Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA)

 - Class of 1924

Page 1 of 227

 

Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 227 of the 1924 volume:

IIX LIBWS' JaluvQMvSseR, Wu ?11a mm ,fame-adm? W L 1 he e 4 v UW Q Pan ora W of washington and Jefferson College I M ,. , N ,IN H if We U :QM H 'W . L V Publzs ed by C7716 Junior Cass W . H i Dolume Cllnirtlif-nine N .251 . WSW ' o ' y'Y1QZMQxi.fE , iF H E51 4' W W w E 1 1 1 1 s .5 H l E Q 5 ,lx ,A ,,, 13N M pl 'Q Nu ,, 'Q w I f N he 4--,ff - Z,,-J f 'J 'lv T,-mrwfilxwffzw .gmff 'e'arwuni09frJ'4'HxwMm:!wm1Nm 'fn1I:lvl1r1:!'.4 !,-u're'wLm1A:,nrJm2rr.:2::' 1ig1r.wl!lx w---vw-an ww A ' if 5 S' Q .5- M .x u. M . 1, . 'N Q3 ' W u.52a,., A ' A. -w., , 5i5ni,3?,g,' ,V .vm iw: 5 V V' .M R-g -.gigs r F ful' . 4' ,J ,W , Mm s my 1 .1-N.: 5 'F 7 '12 A Y' an :HN '- 'X x ' 7 ml U l, A Q QM' 'I-A ywxk , K' Aw Wxm-. x.i lx Ak A ' N. :ar 1- .21-lu pw-es.vzf : ,, M 1 'qi T 's Tis V ,.4g, Q I . . FWIQQ:-be R. N. gzxb ma, . -- A 'f'f'+ C h 1 -M sh -Q'-l -wh kifw 'l?'Qf5i f frm?-wig -M ,, Q .. . '-Hug ,,.' 'lk g 'N x 'Y Q,e,, niM Ss0.x .- S' -X X -WY Q Avst., X ,ii 5.7 N mn x V iw ,.lm , Q'X.,. Mfg . .gwkh .. ..- K--..QA,.,, .- - X wx gg 'bf ' ' if ' A , .C 4? Q -1 Mhwmm Sw , in 'N 'sf' Hz A N- Wu I. . 1 N .. 5 sd, 5 W if A . F1 , N H , Qi Bax XV' Wiz '- 'Q-'fl.3'fi3, .,1.,v3'.wg4 A ' 4- we '4 ' -' A, ' ao , f- 'Ric' 'Ev any Wu, tba:-.s W J' 1-Maixf, 'NN fx Y X y A K as qQ,NkwK, 4 x 1.', :,. e L. h 'JJ'-Q Q -4 fx gk. R' N N ki- A Xiu l xx f X,Ax.,A Cx Q: l ,lily y :FJ 3 gpg ?7,,' 1,5 1 ,Mid .I'3.Lfl N:,1 NYFM Sy Qi is UQ. ww, Q mx WK, . iQx,my ,wg 5- 51-,FQ x., k My 'H' ww, fn, ' gk T .2 1, 5- rx '. Eb 3 V3 ' 'k'a43s'QH' its , - . kay' vR,S.r.hg?xQ 'Ni' D Y' x ,4-'ww'ANN2.'W ' 6,15 ,Y . - ' N :A 'X ' K WN? x la 'WM . -J sv .-NL. X H v 1 -A 5-.gig 55 ua 'V ' 'N ' . , A DNN b . 5 -gtgmf ,I 5 ' M u f ' 5'3 ' 1. if m Ava I Nrirlgxgxqzbru K I iffy ' Xft up 0 vs - .ntl !R.L: .W Q -K 1 it Y.xwq3 -5-W .K P'-. vf. .w' 1 N. l . X, , I X 4. I N' G: if ' 3 g ' A '- Q: gi '..B' NAQKIJ1 ,Q I uf 'W' A ' , . QB' y if-, ,.,1 M , Q dpi ' Hr, l l' lik nm l r A Niwla A ' ',:.,43Nl. 'Q , . AQ L -Q fy 1!f.ge:.1'3:i, f 7w-,hw .gffigqv ,N,'1-aussi? lv - m ',IX 1--NIH 'V 4 '1 Q -WM ,Il fhvfnue ,- A .5 , r ...qluniextism Boolc I - Couecje BOOL H H Classes Boolc Ill Jltmetics Boolc ID Fraternitles BQOL D H Orcjanizations . . Cla gl ,,.A,, ,-.,,,,T.,.. fLEInnural1le 3111111 gHHnQ3lIf1ai11e, patron of learning, who, through his liberality, has given to washington and Jefferson a broader outlook on the world, who has always been cz sincere friend of both the College and Students, we respectfully and gratefully dedi- cate this, the Pandora of 1924. Eight JUDGE JOHN A. MCILVAINE U .. ,A., .L u 1 H T PANDORA -24 Ten Q5 Q .fn as H ...Rf 'RH N T , ,,,: IPANDURA .Nw 24 Eleven CFO the memorq of a classmate Qu: eral nunc ad asira thls page ns respectfullq dedlcaled bq the class of nmeleeu lwenlq four G5eurge glfarris fgigalhfuin FOREWUR This PANDORA is the annual chapter in th history of Washington and Jefferson Col lege. Here we have zealously endeav- ored to clearly portray the events of our Junior year. With the hope that it may be a perpetual font of happy reminisence, we, the Board of Editors, present this volume to the class of nineteen hundred and twenty-four. 'mtl 'Sis 5203 2 e' A .f New ,ffl 'U ,If A K . I VM. . ' ., ,Q 1 4 - , ,A '-,R BOQL 1 CCHS .Q .fn qi lb U ii I I anim' M ,V U E, , , A ,,, .tu u A IPANDORA 3111121 gmiafer S we hold this volume in our hands and turn its leaves one by pgs: :ff l one, we are thinking today, and we will be thinking tomorrow, , D and we will be thinking each tomorrow as we turn the leaves again and again, of a peculiar connection that necessarily ex- -'-' ' iss' I ists between the PANDORA and the dear old campus. It is a picture of today 3 it is also a picture of yesterday, and in a peculiarly rich way the colors and tints of the life lived here are brought back to our vision. Here is the stroke of the artist, here is the mark of the wit, or the foibles and flings of the satiristg here is praise, may be, and a bit of romance that is beautifully covered yet decidedly lucid. Here are photo- graphs and cartoons bringing before us in the silence of our chamber of meditation the face and form-maybe the strength or the weakness of those we knew so well. To those of us who have been beyond the campus for years measured in decades, or even less, the very perusal of these pages serves to bring back the forgotten incidents and memories of campus days, and thereby we are reminded of an allegiance-a duty-a privilege, that is ours be- cause we sojourned here in hours and days that no doubt we count among our happiest. 'Tis a service quite worth while, then, to spend one's strength, time, and thought in preparing this volume, and we ofer our congratulations here to the young men of 1924 who have so faithfully given us this picture. Perhaps its very presence will induce us to go down the old library shelves and bring forth again the old PANDORAS of our days and again in periods of time reune with the brothers who sat beside us when the roll was marked in the old Main Hall. Respectfully submitted, S. S. BAKER, President. Fifteen U Q in . . ffl E l anim' M u Y U -V' E I wi .-,, ..... - .-1 '- PAXD GRA :-nnxlmT?3 1l.lllll' 9 0 gllnrefuiirh ,Q kg' HE college, faithful to its trust, must teach men, not merely 2 how to make a living, but how to live. And this quite practi- cally, by introducing the youth to the real world as it is: as a Lf 61' place of useful toil and of boundless enjoyment, as a great 'if'! '34' opportunity, in which the rewards are gained rather by strength of character than by fortunate circumstance. The college should equip the student for a free life, that his mind may see things in true perspective and assign to them their true values. To this end, there must come a broadening of the mental horizon, an ac- quaintance with the past, both as to the histories of whole peoples and the great achievements of individual thinkers. Literature and art belong to the well-endowed mind as truly as the facts of science. The beautiful is as essential as the useful. This culture, not directly pertinent to the tasks of every day, never- theless contains the elements that make one's own life worth living, and in the illumination that it casts and the wisdom it engenders may make the lives of others fuller and the world a better place to live in. The differences between men, as practical life establishes these dif- ferences, depend on fitness for some specialized type of employment. Mis- takes are often made in choosing one's life-work, and men are born with not equal endowments. If the college can lessen these mistakes and over- come these inequalities, it will be done only by cultivating the habits of sound and careful thinking. On the other hand, to equip the student for earning a living is a task less delicate than that of inculcating culture, although in a materialistic age the pursuit of culture for its own sake must always be defended as something rated trivial by the mass of men. The truth holds, notwith- standing, that the possessor of culture has a priceless advantage not con- fined to himself alone but available for the world of humanity about him. This, as I see it, has been the constant ideal of Washington and Jef- ferson College. EDWARD MOFFAT WEYER. Qs' 1' A Sixteen D Q 'ni Mmrmli lb . Sl U .- 5- 'll U nv' 'IQ . , - if giifzfyf uunmxllllr-'l'll,lWf N 331 -' UR history bears a halo of excellence, refinement, and eminence, and that is an incentive for us as we face the future. Student 'y-+55 body faculty president and trustees shall constitute a united C and determined force to maintain the usefulness and merit of ,, , A . lfln ' ' X , .J - 2-A ff J ' , , 3 , . .K NJMFKQ our institution in the wor1d's work. Washington and Jefferson College is not just a group of buildings and so many acres of groundg it is an assemblage of human souls, immortal, vibrant, glowing, and growing as the ages roll. Great men have passed this way, and in passing have left for us a legacy of inestimable value. ENROLLMENT SINCE 1870 117 1870 Total College Students ................................ 1880 Total College Students 1890 Total College Students 1900 Total College Students 1910 Total College Students. 1920 Total College Students 1922 Total College Students. There have been graduated from Washington and Jefferson College, in the historic period of its existence to the present time, more than 5,000 young men, aside from those receiving baccalaureate degrees, 4,000 men have taken partial courses. A fairly accurate analysis reveals the following interesting facts in relation to these men: Cabinet Members of the United States-4. United States Senators-11. Governors of States-10. United States Congressmen-91. State Legislators-Nearly 300. Presidents of Colleges and Universities-91. Moderators of the Presbyterian General Assembly-42. Judges of State Supreme Courts-21. Judges of Federal District Courts-2. Judges of County Courts-144. Ordained Ministers of the Gospel-more than 1,800. Attorneys-at-Law-more than l,300. Doctors of Medicine-more than 700. Engineers, Teachers, Chemists, and Business Men- Approximately 2,000. Scvcrzteen Pb 0 -'H D U nm r lm ' .iii In I , 'I I 1.1 ll DE I xN.X,. . 1: QRQ'2'MNWf4Wf1ff.f1.- Nnxnna11u1msf1'I!MQ 0 PRESIDENT SIMON STROUSE BAKER fI9ffirers uf Qshnxiziisiraiinxr mth SEIIISIYIIIIIIDI1 ADMINISTRATION .. President SIMON STROUSE BAKER, M.S. Dean and Registrar Secretary of the Faculty EDWARD MDFFAT WEYER, Ph.D. ALFRED M. DAME, A.M. General Secretary Auditor ROBERT M. MURPHY, A.B. MARGARET G. BECKER Librarian Matron of Dormitory FANNY ELLIOTT LOWES SADTE F. HEWITT Eighteen I Q 'D uni .hlmrmn lb ' ti 51 'H' 'li 'ff AW- .fyum , . -. PANDORA 'iff' 'i-' Vf.-vf 1. . , ,, .,...- I ,ui glfarultg of Qilnstructinu SIMON STROUSE BAKER, M. S ................................................... George Washington Hotel President, on the Jasper H. Thompson Foundation. DUNLAP JAMISON McADAM, A. M., LL. D ....................................... 63 LeMoyne Avenue LeMoyne Professor of Applied Mathematics, Emeritus. EDWIN LINTON, Ph. D. ....................................................................,................... Columbia, Mo, LeMoyne Professor of Agriculture and Correlative Branches, Emeritus. WILLIAM CRAIG McCLELLAND, A. M., Litt. D ................................. 45 Acheson Avenue George M. Laughlin Professor of English Language and Literature, Emeritus. JAMES ADOLPH SCHMITZ, A. M .............,.........,...............................,. ..,,,,, ,,,,.,,,., C 1 -afton Professor of German Language and Literature, Emeritus. EDWARD MOFFAT WEYER, Ph. D ................................................... ,........ C allege Campus Dean and Registrar. Professor of Philosophy. ROBERT BYRNS ENGLISH, Ph. D ....................................................... 29 N. Lincoln Street Beatty Memorial Professor of Latin Language and Literature. REV. JOSEPH H. BAUSMAN, D. D ........................................................................... Rochester George M. Laughlin Professor of English Language and Literature, Emeritus. CLYDE SHEPHERD ATCHISON, Ph. D ......... Professor of Mathematics. OTTO F. H. BERT, A. M ...............................,.................... LeMoyne Professor of Applied Mathematics. JAMES CLYDE McGREGOR, Ph. D ..........................,.. Professor of History and Political Science. 403 E. Chestnut Street N. Lincoln Street .........College Campus .....20 S. Lincoln Street .509 E. Chestnut Street M. ALLEN DICKIE, A. M ..................................................... Professor of German Language and Literature. HENRY ADELBERT WHITE, A. M .,,,.........,.,,,,, ,.,,,,,,,.,.,,,..,,,,..,,,,,,, Wallace Professor of Rhetoric and Public Speaking. THOMAS LANSING PORTER, Ph. D .,,,,,,....,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,.,,,., v,,,, A Professor of Physics. GASTON LOUIS MALECOT, M. A ............. Professor of Romance Languages. GEORGE MILTON JANES, Ph. D .......... Professor of Economics. PAUL G. I. LAUFFER, B. S .......... Fellow in Chemistry. C. VERNE BOWEN, B. S ......,.. Fellow in Chemistry. Nineteen .118 Christman Avenue ..........307 E. Maiden Street .......26 N. Lincoln Street ...57 Katherine Avenue .........576 N. Main Street A no tb . M T QQ ,. NDORA 24 1 W. H. ALEXANDER, A. B ......... ..,...,...... C ollege Street Fellow in French. G. W. BENNETT, B. S ........., .......... 3 05 Wilson Avenue Fellow in Chemistry. CLARENCE DIETER, B. S ......,,. ....... I 38 S. Lincoln Street Fellow in Biology. GEORGE WALKER LUCAS, A. B ....................,......... ,...... 1 22 E. Maiden Street Fellow in History and Political Science. ALEXANDER HOLLAND WRIGHT, A. M., Ph. D ......, ..i...... 7 9 Highland Avenue Professor of Chemistry. NORMAN McDOWELL GRIER, Ph. D ....... ,................... ........................ 3 8 S. Clinton Street LeMoyne Professor of Agriculture and Correlative Branches. R. WALKER SCOTT, A. M ..........................,...................................................... College Campus Professor of Romance Languages. EZRA KEMPTON MAXFIELD, Ph. D ..................................................... 20 N. College Street George M. Laughlin Professor of English Language and Literature. LOUIS FREDERICK KIRCHNER, M. D ..........................................,.. 67 LeMoyne Avenue Director of Physical Training. REV. WILLIAM S. SLEMMONS, A. M., D. D .......... .......... 2 14 E. Wheeling Street Adjunct Professor of Bible. ALFRED MITCHELL DAME, A. M ....... ......... C ollege Campus Adjunct Professor of Latin. LYMEN WILLETTS ROGERS, A. D .......... ....... 2 12 E. Maiden Street Instructor in French. HIRAM J. BUSH, Il. S ............., ....... 1 49 S. Wade Avenue Instructor in Biology. DON PYLE HAWKINS, A. II ......... ....,.... 3 0 S. Lincoln Street Instructor in Rhetoric. THOMAS C. BILLIG, A. M ..,.,.,.,..., ,....... 3 2 Penn Street Instructor in Economics. CARL J. CARDIN, M. E .................. ....... 2 64 N. Main Street Instructor in Mathematics. GEORGE H. BARTHOLOMEW ..,.,..,.,,,,..... ,,.,.,,,,,,.,....... H nys Hull Instructor in Physical Education. ROBERT J. MUNCE, JR ........ .................. .......... 1 7 l Allison Avenue Instructor in Physics. RAYMOND A. PRESTON, M, A ....... .......... 2 53 E. Wheeling Street Instructor in English. Twenty Q 'Q nlliTi Mil lr mn lb I I .Q tr . '51, 1111 - U -T ,,W1,j ,yi ,. , , A T . 1211752 0113! f'f' 'ff 'w,., . ,,,.. ..... - 1nnvxx7 11'fN1' Elgnarh nf 'afrusiers JOSIAH V. THOMPSON ....... CHARLES N. BRADY ...................,............ EDWARD McDONALD .........,...,...,..........,.... REV. WILLIAM E. SLEMMONS, D. D .......... JUDGE JAMES I. BROWNSON ................. MARCUS W. ACHESON, JR., ESQ .......... JOHN L. DICKEY, M. D ....................,..... :':REV. JESSE C. BRUCE, D. D ......,.. ROBERT L. McCARRELL .......... .... W. A. H. McILVAINE, ESQ .......,............... JOHN A. MATTHEWS, Ph. D. Sc. D ....... JOHN H. DONNAN, ESQ .................... COL. R. M. THOMPSON ........ . REV. C. C. HAYS, D. D .................................. JOHN MCCARTNEY KENNEDY, ESQ ....... ALEXANDER M. TEMPLETON, ESQ .......... 'lv-MCQZQJKP--Alb Qslunmi QRep1:2se111aiiiue5 XV. H. DAVIS, ESQ., 1918 to 1922 .............,,.,,......,..,,.,,.,.. JUDGE CHARLES M. THOMPSON, 1918 to 1923 ..,....... ALBERT C. TRAUTMAN, ESQ., 1919 to 1924 .......... JUDGE JAMES S. BEACOM, 1920 to 1925 ......,,.... LYLE W. ORR, 1920 to 1925 ......................,....... ARCHIBALD A. WILSON, 1921 to 1926 .,..........., REV. JAMES V. STEVENSON, 1921 to 1926 ........ . FRANK S. LOVE, 1922 to 1927 ....,.,,.,................ ROBERT C. SHAVV, 1922 to 1927 ..............,.......... JAMES R. STERRETT, ESQ., 1922 to 1927 ....,.... 'Died September 19, 1922. Twenty-one ...,....Uniontown .........Washington ..........McDona1d .........Washington .............Washington ......,...........Pittsburgh Wheeling, W. Va. ...New York City .-...--.--Washington .............Washing'ton ...New York City ....,....Washington .......New York City .......,Johnstown .. ..,...... Pittsburgh .........Washintgon .....,...Washington .........Chicago, Ill. ................Butler .......Greensburg .........Whee1ing, W. Va. .,.....................Butler ........Pittsbu1'gh .......Harrisburg ........Pittsburgh ,D JB I - , , .til U5 I ' E anim' M U .vi WZW1i111m,.i.i...., .... .. PANB ORA ,.-.niix1lvx11i 1l,Q0lli' I Qiluznni QAESJJIZIZIIIUIIE ASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON COLLEGE was formed by the union of ,AV Jefferson and Washington Colleges in 1865. The former was char- tered i'n 1802 and the latter in 1806. The graduates of the separate institutions, together with those of the college since the union, constitute the Alumni. The following Associations have been formed: THE GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION r S 5 5 E r U E m m safe 'Um E Qi CP a 2 I Q 'Zim 2 mg EY ww P1 2 Q Q iv N53 U-jg U3 xi Pj . PQ +-5 3-32 542 P1 2 53 rv 2.5 53 ' Z if 5 tv ' s s Q we xl: 2 FPO? UQ cn 5? fs CID mfg ES- i-4 C7 vs. mg F 532 'Eg 4 po mm: O Ip Q 5'-'FUN' o 'm E Q 5 r' M FP Z P1 .0 ,., Ibm O . 4 m Ip I-BQ 'PU M 9 w H3 S 5' U1 is U, 2? 2 as is 'fs H ,Og 2 S5 '9 '-lm 53 P-1 22 o is gif EZ Z Q2 .W P9- 5 QS 5 42 'Uk P id V9 PO 2372? ' 555 USS? Qui ' 2' 7111? s?sS e givin! me eg? E11 U2 -9 FEW? ?'gr'SF Executive Committee Park J. Alexander, Esq. A. Rev. Burleigh Cruikshank Troutman, Esq. McFarland, Esq. Price Sherrard Watt Ralston THE WASHINGTON AND JEFFERSON ASSOCIATION OF WASHINGTON COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA President CARL D. SCHULTZ, ESQ. Secretary-Treavsiweo' Vice-President D. GLENN MOORE A. W. ACHESON, ESQ. Executive Committee C. C. Johnson The Oflicers R. R. Hays Twenty-two H D 'Q rn D5 . M U - I IIIIJE' lm L A, U 'Y' U19 ORA , ,M,., THE CINCINNATI ASSOCIATION President PROVINCE M. POGUE, ESQ. Vice-President Secretary REV. CALVIN D. WILSON, D. D. HENRY K. GIBSON, ESQ. Executive Committee Geo. L. Blackford Henry K. Gibson, Esq. S. Earle Giffen Committee on Scholarships Thos. L. Pogue. Esq. William B. Wherry, M. D. Merrick F. McCarthy, M. D. THE PHILADELPHIA ASSOCIATION President Secretary REV. MARCUS A. BROWNSON, D. D. REV. MERLE H. ANDERSON, D. D. THE CHICAGO ASSOCIATION President J. M. LOBAUGH Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer DR. H. M. CRAIG PAUL BORLAND Directors Dr. W. W. Meloy S. Brittain THE NEW YORK ASSOCIATION President Secretary-Treasurer JUDGE A. A. ADAMS BYRON CLARK, JR., ESQ. THE CLEVELAND ASSOCIATION President . M. DE VAUGHN, JR., ESQ. Vice-President Secretary WALTER B. ROGERS, M. D. I. W. SHARP, ESQ. Treasurer DR. E. R. BROOKS THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN ASSOCIATION President HON. S. S. LARGE, LL. D., Denver, Colo. Vice-Presidents REV. W. P. MGNARY, D. D. REV. J. L. WEAVER, D. D JOHN INGLIS, M. D. Twenty-three Uv 0 -'G dl H d- llltlqiiflilmmli U WWEWIMIWV ,.x:i I. v,., . . --.-. .-,...,., ..,,,. ,,.. Alluiiiwtt- WIN Secretary-Treasurer REV. J. P. MARTIN, Ph. D., D. D.123 E. Fourth Ave., Denver, Colo. Directors William H. Ferguson, Esq. Rev. C. G. Williams, Ph. D. Rev. G. R. Edmundson, D. D. Thomas J. Gallagher, M. D. Rev. J. Mont Travis THE DETROIT ASSOCIATION President CHARLES WATT ERICKSON Vice-Presiclcrit Secretary NICHOLAS DEL ZINGRO ' JOHN BOVIL Treasurer SEYMOUR H. BROWN GREENSBURG ASSOCIATION THE President Secretary JUDGE JAMES S. BEACOM C. YVARD EICHER, ESQ. THE WHEELING DISTRICT ASSOCIATION President ARCHIBALD A. WILSON Vice-President Secretary KENT B. HALL, ESQ. JOSEPH R. NAYLOR THE SOUTHERN CA SAMUEL H. FRENCH Treasurer JOHN S. ALGEO LIFORNIA ASSOCIATION President REV. J. A. STEVENSON Vice-Presiderits D. T. MCCLELLAND F. H. CARSON Treasurer A. W. FRYE Secretary WRAY G. BRADY 4 Twenty-four BOOL H Classes nlrcnner. 1 .ii- 1-.-- UQ bmw M a Jn and All rr mri . ' Q. Ei' Pi U UQ R D V5gZ'WNwWm':fv nuutllllwi-'WWJ' Senior Gila.-z-5 fbffirers First Semester President Vice-President J. KEMP CONN FRANCIS D. LUELLAN Secretary-Treasiirer Historian J. STEPHANSON HEMPHILL GEORGE R. KENNEDY Athletic Director DAVID M. SKILLING Second Semester President Vice-President WALDORF T. KIRK ALFRED L. ECKLER Secretary-Treasurer Historian WILLIAM L. HUGHES GEORGE R. KENNEDY sl 1 :L ' 4T' ,n'T,Q1?-' l Thirty ' n 'n ni Alirmn lb . M ff lm. fs E if 'T I1E,j7yw.,,,,,,, ,, 1.,,, , , .-:Y NDORA 1,. . . .... .. . ,.,, ...... - ...i.,..if-:w.il.l.' Senior Gllztss Iflisfurg WTB? I-IE time has come for our last appearance in the PANDORA. It QS is with a feeling of sadness and regret that we realize others will take our place here, while we pass on to the duties of the outer world. Thrice before our achievements have been Writ- ten here, and there is little to be added to those chapters of O our history. Q J The class of 1923 entered Washington and Jefferson Col- -5 lege on the twenty-fourth day of September, 1919, one hun- s-9 dred and forty green but ambitious men. True to tradition, J we engaged the Sophomores in the rear of the College Gym- nasium, and after a fiercely waged battle emerged victorious and happy. Several of our number made the varsity teams, Cm both football and basketball, thus adding more honor to the achievements of our class. The following year found us back in College, conscious of our increased importance and of the great responsibility of training the incoming Freshmen, for we were Sophomores. Although greatly dimin- ished in numbers, we took a greater hold on the spirit of the College. One of the most notable achievements of our class was our banquet, which was held without interference from the Freshmen. In our Junior year we witnessed, and took a large part in, the suc- cesses of one of the greatest elevens in the history of the College. Also during our Junior year, S. S. Baker was installed as President of the institution. Now we have come to our last year at W. Sz J. We may modestly admit that we have done our part in establishing new customs which we hope will mature into traditions of the College. Our intimate association of our college life will soon be brought to a close. Our many days of drudgery, mingled with our moments of pleasure have both been to pre- pare us for the greater purpose. Although we may be deeply -engrossed in our future tasks, we shall always find time to reflect on our four years association with, and the glorious spirit of, Our College. GEORGE R. KENNEDY. ,,7 1 X . Thirty-one bb .n in ffl U -Q Kilim lmmri V ci -NN-- -J '1e 4iBfi PAND GRA f,,J,, ...,,, . ,,,,,,.,, ,,,,,,,,,,.,. , ...m,,3gflv4l,glliX,l JAMES WILSON AIKEN Tiltonsville, Ohio. A T Q Martins Ferry High School. Class President, 3, Varsity Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, Baseball, 1, Panhellenic Council, Square and Compass, Pre-Legal Club, 3, 4. Nature has formc'd .vtronge follows in llfl' func. -Slzokcspenre. DYG LESTER MATTHEW ALEXANDER New Castle, Pa. A T A New Castle High School. Business Manager, Red and Black, 3, Chairman of Tribunal, 4, Philo-Union, 4, Phi Kappa Mu. Fare thee wall: The clvuzcutx be kind to thee, and make Thy .spirits all of comfort. --Shakespeare. DYCJ DWIGHT EVERETT BEECHER Sennett, N. Y. Auburn Academic High School. Phi Tau Gamma, Debating Forum, 2, 3, C. L. S. L., President, 2, Conference Committee, 2, Pandora Board, 3. The Clllflfjl Q'c.v.vi'I -molccs the gmalcst soh11ol. ' -Slzolccspewe. DYQ JOHN CHARLES BIXLER Scottdale, Pa. 'D K ll' Scottdale High School. Glee Club, 2, Athletic Council, 2, Druids, Skull and Dagger, Pan-Hellenic Dance Committee, Square and Compass. I'II make than glorious by 'my pen, .find funzozm by my sword. -.7au1c.v Graham. Thirty-two A JD W o ROGER MONFRED BOYD Cherry Valley, Pa. A X A Burgettstown High School. Grove City College, lg Baseball, 2, 39 Tribunal, 4. liar 011' his coming .Yll0llC'.H-.7iIlIf0ll. o?o Q JAMES McGlLL BOYER Pittsburgh, Pa. A X A Peabody High. Pre-legal, 3, 4. Ambi!izm is no cure for low. -Scoil. :Qc WAYNE DEWEY BRENKERT Detroit, Mich K 2 Detroit Central High School. Druids, Class President, 1, 35 Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 4. I dun' do all lhal may lmcnme u mmm. '-Sl1llh?t7.Yf?1'tll'f'. o?o EDWIN RUTHVEN BURCHFIELD Tarentum, Pa. B 9 H Tarentum High School. N Cotillon Committee, 4. The silence that acccptx merit as. Ihc -nmxf 1 ncrlural thing in, the 'world is Ihe luglzcst np- 1 f7lfIll.YL'.','-I3'lllL'l'S0ll. Thirty-three lb . E H 'T ,,,,,, C , ilcc PANDORA ,,.....,, l ,lll , ,,., ,,.,,,..., r , ll1lllT'-fllilfmazg i ,Q 'Q V uni rhilfmh Nl tr 'Q iq TT ZfZM'g,y7hfuggm,,,,,,,,,,,.., .,,., ,. Maas...-.-zsf, D .11N- ffl -f-N,- - -...-.,.....v.4-.-- .--.-NL v -. 1 lllllllhif fllllnlwli A . JAMES EDGAR BURKE Day Press Club, 3, 4. o?o CECIL RALPH CONN Point Marion, Pa. Monessen High School. tain, 4, Track, 1, 2, 35 Pre-legal Society. DYG JACOB KEMP CONN Friars, Skull and Dagger. 02741 JOHN LAMB CHOLEVA McKees Rocks, Pa. Pittsburgh Academy. Slz'adfaxIuass ix I1 'zffrtue that .vlafc'.r111e11. Donora, Pa, cb K 2 Donora High School. Druids, Class Basketball, 15 Chairman of Greek Swingout Com- mittee, 'i'N!lflIillgl c111i1n'r.v but fvcrxnrml qm1liliL'.v. Wall Wllifnzan. KD KE Varsity Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Cap- iTln' 1Il'UI'f lo cnlzcciw, flu' 1u1dv1'.vfm1di11g1 fa dzrvtl, nr Ihr hand In z'.1'c'c'11Ir. -fmzzllx. Point Marion, Pa. 1D K 2 Monessen High School. Class President, 4, Class Vice-President, 1, Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 35 Track, 1, 2, 3, Captain, 1, 29 Pre-legal Society, 3, 4, President, 35 Barn for .V1H'CL'.Y.Y, IIE svenwd, lVill1 1117100 I0 win, with Izmir! Iv hold, IVIIII .vllillillg yiflx lllaf look all vyv.v. -I1 Ill vr.vm1. A X fx vzmkcs .minls and Thirty-fou'r Q 'D nll'iTi AIU ml! lb . . U , ig, pq r f,:,q,.,, , . IPANDORA H .. , . ...T m-l HARRY EUGENE COOKE Washington, Pa, K E Tribunal, 4. cl,1tIl'Il1.V .vlrukv Ihr sight, Im! mvril ivinx Ilxc J .vauI. -I ofa. , o?o RALPH ALLEN COOPER New Castle, Pa. KD I' A New Castle High School. Student Senate, lg Phi Tau Gammag Square and Compassg Pre-legal Society, 3, 43 Wag-Jag Staff, 3. The King ix dvud, Long life the King. -1'm'duv. o?e NATHAN WILLIAM CROASMAN Redclylfe, Pa. 1D 1' A Mercersburg Academyg Clarion Normalg Allegheny College. Square and Compassg Tribunalg g Class Basketball, 3, 4. TIN zuwld wax .mr1', ilu- garden 'wax fl wild, .-lmi umm, fha lwrunl, .vzglzml-lil! 'Zl'0HltlF1f .v1n1'lr1i. -Clzzllfwlnvll. DYG KENNETH JOHN R. DAVIES, JR. Duquesne, Pa. 4D K E Duquesne High School. Pre-legal Society, 3, 4, President, 4. 'Zllvn of fmt' u'm'd.v are flu' lmxl infix. -.S'l1f1lcv.vfvm1l'v. Thirty-five A :Q M I ' 2:5 - . U - nnim' ui Wwlfw- ... . .,,, PASD GDR-A Y575???2iwf ff, . . www 'N' ll-Q ,M,.m,,,mf:1Lm..i..,.....,,. ,X...... .. xN,. .. .V .,.- . .-1 - N .. fmxfmfff. . H .... . ,..,,.....,, .,...,.. . .........-.-muxlmw, alll, JOSEPH ANDREWS DENSLOW Pittsburgh, Pa, A T Q Allegheny High School. Presidenifs Council, 3. Hflillll of the we.vIc1'11 dome, 'ZK'110.Vt? weiglzly reuse 1'l01c'.v m jif 'zc'n1'n's and IlL'fI'Z'CllIJ' vI0qm'm'v.' -lhydvrl. o?cJ JOHN COOPER DURFEY Paulding, Ohio. 113 I' A Waukegan High School. Phi Tau Gamma, Phi Sigma, Buskin Club, 1, 2, 33 Glee Club, 1, 2, 33 Pan-Hellenic Council, 39 Druids, Kera. , 'Hc Ilmf ix regardless of his co111'.vv.v, oft sells his l't'f7Hft1fi0I1 at a cheap nmrlecf. o?a JOHN LYMAN EAKIN Petchaburi, Siam. Grove City High School. Phi Tau Gamma, Track, 1, 2, 33 Pandora Board, 33 C. L. S. League. ' And llc went for that heathen. C'lziuce. -Bret Harte. 6241 ALFRED LAVERT ECKLER Ravenna, Ohio. KD' A 9 Ravenna High School. Class Secretary-Treasurer, 3, Phi Sigma President, 49 Phi Tau Gamma Vice-President, 4, Alliance Francaise Medal. ' 'fl wine .vc1'vnce, none mn prize it n1.01'e. -Colvs. Thirty-six D IQ ll Q5 , , E . MQ. E U I ' ,,, .,,,.., ,..., . ,, , . r N-.- . - is D f,1f.- . ...,. , ..,, ,, ,,,,,,.,, ,. ,,,,,, ,.,. , qggugfgflllljllw r f ,, ZWMWMI-au ll .. THOMAS MORGAN ELLIOTT McDonald, Pa. K 2 Kiski. Druidsg Skull and Dagger, Class Vice-President, 23 Assistant Manager of Football, 33 Student Manager of Football, 43 President, Pan-Hellenic Council, 4g Greek Swingout Committee, 4. iff lm In' nnf follow with 1110 brxf king, Ilmu .vlmll jimi him 1110 bus! king nf gland fellows. -S1mkc.v1vcm'c'. o?o DANIEL MILLIARD EVANS Aspinwall, Pa. K 2 Aspinwall High School. Class Secretary-Treasurer, 23 Pandora Staff, 3, Conference Committee, 4. '.S'c'lf COIIIIIICNI is the yrmllrxvl nf 'z'iflo1'ic.v. -Plain. o?a ROBERT GEORGE FISCUS Apolla, Pa. A T A Butler High School. Greek Swingout Committee, 4. True ax the dial of thc mn. -l?uIlc1'. o?c1 HARRY LEE GRAHAM, JR. Butler, Pa. fb F A Butler High School. Pre-legal Society, 3, 49 Publicity Manager, Wag-Jag, 2. 33 Track, 1. I am, in earliest--I 'will not 1'et1'eat a single step,-and I will lm lzvard. -Gurrzmn. Thirty-seven Q 'Q 1-niiffrlurmn b - U3 1:1 4 '53, 'FQ 1 if Y 713- . .. --1 ' 'lj '51 lll' V' ff -- . . W- imiI1T 1ll'.l JACOB STEPHENSON HEMPHILL ' Tarentum, Pa. fb K E Tarentum High School. Cheer Leader, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Manager, 45 Pandora Board, 3, Friarsg Skull and Dagger, Pan-Hellenic Council, 43 Pre-legal Society, 3, 4, Vice-Presi- dent, 4. Only .vo 11111011 do I k11mc', ax I lIl17'I' li:'r'd. -E111v1'.w11. o?o FREDERICK GRANT HESS Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Phi Tau Gamma, President, 4. Baseball, 1, 2. Nun dfliylzfx lllf 11nf., IIUI' tc'0111n11 11z'if11v1'. 1'S1lf1kl .Vf7ClII'L'. o?41 LEON HUGHES HETHERINGTON Bentleyville, Pa. A T Q Bentleyville High School. Class Basketball, 2, 33 Phi Sigma, Pre-Medical Society. lIa1'l11 x111111d.v -my tc'i.vd11111. 111111 high 11vaf'c11. 'lllj fr1111r'. '-l'ln111r'1', DYG RICHARD ALBERT HOLMAN 'D I' A Butler, Pa. Butler High School. Philo-Union, Pandora Board, 33 Pre-legal Society. .-Ill 'ZK',l1.t'1I III' 111111'z'1'.vl1md by rnfv, , .-Ind, ax 11fa'11.vir111 .vr'1'1'v1I, wmzla' q11nlr. -Bzfflvr. Thirty-eight B JD lllfi I mn M I 1 ZH fqq H , ,,,, N ORA f264:Wicfaafm,.,,... .,,. .,,., . ,.., .. num-'l'1'..lll 2 ,m.f,7,,.,,,.,. ., ,,,.,A .,:, - i .. WILLIAM LLOYD HUGHES Johnstown, Pa. A 'I A Johnstown High School. Class Basketball, 2, Pandora Board, 33 Phi Sigma, Johnstown Club. A .-I lilllf' field ruvll filled, fum' n lilllv zuifv rvvll rvillrri, un' yrvnl rivllzfx. -P1'of'm'lv. 1 DYG NATHAN NAGLE JAQUISH Clymer, Pa. :Im K ll' Clymer High School. President's Council, 4, Tribunal, 4. He who 111nf'v.v :ml forziwrrl, yoex Inn'kfc'm'1I'. - -Gorllzv. o?o GEORGE RUSSELL KENNEDY Tarentum, Pa. 413 I' ,S John B. Stetson University, Tarentum High School. Druids, Buskin Club, 1, 2, 3, Manager, 43 Skull and Dagger, Class Historian, 45 Class Vice-President, 35 President's Council, 45 Chairman Conference Committee, 4. Yon know I .my frm! what I Illink, and :milling mnrr' nr 1v.e.v. -I.n11glfz'lIn-zu. DYG WALDORF TILTON KIRK Toledo, Ohio. fl? K 'I' Scott High School. Class President, 4, Class Vice-President, 19 Druids, Conference Committee, 39 President's Council, 3, Buskin Club, 1, 2, 3, Manager, 3, Glee Club, 1, 2, 3. Tl1vy .my Irvs! nlru um' umlrldvrl' mr! of fuull.v. -.S'l1ukv.vfvml1'v. Thirty-nine n in M llIi Al If mn 1 lm .eg 'B' . - U UE -ln... ,... .. . . . ...x .. -.1 PAN D ORA ,,,,,,,A ,, ,,,,,,,,,,.,A, ,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,pw ,WJ 424 CARL W. KONVOLINKA Monaca, Pa. A T A Rochester High Schnf-' Football, 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Conference Committee, 3, 49 President's Council, 3, 4, Buskin Club, 2, President of Student Assembly, 4, Vice-President, 3, Chairman of Junior Prom, 3, Druids, Skull and Dagger, Conference Committee, Secretary, 3. urlffflllfflllllll ix but tl .Yj'!l0lIj'lH for fmpuIarily. -Mrs. fr1r111v.vm1. DYQ TERRY WESLEY KUHN Johnstown, Pa, fb K ll' Conemaugh High School. Glee Club, 1, 2, 35 Class Historian, 23 Pandora Staff, 3, Cotillon Committee, 35 - Buskin Club, 3. n Nan wiazlx but lijflc 1lt'l'I' below. Nm' 'ZUUIIIX that lzlilv long. --G0l!'I.t'lIIlf1l. o?o CARROLL WRIGHT LEWIS Crafton, Pa. B 9 H Crafton High School. President's Council, 4. .lIl'u.v1H'v ymu' HIilIf1'S height by N10 .vlmdow if c'r1xl.v. -Brmwzzlly. DYCI JOHN HOWARD P. LOGAN Conneatville, Pa. Conneatville High School. Vice-President of Y. M. C. A., 3, Vice-President Life Service League, 3. Pandora Board, 3. .S'pcrrl1 ix silz'cr, silcnrr' is golden. -Pr01'crb. Fo rtly Q In lllli M11 mll ROBERT SLOAN LUCAS Greensburg, Pa. K 2 Greensburg High School. , Editor-in-Chief of 1923 Pandora, Phi Sigma. Yet do I fear thy 1111I11re, If is foo full of the milf: of 11111111111 lllfc?l'l'Xf. '-.Sl141kc.vf1e111'c. DYO FRANCIS DARRELL LUELLAN Washington, Pa. B G H Washington High School. Conference Committee, 45 Class Vice-President, 4g Tribunal, 4. Franz a dark .vfvark may I7lH'.ff II llliffllfj' fltllllff' -Dania. o?o ' ARCHIBALD MORGAN MATTHEWS Johnstown, Pa, A T Q Johnstown High School. Delta Sigma Rho, Debating Team, 3, 45 Junior Banquet Committee, 35 Pre-legal Society, 3, 4, Johnstown Club, 2, 3, 4, Junior Orator, 39 Franklin and Marshall Literary Soci- ety, 4. B1'v1'ify ix Ihr .mul of wit. -5'1111k1'.v11c111'z'. o?o C. MARSHALL MUIR Washington, D. C. A T A Tech High School, Carnegie Tech, 1, 2. Y. M. C. A. Secretary, 3, C. L. S. L. President, 23 ' Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2 'l'o1111g in Iiuzlvx, in jlldfjlllfflf old, -Sl111kz'.vpf'a1'v. 1 Forty-one lb . tc 1 E- 'Fi ' , 'V' it www , ,l,l ,' ,,,t. , PANB 0123A 2aS:ffm,W.,,... .,,..,, ,.... ,,,,,,,,,,, ,..,,., , , 1 ,.,..,..N1-g111,1 Eiga I .n :Q M -3' I lllliw fhillrmll lb U . '54, 'FQ l it EQ Hyip., ,., .,,.,,,.,.,,, . .. . 1 Xx.a. . . ,111-X D f5xi?13'7Z'l?'?'74 ffuf.,' ,f,.,.,. . . .,....,, x..,,,.,... - nnm1T 'l',llll.' RUSSELL HAY McCAIN Frederick, Md, qi 11 A Allegheny High School. Phi Tau Gamma, Class President, 25 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 3, Debating Forum, 35 Philo-Union Literary Society, Class Basketball, 1, 2, 39 Day Press Club, Class Historian, lg Pre-legal Society, 2, 33 Pandora Board, 3. ll'l1'.v laik is like fr rapid' .vlrvulll 'ZC'11lL'11 l'11l1.x Will: rafvid rlzunye from I'm'k.v In 1'0.vv.v. DYG WILLIAM EGAN NOBLE Claysville, Pa. Claysville High School. Plough deff while .vluygu1'1I'x SIFCI7.,'-Ffllllkllll. 6241 BOYD CRUMRINE PATTERSON Crafton, Pa. KD K ll' Schenley High School. ' Phi chi Mug n Philo Union, Vice-President, 3. l'VOIlltHI'N al bex! a t'0lIfI'lldlL'fl0I1 still. -Pofvv. :Qc JAMES PAULL, JR. Wellsburg, W. Va. B GJ H Wellsburg High School. Phi Tau Gamma, Cotillon Committee, 3g Class Historian, 33 Junior Prom Committee, 35 Football Manager, 45 , Pan-Hellenic Council, 4. 'l'7'l1v1'c ix H0 arf fn find 1110 Illlllllnx C'OlI.Yfl'IlL'fl0lL in the fare. -S11akv.vfvva1'e. Forty-two lb :uri :hi If TK , Q Y ,,A. ,.., .A,, . , 4 ., .. . . PANDORA lfffi ll'261' YVILLIAM EUGENE POTTER Pittsburgh, Pa. E A Peabody High School, University of Pittsburgh, 1, 2. lllnrff'.vl flnnlvt ix vullvd flu' 17C'I7L'0H nf ilu' wi o?o GEORGE LLOYD READE Ebenshurg, Pa. Ebensburg- High School. Phi Tau Gamma: Class Vice-President, Johnstown Club. 3 -.-l11dr011ic'm '.S'fu'r'r'l rm' llzv .vl11ll1Iu'1'.v nf ilu' 'Z'iI'lll0l1.Y 1mm I DYG --Pl'07'1'l' I JAMES BENJAMIN FRANKLIN RINEHART, JR. Waynesburg, Pa. Waynesburg High School. qw K Varsity Basketball, 3, 45 Pre-legal Society, 3, 45 Athletic Council, 35 President's Council, 4. 7'1'n.vf IIIPH um! lllttl' will In' frm' In ynnf o?o lillll'l'.Y!7ll WILLIAM McCAUSLAND RICHARDSON Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Wag-Jag, 33 Glee Club, 1, 2, 33 Pandora Board, 33 Buskin Club, 33 Day Press Club, 45 Pre-legal Society, 8, 4. BC-J I uxtlllgl in lmmv nf dcclv Plllllfillll, .Snuyx nj lm? and .vn1:g1.v of lmlylug. Forty-three l.nngf4'llrm'. .5 In in M g W N :mlm 1 E f!WWa1if.ww. ,... , , ...X xl'- ' lPANDORA'Q-. fzn,i1fy,', ,,,,, .,,,,,,A ,,,, , , ,,A,4, ,.., ,,,, ,,,,. . , f I in-,Wy 0 PAUL A. RISHBERGER Greenville, Pa. A X A Greenville High Schoolg University of Michigan, lg Grove City College, 2. Pre-legal Society, 3, 4. liar trnflz ix fv'z'ci0u.v and ditfilze, 700 rzrlz ll frcarl for carnal xwuzef' -Butler. , 05741 WILBERT SCOTT RAY Pittsburgh, Pa. Allegheny High Schoolg University of Pittsburgh, 2g Debating Forum, 1, 3. Like lvrrh, by lzvruzif usrd of old, Thou stickest fast: the Iale ix told. o?a ANDREW DONALDSON ROBB, JR. Crafton, Pa. A T Q Crafton High School, Lawrenceville Prep. Conference Committee, 43 Pre-legal Society, 3, 4. He .vrvuzczi for dignity mznposed and high v.1'pI0if. o?o CHARLES MITCHELL SANDERS Rutan, Pa. Center Township High School. , The Izeller par! of mlor is lii5C7'Cfi0l1.'n -Slzakespearc. Forty-four Q D IPANDQRA f , .M 5 . . 1? V- jlfiiglhl If mn E 19 11.12 ,.., . X D' 9 WILLIAM HURFORD SAUNDERS McKeesport, Pa. fl? K McKeesport High School Indiana State Normal. Druids: Class President, 2: Varsity Basketball, 3, 4 Basketball Manager, 4g Track, 2, 3g Square and Compass, Skull and Dagger, Conference Committee, Tribunal, 4. wax 'wont to speak fflain a purp0.vv. -Sl1aka.vj1aa1'g, 4: I-Ie nd fo the o?o JACOB WILLIAM SCHRADER Pittsburgh, Pa. Trinity College Preparatory School. A nzinisfcr, but still a marzf'-Pope. DYQ JACK MILLER SHANE McDonald, Pa. A X McDonald High School. Pre-legal Society, 3, 45 Pandora Board, 3g Pan-Hellenic Council, 4. Build 'mc slraiylzt, O 'ZU0l'lllj' Illaxfvr, Smmzclz and strong, a goodly trsscl, That .vlzall laugh at all di.va.ftvr, .-Ind with fc'a've and wlxirlwiizrl zw'c.vtlc. ' -Longfellow DY41 ROBERT HENRY SHICK, JR. Duquesne, Pa. A T Duquesne High School. Craft Club, 3g Class Secretary-Treasurer, 33 Pan-Hellenic Council, 4, Square and Compass, 45 Day Press Clubg Chairman of Cotillon Committee, 4 V A A A Happy am Ig from can: I'-nz free. ,, lVl1y arc'u't flley all conlcutcrl like life. -Lu Iiayarlzcrc. Forty-five 1 .B :Q 13' ,.. X uni Nirmn I lm .Q H , - U WW121z211111um,.11i1..1, ..,.. .. . -.fs sfsfajs PANB ORA Y5Q2?Mwv1w,,1,,,,. ,, ,,,4 , ,,.,,,4,.,,,,,.,,,4 ,,,,,,, , ,,,,,,,g5'11Mw,' . 6 MATT SHIELDS Mount Pleasant High School. Class Vice-President, 23 Pandora Board, 3g Cotillon Committee, 45 Webster Grove High School. Class Historian, 35 Student Senate, 25 Red and Black Board, 3, Y. M. C. A. Treasurer, 3g , Pan-Hellenic Council, 43 Athletic Council, 4. . . flmxv 'who lim' as 'llI0!1'f'l.Y for Jeannette High School. Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3. o?o ALBERT EMERSON SOWERS Washington, Pa. 1 Washington High School. , l President's Council, 3, Class Basketball, 3. arf' flu' f11'm11f.vf 'Il1l'll.,'-1'1lll'l'. The g1'c'afr'.vf lI'llfll.Y are Ihr' Silllf7lC.Yf, Mount Pleasant, Pa. CD A C-3 Tribunal, 4. 'l 0111 '.v111'e m1'e'.v 1111 c11e111y to Iifvf' -Sl1ak1'.vlvca1'f'. DYG DAVID MILLER SKILLING, JR. Webster Grove, Mo. LI! A 9 Class Secretary-Treasurer, 35 'Ill' 111u.v.v .-Irv Nfllfflll' of 11101'c 'Fllllll' 1114111 Ilmy all. -l?1'111c'11111y. DYG HARRY CLAYTON SOLES Jeannette, Pa. K 2 u1i'Z'l'l'j' 1111111 Ims llix fcmll, and l1011f'.vty ix his. -Ti111o11 of .1ll11v11.v. and .vo Forty-six QQ 19 :W U5 , H Us IUIIIQZQIJWIITH fig,-M-,D,, , - My 957f?'WZ1b99w'w f,,,. ,. .,,.,,,,,4,, A,4,,4 , , ,,,, ,l,.. , ,,,,n-.-,MqM' 4, GEORGE F. TAYLOR, JR. Pittsburgh, Pa, A T Q Fifth Avenue High School. Delta Sigma Rho, Phi Tau Gamma, Debating Team, 2, 3, 4g Pre-legal Society, 3, 4g Track, 2, 3, 45 Glee Clubg Philo-Union Literary Society. On their own. uzerits 'llI0dt'.l'f mm: are dumlwf -Cnlvnmn. DYG JOHN McKEE TEMPLETON Washington, Pa. K E Washington High School. Buskin Club, 1, 3. How 'lllllfll lies in lu1ry11!v1'.'tlw ripluzf' kfy. wlrcrcwiflz 'wc dcwifvlzrf- flu' wlmlv main. --C111'ly1c'. 6241 AUGUST VALENTOUR, JR. McDonald, Pa. A T Q McDonald High School. Friarsg Skull and Dagger, Pre-legal Society, 3, 49 Pandora Staff, 35 Wag-Jag Staff, 2, 35 Pan-Hellenic Dance Committee 35 Tribunal, 4. I a-nz not of that fvaflzcr to shake nj' lily friend 'lC'l1t'l1 lu' mimi 11z'z'd -mv. -Sl1akc.vfwm'c. o?o PAUL CLARKE VAN DYKE Pittsburgh, Pa. Allegheny High School, South Hills High School. Track, 1, 2, 3. f, thus neglecting worldly rndx, all dcdirafcd lo closezzesx and the Izellvriug of my n1inf1'. -Slltlkl'.Yf7l'lH't'. Forty-seven n ,fa M U ' U H I illflmiffilmflfh . ez . , 1. ,. ,.. . . . Q IPANDORA ,, . ,, A,,,l,,4 ,q,.,, ,,.,,, l,,L ., , l RALPH VINCE Connersville, Ohio. Martins Ferry High School. Debating Forum, 25 Baseball, 1, 2, 3g Class Basketball, 35 Football, 1, 2, 3, 4. Elegant as xiulplifily, and warm :ls ecslacy-- -Cowper. DYG JAMES ALEC WAITE Canonsburg, Pa. Gettysburg Prep. Keep the golden mean llCf'ZE'L'Clll saying loo 'mnrlz and lon little. DYG GEORGE RAMSAY WARRICK Washington, Pa. fb K 2 Woodberry CVa.J Forest Prep. Friarsg Cheer Leader, 3, 45 Junior Prom Committeeg Sophomore Banquet Committee. 'f7'l1e glass of faslzimz, and lhe mold of form. --Hamlet. D?4l FRANK EUGENE WICKERHAM Monongahela, Pa. fl? K 2 Washington High School. Class President, 1. , Begum: dull rare, 111011 and I slmll never agree. -Playforth. Forty-eight D :D 1 Ili N ll mn D15 Jyufgf. . ..,, . IPAND ORA. l FRANK EDWARD WIEDENHAMMER Carnegie, Pa. ID A 9 Carnegie High Schoolg Dickenson, lg University of Pittsburgh, 2 Secretary of Life Service League, 3. Thr paths of glory lend but lo the grnwf' o?o EVERETT GRUBBS WINDER Alliance, Ohio. , A X A Chester QW. Va.l High School. Zvi-11111 affcr nigh! he sa! und I1IL'm'cd his cycs 'with books. o?a SHELDON LLOYD WOLF Washington, Pa. A X A Washington High School. Pre-medical Society, 2, 3, 4, lf Iflllv Iulmr. liltlz' are our gai11.s'.' Nanlv forfmnne are according In his fPain.v. o?4J NORMAN L. WORCESTER Butler, Pa. :D I' A Butler High School. Class Basketball, 3. I'u1 a devil, l'n1 a devil, I'nz a devil. -Dickciis. Forty-nine lb .. H .El-Fi' , , .9 in ,Q H 1 I illl'im?himl'I'Il'i E T UIQ KW!! linux.. - X PAN D GRA f?56 Vzv1 Fw' 'ff 1 mu1m7i l .M '24 GEORGE ALBERT WEINMAN Monaca, Pa. Monaca High School. Friarsg Craft Clubg Track, lg Class Basketball, 1, 4g Glee Club, 2, 33 Conference Committee, 35 President's Council, 35 Skull and Daggerg Chairman of Pan-Helle Committee. Q , v- , f 'rho' mil- sl r, sf4rwsrRwQ-mes :Pd 49?-aqgh 15,5595 'M 'am W . - n. M3337 pg -l D23 .QQ fnmx' ll ID A 9 nic Dance Tim 'worln' knows nothing of fix graalvxf men. --Taylor. Fifty 1-1-:-' ., 13 Kfrclxger. Q3 an .45 6. J I ,. 4 ll N a Y . , :SE 53' fi '31 ..: .- .::Lnfsf1.Q.:' ' X , I., -.x 1-2' v-- 'I' is '- f My Qi' 2 ' ' 'px ' f f iii' vi' h f , ff .- A 4 5 1. ' L L JA.0.F Q K I gh xl! . 5:f?'1' IHS! 9 i 9 in Q, K 1 A'llIiQ5hlmYl'I'li H ,11,u.u, .:. D ?2V12'7i.G nwnT MW Hnniur Gllznaz f19ffi1:ers First Semester President MELVIN H. KNOEPP Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer PAUL CARL REUTER ADLOUS B. HADDEN Historian Athletic Director DONN R. AUSTIN MERRITT MCCUSKEY Second Semester President JOHN A. MALCOLM Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer EDWARD E. BAIRD RICHARD T. JENNINGS Historian Athletic- Director DoNN R. AUSTIN MERRITT MCCUSKEY Fi f ty-two D 'Q ni mimrmn Eb . U Ill lm' lm I Q iv lwawgflilflllgf ,l1'11,-, ,...... . . ...- .-.. N :ff T i5I72ZIuKf1f, l U , ,,,,,,,A U !'I14!..IIvvAI4'!- A IIWXIII' Mllnlulm-3q.1+-Mu' Qlifliaturg nf the ffllass uf 1924 Time: September 22, 1920. Place: The Oldest College West of the Allegheniesf' Dramatis Personnae: Two Hundred Freshmen, One Hundred Soph- omores, One Hundred Juniors, One Hundred Seniors, and the Faculty of Washington Sz Jefferson College. ACT I-SCENE I. The Two Hundred Freshmen are gathered in the rear of the College gymnasium, and they register much excitement, the main topic of discussion being: When do you suppose they will attack? Soon shouts are heard in the distance followed by an onrush of the One Hundred Sophomores. A fight ensues, but it stopped after a few minutes. The officials announce that the Freshmen have tied up some Twenty Sophs and that the Sophomores have only tied up Nine Freshmen. All evening there is skirmishing throughout the city. ACT I-SCENE II. The action of Scene II takes place at Rosemire Inn, or Within the im- mediate neighborhood. Seven trucks appear laden with the human freight of the Class of 1924. They dismount and enter the Inn, and from the outside one can tell that a feast or banquet is in session. Many hours later they leave the Inn in the trucks, rejoicing over the success of the banquet, but dis- appointed that no resistance had been offered by the Sophomores. ACT II-SCENE I. Time: September, 1921. The scene opens with the Class of 1924 very much in the fore part of the stage. 1924 shows much pride in the fact that several of her mem- bers were also on the Wonder Team of Washington 8a Jefferson. ACT II-SCENE II. Place: College Chapel. Time: 10:30 A. M. The Class of 1924 decrees that a sock inspection be held and the Class of 1925 attempts to rush the Chapel doors, but are unsuccessful and are thoroughly 'squelchedf The only accident of the battle being the fall of the Chapel doors. . Fifty-tlwee p ,Q in qs uni If mii U 'Fl 'Fl 'E T -.sz PAN D GRA ...- J I1llllll'T'f ll..WAX Q a ACT III-SCENE I Place: The Treasure Room of W. 8a J. College, wherein are stored all the traditions of the College. The president, vice-president and secretary of the Class of 1924 are seen looking through the Treasure Chest containing the traditions and customs of the College. Secretary: Here it is, and now that we have all the particulars, we can revive the ancient custom of Juniors wearing class hats. President: Let us decide upon a color immediately. Vice-President: Why not have scarlet hats with an orange '24' on it ? President: That will be fine-let us order them at once. The next week finds the Class of '24 bedecked in scarlet hats that bear the numerals of 24 upon them. ACT III-SCENE II. Place: George Washington Hotel. Reason: Banquet of the illustrious Class of 1924. ACT IV--SCENE I This scene represents a dream of a member of the Class of 1924: at the right of the stage one sees the Dreamer seated there, dreaming and seeing visions in the smoke-rings which rise from his pipe. First he sees the Class of 1924, assisted by the entire College, con- ducting one of the greatest 'Mock Conventions' that has ever been held at Washington KL Jefferson College. In his next vision he sees '24 clad in their Caps and Gowns and re- ceiving their degrees from the President of the College. His last dream is that of one of '24's number having received his de- gree now taking a last farewell look at the Campus and College buildings of his dear Alma Mater. DONN R. AUSTIN. Illilla gl grill- Fifty-four D Q 3 xlliimiffllfmll , IPANDQRA ,M DON RAYMON AUSTIN Ravenna, Ohio, qy A Q Ravenna High School: Kent State Normal. Class Historian, 35 PANDORA Board, 35 Wag Jag Staff, 2, Pre-Legal Society, 2, 33 Kera. ON is the original fat rascal. You 1 never can tell what he may do next, ERT especially after midnight. They say Ravenna has not been the same since he left. He has a very heavy schedule, as it allows him only three hours a day at Mor. gan's. One of Don's activities not listed above is captain of the Snaking Team, 3. We are inclined to doubt it. Be that as it may, we can boast of few boys like Don. GEORGE S. ALLEN Kingston, N. Y, A X A Kingston High School. Class Historian, 23 Pre-Legal Society, 2, 3g Assistant Editor of PANDORA. EORGE is one of the most versatile in men in school, playing basketball, the 5175? violin, piano, saxophone, and traps. If you have not heard his orchestra in ac- tion you have missed one of the real treats of your college life. He spends his sum- mers playing on a night boat running be- tween New York and Albany, and is the only man in college who can give the correct background for the now famous song, Take the nightboat to Albany and the first train back in the morning. George has invented some new dance steps to be in- serted when his renowned band makes a miscue at an engagement. EDWARD EUGENE BAIRD Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Conference Committee, 33 President's Council, 35 Christian Life Service League, 2, 3. ERE is Ed, who always has an eight o'clock and was never known to be late, in other words, a follower of Benjamin Franklin. Student in all sub- jects, from Biology to Greek, who gener- ally has some intricate questions with which to wrinkle the professor s brow. His pow ers of observation are unusually acute, ' bl' 'e that he must whlch leads us to eiex ' get out his lessons with a microscope at hand. Ed is a good 'lad .and we can surely predict progress 1n his career. Fi f ty- five D JD llld nhl If mn H 'Fl in flip iff ' 1111.1 PANB GRA ?2l7:7zvlJz111 11., mi? '1'.llli' ALLEN WILLIAM BEALE Bessemer, Pa. Bessemer High School. Franklin and Washington Literary Society. LLEN hails from the Steel City, but -W Q has not adopted the art of his towns- 'tm people. He is one of those quiet, ob- serving chaps who does not spill all he has. He once established for himself quite a rep as a fusser, but it is now rumored that some one back home has led him from his downward path. Not being noted for boisterousness, we can well afford to sit up and take notice when he starts to talk. Finally, we all like him a lot and extend our wishes for his success. CLARENCE WILLIAM BECK Youngwood, Pa. Youngwood High School. PIDER, so-called because of his , minuteness, hails from the town of Youngwood. Ever hear of that town? Neither did we, but we are told that Greens- burg is one of the suburbs. He is some- what of a runner, but we must confess that he is still running after the race has been won. As a lady fusser he makes a good coal digger, but he is an all-around good fellow and always has cigarettes. C. S. B. BISHOP Kingston, N. Y. A X A ISH spiings from the Hudson River U Valley. His chief worry is the mail T034 man. There are many things that keep this man busy, especially his correspond- ence. He is one of Doc's star wrestlers and plays a mean game of basketball. Law is they ultimate aim in his life, so we will un- doubtedly hear of him in the future, Kingston High School. Fi f ty-six A Q lb U I llllimihilfmfl E -Y . .,,. ww i -24 MERTON BROWN BRADSHAW Rochester, Pa. 111 A Q Rochester High School. Pre-Medical Societyg Track. 1. 2. ERT is one of the products of the Beaver Valley, and many of the boys -WU from the valley even say that he is the pride of the valley. He claims that his pipe courses are philosophy and psychol- ogy. Next to being a philosopher and psy- chologist of marked ability, he excells in the manly art of wrestling. But, sad to relate, Mert's ability as a track man has gone to waste. for he says he is too modest to appear before the public in a track suit. He expects to study medicine and we know that his success is assured for combined with his ability is his charming person- ality. ' RAYMOND IRWIN BLAYNEY Claysville, Pa. Claysville High School. Q LAYNEY is a lad who is very quiet, never having much to say. He comes 93373 from the wild west QC1aysville7, where they think nothing of a few fires, explosions, and robberies every week or so. Maybe that accounts for the color of his hair. Outside of his college work he has proven to be a satellite on the basketball floor, and in some of the interfraternity games surely did show some of our giants a few things about the game. Whatever his chosen work may be, we know he will make a success of it. WALLACE W. BLAND Blandburg, Pa. Read High School. James David Moffat Debating For- um, 2 5 Johnstown Clubg Pre-Legal Society: Franklin and Washington Literary Society. ALLY comes to us from a town of his own name. His chief activity is de- f'?'?4 hating, and we think that the shades of Webster had better look to their laurels? When not engaged in collegiate debating he has his own private questions to suttle. Every now and then he takes a run to Canonsburg, but his good qualities super- cede such a trifle. Fifty-seven I Q IQ Allliil ' rhl If mn lb tl U lm' OE is T . N ORA Vast iw v ,f,. mum T'- W MH' Y THOMAS HAMILTON BRUCE Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Franklin and Washington Literary Society. ICKNAMED: Tom: Residence: Na- -, tional Highway, six miles west of 117571 town, present occupation: farmer and student: future occupation: surgeon, fa- vorite sport: rooting at a gameg favorite dish: plenty of it, by-word: Oh, Boylg ma- jor interest, chemistry: minor interest: girls: disposition: agreeable to all: motto: smile. Nuff Ced. JOSEPH ROSS BUCHANAN Beaver, Pa. K 2 Beaver High School. Football, 1, 2, 3: Druids: Kerag Junior Prom Committee, Wag Jag Staff, 2: PANDORA Manager, 35 Class Basketballg Class Vice-President, lg Class Secretary-Treasurer, 1. HIS boy started college with a very bad reputation, for at home he is N771 known as Rosser Buck, the toughest son of Beaver County. We can hardly think that of Ross with his cheerful grin and How're ye doin' today? with which this diminutive son of Erin greets his friends, and his friends include everyone we know. Buck is a rip-snorting football player as well as a student of parts, MELDRUM KEESEY CARMICHAEL Washington, Pa. A T A Washington High School. Pre-Legal Society: Glee Club, 1, 2. 35 Varsity Quartet, 2, 35 Wag Jag Staff, 2. OONEY is a roistering, boistering, bull-raging fellow, cursed with fiery NWA red hair and a natural and habitual tendency to fall in love. The latter aiilic- tion, combined with the deadly proximity of the Sem, may prove his undoing. His taste in clothes runs to tweeds and a loud red scarf. The distinctive fragrance that clings to the scarf gives him away, how- ever. She is a nice girl but she got hooked in the trade, and thereby hangs a tale. Ask him about it some day . Fifty-eight QQ U illtlgihl I U .T EQ xfll- V.. -T711 PASTE GRA XV'f4xf vw ii ELMER J. COOK Washington, Pa. A X P McKeesport High School, Allegheny College, 1, 2. C. L. S. League. N our class of '24 we have several v men to whom we lift our hats when 9303 the word student is uttered. but since our friend Elmer has joined our ranks, we are forced to stand with our heads bared when his name is mentioned. To him An- glo-Saxon and Greek are but trifles, and Moliere a personal acquaintance. We do not know how Allegheny could afford to lose him. CRAWFORD McCOY COULTER Big Run, Pa. Big Run High School. Class Basketball, 2, 3. nl OULTER is numbered among the quiet V and studious, a martyr to science. He HM has made a successful journey through some of the most nerve-racking courses in school,-courses which bring per- petual worry to most of us. Whatever he does is done well, for failure is not listed in his vocabulary. He hails from Big Run, but since it is not as famous as Bull Run we can tell you very little about it. Also a member of the Home Guard, having re- cently joined Company H. WILBUR WILLIAMSON CRAIG Rimershurg, Pa. K 2 Mercersburg Academy, Blair Academy. Wag Jag Staff, 25 PANDORA Board, 33 Glee Club, 3: Day Press Club, 2, 3. RAIG modestly admits that the only difference between his voice and that of McCormick is that he sings louder. This songster originally came from Clar- ion City and after migrating from one con- servatory to another, finally decided to lo- cate his nest at Wash,-Jeff. Craig says they treat you right up at Rimersburg. The brass band has never failed to welcome him on his triumphal home-comings. Every girl he meets wants to take him home to meet the folks. This, he explains, is the origin of Meet Craig. Oh, that we were that popular! Fif ty -nine GJD ES , ,Q -3- ...ni .mllilnm U EQ N I A D GRA Iv: W, mum: -'l'u',llll CHARLES LINDSLEY CRAWFORD Washington, Pa. K 2 Washington High School. Wag Jag Staff, 23 Day Press Club, 2, 35 PANDORA, 3. TAND aside and make room for Mr. Ambition himself, quoth one of our T most learned professors as Chink ambled into the class room three years ago. Our friend, however, has aged wonderfully since that time. Some of the fellows can even remember when Chink knew how to hurry. In spite of his slowness, our hero is just as smart as he wants to be and if the spirit moves him he will surprise the smartest of men. To the fairer sex he is known as an ideal Woman's Home Com- panion. To that sterner sex he is known as an ideal Saturday Evening Post. ALFRED JOHN CROOK Detroit, Mich. K 2 Detroit Central High School. Druids, Square and Compassg Class Vice-President, 2, Varsity Football, 1, 2, 3. OR the past three years Al has been the keystone of the Washington and lxlul Jefferson football eleven, and we are here to tell you that there are few that ever came down the road who are any better than he is at snapping back the pigskin. He is a man of no mean ability on sea as well as on land, and during' the recent argument with Bill Hohenzollern, Al made several hurried trips across the water with Uncle Sam's navy. Crook hails from the native city of Henry Ford, who by the way is his only rival in securing fame for the Automobile City. MARTIN MICHAEL CROW Crow's Mills, Pa. Hichhill High School. Debating Forum, .29 Red and Black, 1, 2, 33 Editor, 35 Phi Tau Gammag PANDORA Board, 3, Philo Union Literary Society, Day Press Club President, 3. ARTIN hails from a fine, big' farm made famous by his ancestors, who NV1 wrested it from the red man. A real scholar, having been awarded first honors in the state- educational examinations for high school students. Somehow he always gets a line of H's, which is more of an hon- or considering the extent of his campus ac- tivities, dancing, etc. Sail on,' Mart, with our best wishes for success! Sixty 0 9 .15 . . IIIIHEMIIYFITII U V' HQ ' Vim -F PANDORA it 024, o PAUL EDWARD CULLEY Derry, Pa. mb I' A Kiski. Wag Jag Staff, 1, 29 Philo Union Literary Society. E ERE we have one of the prides of the V . institution. Culls, as he is known about the campus, has been unfortu- nate in that he has been unable to make the Buskin Club. However, he has made himself famous in amateur dramatics, be- ing the leading man in the one-act tragedy, While Satan Sleeps, as well as playing the part of the clock in Longfellow's Chil- dren's Hour. He is also head of the Silent Duck Hunters' Club but, like Postum, therc is a reason, and we would rather not dis- close the reason. One of the latest reports around town is that Culls has received the appointment as visitor to the local hospital, and we hope his good fortune continues. GEORGE THOMAS CUMMINS Washington, Pa. A T Q Washington High School. Friarsg Cheerleader, 1, 2, 3g Pre-Legal Society. ERE we have Cummins, the shiek's only rival, but like all truly great men he found his niche and stuck to it. Although very quite himself, his great- est delight is to hear others make noise. He is one of the college's most popular men, due chiefly to his pleasant disposition. George has decided to advertise Doc's gym this year and you can see him at least once a month in a gym suit, giving the lesser light a treat. He hopes some day to Wichi- Coax before the bar and his audience will doubtless be as muchlfor him then as his present one is now. ARD NICI-IOLLS CURRY Washington, Pa. qi K E Washington High School. U. S. Naval Academy. ERE we have the old original Bpd. He is the only swarthy, able-bodied seaman to gain such a title in a short space of two hundred and forty days. He at first decided to become Secretary of the Navy, but the Navy decided otherwise. Then he cast his lot to W. 8: J. He is now endeavoring to become a leading power in the world of business. He is coming along in fine shape for his worthy presence is needed weekly by the South Penn Oil Com- pany of Pittsburgh. Ard is a little bash- ful but shipped one in from New Castle for the Pan Hell last year, A real fellow and friend. Six ty-mme QQ mivrmri n 'pg Sl U19 We - 1PANDoRA .,,,,,,,,,,..,,,W, 4 LINFORD G. CURRY McKeesport, Pa. QD 1' A McKeesport High School. Tennis Team, 2, 33 Manager, 2, 35 Editor of PANDORAQ Kerag Phi Tau Gamma, Wag Jag Staff, 1, 2. USH, so-called because of his pe- Y W U culiar ability as a bowler, is editor- 1'?f?2 in-chief of the PANDORA, so we will deal rather leniently with him. Lin is un- decided whether to take up the study of law, and dig gold from prospective clients, or to be a coal miner. Judging from cer- tain elections he has carried, we feel that law is his forte, for he surely has the knack of getting what he goes after. Lin is also a member of the Silent Duck Hunter's Club Knot listed in activities for good reasonsj, and holds quite an enviable reputation. HAROLD LAIRD DORWART Greenville, Pa. Greenville High School. Y. M. C. A. Treasurer, 35 Y. M. C. A. Board, 2, 33 Phi Chi Mu. YTHAGORAS, Descartes, and Euclid H .I are some of Red's companions who 5053 have furnished him good sport throughout his college career. It must be mentioned that he was a- letter man in this sport: for he always gets his H. Did you ever hear him tell a good story? Well, if you never did, don't miss that part of your education before leaving old Wash.-Jeff. We are all living in hopes that our future Professor Dorwart will work out some law that will simplify mathematics. WILLIAM EMORY FERREE, JR. Wilkinsburg, Pa. cb K 111 Wilkinsburg High School. Wag Jag, 1, 2, 33 Manager Buskin Club, 25 Day Press Club, 2, 35 Football Squad, 1, 2, 35 PLANDORA Staff, 3. OPHER, a product of Gopher Prairie, E spent the early years of his life at 5575? Wilkinsburg High School. He enter- ed W. Sz J. in 1920 with mud on his shoes. His simple nature required that he live on a farm all last year. Even so, Abe Lincoln came from the farm and the Goph bids fair to reach equal pinnacle of fame. A glance at his activities confirms this state- ment. Notwithstanding these natural dis- advantages, Goph plays a mean game of football, and was chosen captain of Jimmy Aiken's eleven. Some day he hopes to be the boss of Wall Street. Sixty-two QQ tb U I illlimihi If T iiWQ5f2i1,1g.:k V 1 ., - 52' - PANB GRA pw 0 MERLE ROSS FISCUS Youngwod, Pa. Youngwood High School. AM emulated from Youngwood, but V 1 in some manner he managed to grow. He has more uncles than most peo- ple have grandmothers. As a German shark he is a whale of a success. He knows how to get by Gym, by attending the least possible number of classes. We have heard he has his vlimmers on a farm out West, where he will settle down with his intended and raise his little-crops, HARWOOD ROLAND FOGEL Rochester, Pa. cb A Q Rochester High School. ' Pre-Medical Society. Q EOPLE know him either as Bub or the blonde from Beaver Valley. T054 He cannot be convinced that there are any better places in this world than his little Beaver Valley. Bub's quiet nature is frequently interspersed with outbursts of wit and humor. Two years as assist- ant in the Biology Department have given him an unsurpassed vocabulary of scien- tific terms and he delights in using these at very opportune times. Claims he is going to merge with the Mayo Brothers. BAYARD GALBRAITH Carnegie, Pa. A T Q Carnegie High Schoolg Culver Military Academy. Pre-Medical Societyg Phi Sigma. EHOLD-the only good thing that ever came out of Carnegie! Gabby 34952 has never learned to use his spare time because he does not have any. His schedule looks like any ordinary curricu- lum. His specialty is to make the best grades in the hardest subjects. His curly hair and blue eyes go well with the fair sex, especially in- the Middle West, Be- sides studying he finds time to assist in Biology and be a business man as well. If he doesn't make- good, we do not know who will. Sixty-three 0 :Q tl U El 'Fi R U lllii rhl If flfll IE yym H ?iR72'7isQf-7 fff: ff uuT 'wlwli DANIEL H. GIBSON Pittsburgh, Pa. A T Q Peabody High School. E E present the king of the royal line I M and this surely is some line, as it has 9344 pulled Dan through many a time. Dan has an uncanny ability in picking out the right courses although as an unsus- pecting freshman he did take Greek. Dan is a regular social hound and shifts a hot pair of puppies. They are very well trained for they always take him to the same place when he steps out. Perseverance did that. We have an idea that Dan might be an athlete if it wasn't such hard work. His motto: Work as hard as you have to, but don't have to. FRANCIS HAROLD GIBSON Tridelphia, Pa. Tridelphia High School. G1 IBBY is a product of the hills of West Virginia. He is somewhat of a stu- fi-ff dent and has succeeded in passing chemistry and math for three years. His ambition in life is to write a text book on chemistry. Personally we think that he had better put on his junior hat and start fighting iires. ROGER HEWLETT GIBSON Kingston, N. Y. A X A Kingston High School. E HIS is Gibby, the small man with the big heart. He is the man who can NWA tell you who was present at the bat- tle of Waterloo, and what the weather will be next week. Gibby performs well in the social world and is a good student. His ability is chiefly along financial lines. Sixty-four .T EQ W l?f771.'1w- -H 0 ROBERT MARSHALL GIBSON Youngstown, Ohio. iD K 2 South High School, Youngstown. Class President, 2, Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, Kera, Friars, Varsity Track Team, 1, Chairman Junior Prom Committee. ICEST boy that ever came out of vi' Youngstown. At least that is the I-11-71 viewpoint of a certain fair damsel in Niles, O. A peerless, all-around fellow, with lots of friends and a smile for all. As a track man he is a crack hurdler and is also a mighty good guard on the basket- ball floor. Gibby is a debutante of several seasons, but still holds his own in society circles. He it was who was King of the Ball at the Junior Prom. Bob was in New York only twenty-four hours when he found himself perfectly at home on Riverside Drive. AUSTIN GILLELAND Dunbar, Pa. Uniontown High School. Pre-Legal Society, Franklin and Washington Literary Society, Debating Forum, 3. OSY-CHEEKED Austin is the indus- - trious chap around the campus. He hopes to go into the restaurant busi- ness when he is through college, so he is taking a very extensive course in the Greek language to fit him for his chosen profes- sion. His working day is divided into two parts-first, the study of his college work before eight o'clock, second, the study of human nature fchieily femininej after eight o'clock. ALDOUS BERNARD HADDEN Toledo, Ohio. fl? K ll! Scott High, Toledo. President's Council, 2, Druids, Kera, Football, 2, 3, Secretary-Treasurer Junior Class, Day Press Club, Conference Committee, 3. L came here from Ohio State. He claims that when he was a child he was frail and unhealthy and given l a few years to live. However, after fbllfowing Hadden's Habitual Hundred he developed his present physique and good health. Sixty-five Q5 n .Q U I iurimihll mil H . sifl' IPANDORA -M D JB lrlimnhi If mli 5 . .Q F1 U 13' I-E UWM 7 I D WVU f',' I xniillllf- limit FRANK SNEED HAINER Pittsburgh, Pa. 117 K 2 Peabody High School. Friarsg Pre-Legal Society. Day Press Club. AVE you heard the latest record? F Q No? Then ask Sneed for he knows them all. Hainer, after seeing Ted in Chicago, says he is going to make his name more famous than that of the great Lewis. All he lacks at present is the abil- ity to play the clarinet, but he can outdo Ted in all the rest of the stuff. He is a follower of women as well as song, and sure goes over big with them. Let us say that Sneed's future nest mate will not have to take care of the menus for he can arrange a nasty banquet for half a shekel. A like- able fellow, energetic and full of pep. We harbor no fears for his future success and wish him lots of luck. WILLIAM ALTON HALLAM Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Franklin and Washington Literary Society. Q ILL hails from the rapid growing me- wg tropolis of Pancake. If at any time wid you want to find Bill just look in the Y. M. C. A. near the croqueno board. He is somewhat of a radio bug and hopes some day to communicate with Mars. JACKSON LEWIS HAMMITT McKeesp0rt, Pa. K E McKeesport High School. Day Press Club, 2, 3. N the 19th of Februarv, 1902, Jack- son Lewis iirst saw the smoky at- mosphere of McKeesport. Since that date his parents have always passed around smokes in celebration of that happy event. This blond Caballero was a model child, and now grown to young manhood conducts himself at all times in a gentlemanly, dig- nified manner. However, he has his weak- nesses, chief of which are a keen interest in a jeweler's catalogue and a tendency toward iazz trousers. Jack is an enthusi- astic devotee of Terpsichore and at every cotillion and formal dance his light may be seen from afar. Hammitt seems to enjoy peculiar success in the field of philos- ophy and we would not be surprised to see this promising youth propounding the the- ories of Kant and others to future genera- tions of college men. He is a good-hearted fellow and a real friend. Sixty-six , Q Q llllii i' Ghllfmfl n -sg A? ifWWwWnfl:Qla:,..h.i.., ,,....... ORA N I x , my 4 JOHN KIPP HAWES Renton, Pa. B G II Bellefonte Academy. Pre-Medical Society, 1, 2, 3. AWES comes from Renton, Pa. If you want to know more about the - 1 town ask him for he says it is quite a lively burg. Some say that Monk is the l1v1ng proof of the Darwinian theory, but we are inclined to doubt this. He is quite a woman chaser and his most valuable pos- sessions are the trophies of the chase. He Says he is going to be a doctor some day and we are inclined to think he will be a mlghty good one. ROBERT FULLER HOGSETT DuBois, Pa. 111 K jj DuBois High School. Pre-Medical Society, 2, 35 Debating Forum, 25 Franklin and Washington Literary Society. RODIGAL BOB has returned to the ww. Wash.-Jeff. fold not because he loves K'-'-4 Penn less, but because he loved W. 85 J. more. He says he is quite a terminal administrator, serving in that capacity ' ' lso an during the last semester. He is a ardent follower of science, especially Biol- ogy and Chemistry. Being one of the home shieks, we have never been able to get an exact line on Bob's feminine department. We do know that he gets around a good b't 'th the four hundred of Uniontown 1 W1 and once when as a freshman threatened . . I to import one from Los Ange es. HENRY HARDING HOOD Washington, Pa. KD' K ll' Washington High School. Pan-Hellenic Council, 33 Glee Club, 1, 2, 35 Buskin Club, 2, 3. HIS is the great Wally, for the last two years leading man in the Buskin NWA Club and the idol of Culley's heart. He is a worthy successor to his namesake, Wally Reid. Unless some one might think th t Henr 's activities are limited to dra- a Y matics let us say that he is a cracker-Jack ' t dent at basketball and a mighty good s u . Heinie hopes some day to enter the carnival business but says he doesn't see how he will ever be able to walk a tight rope. Heinie is somewhat discouraged because one of our western friends told him that out West an actor like him was not allowed to walk a tight rope. Sixty-seven A :Q lllli Jil If mn Nl U , 'FQ no UQ 'WW' D ?ixCifW9ii'7ff i H' ul?-I 1' Nl l HAROLD BOWMAN HORN ER Johnstown, Ohio. CD K ll' Johnstown High School. Kerag Red and Black, 2, 35 Manager, 33 Day Press Club. ACK is the original busy man. He is L A at present compiling a book on the modern letter writer and says he is writing from experience, which we do not doubt that he possesses. Occasionally he entertains the boys with a new joke fnote the word occasionallyb. Horner came here with a quite a reputation for an artistic temperament, but the Junior hats soon ruined that reputation, but some think it put him in a. class with the immortal Ponzi, as a business man. ARTHUR CARSON HUNTLEY Youngwood, Pa. Youngwood High School. Debating Forum, Delta Sigma Rho, Franklin and Washington Literary Society, Pre-Legal Society, PANDORA Staff. N this chap we see a reincarnation of I our old friend Demosthenes after he 5031? had thrown away his pebbles, for Art is an orator of the silver-tongued variety. He also believes in studying and it is even rumored that he frequentlv has dates around town. He is a very serious chap and goes about his tasks earnestly. EDGAR COE IRWIN Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Baseball, 1, 2g Gllee Club, 2, 35 Franklin and Washington Literary Society, 3. E D is a product of Washington and one v of which we are proud. Beside being 5713 a good student he has found time for other activities. As a Greek student he is hard to beat. He is said to be on the road to matrimony, although we have been unable to find out her name. With all his cheerful personality, smile and devotion to duty he will surely succeed as a Presby- terian minister. Sixty-eight T .,,. ,... . .. U HARRY MONROE JENKINS Washington, Pa. Taylor University. Franklin and Washington Literary Socictyg Christian Life Service League. ENKS is one of our brave men. First, M A because he enlisted in the World War Milif- on April 9, 1918, and soon became a first-class sergeant in the air service. He served in Scotland, England and France as a machine gun instructor and master mechanic. Second, because he has preached the gospel throughout the world. Third, he has suffered himself to be bound by the holy bonds of matrimony. All W. Sz J. men now Jenks are well aware that his who k . little daughter is just as bright as her dad. RICHARD T. JENNINGS, JR. Greensburg, Pa. A T A Greensburg High School. Stgdent Senate, 13 Assistant Football Manager, 2, 3, Red and Black Staff, 23 PANDORA Staff, 39 Phi Sigmag Philo-Union Literary Society, Pre-Legal Society. ICK is a lithesome, slender youth of T tender years, with no bad habits fyetb and a line consisting mainly of silence. He can express himself very clear- ly without the use of verbosity. Good lis- tener and all that, you know. He says he is through with blind dates. Tim is a Ger- man shark. He likes German and any- thing that is connected with it. We found him in bed one night muttering queer words and trying to tie himself in knots in imitation of a pretzel. H. M. JOHNSTON Seattle, Wash. cp K ll! Seattle High School. Glee Club, 1, 3. E URING an extraordinary, severe 1 blizzard, Houstings blew into town feeling very much at home. Last year he heard the call of the wild and went to Oberlin, but this year we found him back at old W. gl J. His intimates say it doesn'i. mean much for he still makes frequent trips to the surrounding towns. French is his favorite subject. He is best known as T. B. Johnston. Six ty-nine 55 P P ml I illlimihi If nm E ll PANDORA X 1 W 24 DID -Q I 'E' Allfi A U EQ WW' lily' PANB ORA 9il5?i2'Vaaravw,.. ,,,,,,,,,.,s,g-111m PHILIP THACKWELL JOHNSON Pittsburgh, Pa, B Q II Allegheny High School, West Point. Glee Club, 2, 3. HIL is a former West Point Man, but - v did not seem to like the army life very M152 well. He says there is too little grub and not enough sleep, so he came here to make up for it. He is quite a singer and hopes to make records for Victor some day. He claims he is going to make the world forget Caruso, but we are more inclined to believe that his picture will appear under the slogan, His master's voice. ERNEST LEE JONES Elyria, Ohio. qv K E Elyria High School, ' Blair Academy, Washington and Lee, lg Wooster, 2, Rollins College, 2. Track Squad, 33 Wrestling, 3. RNIE sure ought to be a brilliant light by this time if travel may be said to Wi illuminate one's vision, for he sure has traversed this part of the world. He is a cosmopolitan composite, having lived in various parts of the United States, as well as in Florida. He made the trip to New York last fall and returned an enthusi- astic admirer of Ziegfeld. However, Ernie is human, for he has had his trouble with Atchie's math. Although only with us one year, he is a ranking favorite among the college widows. You will hear of him in the future as a famous wrestler or as the mayor of Elyria. FRANK STREATOR JONES Washington, Pa. KD' K E Washington High School. Class Basketball, lg Varsity Basketball Squad, lg Buskin Club, 2, 35 Pre-Legal Society, PANDORA Board, 33 Glee Club, 3. ELL, here is old Frank himself and frank he is, too. No hot air from this 213222 fellow. All his acquaintances are proud to call him friend. We think there is some mistake in his middle name. The ea A should be replaced by u and the 0 by e, Glee clubically speaking, our Frank has made good and is also somewhat of a dramatist. Much more could be said of our blond pal, but we will have to leave that for next year. Just one more thing, girls -Frank is a great little dishwasher, and that should count for a lot these days. Seventy D D lb H -q llllimml rmll T '19 j,m,g.,, ,, , - Q PANDORA '24 0 HAROLD DALLAS JONES Ravenna, Ohio. K E Claysville High School. Glee Club, lg Druids, Kerag Athletic Council, 23 Assistant Manager Basketball, 3, Football, 39 Buskin Club, 3. LLOW us to present Dallie, the sheik m of sheiks, and a mean heart-breaker. Please do not deface this page of the Pandora in order to get his picture for your locket. Just send your address and get your picture by return mail. Caruso can't help it, and as he himself says, I simply cannot understand my peculiar power. However, he is a mighty fine fel- low and one who always accomplishes what he sets out to do. He is an earnest student and a booster for W. KL J. and the kind of a fellow who is bound to be a success. LOUIS FRANCIS KIRCHNER Washington, Pa. KD K ll' Washington High School. Wag Jag, 1, 2 3 PANDORA Staff, 33 Red and Black, 2, 33 Day Press Club. APHAEL, Van Dyke, and Corrot turn over in their graves when Lou picks up his brush. His artistic fame cen- ters around feminine charm, but, curiously enough, this said charm has very little in- fluence in his curriculum. Louie is one of those tall, good-looking blonds that you hear so much about and he surely would look neat in the white uniform of a sign painter. RUSSELL ALBERT KLIEVES Wheeling, W. Va. Linsley Institute. PANDORA Board, 39 Franklin and Washington Literary Society, 3. VERYBODY knows Tiny. He comes from Wheeling, where they grow big SE fellows. A shark in math and no mean student in other branches. We al- ways find him near the head of his class, especially in gym. He has attained great fame in after-dinner speeches, due, chiefiy, to his oration at the freshman banquet. Among the many other qualities that make us like Tiny is his comradeship. Seventy-one Q IQ M :uri rhillfmii K if U19 rw ,W f PANDORA ,,,,,,.,..,,.,,M.,24 MELVIN HENRY KNOEPP, JR. Knoxville, Pa. QD A Q Knoxville Union High School. Druidsg Glee Club, 1, 2, 3g President's Council, lg Athletic Council, lg Tennis, 1, 23 Class President, 3. EL is the pink of perfection, not only as a good fellow, but also an excellent NWA tennis player and organist. He also swims, rides, bowls, plays checkers, drives his own car, and will drink a cup of tea occassionally. And speaking of sheiks, he modestly tells us that Araby, has not a thing on Knoxville when he is home. Knoepp holds a record at W. 8x J., namely, that he has received more special delivery letters since he came to college than any ten men in school. His ambition is to be a mail carrier and wear a uniform. PAUL THOMAS LANDIS Derry, Pa. A X A Derry High School. AUL is not a Hercules, but he has the stuff, all wrapped up in a small bun- f'?P?2 dle. Although he is not a toreador, he could be. As far as Spanish is con- cerned, he is not so bad at throwing the tom, His dread of Doc's gym is only superseded by his fear of running out of Fatimas. CHARLES ERNEST LOWREY Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Square and Compass, Phi Chi Mu. RNIE is one of the town boys who has gained fame for himself in the aca- Y demic department. He has a habit of overcoming with ease those courses which worry the majority of us. He never has much to say, but that does not mean much, for wise men never talk until they are mar- ried and then they can't. Seventy-two DE WHJIML 9 JOHN B. LOWRY Indiana, Pa. QD K 111 Mercersburg, Indiana Normal, Lafayette, 2. Basketball, 3. OP started his career at Lafayette. Later they-we mean he-saw their- PPPFZ we mean his-mistake, and he arrived in Washington one bright morning at 12.45. QNote-Pop says the time is authentic, for his watch stopped when he got off the train.J Ever since that day he has been reminding us of his presence. Laugh, and the world laughs with you, says Pop. EDWIN WILLIAM MacBETH Pittsburgh, Pa. 111 A Q-J Fifth Avenue High School. Baseball, 1, Basketball Squad, 1, 2, Football, 1, Pre-Medical Society. DDIE is a gentleman, scholar, and an amateur boxer. When he first came HH to school he was a little rough, being used to army ways, but now he is as tame as one could desire, for he is now a married man. Mac is on his way to be a famous surgeon, and we know he will realize his ambition because of his untiring efforts, his ability and personality, combined with his deep regard for his fellowman. JOHN A. MALCOLM Pittsburgh, Pa. A T Q South Hills High School. Phi Sigma, Phi Tau Gamma, PANDORA Staff, Pre-Medical Society, Treasurer, 2, President, 3, Class President, 3. OHN is one of the most popular fel- lows in his class and combines all ii-N212 those attributes that go to make up a real fellow. He is one of the best students in college and his popularity is proven by the fact that he is president of his class. He was a member of the track team in his freshman year and because he did not break any records he is too modest to include this in his list of activities. Mal is no slouch at basketball and held down one of the forward positions for his fraternity. John is headed for Pennsylvania Medical School, and if there is anyone in school that should make good, John is that man. Seventy-three ? ,....t....fT..... IPANDORA f ii 4 D 'D ffl uni rhllfmh M im .s-. U I? QQ. ff PASD GRA '5v71'7iwl tff' ff uni '1' ll. . WILLIAM SHERMAN MINOR Taylorstown, Pa. Morgantown High School. President's Council, 39 Red and Black Staff, 3g C. L. S. League, PANDORA Board, 3. Philo and Union Literary Society. IGHT o'clock classes are Sherman's special diversions and he is seldom SIE late either. He comes to town on the seven o'clock train, and every evening he hies himself away to his big country home. He undoubtedly burns much midnight oil, for his other activities claim his attention during the day. Student, breeder of blood- ed stock, automobile agent, and yet you have no clue to his future profession. If you knew how much interest he takes in the Life Service League you might be able to guess that he is preparing for the minis- try. W. gl J., Harvard, a Baptist parish, and then-but we hesitate to prognosticate further. It is enough to say that we ex- pect much of him. NOLTON DODD MONTGOMERY Landsdale, Pa. A T Q Druids, Kerag Red and Black Staff. ERE we have Landsdale's candidate for the Hall of Fame. We thought for a while that we would lose him, but there was a hitch somewhere and he re- turned to the fold. However, his trips to Cornell have not been entirely abandoned. Monty's indoor sport is swearing by cer- tain members of the faculty, or at them. With all his work fsorting his numerous let- ters and packagesl, he manages to enjoy life and find lots of time to make friends. LIONEL ORVILLE MOORE Canonsburg, Pa. Canonsburg High School. Pre-Legal Society, 2, 3. aj E have not seen a lot of Lionel since he entered college, because he com- mutes to Canonsburg every day. Law has claimed his ambition, and we can safely predict that he will succeed, for he is one of Dr. McGregor's shining lights. Lionel is also very proficient in sports, and is with- out a doubt the best bowler in college. Seventy-fom BQ U I iurimihl If mn U .Y ,.,.,.. . ,.... -Sf' PANDORA X ff xf mms 24, DONALD FLORENCE MORRIS Circleville, Ohio, ID A Q Circleville High School. ON is another of the three gamboliers 1 from roundtown. He is usually a very carefree fellow, but lately he has had to do a lot of worrying, namely, whether he really looks as much like Conrad Nagel as people say he does. He is frequently known as J. C. Morris. His ambition is to be one of Dr. Kirchner's gym assistants, but personally we think he would make a better paperhanger. CHARLES ROBERTS MUNNELL Canonsburg, Pa. Canonsburg High School. HARLES hails from Guntown, and as a student pulls more tricks on unsus- pecting professors than any other man in school. He says he wants to teach French and hopes eventually to become head of this department. After all, Charley has a deep appreciation for his studies, for un- der all his fun may be seen a rich vein of ability. SAMUEL COOK McCLAY Pittsburgh, Pa. K E South Hills High School. Glee Club, 3. S one of the last survivors of the an- cient nobility of the days when knight- 'KW hood was in fiower, the Duke left his ducal domain to cast his lot with the class of '24. Since entering this democratic in- stitution, his Lordship has thrown aside quite a number of his aristocratic manner- isms and has slowly adapted himself to the life of the bourgeoisie. In spite of the fact that he is shy, modest, and retiring, Sam usually manages to make his presence felt. He takes his work seriously and we all know he will make good. Seventy-five D 'Q lllli rhllfmli : .Qi Fl in H EQ fm ,H iifx:Z:f72iX-Tiff '11 iiwl1'T'-fl'-'fll'i GEORGE FLORENCE McCREA Circleville, Ohio. fl? A 9 Circleville High School. AN you imagine buttons for a nick- name? That is one of the few that cannot be blamed on Wash-Jeff, for he had it when he came to us, and no one can tell how he acquired it. We give But- tons a lot of credit for the simple reason that he is majoring in chemistry and has also attained fame as a pile-driving logician, often forcing his arguments upon bored and unwilling listeners. Our fears for Mac are only surpassed by our efforts to save him irom becoming a tea hound or a finale opper. MERRITT CUNNINGHAM McCUSKEY Moundsville, W, Va. A X A Moundsville High School. Pre-Medical Society, 1, 2, 35 Athletic Director, 3. ERRITT'S ambition is to sling pills for a living. He is a product of the NWA hills of West Virginia, but you would not know it to look at him. His time is mighty well occupied between his studies, care of the welfare of his brother, and last but not least-WOMEN. Mac is an author- ity on all that Mr. Ziegfeld ever produced, and also a lot he didn't produce. RAY C. McLAUGHLIN Massilion, Ohio. A T Q Massilion High School, Kiski. Class President, 13 Class Vice-President, 2, Class Secretary-Treasurer, 25 Druids, Football, 1, 2, 33 Baseball, 2. RISH? Yes, but we can forgive him for that if he wasn't so proud of it. 9355? He is a living proof of the fact that no race can run a canteen like the Irish. Mac is a real athlete and although he has had a long streak of hard luck in injuries, that does not keep him off the dance floor, where he shines as brilliantly as on the gridiron. As for Mac's dancing, well he is persistent. The same quality of persistence is brought out in a more marked degree when one remembers that he spends every week-end away from Washington. Seventy-six D Q intl Mllfmfl 55 U if llwwwinwww. ,.w-,N.. - ,- st5f:-PANDQRA xx, I X lil '24 JOHN WAYNE McVICAR Tarentum, Pa, B 0 H Tarentum High School. AC is a charter member of the W. Sz J. Pigeon Club, whichhails from Taren- NWA tum. He is quite a stepper and may be seen only during the day in Washington, because, like the screech owl, he goes out at night. His ready wit and humor are sources of great merriment. Now on the credit side we shall place his studious at- titude, great ambitions, and steadfastness to his beliefs. Mac will undoubtedly make a successful lawyer and a broad-minded judge. GEORGE ALVIN NORD Bessemer, Pa. Bessemer High School. Franklin and Washington.Literary Society. ORD is very fortunate in having a col- ' league to protect him wherever he E15-T71 goes, for some brute would have kid- napped him long' before this. Most of his time is spent in study, but he frequently finds time to make a visit in the western end of our fair town. Nord is very quiet, and has very little to say, except in Eco- nomics Class. With his strong determina- tion and studious application, we can pre- dict a brilliant future for George. SHIRLEY E. PARKER Washington, Pa. Washington High School. HIS stalwart boy comes to us from the famous town of Pancake and his smil- .WIA ing face is to be seen everywhere, even if a professor should happen to disappoint him, he never loses that smile. He mixes well and is well liked by all those who know him. Due to the fact that his time' is very limited, he has little time for activities. Seventy-seven 7 fund D 'D As - Ui U 'E' 'Fi U 1 If Rl LQ 'WW' PAN D ORA miuuur2f 'wLMi. '24 PHILIP DODDRIDGE PAUL Wheeling, W, Va. B 0 H Tridelphia High School. HIL is hard to get acquainted with because of his backward manner, but 393952 after you know him well you will soon realize what a good friend you have. At present he is taking up the study of Hoyle in preference to Einstein and Darwin. Ped- dey and his Hup are well known in Wash- ington and surrounding garages. WILLIAM KENNETH PERKINS Washington, Pa. 411' F A New Brighton High School. Football, 1, 2, 3g Druids. ERKINS is one of the most popular men E that ever hung around the main build- PPT? ing, although of late he has done more hanging around other sections of town than that which boasts of being the lcoation of Wash-Jeff. His popularity .around the col- lege seems to be eclipsed by his popularity out North Main Street, and we can't blame the girls a whole lot, for Perk is one ot those irrepressible, enthusiastic, efferves- cent sort of chaps that has the peculiar knack of getting by. Perk's stronghold is in Spanish, where it took him over a year to learn that Si, si, senor, does not mean Good morning, professor. Anyway he is young and will learn. Perk's dad is a min- ister, but that doesn't mean anything. CHARLES HENRY POTTER, JR. Titusville, Pa, KD A Q Titusville High School. Football, 1, 2, 33 Pre-Legal Society, ,Baseball, 1. H, girls, just look at the big, handsome brute. Surely you have heard of Tiny. Besides playing football he is also an amateur boxer. The only thing he lacks as a boxer is a good opponent. He is also accredited with a good bit of ability at base- ball. At present his ambition is to be a baseball player for McGraw or a lawyer. Tiny's good nature, generosity and good fel- lowship are only surpassed by the measure- ment of his waist line. - Seventy-eight DD lb I I U illlimifli If mil il . .rli PANDUP-A you L 'lllll'24I- o ALFRED EDWARD PROWITT Washington, Pa. A X A Washington High School. Red and Black Staff, 2, 33 Day Press Club, 1, 2, 33 Tennis Team, 2, 3. ERE is Alfred, a composite of student, business man, social hound, sportsman, et cetera. His original intention upon entering the college was to prepare for a career as a journalist, but the old slogan, Oil is king, seems to have had its effect upon him and he is now busily engaged in selling gas fboth kindsi. We think the company's gas gets by much better than his. At least most any car will run farther on it, for there are mighty few steamers on the road at present. PAUL C. REUTER Pittsburgh, Pa, A T Q Allegheny High School. Class Vice-President, 3, Track, 1, 2, 33 Pre-Medical Society. ERE we have Lionel Strongfort II. He - is one of the enduring kind and can run farther and stand more punish- ment than most people we know. The only place he shows speed is on the track. As a pre-medical student he is naturally very much interested in hospitals. His one glar- ing fault is his cheerfulness before break- fast. He is the first undergraduate in W. XL J. to have a degree conferred upon him, that degree being D. D. D. MATHIAS SAXMAN RISE Latrobe,1'a. B Q II Latrobe High School. Pre-Medical Society, 15 Wag Jag, 2g PANDORA Board, 33 -ERE is our good-natured Sax. Has anyone ever seen him without his characteristic, fascinating smile? He has made for himself the friend of all by his cheerful Howdy? Although his heart seems to have fallen in one spot he still steps out quite a bit here in Washington. His ambition is to be an engineer, proba- bly of the wheelbarrow variety. Seventy-nine n fn qs Illia ahllfmh 5 . .,. if Fl U UQ KW rf 1.1 PAN E ORA iw fflxf mnnnmz 'IMVJ' SAMUEL HARBISON ROBINSON West Newton, Pa. K E West Newton High School. HE picture opposite this lengthy name is that of loving Sam. ,He is the NV: one and only representative from the renowned town of Fig Newton. Sam is a gentleman of leisure, taking things as they come and go, including his studies. It is not an uncommon sight to see this collegi- ate chap motoring in his own car with somebody else's girl. Like a sailor, Sam has a girl in every port, and, incidentally, makes it his business to visit one of these ports each week-end. At the present writ- ing we are unable to inform you as to his favorite port. In conclusion, we will state that Sam is a good fellow, although he will perhaps take his time in going through col- lege, for he thinks it is a good place. DAVID HARRY ROSENBURG Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Glee Club, 25 Phi Chi Mu. OSIE is one of our town products and t some day the town will look upon him as its first son. When he hangs up his shingle and gets out his banjo to while away the time no one will have the blues. Both these predictions are subject to error, for it is very probable that this follower of Gottlieb may mix several unknown acids and thus end a brilliant career. JOHN FRANK ROSS Clarion, Pa. A T Q Harrisburg Academyg Culver Military Academyg Penn State. ACK grew exceptionally long trying to A look over the tall grass. He is a reg- ular Nimrod, as the rabbits around his part of the country have learned. By using his natural ability he might find a job as a fog horn. It is rumored that he acquired his bowling ability rolling pumpkins. Jack began his advanced education at State, but transferred because someone told him that Washington was famous for its pretty girls. Eighty V n n illlirihllfmll tb H 'EI Y Q . IPANDGRA f 1 24 RUFUS DECATUR SHORT Circleville, Ohio. fl? A Q Circleville High School, Miami University. Druids. UF came to us from Miami with the idea of staying only one year, but he took a liking to the place and the place took a liking to him, so he decided to stay. One of the fair maidens of the town calls him the cutest boy in college. This opinion is also shared by a girl in Washington Court House, Ohio. Just a warning, men, watch your sweethearts when Ruf is around. His greatest ambition is to knock them all dizzy, and he surely has had a flying start. WALTER DOUGLAS SNYDER Toledo, Ohio. , fl? K ll' Scott High School. Druids, Kerag Glee Club, 1, 2, 33 President's Council, 23 Football, 1, 2, 3g Buskin Club, 1, 2, 33 Conference Committee, 3g Class President, 1. HE Toledo Rotary Club sent one of its favorite sons to garner the fruits of NWA a Pennsylvania education, and here we have Walter Douglas. Truly Ohio is a very progressive State, but they know a good school when they see one, and also a good representative. Our only regret is that they don't send us a few more sons of Wal- ter's type. We were afraid that David W. Griffiths would see Walt when he was on the coast with the football team and offer him a nice fat salary, but Walt had a greater attraction in Washington so he is still with us. IRA ANDREW STEPHENSON Jackson, Ohio. B Q H Jackson High School, Miami University. TEVE did not start with us, but since he has been here he has made friends Y with everybody. He is our ladies' man and some even say he is the answer to a maiden's prayer. Steve has his own ideas as to the just basis for taxation and the fact that his opinions differ materially from those of Dr. Janes, permits the class to hear many a heated argument. Eighty-one a fn M Illia Ml ll mn U I :BS Fl in IE WW ll :M PANB ORA ?i7i2Tfn::4 ?W w .,,,m1ymi,' '24, DONALD H. STRONG Clymer, Pa. Clymer High School. Franklin and Washington Literary Societyg Pre-Legal Society. ON hails from Clymer, but you can't 1 blame him for that. He is mighty well liked around the campus, because he always has a good word and a smile for everyone. As a student, Don is hard to beat. He hopes to be a banker some day, and like all great men have done, he has started in to learn the business from the ground up. Don is rather backward when it comes to splashing out in female com- pany, but we rather suspect that there is a reason back in Clymer, although he has volunteered no information along this line. WILBERT HOWARD SWOGGER Pittsburgh, Pa. A X A Allegheny High School. Pre-Medical Society, 1, 2, 3, Vice- President, 3. ERE we have a student, not only be- cause he wears glasses, but also be- cause he actually studies. Howard in- tends to take up medicine, and he will doubtless make a great success of it, if the girls will only allow him to study. He has made quite a name for himself from the fact that he always gets to class on time. No doubt Howard will succeed in his life work, for he is one of those men who is born for success. ROBERT GUMMERT TAYLOR Carrick, Pa. A T S2 Fifth Avenue High School. ERE we have a veritable Baron Roth- schild, a wizard on profit and loss. His terms are strictly cash. There are ten dimes to a dollar, ten cents to a dime, ten mills to a cent, but to date no one has ever made a mill give a better ac- count of itself than Bob. There is nothing parsimonious about him and whenever he puts any of his filthy lucre into circulation it is invariably and imperatively for value received. He has been taking calculus in order to differentiate between a lead nickel and the coin of the realm. His semi-pater- nal smile is like the grin of a Cheshire cat plus one stogie. Eighty-two Q15 mnlii mi If mn lg in -Y ffmlhfiwluy.. ' 'iv 1 All CHARLES EDWARD THOMPSON Butler, Pa. K E Butler High School. Day Press Club. HIS is to introduce Eddie, the other Hallroom boy, formerly a native of NWA Butler County, but since his matricu- lation at W. 8z J. he has made his residence at the college library. Three years ago this young attorney thought of nothing but H's, but now we are sorry to relate that his mind has strayed from musty manuscripts to thoughts of love and the more bitter things of life. His chief indoor sports are saw- ing on the violin and cellar digging, but lest we criticise this young upstart too se- verely, let us add that Possum is a de- pendable and conscientious fellow and we are all for him. HOWARD CHARLES TOEPFER Tarentum, Pa. K 2 Bellefonte Academy. President's Council, 3, Glee Club, 2, 3, Class Treasurer, 1, Publication Board, 3. ADIES, cast your orbs on the best looking fellow in the mighty class of 5Vi '24. Note his peach-and-cream com- plexion and his marcelled hair, which has caused many a young lady to make a wish which only one has thus far attained. At times this young man's thoughts have wan- dered as far as the banks of the sunny Nile, as well as those of his native Allegheny. Howard is a musician of no mean ability and plays the violin with as much ease as he does the cornet. His sweet voice has been a great asset to the Glee Club, which has made many a house party a real success. GUY VOLPITTO Johnstown, Pa. Johnstown High School, Grove City College, 1. PANDORA Board, 3, Johnstown Club, C. L. S. League, Debating Forum, 2. ERE is a jolly good sport that comes from the town that survived the Hood. His chief accomplishment is getting an inside line on various student activities. His peppy nature is indicated by the fact that he is known to many of his friends as tor- pedo, and this name seems to describe him as well as any we know. He accepts re- sponsibility with a smile. They say thit the reason he left Grove City was that he caused disension among the co-eds. Eighty-three n fn gg I us: and ,E U EQ Wm W- WNWMW mimilllli-ll'1l,fllli' DEAN MARTIN WARREN Washington, Pa. A T A Washington High School. Class Secretary-Treasurer, 23 Class Basketball, 1, 33 Pre-Legal Societyg Day Press Club. HEN the deacon is all dressed up to go to church he looks like a cross be- 5'??95 tween Jack Holt and an aluminum salesman. Dean likes to dance and spends most of his time practicing new steps. His greatest ambition is to learn the tango. Dean also shows rare grace and skill in manipulating his Number Nines on the gym floor and running' to classes. I-Ie is also noted for his ability to pick pretty girls for the brothers to take to the dances. ROBERT MARCUS WAYMAN Washington, Pa. Ford City High School. Debating Forum, 1, 2, 3, Franklin and Washington Literary Society. OB has quite a reputation as a debater, U being able to argue fluently on any 21388 subject. He has given up chemistry as a life study and intends to enter politics. A sociable fellow, known as bloody Way- man, because of the weird and horrible stories he tells. He is an earnest student and now that he is married we soon expect to see him at the top of the ladder. CHARLES FREEMONT WEST Washington, Pa. Washington High School. Football, 1, 2, 35 Track, 1, 2, 3. RUNER comes to us from Washington A High School with an athletic record 95595 worthy of mention. Since he has been in our ranks he has taken part in our great- est sport, football. This fleet halfback has made a showing which has put him in the ranks of the best football men in the coun- try. When you have nothing else to do just look up the 1922 game with Carnegie Tech' and you will appreciate what Charley means to a W. 81 J. man. And while you are doing research work, you might review that 98- yard run at Syracuse. In track he has es- tablished many records. In addition to all this he is a mighty good student., Eighty-four ' n A U as I 1 U, W furigihi ir nm T I,'lfQ1Z7Mmw ,.,1-w-,w..-,,x..... -'P52'-iPANDQRA lxffvxff I Q. my 924, CHESTER CARL WIDERQUIST Moline, Ill. KD K E Moline High Schoolg Northwestern University. Varsity Football, 2, 35 Glee Club, 2. D ERE is a man who goes through the opposing team like the Israelites went through the Red Sea. Widy fights from the kick-off to the last whistle and keeps all the rest of the team plugging at top speed. May he captain the 1924 eleven through the greatest season in the history of the college. He is a very accomplished tenor, and as a member of the Glee Club, displays his wares in various parts of West- ern Pennsylvania. As a finale hopper, he can't be beaten in the heavyweight shimmy class. He favors women from Connellsville. He is a popular fellow with a winning per- sonality, full of fun and originality. OLIVER DAVID WILLIAMS Bellevue, Pa. Belevue High Scholg Pittsburgh Academy. E LI.-IE believes that actions speak louder than words, for, though he rarely has much to say, he accomplishes a great deal. His broad, liberal education includes several very adventurous trips with the football team. Besides he enjoyedf?J sev- eral months' service in the army in various parts of France, England and Germany. At present he plans to enter Yale medical school, and we are confident that his faith- fulness as a student will make him a reali- able medico. HERBERT STEWART ZISCHKAU Turtle Creek, Pa. Union High School. PANDORA Board, 2, 35 Class Basketball, 3. ERB may be said to be a heart crusher with some degree of skill, but for all that he finds a few minutes daily for his studies. To date he has passed five se- mesters of math, yet he declares he will not major in this subject. We have no doubt that he will be a dark horse candidate for some high position, although he re- fuses to make known his great ambition in life. He has a well-knit, muscular frame, and his major sport is basketball. Eighty-five . thrill while he was in tl 0 -'Q G5 gi I illlimihimflfll U U ,..,.l...,... , i4x?2' VPAND ORA mas in f.. annum? M'.ill.' Fayette City, Pa. George and W. KL J. Sam genial sort of fellow, and been with us for a short known and well liked. He come to stay, and our only didn't come sooner. S. R. KALI' Mt. Pleasant, Pa. Glee Club, 1, 3. MARVIN SAMUEL SAMBERG University of Pittsburgh, 1, 2. AMMY grew tired of Pitt, and of the life in the Smoky City, so he packed 'WF' his grip and took the road to Little is a mighty con- although he has time, he is well says that he has regret is that he AXA Mt. Pleasant High School. D ERE we have the original Beau Brum- mel. He surely did give Broadway a New York. This chap is a student, as his grades indicate, but that does not prevent him from being a good fellow, for he has quite a few qualities to offset his studiousness. Hopes to take to law if the girls will only quit bothering him. WILBUR C. MULHOLLEN Johnstown, Pa. KD K 11' Johnstown High School. Friarsg Glee Club, 1, 2. UL left the Cambria Steel Company to its fate last year and returned to AWA Washington and Jefferson. When a babe in arms he astonished his admiring re- lations with his musical ability-and suilice it to say, that they are still astounded. Mul is a natural born gloom chaser, for he has a grin that is mighty contagious. First you see the grin, and then you see Mulhollen. Look out for him for he is a comer. Eighty-six B 'Q ni mrmn U W Ai 'E' Q 'M h V ti? lv- I,-EQ WZQgM77hfl0M9mfl'u-uumv -v,x,-. .A .. . - . -A N-.x 1 xs-x X-25431 f D .,.. ,,, ,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, , J ,nllllm5jl1yLM,' 9 0 inplqnntnre 0112155 fbffirers First Semester President GEORGE N. DYER Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer JOHN M. MCCUSKEY B. E. ALLENDER Historian Athletic Director .- EDWARD M. WEYER, JR. CHARLES M. RITCHIE Second Semester President EDWARD B. FRIEDRICKS Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer A. B. ALDERETTE GEORGE H. ANTRIM Pandora Editor Pandora Manager RICHARD T. SALMON WELDON W. WILLGOHS f P955 tr A A Eighty-eight lb 0 'Q C, i I M U iirlim' mm!! In I H -7- UIQ WW lhllnw 4 , PAN D 'ORA QKQQWX .1i1vuw?4!1'll.lll.l gfliziurg uf the Gllass nf 1925 SEPTEMBER of 1921, our class entered Washington. Sz A V Jefferson in the time-honored manner. There was nothing C9 2 extraordinary about our entrance. But great things have f M small beginnings. It was only a short time until all saw the possibilities of a great class and the reputation which we , established at that time has been improving steadily. 92650 No class history would be complete Without mention of Q the inter-class battles and so something must be said about B 3 our present season of class fights. This came to a climax YE at 10:22 Friday morning, November 17th, when the class of QQ '26 was placed under complete subjection. With the fresh inside the Chapel and the sophs outside, the doors separat- KN ing them bulged with the tide on one side and then the other, Q until, to Henry Coates' dismay, the strain proved too great and the doors, frame and all broke down before the torrent. As a result of the fight, 12 freshmen were dipped in the pool, only a few of whom Went in Without any clothes on, and, as the next dayis Observer expressed it: .. .. .. Sophomores assembled and gave the Class of '26, numbering 169 students, a thrashing not likely to be for- gotten soonf' The members of our class, wishing to leave some sort of a memorial, tried to establish a pool to be used only for tubbing Freshmen, but this project fell through because of the scarcity of funds. In judging our class, consider what it has accomplished as a class. The superiority displays itself in all activities. When you hear other classes saying that they are the best Cfor they all do this, and most of them actually think that they arej, it means nothing, for there is only one best class-the class to which you belong. We will endeavor to follow in the steps of our glorious predecessors, and thereby set the example for those Who follow. E. M. WEYER, '25. lnillili N15 761 TQ 1 1 1 J V g, Eighty-nine .D :Q mul miurmn Q. U I 1 Ill Q' W I , lv T ffWQ?If,71 pf I , .. .. .-..:. .. l':f7? 75?i2iff'1' wi ',-.... ......,,..,.. ..,,,,,... -niivlr- 'lvLlll.' Snphunture Qfinll ARTHUR BRIAN ALDERETTE .................... Taos, N. M. Me and Paddock WM. ARTHUR ALLEN ............ New Cumberland, W. Va. Rip Van Winlcle Himself BYRON ELMER ALLENDER ........................ Washington A Good Fellow JOHN RALPH ANDERSON ....,....................... Washington Another Home Product GEORGE HAROLD ANTRIM ........................ Parkersburg A Busy Man JOHN ROBERT ARTHUR ............................ Akron, Ohio Another Rubber Product FRED DWIGHT ATKINSON .... New Cumberland, W. Va. True Blue Sam GEORGE BAIRD ................................................ Washington Strictly Business ARTHUR NELSON BAKER ................ ........ L ima, Ohio Nature Lover R. G. BAKER ...................................................... Fayette City Book: Worm JOSEPH WILLIAM BASISTA ............ Wheeling, W. Va. Rudolph WILLIAM H. BASTIAN .........,.................. Zelionople, Pa. Nobody Loves a Fat Man JOHN FRANKLIN BONNEWITZ ............ Van Wert, Ohio Back: in Van Wert- I HARRY WAKEM BOWMAN ................ Clarksburg, W. Va. A Gay Gambolier HARRY MILLER BROWN ...................................... Crafton An Authority On Women JOHN EDWARD BROWN ...................... Wheeling, W. Va. Some Lad JOHN TEMPLETON BROWNLEE ................ Washington A Commuter from Washington J. I. BUCKINGHAM ............ .... .................... Me and Janes HOMER NELSON CLARK ................................ Lima, Ohio From Beantown GEORGE CHASE CLEMENTS ................ Johnstown, Ohio Handsome 37 THOMAS WINGETT CORBETT .............. Glassboro, N. J. Bashful CHARLES PAUL CRAIG .................... Clarksburg, W. Va. Funeral Director ELMER ELLSWORTH CROUPSHORE ............ Greensburg Miss America Ninety A 'D ' vfllfmli - J E 1 V u M E IV-I-HQ N.,, . . ORA .................sfiv-1.ll'24 B. L. CRUISE Farmer Cruise FREDERICK CHRIST DENNIS ........................ Tarentum Raised on Mellin's Food R. J. DUNN Dunn But Not Done GEORGE NOBLE DYER ...................................... Tarentum I Have A Car HARRY DWIGHT EATON .................................... Bellevue Foul-Not Fowl-Shooter MERLE PRINGLE EKAS ..............................,...., Tarentum Quite A Bowler DONALD KRING EPPLEY ............................ Johnstown Shades of Caruso EDWARD ALVIN FREDERICKS ........ Wheeling, W. Va. When I Was At Bethany A CLARKE FULTON .................................. Wheeling, W, Va, In New York- JAMES WINFIELD FUTHEY ................ Shadyside, ohio An All-Around Athlete HOWARD BALL GOULD ................ East Palestine, Ohio A Future Minister CLARENCE SYLVIUS GREGG .........,.,........,, Washington Always Smiling RALPH CLYDE GRIMM ...................., ...,..,,,, W ashmgton 57 Varieties HUMPHREY A. HARMONY ............,. ...,,,, C anton, Ohio Smooth DONALD MCKINLEY HARTFORD ........ Chester, W. Va. A Lilceable Chap GLENN BLAKER HAWKINS .,.,,...,................,.. Beallsville Don is My Brother WILMERI ARMSTRONG HOERR ...................... Johnstown Also From Johnstown . CARL COOKE HOFFMAN ....,...,,,.,.,.,.,...,..,,..,.. Coraopolis Humpty-Dumpty HOMER LEAROY HOOVER .............................. Johnstown A Famous Name COURTNEY ALLEN INGALS ....,.......,,....l.,,,,.,,,,.,, Crafton A Hustler JOHN COCKIN INGLIS ............................ Columbus, Ohio Pride of Pa. Gamma . BOBERT BLACK IVORY, JR. ............................ Pittsburgh Solid i WALTER HAVEN JONES .............................. Washington Ping, the Woman Tamer CHARLES WILLIAM KETTERER ............ .......... B utler Whee-ee-- Ninety-one an in ll. H U ffwlltvfimp ,,,,.,,,..,,,,.. . .. .sa - 92lil'7ll'7i41l L-it '!.-,-..,., .,....,,.,. . .,,....... -llnxnulullri-'Will' HERBERT KOPF .................................. New Britain, Conn. All American CARLTON BEN LEHMAN ............................ Warren, Ohio I'm a Sign Painter FRANK TREIBER LOBMILLER ........ Wellsburg, W. Va. From a Famous Town JOHN MYRON LOVETT ........................................ York, Pa. I Love Debating AARON KERR LYLE, JR. .............................. Washington My Kingdom for a Basketball PATSY VINCENT MARINO ............................ Washington ' Debatable JOHN GRUBER MILLER ...................,.... Chester, W. Va. Takes His Girl to a Basketball Game: He Likes It ALFRED LESTER MORROW .............................. Valencia The Pride of the Country c K. G. MCCAR ........................................................ Washington Did You Ever See My Car? LAWREN CE HENRY MCCULLOUGH .......... Washington A Busy Man JOHN MILTON MCCUSKEY ............ Moundsville, W. Va, A Brother of Merritt JOSEPH EDGAR MCDONOUGIH .................... Eighty-Four Another Commuter ROBERT MCGOWAN MCNAB ................ ........ P ittsburgh Is He Irish? u RONALD OTIS NASER ........................... : ........ Washington The Tilden of W. Sz J. FRANK NEWKIRK NORRIS ............................ Pittsburgh The Modern Apollo WILLIAM FRANKLIN PENN, JR. .................... Morganza How Did He Get Out? JERE R. PERKINS ................................ Youngstown, Ohio One of the Hall-Room Boys RAYMOND MARION PULLEM ....,....... Youngstown, Ohio A Good Student MYRON THOMAS RANKIN ................ Wellsburg, W. Va. Women Are His Major DAVID MELVIN RASEL ...................................... Claysville The Early Bird Catches the Worm ROBERT BRADSHAW REED .............................. Duquesne A Basketball Shark . EDGAR REEVE .................................................... Pittsburgh Lost His Hat EDWARD EVERETT REYNOLDS ........ Cameron, W. Va. A Regular Fellow - FRANCIS ALEXANDER RICHEY ................ Washington He Calls Her Evangeline N inety-two I .n :Q :nl Im!! nn 'l 'mf 'H U U T 'TQ QfWl!J.,7my.,, ..,.,..,, ,,,.. , , .. .x-. D' GRA WViWWWfff-flu' f 1.1.!,. . .,.,... ..,.....4 f. .,... . --fenmuulllimfllll.llllil 0 CHARLES MULLIN RICHIE .......................... Washington A Mean Stepper VICTOR FREDERICK ROWLAND ..........,..... Cadiz, Ohio Few Men Have His Ability ROBERT BENJAMIN RUSH ...................... Newell, W. Va. Ain't We. RICHARD TRUDEAU SALMON .................... Lock Haven A Future Coles Philips RAYMOND ORNDOFF SCOTT .................. ........... R utan Thumbs Uv HARRY V. SHANK .................................v............ Johnstown Another Product of the Flood City JAMES ROBERT SHIELDS ........................ Mt. Pleasant Dapper Dan From Mt. Pleasant ORVILLE MAYNARD SIEGFRIED ............ Mt. Lebanon Likes His Own Brand AUGUST L. W. SISMONDO ..................... ............ D onora Some Grappler PRESSLY LEECH STEVENSON .................... Washington A Voice Like a Lark--Oh, Dear! CHARLES LEE SPILLERS .................... Wheeling, W. Va. The Original Hard Luck Kid JOSEPH CARTER SWAIN .................. South Brownsville A' Candidate for the Pulpit CHARLES LARNED TARR .............................. Johnstown The Brother of Feather WILLIAM JAMESON TEMPLE ..............,..,,.., Washington The Author of Whois Who THOMAS BROOKE TOWNSEND. JR. ........ Ontario, Can. Tarzan of W. 8z J. JOHN EDGAR WALLIS ............,.,......,,. Youngstown, Ohio, Always Busy HOLLAND DEVAUGHN WEIR ...................... Washington Taxi E. HAYDEN WELLER .,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,..,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,, Washington A Coming Journalist EDWARD MOFFAT WEYER, JR. ........,...,.,, Washington . I'll Tell My Father on You WELDON WALLACE WILLGOHS ........ Canal Fulton, Ohio A Big Boy From A Little Town JOSEPH HUSTON WILLIAMS ............,...,.,,.,,, Fairchance E. J. WINNER Persistency Himself A Newcomer ALBERT NOBLE ZELLAR ,.......................,.,, McKeesport A Long Way Home, and A Long-'When You Get There Ninety-three A ,I , M,..',,. A v 1' ,f.,,! ' fn m f' , ' A ka . ,4- 3 5 3' v . 'Li 41- 1 . W. ,V ' 1 ,, 'id ,gil , r fe . 1 qv lf' ' A 13 N- X, W. . 'Z if 5 s S131 in if 2 9' .X 2 z-2 'Q if ' ug R. an 5 2,5 r ig . 'I .ff 4 E1 KI, w 1-.1 f Jffffv '- '-W mf 1 , x Q i 'Hn-' an ' S v Ky , . gf w. N Gr 4... A tv 31-eh X D ps ,. N .. A M--N 3 ay '.'fl3q4:mf!51 1 A ,, 1, 2. wx M ff-f. :pf-gww Hx A Q P v 4 4 Mtv! r . e, 1 sr 1. ' ',:m..as.n.L . .www .I x.,L , . ' 1 Q ' H PM-L5'L 'tm'CI1 fi' 'bn - n 1: -, fum: ' 1.19 ' ff? ' fly!- 'aif mug Wx: ' '- , - 1 ':'- ,SW E1-f NM ., 1 -,M E ... Q., Q, ww wi F - K , ,sr . ZI:Li.fr..11f..,x1 -m if N ,I WV M V A ':, X Q ? ,A 1. xi N.-.0 J..-1 C i . 1 v...! V JS 'V' E fx Q Q ,,.. ,- I ,.. 5,1 new ,. gf -A, , ,, , r 'Q .ww 1 X ,X . . N 11 A,-If l yy 1 4141 . g' I. -r I If f' M' , 1 X 4 19 ,av ,fx X '38 -S! FG. 'Wi' Q- i ill Li XC 5 5 QXQ 13, F .Six ,X 5: X RK X 5 A 'i Q!-liq-f-jsk X . - xx '-figs f--' 'f' -:eff f RK 'fig . 1 wa, fi , -- J! E b L- Q, fx Q 1 ' ' fgg ,--N, g. J W. I l K O fl , , X X. Y- ' Y S 1' 5 1' ,rj A, E D3 T Q? 'oi fc ,' 'M ' '- 1 4 f A, WZ ' 7 ' ff, Zh l yyg . X 5 2' f ffi '. Ziff i x. A jx I A ' ' ' :Kg fjffii? - 'SQ -'Wiki 2 W 42 Q FQ 031-I I U ,W ,, IC, i ,Q 'Q mnl. ' N mr mli Q3 . M H' 'Fl in .Y DQ .-N, w..,.,... . ORA ?2R??'HXf?f:'rv1nf nun 1 M o a 'fires-111112111 Gllass flbfficera First Semester President JULIAN G. HEARNE, JR. Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer JOHN D. RICHEY PAUL A. DELONG Historia-n Athletic Director HARRY H. JACOBS FREDERICK M. REMLEY Second Semester President WALTER C. LONG Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer EDWARD MCKEAN HAWES HOWARD FRIEDRICKS Historian Athletic Director HARRY H. JACOBS FREDERICK M. REMLEY ' -, A iw? 3559240 Q1 srdE:2,Q,,w'22'f, 4 5641- Www' 2- if 29-'Q' ' WEL W-f, 'Q P 1' 5 Mig ' l Www ev. Ninety-eight V -04. ,. .,,,-.,,,-. 1, xi N 9 .f ,--.,T- - :.'f'L-'- ,-'if . i'-AQ N Q' ff ',.-l -'. - 2 :4 , 5 . -V - . b W . --..v if- .. --1 A y- - J 1 --, - ' ' -.,.--2. f- , ,. - -. , - .- 4- - 'ai 'R iii? f f- .Q-x ,If 5 r 3... 4.--5 gy' - - ' ,o. ' z. .Va . .- - A . . -,Z , - f, . nt- .-,..- . 5,-. . .f ,.w Q .4 4 , W, vw M , - -,,, A: AA' ,X Q., , , 4 ' 2 -, , , 'JH' -.:',h.iL- , ...',g,l,,.f , ,J Y, -- , A .r 1- , , ,-' 5 ...nFg,,Ay, lv :,i T,.Vw J -,V -W rv' K xv A , Y ,V 5... Ii., If -vi '-31 5 , . 5 ,Et 'lk 14. in ln ' -ff--413.-1 1353,- ,y- , Y, 'J' , A' .- 1. ' 'D 0' M' - 'ff' 'iv - rf '. , fer A -' . - 1 -,., - fy. ,H -- . ,' A' '-1f4'e A - - I - ,-' -'-' -A . , M :4 - ' QL- .'f--'- .. .. J -. - ', 4 '- ' ,Z ' - x- . , ' - . ' ' K ' 1 Nr' '- - 'I . , , ,,.f -. -7. , U , - - - ,t ..,A 5 ., ,Y L .3 , -.P '- ' , n -, H, T ' ' 'A' 1. 1- Q . A . A A- , V Q 5 , .' A A f Y L- ' 4 up v. .1 - - -s.. , FRESHMAN CLASS I no 5.5 - M T D5 1--w-!,N I .-.. .. PART D ORA iii? .-.- mnnnmi-'li',Mm glfreslpnan Zgisturg nf the 0112155 nf 1925 ,:53j'K'9wgf DEEDS rather than in words the Class of 1926 wishes to EMS demonstrate that they are worthy to be called true sons of wif Washington 8a Jefferson A review of the record to date proves that the aim is in the proper direction and this is all 'P P A il X. -16' ' y 'L rfvogd ' Q N ' that can be expected of first year men. The customary fight between the Sophs and the Frosh on the first night of the college year ended in a victory for the Freshmen, al- though many side encounters later in the evening did not turn out in such a satisfactory manner. On the whole, however, it was a triumph for the first year men and they earned the laurel they received. The one outstanding event of the college year, from the standpoint of the frosh, was the Freshman banquet, and it must be admitted that they surely deserve credit for the manner in which they fooled last year's Freshmen. Only two Sophomores appeared at the banquet and they happened to be special guests who had received a forcible invitation earlier in the evening. The banquet was held in the William Henry Hotel and the celebration was over before the Sophs got wind of the affair. It was a sheepish bunch of Sophs that appeared on the campus the following morning. The class motto is: In deeds rather than in words. Watch them go. Harry H. Jacobs. rf-Lf' lf, m,,'. ,jr.,u1:,f.: M-:,l7V.L:'.d rv '. 'la' Juo,v'.'w-,y-g.4.:1, 4-Q a.','.'v'-'.4,:?1r1 'f,Q':lQ! Lui-5:3525 X gc . . - One Hundred Q Q Hifi Milfmll M I. U . 'Fl A U -T Wdwfyjmuuf, ,.!,.,,.,.. .X... . . .-.. 1 3 V f ' ww f'-f--.-- l . ..,,., ,,,. ,.,.. l nnu1llll1ITSf Ml Ullman nf 1925 lee allen alberl ................... william alexander adair ..... joseph mccullough altemus .............. george washington armentrout ...... william lorne armstrong ............... david bowser ashbury .............. clair cochran bailey .................... william holmes baldridge, jr. duane e, banks ,,,.,...................... . robert bruce beatty ................... clarence arthur behringer ...... conrad mahan beighley ........ charles howard bell ...,,,.,... cornelius b. berlin ................. william stewart berrehsen ...... john henry bessling ........... john Mathew biggs .......... george newcomer bisell ....... raymond e. blair ....................... stanley burton bonner ............... cortlandt kingswell bradbury arthur fremont brandy ............. charles beal brenneman ......... robert bruce campbell ............ william simpson campbell ........ james alexander cooper william murray cooper james bruce craig ............. j. herbert creigh ........... harry nathanial croft john Willard cushing, jr. ...... . donald varion daly ............ harold salisbury davis ...... john herschel davis ...... john harford day .,......,. paul augustus dulong ...... glenn Wilbur devinney william b. dickson .......... One Hundred and One .............arno1d ,........johnstown .........johnstown .........coatesville .......washington .........philadelphia ..........clarendon ..................latrobe .........beaver falls ...............oil city ...Mwashington ................prospect .......west alexander ..............greensburg ....wheeling, W. va, ...-.-.'.'.marlinton, W. Va. .....................1ngram .....................latrobe ........elmira, n. y. ..................ed1nboro ......wheeling, w. va. .............Wasl'1ington ..............wildwood ............johnstown ........jasonville, ind. .......youngstown, 0, .............wash1ng'ton clarksburg, w. va. .............wash1ngton ...............pittsburgh ..sistersville, w. va. ..........youngstown, o. ..............pittsburgh .......washington ....,...washington ........columbus, 0. ----....................derry ...Wedgewood park .0 :Q imnl ur mn U . 'lil . U UTQ fMMgf,y,j.wm,,,, ,.,,. , ..,,,, ,. . .,.., rs f.1,.1' H.. ...,. , .... .,.......... . . ....... .-fnnnxixiwllllll m. addison dimling ...... otto anderson engh ..... william silas feeley ....... joseph lester festa ....... richard r. frampton ............ ........pittsburgh ......,.....johnstown ...............hannastown new haven, conn. ..................latrobe raymond fox ............................... .................... s outh fork howard Wharton friedricks . lawrence edward geraghty .. john raymond gjibboney ..... robert shotwell goe ............. james louis guichard ........... james wiley hartman, jr. .... . harold krieg hastings ..... edward mckean hawes ...... julian green hearne, jr. charles w. heim .................... james tarney hemphill ...... ormond lee henry ........ harold emerson hertz ........ john eldridge hills .................. arthur leslie hodson .............. norman macpherson hunter .........wheeling, w. va. ............evans city ...mgreensburg ...........grindstone .......trenton, mich. .................latrobe ................aspinwall ............,...harrisburg .........wheeling, w. va. ..........williamsport .........washington .........,...aspinwall ..............sewickley ..wheeling, w. va. ..cameron, w. va. .....................dover robert dow huxley ..................... ......... y oungstown, o. harry hopton jacobs ............... ......... y oungstown, o. william arnold johnson ...... ................... l udlow guy lisle johnston .................. .......... t oronto, o. john duane johnston ................... ......... w ashington thomas mcnaughton johnston William kemp johnston ....... william wayne johnston .... melvin edward jones ....... sumner richard jones ...... william d. kaufmann ...... richard douglas keck ........ william thursby kessler ...... walter curtis kidney ......... george walter kiehl ....... george ludwig king, jr. .... . ........allison park ............bellevue .........washington ...mmckeesport ................elyria, o. ...youngstown, o. ............greenville .......mckees rock ........,....mckeesport .......east mckeesport ..................bellevue One Hundred! and Two B JD Allli Al If mil lb . jj . V U -Y ffyywflihwyf I Wlwl, J .,!..v U 1 h A, . -1-it fikjiflnl-55-V 1 W- W -V .. 1 1 H-.. -nulNIlT' 'W l harold edwin kingston ...... thomas henry kinloch ....... frank leslie knox, jr. malcolm merle lang ...... joseph charles lee ....... john Whittier leech ........ john greenwood lehew sidney everett lewis ....... emil roth liebschner ......... william mcclelland litle ...... harry m. long ........................ ...... donald fraser lyle ......................... charles bingham mcallister, jr. .... . auren Wellington mcconkey ......... richard appleton mcconnel ...... charles lawrence mccormick ..... joseph campbell mccracken ...... eugene moody mckelvey ...... . robert gunn marshall peter paul marvin ......... harold leroy masters .... charles henry mathews robert mathieson ........... lester leroy miller ........... louis mccune miller ............... thomas burkellaw' miller ...... wilson connell miller .......... william wray miller .......... robert Wallace moorhead ..... raymer langford mowry .... ralph good murdochl ....... robert carroll murray ........ john dust musser .,......... Newell L. Neif ...................... herbert francis olmstead ..... gustav Vernon olson ...... frantz torbert parke .... wilbur george parks ..... One Hundred and Three .dunstable, mass. ...............uparnassus ......,..claysville .......johnstown ..........latrobe .......ebensburg .................crafton .,......,..........warren, o. ........east liverpool, 0. ..............washington lebanon .......west middlesex ........Washington ..............canton, o. ..................beaver .........east mckeesport .................juniata ...................derry ...........washington .................venetia .east mckeesport .....................ligonier ................munhall ........washington ........fayette city ........washing'ton ........washington ...............avella ........aledo, Ill. ..................derry ........youngstown, o. ..................indiano ...........shadyside, o. ....,....wheeling, w. va. ..................ludlow ........monessen ........rockwood an in .Q .-..-.mmuiginm if wm.,.,, ..,. . . N.N.. PANB GRA -mimnnim-SflhlMQ . j. donald patton ............. ......... c oraopolis raymond taylor payne ..... ...mwashington c. frank peters, jr. .... ....... m ckeesport fred shope piper ............ ......... d ry run davis arnold phillips ....... ........ p ittsburgh homer clifford porter ....... .......... W ashington william storer rahauser .... ........ c hambersburg cadwaladr david reese ..... frederick marion remley curtis alfred rhodes ......... john denney ritchey .... robert Walker robb ..... stanley bell ross ........ l. frank rugh .................. william howard ryall ....... stanley greinert schade frederick p. schuette .... thomas brainard scollon jack Wesley seeley ........ richard snyder silvis ...... denny james smithe .... richard galbraith smithe ..... thomas frasier smith ............ william hurst sendegar ......... thomas turnbull spence, alan james stark ................ . lyle porter st. clair ......... robert eugene Stephens james fulton sWain ......... george harold taylor ...... harry louis tennyson .... William leroy thomas ....... William s. thomas, jr. george bowman varner .... Wendell hall vodrey ........ eldon burns voneman ..,,. franklin luther vozel ..... ...,.,,,johnstoWn .......port rnatilda ........,.....Warren ........pittsburgh .................crafton ...........scenery hill .........new alexandria .............saltsburg .........blaWnox ........pittsburgh barnesboro detroit, mich. ......,...greensburg ..............carrick -...................Warren ......,Wheeling, W. va. .......r0anoke, va. ..........ITlO1'16SS61'l ........union city ...........1nd1ana ................monessen ............mwilkinsburg kalamazoo, mich. ............'..........slovan .......akron, o. ...........pittsburgh .............conemaugh .......east liverpool, 0. .................salem, o. .......'..j...j'eannette arthur howard Wagner ...... ........ s hields One Hundred cmd Four 55 in in if Ania' I-N if UIQ or IPANDORA o.......Wl.llll24 john henry Ward .........,..... william bell Wardrop, jr. vincent e. Weaver .............. john William Welsh ............... charles horatio Wheeler, iii .... robert rudolf Whitmer ........ preston adams Williams .... george lewis Winder ...... lloyd Walked Woodward .... clarence leland zook ....... ....,...bridg'eville barnesboro east liverpool, o. leechburg Wheeling, W. va, ..........,........clarion youngstown, o. ...........all1ance, o. .........uniontoWn ...mcrafton 11---Y- One Hundred and Five A J xmih Q X nlm Z lQi1H HlIlhl1ngL-3-'f, N X fy ' im fini Nwq Qz,,f1lJQ,4yulvfz A f1...,..,,f' Q ' K Mr! -' if I f f s.--, I ' ' , 1- 4 Y -+b- - 'gs wg.-. .,-. ' if XXX v - 4-' X, AA 14. ,, s... x xx iff- 1 '-..- ' X, wx J QL' -QNX ff 5-L' c?:5 ,. L.-4 Q i gr2z,? Ying' J 'U ,J ci I o iq' -' of q a- rp vi, X xx I 3 vp '-. , 4 N 9 f X.. Boo IH Jlt lc-:tics F M V I 1 :Z f1,:fl'Q., x 0 Vi K' sf 'Z 5' S W ' 5Qwf l W W7 gs X fi. X- Z! , -Jim fffffff lgw '1 ' fav- ,'i ,Qg,'Qll fn ' MF K jf f , E112 Qdlqleiin Cllnuncil The Athletic Council is composed of one member from each class and representatives from the Faculty and Alumni. Meetings are held each month to discuss all questions arising concerning college athletics. OFFICERS: Chairman PROF. M. A. DICKIE Secretary Treasurer PROF. O. F. H. BERT PROP. E. M. WEYER MEMBERS: D1'. L. F. Kirchner John H. Donnan M. C. McCusker, '24, Howardn Hughes David Remley, '26 David M. Skilling, '23. W. H. Davis C. M. Ritchie, '25 One Hundred and Ten uhm 'avi' ,. 3, 1' hx. ss 15 In in Q E. lilllig m I A' it T E it PAN D ORA 'wwfff uueul1Im5!1lll2llllk 24- o efliefn nf the Swann HE past season was a peculiar one in the history of Washington 'and Jefferson College. The undefeated champions of the country the year before the team entered the season with bright prospects for another championship. With practically the same team as the is UUAQIA' previous year hopes were bright for a repetition. ln! fact from. the first game with Bethany up until the Pitt game it looked as though the Presi- dents should eclipse the brilliant record of the year before. The only draw- back during .the early part of the season was the 7 to 7 tie with Carnegie Tech. The real climax of the season came on November 4th at the Polo Grounds, New York, when the Red and Black stopped Lafayette- I4 to I3 in one of the most sensational games ever staged in the east. Outguessed and outplayed dur- ing the first half the Presidents found themselves and completely routed- the Lafayette .tieam during the last two periods and when the final whistle -blew ending the struggle the team from Little Washington was one point to the good. It would not be right to leave this account without saying one word about the nervy trick that gave the Red and Black their winning point. With the score tied at l 3 all Brcnkert went back as though to try for a goal by drop- kicking. The ball was snapped back, the Lafayette team charged in a des- perate attempt to block the. kick and stave off defeat. just as the kick was about to be blocked by the onrushing linesmen Brenkert took a step to one side and threw a short pass to Kopf who received it over the goal line for the deciding point. This nervy and brilliant play will live forever in the minds of those who witnessed the game and these two names will go down in the history of the college as two great sons of their Alma Mater. The Lafayette game was the high point of the season. The next game with Wabash resulted in a victory for Wash-Jeff, but the following Saturday the team went down to defeat before Pitt I9-0. This setback seems to have an uncanny effect upon the team and they lost the two concluding games in spite of the fact that they outplayed and outgained both Detroit and West Vir- ginia. The breaks of the game went against them and the season ended with a I4-0 win for West Virginia. All in all the season was a success but the last three games kept it from being the most successful in the history of the institution for the victory over Lafayette was, without doubt, one of the greatest achievements ever attained by any Washington and Jefferson football team. One Hundred and Thirteen NEALE KELLISON Captain Wayne D. Brenkert Student Managers Thomas Elliott James Paull Left End ..,.,. Left Tackle Left Guard . .... Center ............. Right Guard Right l:.nd .......... Right Tackle ..... Quarter-Back Left Half-back ....,. Right Half-back Full-back ......... THE LINE.-UP Kopf Clements .......Perkins, Haddon Crook Vince Konvolinka, Spillers Widerquist Brenkert West, Futhey Erickson Basista One Hundred and Fourteeen BETHANY GAME-BETHANY FAILS TO MAKE' IT GENEVA GAME W. 8: J., 14 Geneva, 0 m ASHINGTON and jefferson opened the season with a I4-0 victory over ,NW Geneva. Wash-JeH: was never in danger of being defeated for the Covenanters did not make a first down. The game was rather listless. and not up to the type expected of a veteran team. The rea-l thrill of the game was Erickson's run of 35 yards early in the first quarter. Kopf was responsible for the first touchdown on a pass from Snedegar. West scored the other touchdown after the effort of Basista, Fu- they, Harmony, and'West had carried the ball within striking distance of the Geneva goal. Brenkert kicked both goals. WESTMINSTER GAME ' W. 8x J., 34 Westminster, 0 E ESTMINSTER proved easy and was completely outplayed by the Red and Black. Westminster did not make a single Hrst down. QM' W. ot made two touchdowns in the first period, one in the second, none in the third, and two more in the fourth. Drop-kicking was used as a means of obtaining the extra points after touchdown and all efforts were suc- cessful except the last when Bucky Buchanan missed the bar'by inches. BETHANY GAME W. 8: J., 19 Bethany, 7 . 6z defeated Bethany in a hard fought game full of thrills. The Presi- ws., dents completely outplayed the Bisons making I7 first downs to Beth- MM4 any's 3. Wash-Jeff was superior both on offense and defense but it was their defensive play that featured the game. West and Kopf made clashes through tackle and around the ends for substantial gains. Kopf scored the One Hundred and Fifteen WAEASH GAME-FUTHEY HITS THE LINE first touchdown by going around Bethany's end on a triple pass. West scored next after Brenkert, Kopf, and Basista had advanced the hall within striking distance. Brenkert missed both goals. Cranfil, Bethany fullbacky accounted for their touchdown after a punt of Brenkert's had been blocked, Litterdale recovering for Bethany on the Washington and Jefferson I2 yard line. Randolph went around the W. 6: end for first down and on the next play Cranfil crashed over for touchdown. Shoemake kicked goal. A spec- tacular dash by West through an -open field gave W. 8: her final score in the third quarter. West kicked goal. CARNEGIE TECH GAME W. 8: J., 7 Carnegie Tech, 7 HE. most exciting and nerve racking game played on College Field afll HI ' ' X season was the 7 7 tie with Carnegie Teach It was the hardest battle a A ' Wash-Jeff team had fought since the fall of i920 when the Panthers forced her to accept a 7-0 defeat at Forbes Field. Not even the game with the Golden Bears at Pasadena was as hard fought as this game. Carnegie Tech had undisputed advantage during the first three quarters of the game and the fourth quarter opened with the ball in W 6: fs possession on her own I2 yard line and the score 7-0 Tech. The Presidents, desperate, opened up the greatest aerial attack ever seen on College Field. Futhey passed to Kopf for I8 yards. Reese, who was substituted for Basista, threw a pass to Kopf for twelve more. Reese then passed to Spillers. The ball bounced out of his arms but before it could touch the ground it was scooped up by West who sprinted ahead of the frantic Tech tacklers for touchdown. The crowd went: wild at this point and surged upon the field. When the field was finally cleared by the state police West stepped back of the line of scrimmage and dropped kicked a goal for the tying point. It was this break that kept Wash- ington and jefferson from suffering her first defeat in two years. ' One Hunolred and Sixteen P GENEVA GAME-BRENKERT ADDS ANOTHER WEST VIRGINIA WESLEYAN GAME W. 8: J., 14 W. Va. Wes., 0 N spite of the fact that Wash-jeff gained ground at will they were unable to score more than two touchdowns against Bob Higgins eleven. Har- V0' mony, substituting for West at half back, proved to be the star of the day. His off-tackle dashes and speedy end runs reminded one of the in- comparable Erickson. He was responsible for the longest run of the day when he ran 56 yards after catching the kickoff at the beginning of the second half. The two ends, Spillers and Kopf, accounted for the two touchdowns and Brenkert kicked both the goals. W. 6: used the forward pass to great advantage in th-is game and both the touchdowns were the result of this style of play. LAFAYETTE GAME W. 8: J.,s14 Lafayette, 13 E FIGHTING finish that will go down in football history enabled W. 6: V , to defeat .Lafayette in the last few minutes of play. With defeat star- R mg them ln the face and the shadows of the stands darkening the play- ing field, the Presidents tore up the Lafayette line and pushed over a touch- down that made the score I3 all. Then, by stra-tegy seldom used in such an emergency, W. 81: got the extra and all-important point, by feinting a try for field goal and hurling a successful pass over the goal line. Lafayette scored just as the first quarter ended due to a fumble by Erick- son and a steady march down the field by Lafayette. Brunner missed the goal. A penalty of fifteen yards for holding put W 8: J on the defensive in the second and gave Lafayette the ball on the Wash-Jeff 40 yard line. Here again Lafayette started a successful march for touchdown and Brunner's at- tempt at goal was successful. One Hundred and Seventeen LA FA YETTE GAME-THE LINE-UP A new W 6: j team came on the field at the beginning of the second half and fighting in a manner that could not be denied they pressed nearer and nearer to the Lafayette line and finally Erickson skirted the end for touchdown and West kicked the goal. A partially blocked kicked paved the way for W 6: fs second score in the fourth period. The ball went out of bounds on Lafayette's 44 yard line and Wash-Jeff recovered. On the old Statue of Liberty play Erickson took the ball from Brenkert's extended arm and raced 34 yards to the La- fayette I0 yard line. Brenkert gained two yards through the line but on the next play Kopf lost 4. Then Brenkert threw a forward pass to Spillers and he wiggled over the line for touchdown. ' WABASH GAME W 8: J, 32 Wabash, 6 HE. final home game of the season saw the Presidents run rough- X shod over Wabash College by the score of 32 to 6. The W 6: J team was superior to that of WalJa::h in every department and at no time was the Red and Black in danger. The Indianians fought desperately, although outplayed at every quarter. ln the last period Wabash recovered a fumble and ran 60 yards for touch- down. The game as a whole was flashy with Erickson, Futhey, Reese, and Aiken furnishing brilliant runs. PITT CAME W 8: J, 0 Pitt, 19 HE greatest football s 'tback in years came on November l8th when the Pitt Panthers humbled the Presidents I9 to 0. It seemed as though a cyclone was thrown into the W 8: J ranks and the Pitt attack was too powerful and the defense too perfect to be denied. One Hundred and Eighteen D0 an -,, lb . 4 55 U H ,- I lll ' M I M -T iZyMWUM,,,u2Mm tllxyybxvy sfff D 7hXZ7MNf77cfwf1u f.v.' -innlxlxllwkwllilllhl Th R d and Black never gave up but fought desperately until the final whistle puteaneend to the battle. Even with the score l3 to 0 in faivor of Pitt at the b d th L half the Wash-Jeff supporters did not give up for they remem ere e a- fa ette game and how the Presidents came back during the second half. But Y today it was different and the team could not seem to get going. Only once, in the fourth quarter, did the Red and Black show its true form. ln this pe- riod they launched the most brilliant aerial attack ever seen at Forbes Field. Eight forward passes were attempted and seven of them were completed, the last one being grounded over the goal line. Pitt scored in the first, second, and third quarters. DETROIT GAME W 8: J, 19 Detroit, 20 EJ ADLY crippled as a result of the Pitt game W St J fought a losing fight ,Nu against Detroit. No team ever deserved to win a game more than did MJ the Presidents on this day but the gods of chance seemed to be against them. Four breaks gave Detroit two touchdowns and placed the ball in a position where two field goals could be kicked. At the very beginning things looked very bright for the Red and Black. A punt of l'logan's was blocked and Spillers fell on the ball over the goal line. The ball rolled into the crowd and the ground rules gave W 6: J a safety and the resultant two points. Detroit was outgained by their opponents but the fortunes of battle were with the home team and they emerged the victors. WEST VIRGINIA GAME ' W 8: J, 0 West Virginia, 14 E ASH-JEFF seemed unable to recover from the effects of her two pre- ,Nw vious defeats and went down to defeat before West Virginia l4-0. Let M 'A' us say right here that we do not present any alibi for this defeat for West Virginia had one of the greatest elevens in its history and deserved the victory. The Presidents fought in their characteristic manner but the opposition was too strong and they were forced to accept defeat. Special attention should be given to the work of the West Virginia back- Held and especially to Nardacci. It was this man who was directly responsi- ble for the first touchdown and indirectly for the second. I-le was one of the truly great backs of the season. One Hundred and Nineteen F 1 1 U5 . in Sl fl in l unit g U -Y ,.,,.,, ,,.. . D ivrm lilAT? V',i'Ni' Elilrnspeni ' ' HE outlook for Washington and Jefferson as viewed in the com- 571 ing football season of 1923 is particularly bright. The develop- ment of the team has been entrusted to John W. Heisman, for 15, many years coach of the Colden Tornado, and more recently, A V 9' coach of the University of Pennsylvania football teams. He is a man of the highest moral character, and a nationally recognized authority on football. During his career he has produced many teams of the highest cal- ibre and it is expected that his ability as a coach, combined with the splendid material he will have at W 8: J next year, will put the Red and Black among the leading teams of the East. Manager Murphy has also secured the services of David C. Morrow as line coach. Morrow's ability is well known at Washington and Jefferson and there is a good bit of genuine satisfaction over the announcement that he is once more connected with the Red and Black. Chester L. Widerquist, of Moline, Ill., is captain elect. Widdy was mentioned by Walter Camp and his value to the W 6: ,I team during the past two years has been immeasurable. We predict great things for Widdy and his team next year. n rf wg , DL ' :Lf it SCHEDULE FOR I 923 September 29 ...................................... Bethany at Washington October 5 ..... ....... W ashington and Lee at Washington October l 3 ..... .......... B rown University at Washington October 20 ..... ............ C arnegie Tech at Washington October 27 ,.,,.,,, ,,,,,,, . University of Detroit at Detroit November 3 .... ................. L afayette at New York City November I0 .... ..................... W aynesburg at Washington November I7 .... ....... U niversity of Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh November 29 .... ................. W est Virginia at Morgantown 1 . J One Hundred and Twenty-two 1 1 1 'A 9-- ' CAPtI'AlN c:.f:cn. cofwv Captain Coach Student Manager Cecil Conn John Byerly W. H. Saunders Forwards Centers Guards Fredericks Lyle K. Conn Eaton Thomas C. Conn Kopf Saunders Rinehart Lowry I One Hundred and Twenty-four VARSITY SQUAD 4 n n m 1 ni' ur mn Pb -' M U I lm' 'M U T w,xv I .A,. ,..... . - fifflf D nmiilvll-T- 'N'.IIlil ' Qiiefiiefn nf tips Seasnn, 1922-1923 51? . 6: though losing the Tri-State non-league title by a narrow mar- gin, enjoyed a successful basketball season, winning I0 out of I6 3: 154, fl games and finishing well up among the leaders. Coach Byerly had a nucleus composed of Captain Cecil Conn, ' ' ' Kemp Conn, Saunders, Lyle, Kopf, Eaton, and Rinehart, about which to form his i923 team. Of the new men who competed for positions on the squad, Fredericks, Thomas, and Lowry were successful. The close of the season marks the passing of Kemp Conn, regarded by many as the great- est running guard ever developed in the history of Washington and Jefferson College. I-lis play throughout his entire four years has been nothing less than brilliant. With Kemp goes Cecil Conn and Hurford Saunders and while they were not as brilliant as Kemp, they won for themselves creditable places in the athletic annals of the college. Two heart-breaking defeats by West Virginia and Pitt, both at home, practically eliminated the Presidents from the Hag race. The score in the West Virginia game was 33-3I. While that of the Panther struggle was 29-27. ln the Pitt contest the Presidents pulled from behind and tied the sciore in the last few minutes of play only to lose out in the extra period of P ay- No alibis are intended, but if the Presidents had not been handicapped by the loss of Eaton, it is probable that the non-league standing would have been much different. SCORING RECORD FOR THE SEASON 36 .................................... Westminster, 26 40 ........ .......... B ethany, 30 27 ........ ........... W ash-Lee, I5 22 ........ ......... G rove City, 20 37 ........ ............... B ethany, 24 ,3I ........ ........ W est Virginia, 33 IZ7 ........ .................. P itt, 29 WASH-JI-:FF-5 37 ........ .......,...... L ehigh, 27 I 7 ........ ............. I.. afayette, 22 24 ........ ...................... N avy, 46 23 ..... ........ West Virginia, 22 34 ........ ........ C arnegie Tech, 23 40 ........ ............... Cn eneva, 29 23 ........ ....... W estminster, I7 I9 ................. .................. G rove City, 26 474 Total Opponents, 442 Won I0 Lost 6 Percentage 625 One Hundred and Twenty-six w XS 4 S 4 5 11111111 CW A. 4 Z 7 2 9 4 .f A. f , 1 f Z M Q 0 f V b ww . W N 1 l CAPTAIN J K. CONN I M ' 'Init ' N ' M ,a .Q ' I qv-u U C ,t H m H Q19 . IPANDGPA iuln1m+i'iH:1Xli 24 Y Qfieixiefn uf the 1922 Trunk 9525151111 fyfirfqiif LTHOUGH the track season was not particularly brilliant, it was strengthened by the work of everal of the team. Too much 4- credit can not be given to Charles West our brilliant middle dis- lbb f7 ' tance and weight man, who last season moulded himself into one ' of the best track performers m the history of the school West succeeded in placing third in the Pentathalon at Pennsylvania, a feat never before bestowed on any athlete of Washington and Jefferson College. Ir might further be said that West has a very good chance of annexing the event at the relays this spring. The performance of A. B. Alderette was also very credible. Alderette succeeded in beating some of the fastest men in the Tri- State events last year, and has improved considerably since that time. The Captaincy of the team for the coming season has been bestowed upon him. To date Alderette has broken five college records, several of them by no small margin. Of last year's squad Gerge Taylor, a distance man, Kemp Conn, a hurdler and quarter-miler, Reuter, a distance man, Futhey, Wilgohs, Harmony, Cecil Conn, and several other good men will be available. These men. along with a wealth of material from the Freshman class ought to give to Washington and Jefferson one of its most successful track seasons. .KK One Hundred and Twenty-nine O. I W K A X W9 Xxxxwxx A C W 5 6 2Z X H.c, ,,.-in Qu x X x ' In . X X EIHENNUS Tennis Captain W. H. Alexander Coach Manager M. A. Dickie l... G. Curry 'meant W. H. Alexander Melvin Knoepp Clarke Fulton R. Oi Naser One Hundred and Thirty-two bg in fn - lil I I 2-3 U , illlimifflmllfli V A E AT l-Q ,V , ,, , 1- x-'g 'ft ORA ,. .-uunlwumTf 'i'MQX c Ullqe A1922 Uennis Seas-nn tif' HE tennis season was very disastrous from more than one view- point. Coach Dickie was greatly handicapped by the inclemency gfiw GA of the weather and by the fact that he had to build a new team fl 'O f lif? as Captain Alexander and Knoepp were the only two left frorri 2055?- afw f rn 333 ci mo K' OH: :rw 09,53-Fr 0 IJ' 'nf-rfi,O 95:1- 'NES gigg- 94'3:,'W .Q ....:gD : 5 xv 025:9- 9-SET '-' on JS'-f::-'I -.:r'- veg, OEZW Q.mo4 -1'4..,.,g-p 152- 4 gun:- 1 . mg 9.2'.?.. 'fo not-f ms' 'omg .-+03 S-26 FP O V9 ...Eg gm r-1.l'4' mp:- 5,0 D.-5-:h 00,1 Frnw f? 223 S 'E'. n ESF wail, SES S The Schedule Lehigh .............. ,,,,,, ' Carnegie Tech ..... ,,,,,, . 6: . ..... . 8: . ..... . 6: . ..... .... P ltt .............. iii O 3 Q I 2 3 S Q.. 'I Q Q.. Q 3 9.4 H 3 3. 6. L? eo- B' -a 46 Q 2' -I ':r E 6: , .,,., .... P ltt .... . ......... O 6 2 4 I 5 6: 2 Allegheny ..... ,,,,,, 4 6 0 2 4 l 5 2 4 Eg , ,,,,, .... A llegheny ........ ,,,,, , 'Sp , ,,,,, ........ C arnegie Tech ..... ,,,,, 1 Lost ................ 7 Won ..... .... l ff V 4 1 .X is Q is is uni .Mlurmn 'E' F! iyydfiffllf 1 w.-.. - sl f i'BiVV1'7:f-if' fi' H, , ,,,,.,,i HUT ll 2 nminzzte fur the gffilzxll nf Manager R. M. Murphy-because as manager of the football team, he has led W. 6: through the most successful epoch in the history of the College: because of his love for, and loyalty to, the College: because of 'his inspiring talks in pep meetings: because of his popularity among the students: but chiefly because he has accom- plished this under a great physical handicap. Chester L. Widerquist-because he was a member of the football team for the past two years: because he was mentioned by Walter Camp: because of a famous chapel talk, entitled me and E.rick : because he had a long and varied career in Moline High School: because W. 6: likes him, and he likes W. 6: J.: and finally because he was unanimously elected captain of the I923 eleven. K. Conn-because his basketball record of the past four years brands him as one of the most brilliant players in the history of the College: because he is the brother of Cecil Conn: because he is also an extraordinary track per- former: but also because his prow- ess as an athlete has not over- shadowed his brilliancy as a stu- dent. J. Wayne Dewey Brenkert-because he was a member of the team for four years. and was captain of the I922 eleven: because he was twice mentioned by Walter Camp: be- cause he is one of the best known and most popular men on the campus: but chiefly because he toss-ed the famous forward pass for the winning point in the La- fayette game. glfanw i U-I. I ,my - 1 M W . . . L he Ona Hundred and T.hwty four BOOL IU Fraternities Ihrcnuur. in in M U lil M' i E I-is - - - I- 'Tire D Ivllllllf 'vifxwii 'T-5 -f'f'if1N4 .,AL,', - ' -' Q 232151 Theta ggi Established in l842 Founded at Miami University in 1839 Number of Chapters .......................... . . . 83 Number of Members .... 28,150 One Hundred and Thirty-eight rf: One H1171 655111111151 Cftlgaphsr FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Hundred and Carrol W. Lewis James Paul, jr. Twenty-Three Edwin Burchfield William MCC. Richardson F. Darrell Luellen 1 ' Nineteen Hundred and lra A. Stephenson J. Kipp Hawes Philip D. Paul Twenty-Four J. Wayne lVlcVicar M. Saxman Rise Philip T. johnson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Frank T. Lobmiller Clarence W. Lyle Richard T. Salmon John E.. Brown, George Baird jr. Ninteen Hundred and Howard W. Frieclericks john E. Hills William H. Baldriclge, jr. Frederick R. Remley Myron T. Rankin Edward A. Friedrichs Herbert F. Olmstead John T. Buckingham Carlton B. Lehman Twenty-Six C. Howard Bell -I. Wiley Hartman, Jr. Guy L. Johnston, jr. Richard A. lVlcConnel Richard R. Frampton dred and Thirty-niinc lb n :Q M H , Illiim' 'mmn H JH2' 1 wwrx ,- , - ,fi 74' . x',. x.,. ,.,,. ,,.,,, . . . .. ,,... - vyli'-'N'2'4NM Qphi gamma Evita Established in I 848 Founded at Washington and Jefferson in 1848 Number of Chapters .......................................... 65 Number of Members . .... l9,500 One Hundred and Forty Qllplqa Qllqupier FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three George R. Kennedy Ralph A. Cooper Norman L. Worcester Nathan W. Croasmun Richard A. Holman Harry L. Graham, jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Paul Edward Culley Linford G. Curry john C. Durfey Russell H. McCain Wm. Kenneth Perkins Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five John G. Miller Charles W. Ketterer John F. Bonnewitz Edward M. Weyer, jr. Robert B. Rush George Chase Clements Wendell H. Voclrey Ninteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Robert Carroll Murray James Cooper William Thomas Edward Hawes One Hundred and Forty-mze julian G. Hearne, Jr. James T. Hemphill Charles lVlcCormick Lawrence Geraghty D :Q ni fhiurnm , M ll E' W 4 t E ff7w,1, ,u.u .1, . . PANDORAQN f f ,, M ,.,. ,, A z.2 'N',x'nQ.3i Phi IJRHPPH 1526 Established in l852 Founded at Washington and Jefferson College in 1852 Number of Chapters .. Number of Members .. 48 21,137 One Hzmdrecl and Forty-two lgemxiwglfiaxtizr Qtlplqa Gllqzqaier Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three h Waldorf T. Kirk Terry W. Kuhn john Bixler Nathan N. ,Ioquish Boyd C. Patterson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Walter D. Snyder Harold B. Horner Henry H. Hood ' Aldous B. Hadden Louis F. Kirchner ' W. Emory Ferree, Houston N. johnson john B. Lowry Willaer C. Mulholen Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Clark Fulton Ralph Grimm Paul Craig Harry Bowman Hayden Weller Ludwig King Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Bruce Craig Lyle St. Clair Denny Smith William A. Adair W. B. Wardrop Donald Patton Thomas lVlcN. Johnson One Hmzdred and Forty-three ,B 'Q - ni mixrmn -Q I I lil IQ im U is U9 yfwwfyihxlwmw. ..,, ,,.. , , . .. . x,,f 1-F D 7?'i?fi'7f5Nv7!4'-4vf'.fH' ,ff-,., u,.. ,,.,,....,.,.,,,... ,,...,.. . x - unml1'T4 'UMi' . flglgi 'iappzx Signm I Established in l854 Founded at University of Pennsylvania in 1850 Number of Chapters ............................................ 3 I Number of Members .. .... 7,166 One Hzmdred and Forty-four gliielizr flllqapier FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three J. Stephen Hemphill James Edgar Burke james B. F. Rinehart Kemp Conn William I-lurford Saunders Cecil R. Conn Eugene F. Wickerham Kenneth R. Davies George R. Warrick Harold A. Erickson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Frank S. Hainer Ernest Lee Jones Robert F. Hogsett Ard N. Curry Frank S. Jones Robert M. Gibson Chester C. Wiederquist Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Harry D. Eaton Charles M. Ritchie Albert N. Zeller Orville M. Siegfried Frank N, Norris Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Donald V. Daly Harry H. Jacobs Robert D. Huxley John W. Leech Milner A. Dimling Robert Mathieson C. Frank Peters, jr. One Hmzdred and Forty-fi've .9 in Sl U V Illlim?hlmll'lli 1 H 'TQ .,..,!:,.., , .,.X.. . . .. .- .XN. : GRA iw' u, ,',,, .,,. . ,, ..,.,,,,,,..,.,. ,.,4,.,... . mmi-'IM' .Wg 2321121 'Glam 6321121 Established in I859 Founded at Bethany College in 1859 Number of Chapters ........................................ 70 Number of Members .. .... l8,000 One Hunclrcd and Forty-sim One Hwzdv' Ggnnuuzr Qlhapier FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three L. Nl. Alexander William D. Hughes R. H. Shick, Jr. C. W. Konvolinka R. G. Fiscus C. M. Muir Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four D. W. Warren M. K. Carmichael R. T. Jennings Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five E.. W. lVIcKissock R. G. Baker D. A. Phillips Reed Dunn C. A. lngals C. L. Tarr W. A. Allen C. C. Hoffman Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six J. C. McCracken D- Ritchey R. D. Keck F- Smith J. M. Altemus W- Welsh C. K. Bradbury ed and Forty-seven R. W. Moorhead in in U V I H ..... ,:a, Q , PAN D 'ORA 5fi7!1 x.zw, . ,,,,,,,W:mMWQ 'Z 4, Elplqi QBBIRI Theta Established in l875 ' Founded at Miami University in 1848 Number of Chapters ..............................,........... 90 Number of Members .. ..... 26,000 One Hundred and Forty-eight 1He11115gIf1a11ia fganuna Cftlqzxpier 4 FR-ATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Alfred L. Eckler George A. Weinman David M. Skilling, Jr. V Matt Shields Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Charles H. Potter, Jr. Merton B. Bradshaw Donn Ramon Austin Donald F. Morris Harwood R. Fogel George F. McCrea Rufus D. Short Melvin H. Knoepp, Jr. Edwin W. MacBeth Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five William S. Feely S. Donald Rush Elmer E.. Croushore Preston N. Wrenshall James R. Shields Holland DeVaugh Weir John R. Arthur Louis C. Bailey, Jr. William F. Penn, Jr. Richard G. Smith John C. Inglis E Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Harold G, Taylgr William T. Kessler George B. Varner Duane E- Banks Donald F. Lyle Paul A- Del-Ons Thomas E. Davis A One Hmzclred and Forty-vziue n .fn Q3 U ...E BEM I I ef: , lv' W U . i ,- , E '19 Zffwmmwe. n . ,. ,, , IPANDORA fif1??w.'f.mf-W .,,,,,,, ..,,,,,4,,,, . ,,,4 ,,,,, . ....,,.,f.W, Q4 Zifizqxpa Sigma Established in l898 A Founded at the University of Virginia in 1869 Number of Chapters .......................................... 9 3 Number of Members . ..... 20, I 4l One Hundred and Fifty Esta Belts Qllqapter FRATRES IN coLLEc.1o Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Wayne D. Brenl-cert Daniel M. Evans Thomas M. Elliott Robert S. Lucas Harry E.. Cooke Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Charles L. Crawford Alfred Crook Joseph R. Buchanan Howard C. Toepfer Samuel H. Robinson Harold D. jones Samuel C. lVlcClay J. Lewis Hammitt Wilber W. Craig Charles E.. Thompson Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five Thomas B. Townsend Pressley L. Stevenson Charles L. Spillers Robert B. Reed Thomas W. Corbett Merle Ekas Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six Ormond I... Henry Curtis A. Rhodes Arthur H. Wagner Robert R. Whitmer William M. Litle One Hundred and Fifty-one Auren W. lVlcConkey Arthur L. Hodson Charles H. Wheeler, Ill Harold K. Hastings John M. Biggs BQ t - G5 H V lm lm h ni ' rr mn me 1,-- 1,-,,. , .. . - V-15.13 WW .- - ,1,-,1,. ., ....,, , . .,..,,,. .. 4mnm1T' 'ffyWL' Qlplqa alan flBnwga Established in l90l Founded -at Viiginia Military Institute in 1865 Number of Chapters .......................................... 80 Number of Members .. ..... I 7,075 One Hundred and Fifty-two . Qtlplqu Jjli Glhzqsier . FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three Archibald M. Matthews James W. Aiken John F. Taylor August F. Valentour, Jr Leon H. Hetherington joseph A. Denslow ' Andrew A. Robb, Jr. Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four Ray C. McLaughlin George T. Cummins I Daniel H. Gibson john F. Ross Paul C. Reuter K. Dodd Montgomery Robert G. Taylor Bayard Galbraith john A. Malcolm Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five joseph Basista James Dyer Aaron K. Lyle james Futhey Howard B. Gould Harry M. Br Nineteen Hundred an Walter C. Long John Day Ralph Murdoch Frederick Schuette A William C. Campbell Herbert Kopf Weldon W. Wilgohs Humphrey A. Harmony Glenn Hawkins Sydney D. Lewis own cl Twenty-Six Lewis Miller Wayne Johnson Duane Johnson William Cooper Luther Vozel Harry T. Tennyson One Hundred mid Ffifty-tlzree D Ja A ni lfmfl gl 'l Im' 'W i M ..... A...,. ,A., ...ly .., ,4... .... , .,',w:.riw.l l 'fhrnrhha fllhi Qtlpha Established in l9l9 Founded at the University of Boston in 1909 Number of Chapters .......................................... 61 Number of Members . ..... 8,561 One Hundred and Fifty-four 6211111118 Zeta Glhzqaier FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Three james MCG. Boyer Everett G. Winder Roger M. Boyd jack M. Shane S. Lloyd Wolf Paul A. Rishberger John L. Choleva Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Four C. B. S. Bishop W. H. Swogger George S. Allen Paul T. Landis Roger H. Gibson Samuel R. Kalp Merritt C. McCuskey james C. Crowe Alfred E. Prowitt Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Five John E.. Wallis Willmer A. Hoerr Raymond M. Pullam G. Harold Antrim ,Iere R. Perkins Harry V. Shank J. Milton McCuskey Nineteen Hundred and Twenty-Six George M. Bissell Lee A. Aloer Raymond E.. Blair William S. Rahauser Alan Stark Stanley G. Schade Willner johnson One Hundred and Fifty-five Otto Englm Claire C. Bailey Eugene M. McKelvey Raymer L. Mowry William L. Armstron Charles W. Heim George L. Winder 8 ,IIHZIIT-?tIBllB11ilZ Qluunnil Thomas lVl. Elliott fPres.J ...... ......... K appa Sigma David M. Skilling ...................... ........ P hi Delta Theta Waldorf ................. ,,,,.,,,,,,,,, P Kappa Psi J. Stephenson Hemphill ..... ........ P hi Kappa Sigma Robert H. Shick, Jr. ........ ............. D elta Tau Delta ,lack Miller Shane ......... .,....,., L ambda Chi Alpha James Wilson Aileen ...... ........ A lpha Tau Omega John C. Durfey ....,,,.,,.. ....... P hi Gamma Delta James Pauli, Jr. ....... .......... B eta Theta Pi HE Pan-Hellenic consists of one representative from each of the nine Nm Greek-letter fraternities on the Campus. lts purpose is to organize and aid the social and athletic sides of inter- fraternity activities. It has given to the fraternity body the lnter-Fraternity Bowling League, the Basketball League, the Cotillions, the Greek Swingout, the Pan-Hellenic Dance and numerous other activities. One Hunclred and Fifty-sim BOOL D Crcjanizations 1 ORGANIZATIONS Us 1 M V n 'Q U -Q llll L Q H AY : - D llll!1l1'TT-'ull Uhr Sntuhent ftssemhlg V President CARL W. KONVOLINKA Vice-President Secretary WILLIAM M. RICHARDSON DWIGHT E. BEECHER H officers for the organlzatlon are elected at the begmnmg of each year and hold office for the year. lt handles all matters of common interest to the student body, and also acts as a medium between the faculty and the body. HE Student Assembly is composed of the entire student body. The L UA ' One Hundred qnd Sixty Ellyn qgresiiwextfs Gluumzil President, S. S. BAKER Howard Charles Toepfer ......................,.,, Kappa Sigma Carroll W. Lewis ....................,,........,,.,.,., Beta Theta Psi Adlous B. Hadden ........ ...,......... P hi Kappa Psi George R. Kennedy ........ ....... P hi Gamma Delta james B. Rinehart .. George H. Antrim.. ...........Phi Kappa Sigma Lambda Chi Alpha Andrew D. Robb, Jr. ........ Alpha Tau Omega Melvin H. Knoepp .... ......... P hi Delta Theta Carl W. Konvolinka Robert M. lVlcNab .. A. B. Alderette ...... Edward E.. Baird .... William E. Noble .. William S. Minor .. ......Delta Tau Delta .........Non-Fraternity . ......... Non-Fraternity . ......... Non-Fraternity . ......... Non-Fraternity .....................Non-Fraternity HE President's Council is composed of one member from each of the X nine fraternities, and five members from the non-fraternity group e primary function of the Council is to act as a medium between the PYCSI dent and the student body. One Hvmdzed and Sixty-one Ullgc G,,Tl1ltIfl'1'PlIEl' cgl1l1Il1Iiffl'l' Chairman GEORGE R. KENNEDY George R. Kennedy Andrew D. Robb, jr Francis D. Luellan .... R. G. Baker ........... C. B. Bishop ........,,. Daniel M. Evans Adlous B. Hadden ...... Melvin H. Knoepp . William H. Saunders George L. Reade ...,. Edward E. Baird ..... MEMBERS Q Secretary ANDREW D. ROBB .....Phi Gamma Delta . .,..... Alpha Tau Omega ...........Beta Theta Pi ..........Delta Tau Delta ...Lambda Chi Alpha ..,........Kappa Sigma ..........Phi Kappa Psi ........Phi Delta Theta ......Phi Kappa Sigma .......Non-Fraternity .......Non-Fraternity A. B. Alderette ...... - ...... Non-Fraternity HE Conference Committee was organized in l9l6. It consists of one member from each of the nine fraternities, and three members from the NUI , L A non-fraternity body. its purpose is to act as a nominating body for all student elections, and it also has jurisdiction over all class elections. Ona Hvnldrccl and S-fatty-two Kmlfllllllliell President Secretary LESTER M. ALEXANDER HARRY E. COOKE MEMBERS August F. Valentour Roger lVl. Boyd Matt Shields Francis D. Luellan Nathan N. ,Iaquish Dwight Beecher William H. Saunders Nathan W. Croasmun john L. Eakin William E. Potter HE Tribunal was organized in November, I922, as the organ of student government. lts purpose is to settle all cases requiring discipline, and to sanction all inter-class combats. At present its powers are very limited, but as President Baker intends to give the student body a greater share in the student government, its duties will become more onerous. Ona Hunflrcfl and Siwty-tlwec' Pan ora Staff fy-I s 4 K 2 . xl I jc s 5 ' ,Y--ll E X. N v Q1 f One Hundred and Sixty-fom L. G. CURRY Editor-in-Chief Frank S. Jones Martin M. Crow Russell A. Klieves Russell H. McCain Mathais S. Rise William S. Minor Wilbur W. Craig Louis F. Kirchner Richard T. Salmon One Hmzdred and Sixty-five 15 J. ROSS BUCHANAN Business Manager zmimra Stuff George S. Allen Arthur Carson Huntley Donn Ramon Austin William E.. Ferree, Jr. Richard T. Jennings John A. Malcolm Guy H. Volpitto ART BOARD Hayden Weller Herbert S. Zischkau E112 Qlleh Huh iglarla am- fu. gum.-1.13 THE STAFF MARTIN M. CROW, '24 HAROLD B. HORNER, '24 Eclitor-in-Chief Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS Alfred E. Prowitt, '24 L. F. Kirchner, '24 J. Gruber Miller, '25 W. Temple, '25 Robert B. Rush, '25 john Logan, '23 A. C. Huntley, '24 Wilbert S. Ray, '23 J. M. Lovett, '25 L. Eakin, '23 George B. Varner, '26 W. Sherman Minor, '24 ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS K. D. Montgomery, '24 W. S. Rahauser, '26 Albert N. Zellar, '25 W. H. Baldriclge, '26 J. Donald Patton, '26 E.. P. Shuette, '26 W. W. Miller, '26 Ona H'1n1clrecl and Sixty-si Qtllgi gfglllbl ACTIVE MEMBERS President A. L. ECKLER Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer ROBERT S. LUCAS WILLIAM NOBLE William L. Hughes john A. Malcolm Leon H. Hetherington john C. Durfey A FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. N. M. Cirier H. Bush Dr. E. Nl. Weyer Don Hawkins Clarence Dieter HI SIGMA, the national biological society, was granted a charter at Aww Washington and jefferson College on May 22, l922. The society's main H 'A object is to create interest in research along all biological lines, thus stim- ulating the student's interest in the science of life. With Dr. Grier acting as the prevailing influence, the society has maintained its enthusiasm and has accomplished much, to the benefit of its members, and those who take ad- vantage of its hospitality. - One Hundred and S'ia:ty-sefzwvl Qllclia 59511121 Qlllgu President Secretary-Treasurer GEORGE F. TYLOR ARTHUR C. HUNTLEY ACTIVE MEMBERS Professor H. A. White George W. Lucas Don P. Hawkins Leslie A. Faust Arthur C. Huntley George F. Taylor Arch M. Matthews HE local chapter of Delta Sigma Rho natonal honorary forensic frater nity, was established at Washington and Jefferson College in I9I6, Its purpose is to encourage and advance public speakmg. Members are elected to the organization for meritorious work in inter-collegiate debates. Ona Hulldrccl and Sivvty-eight H111 man Qiijblllllllbl DWIGHT E. BEECHER F. G. I-IESS President Secretary-Treasurer HE Phi Tau Gamma Honorary Fraternity was organized at Washirigton and Jefferson College in 1920, for the purpose of a reward for excep- Allh . . tional work in the arts and letters departments of the college, and thus to create a greater interest in these departments. The membership is limited to twelve men and includes only those who are majoring in the arts depart- ments and have attained a high standard of scholarship. ACTIVE MEMBERS Dwight E. Beecher George L. Reade Ralph A. Cooper George F. Taylor, Jr. John L. Eakin Martin M. Crow Frederick G. Hess John C. Durfey Alfred L. Eckler john A. Malcolm james Pauli, jr. Russell H. McCain Ona Hundred and Siasty-vzfinc Qtllii Qllii Jilin OFFICERS President Secretary-Treasurer FRED G. HESS BOYD C. PATTERSON MEMBERS ON THE FACULTY Clyde S. Atchison, Ph. D. Ralph W. Thomas, B. S. Norman M. Grier, Ph. D. Paul Ci. Lauffer, B. S. Thomas L. Porter, Ph. D. C. Verne Bowen, B. S. Otto F. H. Bert, A. M. Harry Kerr, B. S. Alexander H. Wright, A. M. H. Bush, B. S. C. Cardin, M. E. ACTIVE MEMBERS Fred G. Hess Harold L. Dorwart Boyd C. Patterson Louis Cancelmi Charles E. Lowrey -IE Phi Chi Mu Honorary Fraternity was established at Washington and jefferson College in l920. It has been an active scientific society since its founding. The purpose of the society is to promote greater interest in mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology and applied sciences. It holds regular monthly meetings. One Himdrccl and 'Seventy Bag Qjllress Glluli OFFICERS Vice-President President ALFRED E. PROWITT, '24 MARTIN M. CROW, i24 Secretary-Treasurer RUSSELL H. M-:CAIN ACTIVE MEMBERS james E. Burl-ce D. H. Rosenberg A. B. Haddon J. R. Buchanan C. E. Thompson A. C. Huntley Wayne D. Brenkert A. F. Valentour Harold B. Horner W. W. Craig C. H. Volpitto H. Hoerle C. R. Conn Charles F. West P. T. Landis C. L. Crawford F. E. Weidenhamer N. S. Minor W. E.. Ferree F. S. Hainer W. M. Richardson J. Louis Hammitt R. S. Lucas Samuel H. Robinson HE Day Press Club was organized at Washington and Jefferson in the spring of l922. The purpose of the organization is to establish a fra- . A . . . . . . . ternal spirit m college among persons who may be pursuing journalistic activities. The club is named after Mr. Minor H. Day, managing editor of the Washington Reporter, and Mr. Lem Day, managing editor of the Wash- ington Observer. Faculty members are Prof. Adelbert White and Mr. Don Pyle Hawkins of the Department of Rhetoric and Public Speaking: Dr. Nor- man McDowell C-rier of the Department of Biology? Dr. George Milton Janes and Prof. Thomas C. Billig of the Department of Economics. One HIl'lIfiI'Cd and SU'UUII.tjj-0116 Skull zmh gilaggcr HONORARY SENIOR CAMPUS F RATERNITY Founded at Washington and jefferson College in November, I922 J. K. Conn J. S. Hemphill W. H. Saunders G. R. Kennedy A. F. Valentour MEMBERS , Jr- J. A. Bixler C. A. Weinman T. M. Elliott James Paul W. T. Kirk One Hundred and Seventy-t'zvo Ezra HONORARY JUNIOR CAMPUS FRATERNITY Founded at Washington and Jefferson College in December, 1922 OFFICERS King Evil-Eye Pusher of the Quill Keeper of the Gold K. D. MONTGOMERY H. B. HORNER R. M. GIBSON MEMBERS . A. B. Haddon D. R. Austin W. D. Snyder C. Durfey H. D. Jones R. Buchanan L. G. Curry One Hundred and Seventy-three gl'liI'l2I1'5 Beta Chapter National Sophomore Honorary Society: Founded at Penn State I9l2 MEMBERS Class of 1923 George R. Warrick George A. Weinman J. Kemp Conn August F. Valentour J. Stephen Hemphill David M. Skilling Class of 1924 Frank S. Hainer Robert M. Gibson Wilber Mulholen George Cummins Class of 1925 Orville M. Siegfried Richard Smith Harry D. Eaton jack Inglis William Feely Frank N. Norris Paul Craig Aaron K. Lyle William Ketterer ' Class of 1926 Robert D. Huxley M. AddisonsDimling Harry H. Jacobs Denny Smith Donald Daly . Edward Hawes Bruce Craig Robert Murray William Wardrop Donald F. Lyle Paul A. DeLong ' One HI!I1lIl'0fl and Smwnty-j'o111 gllrnihs Gamma Chapter National Sophomore Honorary Fraternity: Founded Penn State i907 W. T. Kirk T. M. Elliott W. D. Snyder M. H. Knoepp R. C. McLaughlin Elmer Croushore john G. Miller Charles Ritchie William Temple Thomas Townsend, Jr. Robert Mathieson Harold Hastings Harold Taylor Harry Friedricks One Humlvred and Seventy-five Class of 1923 W. H. Saunders G. R. Kennedy Class of 1924 K. D. Montgomery W. K. Perkins R. D. Short Class of 1925 Joseph Basista Ludwig King john Bonnewitz Chase Clements Herbert Kopf Class of 1926 John Hills Walker Robb William Thomas tl. C. Durfey J. A. Bixler A. B. Haddon H. D. Jones J. R. Buchanan Lee Spillers Humphry Harmony Sydney Lewis Edward Frieclricks Wendell Voclrey Lewis Miller Walter Long Guy Johnston glira11lzIi11 anim jllliuslgixigtnxr literarg jnriutg Vice-Presidents P. V. MARINO I. C. SWAIM A. M. Matthews W. E. 'Noble G. L. Reade C. M. Sanders E. E. Baird A .W. Beale W. W. Bland W. A. Cilleland W. A. Hallam R. F. Hogsett H. M. Jenkins E. C. lrwin OFFICERS President A. C. HUNTLEY Secretary J. M. LOVETT MEMBERS R. A. Klieves G. E. Nord C. L. McCormick W. W. Miller R. S. Silvis J. A. Brown F. C. Dennis P. Elias M. Hartford T. Salmon O. Scott J. H. Williams FUFUUS Treasurer E. E.. BAIRD W. H. Baldriclge R. B. Campbell H. S. Davis A. L. Hodson W. C. Kidney G. W. Kiehl D. F. Lyle H. l... Masters F. S. Piper W. H. Ryall F. P. Shuette l... W. Woodward One Humlrccl and Savmzty six HJJIIJILT-3H1lIfl11I liierzxrg Surieig OFFICERS EDW. M. WEYER, JR. DWIGHT E. BEECHER BOYD C. PATTERSON HOMER N. CLARK HONORARY MEMBERS DR. E. K. MAXFIELD DON PYLE HAWKINS MEMBERS L. M. Alexander P. E. Culley J. L. Eakin D. K. Eppley Ona Hunflrcrl and Svmwlty-smfen G. B. Hawkins R. A. Holman R. H. McCain R. T. Jennings W. A. Hoerr W. S. Minor Donald Patton G. F. Taylor, Jr. M. M. Crow Hlzxuues Q5z1f1iI1 gmlnffai lllehaiixlg glllJ1'1IllI OFFICERS President A. lVl. MATTHEWS Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer R. W. WAYMAN A. C. HUNTLEY HE. Deabating Forum, which was organized during l9l5-l9l6, has the W! entire charge of the forensic activities of the college. Although its pur- K 1 1 . 1 n pose is to foster all forms of public speaking, emphasis has been placed on oratory and inter-collegiate debating. Fifty-seven men have been can- didates for the various teams and much unusual ability has been developed. The debates this year have attracted unusual attention and the ques- tions have all been of universal interest. This year's schedule included the University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania State College, Wooster College, Alle- gheny College, Western Reserve University, and Rutgers College, as well as the usual oratorical contests. One Hmzdfrecl mul S'e'vc11ty-eight Sq11zxrc Zlllh Qluxiipzxss National Masonic Fraternity Established at W. lk in May, i922 OFFICERS President A. CROOK Vice-President W. H. SAUNDERS Secretary Treasurer C. E LOWRY Historian T. C. Bll..l..lC MEMBERS Dr. L. F. Kirchner R. H. Shick Stanley B. Ross John Buckingham D. P. Hawkins Ona fllmrlrml mul Suwilty-11-im' Ralph A. Cooper James W. Aiken Herbert Creigh Ira Haclfield R. M., Murphy f'lHrv-5U'lHehivz1l Surietg OFFICERS President JOHN A. MALCOLM Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer W. H. SWOGGER M. C. McCUSKEY HIS organization has been active since its foundation in l920. Any stu- Nm dent intending to enter the medical profession is eligible to membership. The purpose of the Society is to acquaint, men with the requirements of the medical schools and the conditions to be met there. It also tries to give some idea of the practice of medicine and thus help the student to determine whether or not he is fitted to enter the medical profession. The members are fortunate in their they have access to the meeting of the Washington County Medical Society and here enjoy the privilege of lis- tening to discussions upon points of interest to those contemplating the study of medicine. ' Om- I-Ircizflrecl und' Eighty mire-legal Snrieig OFFICERS President KENNETH R. DAVIES Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer J. STEPHEN HEMPHILL RALPH A. COOPER HE purpose of this society is to give to the undergraduates of Washing- Nm ton and Jefferson an insight into the study and practise of law and a knowledge of the personnell and character of the members of the bench. Membership is limited to undergraduates and professors interested in such training. One Hundred and Eighty-one Qllgvistiuu Qlifc Svriiirc lezfztpxc President JOHN L. EAKIN Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer J. CARTER SWAIN E.. E. BAIRD' HE Christian Life Service League, organized in February, l920, is an organization for the purpose of gathering together the men in college who are preparing for the ministry, or some definite form of missionary service, and for the purpose of promoting Christian Fellowship and activity among its members and among the entire student body. It is to help those men who have decided to make Christian Service their life work prepare them selves for this task, and to assist those in the student body who have not de- cided on their life work to choose some form of Christian service. Om- IT!IlI1dI'l'd and Eighty-two Hjulpxsiufun Glluli Vice-Presiclent GEORGE. REED William Hughes Archie Matthews Wallace Bland Harold Horner Wilbur Mulhollen Guy Volpitto OFFICERS President TERRY KUHN MEMBERS Robert Campbell Otto Engh john Leech Donald Eppley Homer Hoover Harry Shank William Wardrop I Secretary-Treasurer Wll..l..lVlE.R HOERR Charles Tarr William Adair lVlcCullough Altemus Donald Lyle Thomas Scollons George Varner HE Johnstown Club was originally organized to embrace alll W. 51 J students hailing from Johnstown, lnenna., but has lately been' broadened ' A to include all students from Cambria County. The purpose of the organi zation is to secure new students for the college from Cambria County, and in general to promote a social, get-together spirit among its members. One Hundred and E'ighty-three QQ, girl. ar. CA. OFFICERS President JOSEPH C. SWAIN Vice-President Secretary RUSSELL H. McCAlN F. E.. WIEDENHAMMER Treasurer HAROLD DORWART One Hundred ancl Eighty-form' 4 Elie giiglqieeuilg 53t11111Ik1l Hjuuiur Qllruur April Twentieth at C-eorge Washington Hotel COMMITTEE Walter D. Snyder Robert M. Gibson Q Chairmanj Ross Buchanan PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Pres. and Mrs. S. S. Baker Dr. and Mrs. C. McGregor Prof. and Mrs. C. L. Malecot Om' Hmldrczl and Ejgllty-six Qllznlx-Zbivllmlir Primm COMMITTEE George Weinman, Chairman August Valentour john C. Bixler PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Pres. and Mrs. S. S. Baker Prof. and Mrs. Gaston Malecot Prof. and Mrs. M. A. Dickie Dr. and Mrs. C. McGregor Prof. and Mrs. L. W. Rogers HE Pan-Hellenic Dance was held at the new George Washington Hotel on March second. It was the first.college dance to be held in the new hotel, and was one of the most brllllant and successful dances of the year. More than two hundred couples attended. The ball room was very attract- ively decorated with fraternity banners and streamers. Our' Hnurlrwl and Eigllty-sc'1,wn f!I5reeIa yciiuimlg-Q9nt COMMITTEE James E. Burke, Chairman Thomas M. Elliott' Robert C. Fiscus PATRONS AND PATRONESSES Pres. and Mrs. S. S. Baker Mr. ancl Mrs. Warren S. Burchinal HE Greek Swing Out the first formal clance of the college year was held at the Masonic Temple on December fifteenth. The decorations were elaborate, and made the Temple a blaze of color. One Hzmclred and Eighty-eight Qlniilliun COMMITTEE Matt Shields Edwin R. Burchfield Robert H. Shick HE Cotillions are a series of informal inter-fraternity clances, held throughout the college year, at intervals of one month, except when they conflict with the formal dances. Five Cotillions were held the past year and were unusually successful, due chiefly to the careful supervision by the committee in the way of entertainment and music. 0710 Hvmclrvrl and Eiylzty-wine Ulunulduvh g.lll'l11siralQlI11l1s Director HARL H. HOLMES First Tenors D. K. Eppley P. T. Johnston S. R. Kolp C. H. Mathews P. D. Carmichael C. P. Craig Second Tenors H. M. Johnson W. W. Craig W. T. Kirk E.. Reeve J. C. Lee F. Bonnewitz M. T. Rankin W. P. Snyder PERSONNEL OF CLUBS Manager Assistant Manager J. STEPHEN HEMPHILL M. K. CARMICHAEL Quartet D. K. Eppley W. T. Kirk M. K. Carmichael C. W. Konvolinka First Bass R. T. Salmon P. L. Stevenson J. C. Durfey M. K. Carmichael J. S. Hemphill D. E.. Beecher F. S. Jones Second Bass C. W. Konvolinka H. C. Toepfer R. G. Smith S. C. McClav E.. M. McKelvey Wm. White Instruments and Specialties W. T. Kirk R. C. Smith M. H. Knoepp H. M. Johnston R. G. Salmon H. C. Toepfer C. H. Mathews M. T. Rankin J. C. Lee Ona Hunrlrwl and Ninety Egllf-lillI Qlluli HE Buskin Club enjoyed one of the most successful years in its history 'The Champion, a farcical comedy by Thomas Louclen and A. E L Thomas, was presented under the capable direction of Miss Bird Foster Core. The local presentation was given at the Capitol Theater on March twenty-eighth. The play was also given in Butler, Uniontown and Wheeling Cast of Characters Jane Burrough fWilliam's Mother, .,..,,.......... ....... H elen Mccutcheon Mary Burrough fyounger sisterl ........ ........... M ary Phillips john Burroughs ffatherl ...................... ....... J ohn C. Durfey George Burroughs felder brother, ..,,...... ....... H ayclen Weller David Burroughs Cyounger brotherj ....... ....... J ulian Hearne Lady Elizabeth C-alton .....,.................... ......... S arah Hayes Lord Brockington .,,,..,,,.,,,.,,A,,.,,,.,,,,,. Walter D. Snycler William Burroughs ..... Antoinette ............... Simmons .............. Mr. Mooney .............. Mr. Coykendall ............. Marquis of Harroween ,,... Earl of Chuffleigh .......... Baron Halloway ........ Mayor of Knotely ..... Frank Smith ........... One Humlrefl and Niimty-one .........l-lenry Hood ........l'lelen Frazier ........Robert Rush .............l7rank jones ...James Hemphill ,Presley Stevenson ...........Harold Jones .....Wilbert Ray .........Robert Weyman .......Ralph Grimm Afterwor Q l e f Q ,lm X HIS concludes the l922-l923 chapter of the history of Washington and Jefferson College. The co-operation of others has made this Pandora possible. The editor wishes to thank Mrs. Ellen C. Hildebrand for the campus view: also Professor Ezra K. Maxfield and Mr. Raymond A. Preston for their kindly criticism, and all others who have contributed to the success of this Pandora. six W Xl PN 7 K F e 3338 fi 'f'5E JL?5g , X 7 s f' 'Ki2,.uo ,frQi,fZ,, .lzjglr-wi. we -47145-. K' , , yv ,L - ll Uv I I Jlc nowle ment 5 I 32 . cp .,g,Qs - .-.- 11: --..- :::: .5 EALIZING that this Pandora has been made possible only through the courtesy and patronage of our aclver- tisers, l wish to express my appreciation for their kind co-operation. Dear Reader, kindly bear in mind the fact that they are all thoroughly reliable and up-to-date bus- ho are highly deserving of our patronage. P clora Manager. iness men, w -The an as asgg M mf: :K Asbury ..................... B Baker and Samson ....... B. B. Sz B. Trunk Co ......,........ Beau Street Cafe ........... Frank H. Berthel ........ Betty's Folks ......... J. C. Bragdon ................,........... Caldwell Co. .... .................... . Cameron Bottling Works ........ Capitol Theater ...................... Wm. Christman ...................... Clutters ......................... Court S uare Q ----.------.------...-.... Consumers Service Co ............. D Duquesne Trust Co ................. Dunbar and Wallace ................ DeMaria Shoe Repair Shop .... E B. K. Elliott ...........................,.. F First National Bank ,..,....,,,,,,,, Fidelity Title Kz Trust Co ......... Frank Bros. .... .................... . Sam Green .............................,,, John C. Griffin .......................... Goodridge Grocery Co ..... Hallams Producgik Exchange Happer Agency ........................ Jack Hart ...............,..............,. Holub Grocery ............. Huffman Motor Co ................... 1 Imperial Ice Cream Co ........... J J. Mac Jones ................. G. W. P. Jones ......... C. H. Jones .................. K R. F. Krause ............................ Kurtz Monument Co ......,..,,.,,. Kuhnlee Sz Dunning ................ Kirby's Shoe Store ........ M. G. Knoepp .... ....... Lydic Sz Griffith ............... Lewis Paint 8: Glass LeVinos .................................... M Metropolitan Shoe Shop .......... D. O. Morgan ............................ McLeod Motor Co ...,............... Nease Tire Com? .................. New York Restaurant ............ INDEX Olympia Confectionery .... Observer Publishing Co ......... 11 O Potter Title Sz Trust Co ........... Paul and Post .......................... C. W. Peterson ........................ Penn Manufacturing Co'. ....... . ll Reymers Candy Co ........... Rutherford's Garage .............. Regent Theater ...................... Real Estate Trust Co., ............ .. S Stevenson Laundry ...... Stetson Shop .................. J. M. Spriggs Sons .................... D. T. Samples ............................ Simplex Engineering Co ......... C. L. Sharp ................................ Lee Schoenthal ........................ Sutter 8a Shepherd .................... n T Thompson Hardware Co ......... Tranter's Mfg. Co ................... Voorhees Grocery, .................... Valentine 8a Murray .......... Washington Sz ferrfferson College ................................ Washington Seminary ............ Washington Trust Co ............... Washington Laundry .............. Washington Furniture Co ..... Washington Baking Co ........... Washington Mold 8a Machine Co. ..................................... . Washington Plumbing Co Waldo Baking Co ..................... Western Theological Sem- inary .................................. Weller's Studio .............. 202 8z Warrick Floral Shop .............. Ward's Store .......................... Weir's Garage ................ Wonsetler's Taxi .................... Charles E. Wrenshall .............. Wigmans Sn Iams ...................... White Monument Co ................. George Wilson ........................ George Washington Hotel ........ George Washington Billiard Parlor ................................ George Washington Barber Shop ............ ig ................. Y. W. C. A. Cafeteria .............. 217 203 210 214 222 210 215 203 224 219 206 207 194 197 194 208 198 204 206 205 214 200 195 218 221 216 207 205 207 200 212 214 223 196 216 212 204 210 212 199 220 203 219 224 197 ,E . wi -- - W--W ev esee ss E4 M .,.,,, H4 T' .:...x , ,bfffilv ' 1- G- x u tty's Folks wish 24 Folks a lot of Luck 'Q ,, ,, Fw 1. ,L it-i ' T- vt 'f .' JZ ,. W: . 'if- 'xvlx 7 'l ' I 161 '- , A -'M 9f 11i'4- :W gm' rnfxoz if '.f5,iN MARK :L :ia ij' irq iff W' -- .V A 5. J Brooms Betty Broom Betty Whisk Betty's Playmate CToy Broomj Betty's Toughest Brother fFactory Broomj Betty Bridesmaid Betty Fibre Betty Ton fRoofing Broomj Betty Rattan Betty Hearth Betty Railroad Betty Car Betty Boulevard CStreet Broomj Brushes Betty Poster fPaste Brushj Betty Brush Betty Ceiling Betty White Wash Betty Paint fAll sizes paint brushesj Vacuum Cleaner Betty's Companion ggggy BET1'Y's FoLKs P 1. h Clncorporatedj o is Betty Polssb t 1 .1 Bettys Crossing 0133 202138. S1 Ver WASHINGTON, PENNA. We One Hu ndred cmd N'l7l,GtQll-tlL1'80 i. hee- an A WNW- we M Simplex Engineering C0 CCNSULTING CONTRACTING ENGINEERS -for- Complete installation of Gas Producer Plant Fuel Oil System Power House Heating and Melting Furnace Coal Handling Equipment Labor Saving Devices Motor and Electrical Equipment Washington Trust Building WASHINGTON, PA Our Leaders White House Coiee Libby's Canned Goods Pillsbury Flour Bob White Flour, Compliments of IMPERIAL Jos. M. Spriggs' ICE Sons Wholesale Groceries WASHINGTON, PA. BELL PHONES: 400 and 804 CREAM One Hzmdred and N Washington E5 Jefferson College Builder of Men Developer of Leaders Molder of Character ,. .- Atmosphere Definitely Christian S. S. BAKER, President WASHINGTON, PA. OHdddN fi m -.-r fr VICTROLAS-EDISONS-COLUMBIAS The Latest Records MANDOLINS-GUITARS-UKULELES Steinway Grand Pianos Sohmer Reproducing Pianos THE BEST PLAYER PIANOS Q! You Are Always Welcome At - il . L as G. W. P. Jones Music Co. at N, 56 North Main Street WASHINGTON, PA. Auto Accessories Go. Firestone, Goodrich, Silver- town and Oldfield Cord Tires Firestone Solid Truck Tires Hassler Shock Absorbers GASOLINE AND OIL Corner Main 81 Maiden Streets PHONE 10 W. G. NEASE, Proprieto We Grow the F lowers We Sell and fresh cut, home grown flowers are the best 16 Modern Green Houses and 4 acres of ground used exclusively for the growing of flowers for our retail store. 4 r ' ' arnclc Jlqral GQ. George washington Halal Bldq. 80 Swfh Main Sh-ee! 5,'gygggjggg',gg'g 'lifafhfnqlon , .Penna . E -M - - -iff f- ---li---+ +- -M - -Y -r YYY Y Y. W- Ea One Hundred and N ty V, Ml 1 -.-gr: -ia, Alva, 4 -. .1 ,-,... -fn ---if - W- -'---'-im ,-..-Y 5 Y. W. C. A. Cafeteria OPEN DAILY QUICK SERVICE fH0me Made Pastries a Specialty ww I 42 West Maiden Street WASHINGTON, PA. The A. G. Happer Agency I n s u 1' a n ee Fire, Life, Accident, Steam Boiler, Burglary, Tornado, Automobile and Workmen's Compensation .Real Estate Bought and Sold-Also Bonds or Suretyship 55 S. Main Street Telephone No. 20 WASHINGTON, PA. Day and Night Service Special Rates on Country Trips D ' I ' SAMPLES ' I 'AXI O I PHONE 998 ' 15 East Strawberry Avenue WASHINGTON, PA. it in A177 ,, One Hmidred and Ninety-sefucu ..- -A 7,,7, , -W ,,,,.. L-, , ,, , .gy LEE SCHOE SUITS TO ORDER The W GG? J. Tailor CLEANING -- PRESSING - REPAIRING -Established 1907- 27 East Beau Street WASHINGTON, PA. Best Music Finest Attractions Hg? P A R L O R The Home of the Pipe Organ 4 A-1 BARBERS Most Comfortable and Best Q9 Ventilated Theater in Western Perma. A Big Student Trade Q21 PHONE: 247 63 North Main Street WASHINGTON, PENNA. John C. Griffin 5 62 N. Main Street Pure Food Served BELL PHONE 134-J Courteous Treatment New York Restaurant Open Day and Night 55 North Main Street WASHINGTON, PA. E ff, M ---H :,,,,- -in .-NESS-. .H .Y Y U -H W., . A . A . One Hundred and N-inety-eight m,i,.vv7 , ,YYY 774- W , ,,,, Ss X SIMON WHITE Ea SON Monuments Made in the Largest and Best Equipped Plant in Western Pennsylvania SEE OUR STOCK BEFORE YOU BUY 35 WEST MAIDEN ST., near Postofflce Phone 656 Washington, Pa. Get This Book We Want young men to know' what a Trust Company is. Our book, The Functions of a Trust Company, will be given to you free of charge. Ask for it. Fidelity Title Ei Trust Co 341-343 Fourth Ave. PITTSBURGH BAKER Est SAMSON Main and Chestnut c L o T H IN G ...and... FURNISHINGS For Particular Men Newest Styles Lowest Prices Let your next suit of clothes lic one of the following: HART, SCHAFFNER 81 MARX KUPPENHEIMER SHERMAN 8z SONS CORTLEY BELL PHONE, 1267-.I WASHINGTON, PA. VVILFRED CAMERO Bottler of Soft Drinks of All Kinds Coca-Cola 70 East Wheeling St. Whistle si e!-e -- Hee H reefs no so l Ono Himclrecl and Ninety-nmr' E4 , I J. W. HUFFMAN J. C. BOOTH Compliments of Huffman Motor Car Co. DISTRIBUTORS HUDSON and ESSEX AUTOMOBILES WASHINGTON, PA. A i Whitman 's Reymefs Johnston 'ls Belle Mead Sweets ' Valentine A S3 Murray A ' Washington Plumbing George Washington Hotel and Heating PHONE: 2298 Acetylene Welding G. C. HERR, Manager - 67 West Cherry Avenue PHONE: 2250 B 4 m -1 Intl! 'W TA -T W 3 Two Hun dr EL .,.,, , W1 SAM GREEN ' K l QThe Fraternity Grocerj I 'ffl-.,, ...... ' Here Is cz Dandy It is only one of our fast-growing HIGEAR Line of shoes for young Men 38 and 39 Frank M. Berthel 30 South Main Street Opposite Court House WASHINGTON, PA. Meats E63 Vegetables Specialty on all gallon can goodsn PHONE: 1082-J 68 WEST CHESTNUT ST. J. M. LYDIC R. E. GRIFFITHS LYDIC 52? GRIFFITHS i Commercial PRINTERS 40 East Beau Street PHONE 225 l r l I fx vX .. . I g e, sl. , .- Q 'j v ...ie-:fy f,.w,,,,g: f in .,,,,,, ,-i W... ,, .1 ' 41 ..yf...,, 4 ,V E, . ,I ......... Why Worry about your shoesg we can transform your old shoes into new ones by the efficient Goodyear System Ex- pert workmanship Work Guaranteed METROPOLITAN SHOE SHOP B. PARISSE 206 SOUTH MAIN STREET Two- Hzmdrecl cmd Ona ra ,, M H :W :T-:,.e-:L -.H-.,-,-The ,aura -f-. HH- H L4 I llhf y l :Faq-A 1 A' J ' I' I - - ,H ,f U ll l If if fi -lmllwl. pf 7 X ,MI Na v , . lik!! f is 527 All u Y X , srl f I W ffl am' f 4 W h Ma n HM W! , Wh l , l WA ll . .i!'uy'l'l' eg I 4 'Q 'lll l , .lf ff l ' ll? Early Photographers an' Them o' Today When we recall how we used t' have t' wait fer a sunshiny day before we could git a photergraph struck, an' then think o' all ther doin' with the' camera these days, we begin t' realize what awful strides photography has took. Th' first photographer we knowed had long stringy hair, a Windsor tie, a glossy diagonal Prince Albert, no cuffs, a fluctuatin' Adam's apple, bushy eyebrows, an' smelled like collodion. His shop wuz called an art studio an' his sign had a picture of a artist's palette on it. We kin remember how he posed us fer our first cabinet photergraph. Th' background showed an Italian castle an' a lake full o' swans nearly as big as th' castle. Then in front wuz a fancy balustrade. We stood in front o' th' balustrade facin' the' camera, wearin' a plug hat, bell-bottomed trousers, a cane an' other things, with an iron pritch clutchin' us at th' base o' th' skull. We wuz told t' look intently at a picture o' Pharaoh's Horses some forty feet away. We must have stood some hours, but th' pritch took much of our weight off our feet. This pritch wuz a villainous-lookin' affair an' must have come down from th' ole Spanish Inquisition days. It had a number o' big set screws an' wuz adjustable like a music rack an' could be let out t' fit a fat intellectual giant or a small run-down mother. Also it could be lowered t' hold a child in place. When applied t' the' back o' th' neck it gave one th' expression 0' tryin' t' locate a airplane. Th' ,ole-time photographer wuz strong fer crossed legs, akimbo arms, full fronts, iron lapels, tin cravats, an' ever'- thing jest so. He wouldn't shoot till ever'thing wuz rigid an' favorable. If a customer had a hair lip, or a wend on th' neck. he made it th' principal point o' interest in his photergraph. If th' forehead wuz inclined t' buldge he'd powder it an' feature ' Turn to page 223 iz HL, ge- ----1: vw -M V Y 7' Two Hzmdred and Two lil .- The George Washington Hotel WASHINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA. 225 Rooms Each 'Thoroughly Modern With Bath F ireproof WILLIAM FOOR HOTEL CO., Proprietor W. H. Lowry, Mgr. The College Man's Paper The The .Observer Reporter Morning Evening Combined Circulation over 16,500 copies daily WASHINGTON'S Leading Daily Newspapers Complete and accurate reports of everything of interest in College Life. All sporting events thor- oughly covered. ALL THE NEWS ALL THE TIME OBSERVER PUB. CO., Publisher John L. Stewart CW. M J. '99J President and General Manager The Observer Job Rooms The College Printer Printers' Ink Makes Millions Think Lincoln I-'ordson CARS - TRUCKS ' TRACTORB Lowest First Cost Lowest Upkeep Value Highest Resale Value L. H. Rutherford Incorporated 65-75 EAST MAIDEN STREET, P WASHINGTON, PA. Show Room Open Evenings HONE 306 PHONE 306 Two Hmzdred and Three it 1 11-V i 1- Lui'-ivriivim Court Square Haberdasher CHAS. B. BOYD, Mgr. 28 COURT SQUARE- --PHONE 2428 IT IS the natural thing for any man to desire an air of smartness about his clothes. Men who realize the lack of it wonder how the other fellow acquires it. You'll find all the style and snap required in our celebrated ED. V. PRICE 8z CO. Tailored to Order Clothes CHAS' HOLUBS WONSETLER TAXI CALL 1046 Closed Cars Day and Night A Service STUDENTS' TAXI OFFICE: William Henry Hotel WASHINGTON, PA. East Chestnut Street Grocery Meats Groceries EAST CHESTNUT ST. PHONE: 1083 WASHINGTON, PA. W. J. SUTTER LEE R. SHEPHERD THE 12.E?H.Rl..?.W1C K Billiards and Bowling 16 BILLIARD AND POCKET BILLIARD TABLES 6 BOWLING ALLEYS V. M:-:f ---W -'- ---j'- - - -- El Two' Hundred and Fam l E g ee s S pplies and all equipment for Architects and D '1ft e Students' Drawing Outfits 'School Drawing Instrunienfts B. K. ELLIOTT COMPANY 126 Sixth Street PITTSBURGH, PA. 5 ' '4Nk ' C. H. JONES E EST. INC. M IB36 i l89I 3 'QMNEE A0605 Q3 Machinist M , Manufacturers GHS Machinery Jobbers VV ear PUMPS: Hand, Power ENGINES: Oil, Gas, Steam Q23 37 North Main Street MFG. CO. ' PITTSBURGH PA WASHINGTON, PA. LUXURY BREAD The Sweetest of them all Washington Baking Company THdddF y' ,WW , , if.- EH-, ,, Www v, - gt Stevenson's Laundry 52 Opposite Chestnut Street Depot Washington, Pa. BELL PHONE: 124 The Thompson Edt df H 'S Hardware A LLA M J. D. THOMPSON, Proprietor We Have Home Made Bread, Pies Cakes, Rolls, Etc. General Home Dressed Poultry Butter and Eggs Hdfdwafe Nucoa Nut Butterine a Specialty FAVORITE Stoves and Ranges Paints, Glass and Seeds TELEPHONE: 710 56 WEST CHESTNUT STREET WASHINGTON, PA. HALLAM'S Produce E6 Exchan ge 112 West Chestnut St. WASHINGTON, PA. PHONE: 297 H lip 1,',:, 5 :: l :7,i lli ll,,1,:,n, E, .N I: 4 1 L 2,474 i 1 W Two Hmrdfrcd and S100 For Collegg-Footwear R. B. MERPHY The Stetson Shop Jenkins Arcade ' PITTSBURGH, PA. For Furniture, Rugs, Brunswick Phonographs and Records Toilet Articles 'SEE' Drugs The Washington Sundries Furniture Company sodas and 137-139 S. MAIN ST. Ice Cream QU For China and House Furnishings -sEE-- R. E. Krause RUDOLF HANAU Cor. Main and Maiden Sts. 59 S. MAIN STREET WASHINGTON, PA. Clfraternities Take Special Noticej , J. L. SCHELI. President W. M. CRILE, Manager C. M. BROMLEY, Sec'ty W. J. BROM LEY, Vice-President CHAS. BROMLEY, Treasure Washington Mould, Machine R and Foundry Company BELL PHONE. 1809 SPECIALTIES FORGE SHOP - GLASS HOUSE MOULDS MACHINE SHOP SMALL MACHINE PARTS FOUNDRY ACETYLENE WELDING Washington and Beau Streets , WASHINGTON, PA. ai A -- -.. A A--ee Ei:-fe - --... -sieM.-. ,, T H mired and Seven We- is I, vi A ..A , Il! The First National Bank OF WASHINGTON, PA. Oldest Bank in Washington County J ' 9 ' sill ? 4 it 2 5 ' ' ff l: CAPITAL AND SURPLUS S500,000 Brunswick Phonogruphs and Records Sharp's Furniture Store Furnishings for Better Hornes 110 We-st Chestnut Street WASHINGTON, PA. W wutos DOG Find Out for Yourself I ' ' Why most of the intelligent people come f . 'ri 'fits 'II here for shoe trouble. Pay us a person l f B' EI ' Q , visit and you will learn why we d t' fi! '1 high st grade of work at the lowe t p X ' , Illia in and the shortest time. Whenever y lit Ji II !!! i tlllioes tbeing to show signs of wear b g X - , F , em o All ff M J f SAMUEL De MARIA gigtllnv W ' A 35 East Beau Street ' 5.0 Y .. WX PHONE 862-R WASHINGTON, PA 5- ewrmewr -:ln I al I E 1'fg fl - ,A l, 17:11 .,,,, ,ff -gil-fir, 1Y -l, - alfa-fi ,, f- -,,, ,, -5 A-iklrgizgirlli Two Hundred d E 69 s fi , hi I -19 ,lt V. r 6 F' ' 5 HT he Shopn That sells better things to Wear Hickey F reeman Hart Sohaffner 699 Marx Style Plus Clothes Dobbs Hats Manhattan Shirts Wilson Bros. ' NECKWEAR HOSIERY ATHLETIC UNDERWEAR HANDKERCHIEFS The Chas. E. Clutter Co. THclcld . H, Y , ff -- ---,- .T Y 'TEQ CHAS. E. WRENSHALL Tailor, Hatter and H cz b e 1' d cz s h e 1' N0. 20 S0uth Main Street WASHINGTON, PA. GEORGE F. DRURY, President ' F. K. FAWCETT, Vice-Pres. Kz Gen'l. Mgr. J. A. STEN, 2nd Vice-Pres. H. V. HART, Secretary HENRY MARTIN, Treasurer The Penn Manufacturing 599 Supply Co. CINCORPORATEDJ FORGE, FOUNDRY EG? MACHINE SHOPS Manufacturers of 5 Steel Drilling Derricks, Oil and Gas Well Supplies Gray Iron and Brass Castings FISHING TOOLS A SPECIALTY WASHINGTON, PA. Successors to ZAHNISER MFG. CO. BANKING-TITLE INSURANCE-TRUST SERVICE- MORTGAGE INVESTMENT , 1 1 1 'vw' Y, .,?--,WJ ,--'- lf- -?.., - 11111: -f'- .:., -if -4- ,iq Two Hundred and Ten pm - v. v.., -.. ,, W, MELVIN G. KNOEPP Wholesaler Toys, Novelties, Fireworks, Sporting' Goods, Dolls, Val- entine, Easter, and Hallowe'en Novelties, Flags. Cor. Second and Market Street PITTSBURGH, PA. BELL PHONE: COURT 3329 KUHNLEE. DUNNING 4' 4' ar ' + Zi Ha berdashers GEORGE WASHINGTON HOTEL WASHINGTON, PA. '14ttention, F olks For real service, quality groceries, Home-dressed meats and Poultry-Go to GOODRIDGE BROS. Grocery Dept. Meat Dept. PHONE 1077 PHONE 1407 194-196 South Main Street Service and Attention given to Fraternity Trade Dunbar E-9 Wallace Lumber Go. ., Phones 451-452 829-837 Jefferson Ave. WASHINGTON, PA. Ei 1 - Two Hundred and Eleven B. B. B. TRU K CO. 4 STORES 431 WOOD STREET 537 SMITHFIELD STREET 419 FEDERAL STREET r 1426 EUCLID AVE., CLEVELAND, OHIO. FACTORY: N. S., PITTSBURGH, PA. Manufacturers of Luggage for Service PITTSBURGH CLEVELAND WEIR'S PHONE 88 Best Sedans in City 87 W. Wheeling St. WASHINGTON, PENNA. Wa1do's New System Bread GOOD for BRAIN and MUSCLES Eat More Bread and . Be Healthy DONUTS, CIN. ROLLS COFFEE, CAKES, Etc. Try Our Special Graham or Whole Wheat Bread Fresh Every Day Waldo Baking Co. Phone 1744-.I WASHINGTON, PA. - ...Y-X N 's1,e,,. ,. .... . i. - 5 Q. . , . F' .... a M A +- W. n .. . IA Q -.C Lu M rm rrzu sf rf:T.:...x.. vro xr: xc riii 5,-.',a,. f ' 'B ' 'KNQRQ' .. 'Q .rf I -..- - f. . . .... . . . I E ' '4'7'7 ' Q uw MW' A' E Two Hundred and Twelve OR over sixty years this store has enjoyed the Warm friendship and loyal patronage of the students of Washington Ei J efferson. And in our plans from season to season the fullest consideration is always given to meeting four-square the needs of our student friends. Spring 1 923 finds our stock splendidly ready With snappy, exclusive apparel from the lead- ing makers of America. Suits T opcoats Hats and Furnishings that appeal to men of judgment and good taste--always priced right. Come to Caldwell? The store that is ever loyal to the tradi- tions of old EC? J. cl Thirteen The Western Theological Seminary Founded by the General Assembly 1825 A Seminary for College Graduates A complete modern theological curriculum is of- fered to students of all denominations. Elective courses leading to degree of B. D. Graduate courses of the University of Pittsburgh, leading to degrees of A. M. and Ph. D., are open to properly qualilied students of the Seminary. Exceptional library facilities. Two entrance prizes of 25150 each. A post-graduate fellowship of 35500. All buildings are new, with latest modern improve- ments. Social hall, gymnasium, and students commons. For information, apply to President JAMES A. KELSO PITTSBURGH, PA. The Big S. R. Voorhees A Hardware Store Stands for Quality and Service FRESH AND SALTED Qnstabiished Twenty-one Years Agoy MEATS' POULTRY' THE OLDEST HARDWARE FIRM GROCERIES AND IN THE CITY PRODUCE OF See us for ALL KINDS New Process Gas Ranges Caloric Pipeless Furnaces Pennsylvania Lawn Mowers General Hardware and House Furnishings Implements, etc. Paul EG? Post THE BIG HARDWARE STORE 219 West Chestnut Street PHONE: 1744-W -W ,l M H E Two Hundred and Fourteen 'LL E4 --A WA H A- A -- A A V ft JACK HART 'Tl Headquarters for I 'I' C d. W Society Brand, an les Clothcraft EG? il f,'f,f,'l'f,in,i,cSlf',f,?eSwfglsfQ Sold Bond Clothes R. V. B. 1 N illiiiit or Nut Just cz Real Good Store Variety Butter Creams 'l ' Say it with ' 6? Reymefs BERG HATS Quality Furnishings Selling at nearly all WASHINGTON 16 North Main street STORES WASHINGTON, PA. Sale of Real Estate -and- Fire Insurance William Christrnan 326-327 Trust Bldg. Phone 399 WASHINGTON, PENNA. A S B U R Y The Students' Barber Under the Washington Trust Bldg. I Ten Chairs Ten F irst Class Workmen WASHINGTON, PA. 'mired cmd Fifteen Kodak ylifglilgiay College and let the p i C t u r e s keep your mind fresh of those h a D p V days. WARD'S The College Book Store 20 North Main Street Complzments of the WASHINGTON LAUNDRY H zghest Grade Work Phone 315 205 WEST MAIDEN STREET THdddSt ' r Only the best in I Monuments, Markers, Mausoleums MARBLE, GRANITE OR BRONZE Kurtz Monument Company Bell Phone 906-J. 267 East Maiden Street ne r Wade J. MAC. JONES TOBACCO, CIGARS, Etc. Pipes a Specialty-Sporting Goods 75 N. MAIN ST. WASHINGTON, PA. OLYMPIA CONFECTIONERY The Home of HoME MADE CANDY and ICE CREAM New Line of Fancy Boxes Reymer's, Johnston's, Whitman's and Booth's ALWAYS FIRST' 59 NORTH MAIN STREET WASHINGTON, PA. zdred cl S t rm .-.W m mashingiun eminzxrg A Hagnslqingtnu, Elflennsglfmnia .emy6 Marg he 'fgnre gHHrf1Turhg, 'jgrinripal 'Yankee Lunch Room 'Meet your college buddy at the Yankee One Square from the College 29 EAST BEAU STREET WASHINGTON, PA. Duquesne Trust Co. DUQUESNE, PENNA. OFFICERS A. N. DIEHL, ...........,,............Pres1dent L. H. BOTKIN .,.......... lst Vice-President S. G. WORTON .. Vice-President J. R. DAVIES, Jr. ,........... Sec'y 8a Treas. ROBERT LAING E. J. SCHORR ..... ........,.Asst. Treasurer .............Asst. Secretary E 1 1 I i E Two Hundred and Eighteen Real Estate Trust Company BESIDE THE COURT HOUSE, WASHINGTON, PA. Capital and Surplus .S'600,000.00 T. JEFF DUNCAN .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Presid t CHARLES A. BUMPUS V P d t R. S. WINTERS S t y d Tir W. O. SCHEU A t S t y d T HUGH S. DARSIE T t Off H. B. HUGHES ., .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. Solicitor Member of the Federal Reserve System GEORGE WASHINGTON BILLIARD PARLOR MIN: 44. L, - GEORGE WASHINGTON HOTEL - Q Nineteen 1 1 1 1 lm George M. Wilson The Menis' Store of Pittsburgh CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Bldg. Sole Agents In Western Pennsylvania for A New York's Finest Rogers Peet C l 0 t h es McLeod Motor Co. PACKARD and NASH Fmiw Buowlens Fifth Avenue Boot Shop near 48th Street, New York Models for Sports, Dress and Street Xeeflfxs . V ,,-5.131313 X , ,.q,mg.gi1:, - 1 , ,i , 3100-5' -.1 I , -'Q , - -is-4 '-11, :lf 1-, . Z- fini,-,4 ,1-1 t, x. .K,.l, 3.. ' '.5.:,1,.-,.,,, A '- ' me .. ,LQ-' .:3:15k',:.i,'..,,,f , Vi ,,.,v4 I Q ' 'e:1S.9?',e'h-f:'r?v::!v.wg,-421 , ,. W., .. . l 4 - A r . ., EXHIBIT SHOPS: WASHINGTON CHICAGO Peoples Trust and W00dWa1'd Bldg'-, opposite Shoreham Hotel NEW HAVEN Savg's Bank Bldg. ST. LOUIS Arcade Bldg. SALES SERVICE Hotel Taft BOSTON PITTSBURGH Little Building Jenkins Arcade all-'eeeeeeeeeeeee gm Two Hundred and Twenty i 4 EV- rf EET- --E E W. -EW E. H. Harriman said: l No man can afford not to be thrifty. This statement by a man who did much to reward thrift by ' creating valuable railroad properties is worth the earnest consideration of all workers and earners. The truth of this quotation undoubtedly is confirmed by our own observations and experiences. A well maintained savings account at this institution will be a good proof that you are thrifty. Washington Trust Company l A Corner Main and Beau Streets WASHINGTON PENNSYLVANIA Best of Meats Home Baked Pies E63 Glass . Beau Street CO C A I I 'Save the Surface and you Save All G. L. MINTON, Proprietor P Ego B E S T G L A s s -Of-' of all kinds COFFEE 13 EAST BEAU STREET W. CHESTNUT at JEFFERSON WASHINGTON, PA. AVENUE -f-is - W-e N Two Hundred and Twenty-mze in Bm., EW- CB, I gi Motor Oils CUNSERVC Conserves 317 WEST CHESTNUT STREET WASHINGTON. PA. Bulk Storage: West Chestnut Street PHONE 1070-J CONSUMERS SERVICE COMPANY PITTSBURGH, PA. SOUTH BEND, IND. An Institution of Quality and Service Ask Your Dealer For . .553 I ' 1 Www The Best of All ICE CREAM CAROTHERS' PHONE: Bell 1141 PHONE: National 6809 C. W. PETERSON 4 FRESH AND .SALT MEAT, BUTTER AND EGGS Special Care for Fraternities. 'Cor. Wade Ave. and E. Maiden St. ra ---- - efe- - ees A W l Q Two Himdred and Twent ll Q .... .. .., .... -... ..- El Early V T Photographers l an' The-m o' Today it. If a chin retreated he'd pry it out an' take an in- terior o' th' nose. If a customer wanted t' be took so his watch charm an' aligator shoes would show he'd lean him agin a little column an' pritch him in position like a lamp-post on th' stage. Then he'd throw one leg stiffly across th' other, an' then one foot would show twice as big as th' other one in th' picture, an' leave th' victim lookin' ' like he wuz waitin' fer somebuddy t' shoot a cigar out o' his mouth. It's no wonder all th' ole-time folks, ancestors an' such, that we run across in ole photergraph albuns allus look like they wuz wanted somewheres in Minnesota fer murderin' a whole family. Th' modern photographer kin make us look any way we want t' look. He removes goiters, superfluous hair, Warts an' wrinkles. He fills out necks an' busts, an' sandpapers elbows. If you want t' look like a great writer th' modern photographer kin fix it fer you by posin' you with your left cheek reclinin' lazily in your hand, mussin' your hair an' tie a little, an' screwin' your face in such a way that you'll look fierce an' brainy. -Abe Martin in the Saturday Evening Post. What is now the WELLER STUDIO was founded in 1856. That sort 0' give it a runnin' start on the photergraph business, and now, 67 years after the first W. Xt J. student had his likeness tuk we are still at the front end of th' perfession. THE WELLER STUDIO, 22 N. Main St. gg, - - - - 4 I'wo Hundred and Twenty-three ll --. - A-. I' We extend our compliments and best wishes to the students of W. 8a J. Come in and get acquainted with our line of footwear, the prices are moderate and the style the best KI R BY'S 36 NORTH MAIN STREET The REGE T Q Better Photo Plays Everything you would expect to Find in a Good Drug Store SHAEFER, WATERMAN PARKER PENS and PEN CILS D. O. Morgan 92 NORTH MAIN STREET WASHINGTON, PA. I George Washington Hotel Barber Shop George Gross, Proprietor . Washington's Most Up- to-date and Sanitary Barber Shop Under the - George Washington Hotel s Two Hundred and Twent ll rw Ll H S3 f f INR V137 v R a s C N f f U KN , ., 1-1 'J .f -. ' 1 'l . 'a qt 13,500 sq. ft.,:oI -noon:-llrieul--corlxpldfely equipped! ' 'ESSSSSSSSSSSSLESSSSSQKXXXXSSSSSSSSSHSMSWSM f - ' kdlllani 6 koad Preszbvng A 95 yki i P 1 Plraflrs .24 Mylar: Pico-Prvs. K iran? Jikfad .Secjf-Mas. i i . ' fi The 392 'T fl 4 ' W ,1 eo ag or ompon , if , -.,,..,..- 3120 + Qyahi' + .5'e::v:'ee 2 5Printersi-and Cjbubluskezjs - 'S iomliard mg Siutfbifreots p,Kp,x, V .Laltimorv I c1'5'8i ' 25 ' W 5x SQ5l3khw5l3 55Smw3SSS23iSE3S5 Y w A Remembec' the Pvoducerfs ol This Annual., K I ,-nn N f ,Ll x. A X . . ,J f- Lb' ' s -- .-pf, , X --.. naw, lt, ty? 1 N '!mR0 '.. X I , Ly.-sl X ,N x sa'-f, V . I' 41 3i 'f'H ... ,N ' ff, ..,,, , . - .Y Xia?-jawn. .. ' ,,..:K'?'? QM . . , f At ,-,1,1.4,.,gE.3..., 'JV'-Lmviulfhr X K ,, 'sin ,, -sf - g' --Sas' -' ' 'N---Y' - , - , . , Q Eg .1..-, ' ' 1'--. 1,g.-,juiflvh ,L14'. vias-1,1 ', . ff' H 'w1f:f5im.:f :A 7'a,,g2-:W c:,t,g2wA9fti,115f5f5Ew.+Q- JN' N: ' Q ,' k .11 U' gd .tv ru.: , ,'? ,,f 'gfIfiyvvrmeffwsq 'A f - N. '- ,fm f . 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Suggestions in the Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) collection:

Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Washington and Jefferson College - Pandora Yearbook (Washington, PA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927


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