflVld H. VV1ck, County Auditor 1' 7 Selle- . ffm e'?f3'6 7e?eW Dr. HI. V. Staton 30 NAMED! b,,,, Mrs. R. H. Sillitoe 'J' new gf Ee 4 The Blackboard ' NBP T Y ' UONOQ 49 Z1 Q lVIrs. N. A. Wolcott SOCIETY .tt Me. and Mrs. A. W. lVlcCleery AWARDS A ' V 'Z Page One Hundred Eight Conzpliments of McCul1ough's Sweet Shop QUALITY I-IOIVIE IVIADE CANDIES 70 N. Cedar Niles, Ohio Phone 995-W Marie B. Collier BEAUTY SHOPPE COMPLETE SERVICE FHRR'S CLOTHES Buy Farr the Bestn C L O T H E S FOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN 517.50 Others at 515-520-522.50 Compare Before You Buy 178 East hfiarket Street ROB I NS TH EATRE BLDG. The Largest Clothing Stock in Warren and Trumbull County Phone Scott SITCCY Reese Charles Goerlng Compliments from JUROW'S WARREIVS BIG FURNITURE STORE 253-55 East Market Street Dealers For PHILCO RADIOS, LEONARD ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS, APEX WASHERS I'Karpen'I-- Kroehlern-Jamestown-Simmons and Fine Grand Rapids Makes Complimenfs of Risher's Dairy Page One Hundred Nine Your Dollar Buys More at an I.G.H. Store -At l. 6.15. Stores satislaction is always linl4ecl vvitlw savings. -A Hpricen lwere means a real value in loools ol tl'1e liiglwest qualities. I.G.H. Stores are owner operated Compliments ol M HU RICE For SMART DRESSES pour Madame and Delbutante E. Marlcet at Pine lL ll lf lli Your life is a bowl That is yours to fill With honey or with chaffg But in filling 'Tis Wise to remember That it's you- The bowl must quaff. Your life is a cloak That you must Weave, And the warp and the Woof Must be fair, For down thru The chilly years ahead 'Tis you- The garment must Wear. And so as you build This life, that is yours, Be sure it is honest and trueg For nobody else Has to live it, my friend, Nobody else But you. llilllm 'Ut 11D GVDNWVN S Photographer fDedicated to the Classes of l935l Pagr One Hundred Elfsvfn ROSE 6 SONS 120 East Market Street HOME OF NATIONALLY KNOWN QUALITY MERCHANDISE '1Hart-Shaffner-Marx Suits Silvertone Suits Arrow Shirts VViIson Bros. Furnishings Society Club Hats Crosby Square Shoes SPORT TOGS The Park Hardware Co. Everything in HARDVVARE - PAINT and SPORTING GOODS 14-5 West 1VIarket Street Phone 1205-1206 Richards Motor Service CADILLAC - PACKARD PIERCE-ARROW SPECIALISTS Lubrication Service General Repairing BATTERY SERVICE ROAD SERVICE Phone 3028-X 1152 E. Nlarket St., at B. S1 O. Crossing CALENDAR caRTooNs r?'o4 23? H? QLQQQQQQ l m? V 1 ,I :el ' -SQEJMQSQWQQZQX I fr , LRQ I QIIZ '24-1 fwmmonsrggiqi MATH ,Q 'lwam-'-Scaivimq-,, ,, SHOW ' X Eff -19 if x 1 25951 57 flap iff ai? fr 5 pq , LAxFFZXT15 .2 Egmi-IV awe V ,115 . X 1 Us a 'iii-f QVKO XIXSQJN ' MQ 25, ,OE :M Q -4-11-Y ' 'Wff' N 3 Pi f ibiivagig ' T , ,Z-ill 'MT wi -9 Ji .e- 'l,f i795,i'?a DANCE '59ggrBA'f flag I er-e,6Eff57X' 'iii ' .V -9 'QT f'a Xfa wary, , f i xl l -'S N . C4 W -32 I ,13,',Q' ,a ' '44 JAN- : I 1 Hwmv ' MN aaefe SM I 0909 far THE V - ' yi KB ,si vxgvgqi Q-Zffsuys Vw p G fe Q gif H5 -1 21 051 E27 20 'WCW -if 3 2 ,? 22-12, 52- .QX3 wEQ.Tif . Page One Hundred Tiwelfve Schaible Brothers S O H I O Gasoline Station Independently Operated TIRES BATTERIES East HIarlcet -For School or Business- You'll Need a Royal Typewriter CROSBY-MCOK Typewriter Exchange l6S Pine Avenue N. E. gincfr 6? Go. GROCERIES - MEATS Corner Ohio and West Market Phones 1192 - 3621 , , ff-succnssgi l'OIllflllII1t'I1fS of and , WI HE Albert Guarnieri 8: Co. S S VVholesale Candy, Tobacco Ii' Cigars and Confectionery Rear-433 East Nlarket Street THEATRE WE GIVE AND REDEEM -EASH STAMPS ATHLETIC SUPPLIES and TRAVEL SUPPLIES Articles For All Occasions, To Be Found in All Departments P gf' One Hundrmi T!llI'fI'fH Compliments of The Denman Tire 8: Rubber Co. QFactory Branchj 181 High Street Opposite Warner Hotel Phone 2057 COM PLIMENTS OF Taylor-Winfield Corporation Manufacturers of Electric Spot and Butt Welding Machines Nello Beauty Shop Phone 1161 Grace Dunlap, Prop. for Established 25 Years W. T. Cab Service CABS and BUSES For All Occasions The VVarren Transportation Co. Permanent Wfafving Il Sperialty We Can Give You Frederick, Eugene, Realistic, Etc. Prices 53.50 and 35.50 Jny Standard Curl flomplete Beauly Serfvire l29 Elm Road N. E. Phone 2818-K Page One Hundre d Fourtee BEST VVISHES The ADAMS INSURHNCE AGENCY CO. New Ground Floor Location 115 High Street N. E. Since 1857 at Warren, Ohio The WHRREN STUDIO Photographers PHOTUGRAPHIC PORTRAITS COPIES and ENLARGEMENTS also Oil Tinting Frames and Framing Kodak Finishing 260 East Nlarl-:et Street Phone 169 1 Compliments of ll? llDHI'Ill?I' UIIIIJHIIIJ I U Illllldffmi Ffflfrn Warren Office Supply Co. Cvfnplifflenff of Phone 1015 294 East Market '- 9 3' R dl Y Diamonds - VVatches - Jewelry Spefial Attention Given to Cgynplimenfg of VVateh, Clock and Jewelry WARREN'S Repairing MODERN DRUG STORE Es bl'.h d 1847 ta N e Lewis 8a Mcwhirter Vautrot 8: Myers Co. Druggists 131061375 131 High Street Phone 2825 141 Market Street, West Warren, Ohio For Your GRADUATION OUTFIT S Compliments of ee WOLKOFF'S ' Post Theatre Outfitters For Men 139 East lllarket Street Cozzzplinzerzfs of Compliments of The Hare Music Corporation BALDWIN and HOWARD PIANOS Also PAINT - GLASS - MIRRORS The Largest Stock of llfliscellaneous WALL PAPER MUSICAL MERCHANDISE ln Trumbull County The City Paint 8a Glass Co. 230 North Park Avenue 240 North Park Avenue Phone 2242 Warren, Ohio Youngstown Branch: 18-20 Federal Arcade Pagf One Hundrrd Sixteen CHLENDHR CHRTOONS ALL scuoos. DAN ? Q Q vofi 1 - ' 1 6-Ed t , JQNI-S ' ov ,, -'gf ' 0 VA u - XJ iq- QP U, 11 2 9, , 'df Xf, TVR 2 YQ TT rj 4 4,7 1' A on f - 2 5 ,V 'V C JL!N.2?n. 5 .f 9 Wtfv? Itfffwzg I 0 3 1 L 0 X 5 3 9' 2 if 4 rg 0 0 5 'W 9 P 'UW f I, f' fy ' Z H sff 'if X ' 'I , ' f A QZQSX I? f' AV' ' 3 1 F1 -1 49? o n T 'T if f 4 go 1 151 f :WX , Q 1' ,,.,ff-' ,, 1 . V WW Q f I N f 1 1111 EGF' 1 I ii, lD Hl1a 1114391 GOROG'S De1.uxe Markets 1302 Youngstown Road 806 Parkman N. W. 210 Elm, Corner High YOU WILL FIND ALWAYS NEW STYLES QUALITY FOOTWEAR at Sweet's Shoe Store Form ez-ly VVALKOVER BOOT SI-ICP 124- North Park Avenue G R A D U A T E KEYSTONE COAL for HEAT and HAPPINESS The Keystone Coal 3a Supply Co. Two Convenient Yards 12-10 Youngstown Road S. E.--Phone 2799 509 Elm Road N. E. - Phone 2286 f on S. naw. Pagz' One Hu ndrfd Smzenlef l I EII'1'Pl1 1' Mranrh nf lfliram Glnllrgv Hiram-Warren offers you a new experience in education-the New Hiram Study Plan. Hiram-VVarren offers you the Hiram College faculty, known afar for its excellence. Hiram-Warren offers you Hiram College credits, accepted at any college or uni- versity in the country. Hiram-Warren offers you wholesome social life, with abundant opportunity for in- dividual participation. Ufzzlch Hz'1'am-Wa1'1'en.f If is a growing college! Warren Women's Exchange BAKED GOODS LUNCHES PARTY ORDERS O Saturday Evening Supper 170 Pine Avenue N. lf. Phone 2190-W Compliments of Cfnlzjvlirllefzts of H l The Harding Dairy and Grocery Always at Your Service Q Across from the School Phone 3491 Pagf' Om' Hunrfrml Eigflzlfzfn MEET ME AT Compliments of Leach Service Drug Store Nobil S1109 Sf01'e Opposite QUALITY SHOES FoR ALL Warren G. Harding High School Compliments of Buchwalter 6 Guielius CITY MEAT MARKET Market House FRESH and SALT MEATS Phone l267 With Compliments of G. K. BHKERS Warren ' Ohio Congratulations, Grads! A Wise old owl sat in an oak, The more he heard, the less he spoke, The less he spoke, the more he heard, Why can't We be like this old bird? RGYAI. H. SILLITCDE County Surveyor Page One Hundred Nineteen One of our many S ty1 eh 'll fg ue-5. - Q' 4 If fyf J: '., l A I I 'I- rff if I . N I 1 1 new S Z YI S. . f ' 'a .QLIGI ge1L1II2ICLGjA0ppe Permanent Waive Specialisis CHLENDHR CHRTCONS 5 I W A iwiaa ' f ' 7 TV I, IAAA AGENTS, quer-O-0 5 XXX - , I 50 A9 A . NI' . 1 5 'jx 4 NAME I H , XPC-'Z 1 'I 1112 , .' I J LAS fir fm ,df 11:1 N Zi , 6 I - EE! Ia. 20' 10 1 0 v' ' L I 1 Q W . 111g 1 4 f 141 33 Ai A 1415 A3 B U PWAQINWO S 'S X fl I A Q X tf Phone 4144 I 179 Main Ave., Cor. Franklin St. 222612, WMA fjj?XC6NCEi15'T i1G5LNlf'fjf1 A , vp k FkG 'm- 'Agn Q COM-Q '45 M , ' Q? 9 ' AS USUAL X Q O-S-B-O-R-N-E QED 29 q f ,f ,-I I f QS THE SUIT MAN HPWQ5 Z HON You Know WM '11 VACA ' - W gifs? wwf N MENS FURNISHINGS V LMS X '-A ..:u 5 L f' SUITS TO ORDER A db PX LUGGAGE OF MERIT If ,Fig Y W 5. 'f12 1 APRIL' .ZU1Y1wYC4L7QgfSPRl Z6 , . , 1.25 IIlllIf7lllllFlIfX of 76?-S-.-tdzxxpgsxfg 4 M WA Ilurhvzn Qi'fX ,QP ig? 5 0 iw M Glhnrnlatr Svhnppv Q'11g5X ,6 s f 91 fa CANDY GIFTS X Wi For All Uccasions X ffgj KN I 37 134 East Nlnrket Street I 11,0 H1dT ty Complimenls of arren Elvlrphnnv Qlnmpang f701llf7lflllFIlf5 of STAR CLEANERS and DYERS Phone l924-K VVest Market Street fj0lllflIflllFlIfX of W. M. KYSCT Sales COITIPBDY Distributors of janitorial, Sanitary and School Supplies Office Furniture, School Furniture Public Equipment Corner Parkman and Hunter Phone 1716 Select Your LANE CEDAR CHEST 'iW'here You Charge Your Cloilzes' Here 'rim For That Sweet Girl Graduate The CROSS-LESLIE Co. 132 N- Park AVC- 'AQuzility Furniture Since 1889, Warren Pagfr Um' Hmm' 1 Tfzcfnty-01 Compliments of The Wm. Eby Company Gei Your Graduation Flofwers of Rowland Grocery The Reliable West Side Store Hdgate FIQWGPS ALWAYS DEPENDABLE INIEATS and GROCERIES AND MOST RELIABLE Corner West Nlarket and Parkman Road H+ Blain Avenue S. W. Phone 1141 Qbhin Ifiuzinvzn Zlnatitutr ACCOUNTING, STENOGRAPHIC, SECRETARIAL COURSES AND HIGHER ACCOUNTING INIefw Clusxes the First Jlonday of Each Blonlh 222 Klzzin Avenue S. W. Phone 2129-VV Page One Hundred T1-wenty-ffwo Coinpliments The Masters-Daugherty Co. -fCoiviPLETE FOOD sToRE 280 North Park Avenue AS A LVVAYS XVishing You Wfell ' 1 1 '5 Q' THE SHERWIN-WILLIAMS CU. ROBINS 5- KNHPP 1 PAINT -- WALL PAPER HATS gg CLOTHING 137 PM Avenue HABERDASHERY i Proper Stationery and Good Printing are prerequisites to GQQD BUSINESS in more tlian 80 per cent ol our commercial lile. Every buyer of com- mercial printing vvants tl'iat vvl'iicl'1 We are able to give, viz. tlie greatest value lor your money. l-ry us. HTKINSON PRINTING COMPHNY Printers of Ti-IE ECHOES I ' Om' Ilizzlifnull 'l'qci'11fy-Illwi' fl0lllfPIl1IlFIllS of SHNFORD'S Shoes tor Men One Step Off Market-Robins Bldg. Compliments of Cetrone Dry Cleaner CALENDHR CARTOONS fy i W ,EB WWC W N' wp 2 S , f ei? VHYZLCQL ED-AO 9 Nmvzu 55 1, V Nl X1 Q pgqemeub ESENTAIUON PM l AY 1 'OF 523553 X 'E IG TOO XXNXx 6x,5J f o x ff is 0 X X 'll V sa P Page A A X exk u xy XX SS X m I elf 'QLE ffl. A 1- N 5 ff we ' 5 X' L 753 Q 4, WWW N XXRQQESR-x twill ok XF L Q 41:3 I aa A S Compliments of ,K , , 2 ' .,e' Bo1otin's Furniture Store S990 4 . Z MN ' i ' 464 South Street S. W. - Wa1'1'en'J Leading Furniture Store We -WMA, Q? EQ' 'i AW' CJ '. JUNE Q ' Q I Z ' N .f ', : Q 'Q A Compliments of 6 - P W Q Personality Beauty Shop 6 GLQXEQMXX is Ly Opal Fox, Prop. 699 ' Located at Warner's Store 4 h 2 -5, v A P one 130 0 l lffllffll for Our Weekly Specials SCNGEDL Cl-05E-S .K Page One Hundred Tqwnty-four LIFE-LIKE PORTRAITS THAT PLEASE cgncfrews Studio Phone 2193 Corner Park and Market Conzpliments of Iensen Flower Shop 234 East Nlarket Street Phone -I-099 Greenhouses on Parkman Road Exte Phone 2124-Black nsi Warren Hardware Company Near the Corner-Market and NIain BUSY SINCE 1892 I-Ieazlqzzarlers for GOOD HARDWARE and SPORTING GOODS IIOIIIPIIIIIFIIU' of Wyndh-Urn-is T0gge1'Y Shop T 'l d r O d Cl th HI OTC O CS VVARREN'S FINEST and SQDA GRILL FURNISHINGS 158 North Park Avenue That keep you looking your best Nlarket at Tod Avenue Compliments of HAMILTON 5: MEIGS FRED H. MYERS The Gift Shop Diamonds - Watches - Jewelry School Rings and Pins Pagr One Hundrrd Tdzcrnty-jffvf STYLE ASSURANCE Compliments of H1-May Beauty Salon Elm Rodd Market Up to the Blinute on the Latest in HdZ.TdTES.f 107 Kiahoning Bldg. Phone 2033 H U T O G R H P H S Payf Om' Hundrm' Tfwenty-.via Compliments of 3 0 cwee Qjfmjzo PHOTOGRAPHS 274 North Park Avenue Phone 1376 Compliments of G. P. FISHER Compliments of Gene's Beauty Shoppe 361 N. Park Avenue Phone 1638-L LIBERTY SEA FRUIT RESTAURANT We Serve Special The W. B. GIBSON CC. Contractors and Builders Full Course Dinner Phone 4210 35c From ll A. M. to 9 P' M. BL'n.nE1zs OF BETTER HOMES . . . 238 N. Ch: S WV. ' , Oh' Try Our Delzczous Sandwiches esmut meet Amen A 10 Page Om- Hundrfd Tfw1'rzty4Jr .-. .-.-f'.Y1.F.-.Ufljkykl ii There are few fields where fhe necessify for progress-fhe demand for new ideas, is as pronounced as in 'fhe producfion of School Annuals. U Here in Canfon we fake pride in nof only keeping pace, buf in seffing fhe pace for innovafions and changes in fhis highly progressive field. Q When you work wifh Canfon you are hand in hand wifh experienced people, consfanfly on fhe alerf fo sense 'fhe wanfs of Annual publishers, and quick fo change from fhe old order, and offer new and unusual ideas fo progressive edifors. me cAmoN ENGRAVING s. smscmorwe co., cANroN, omo T N H l'f1f1r Um lllzfllffmf 'l'Q:f'11lV1'-wifffh' A1 P J 1 N V J Q f s-9' ' ' Vim' . 5' . Y -.4 is 1 .. .f.., 5 A r Y :G.rJ'-.'fn. ,,. 1 Lb- ,i2E2,f-- 1237- 15,'1 i?'f-f K 5: ' VF' , 4 'J -f ' 3' fl?- V , ' 1 1 ' --.,.g1.-'.'- 'f 5 :.,A. ' -, 5 .- ' :-' -' '-'v.1.': - .Y ., .,f3,3gV-V . ,124 1',,--ff-N - F 11 gt .,L,,,,. 4. ' , L., - ,r,Y,.: Q 1' '15-'L-'V r-,fZ',. i1'g2, M - ' V-.-gy :'1 .,, .Hifi Fig-'4f5'-Lg . - V Q. fi'-.74 ' . A ., . E ' ' F-1 ' --ff ,-L 3 'T' Yiwu: . Q-L .jp rf 5 X... 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Suggestions in the Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) collection:

Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Warren G Harding High School - Echoes Yearbook (Warren, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941


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