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•t&.agiWJB^iii gjjgft, • 1925 ' '".!?•% ^ } •JA..^/\^' M^ Upper Arlington bcnool Annual 1925 UPPER ARLINGTON COLUMBUS, OHIO O MARION BALLARD IRWIN, of the aepartment of languages, an inspiring teacher, a genial counselor in all school ventures, ana above all a •well-belovea friend of ever)) stu dent; we, tke class of nineteen hun dred and twenty-five, dedicate mis, our third annual. MISS MARION IRWIN •••* I 3sirtmBrh 'ITTLE more than a decade ago our village and school was a dream, a hope in the minds ] of our forward looking citizens. Today both are glorious realities, the consum mation of that past hope and dream. j Those who planned so well and executed : so nobly did so that we the babes and then unborn generation—the school boys and girls of today—might not lack the stuff wherewith to prove ourselves. With this heritage, fraught with the most coveted opportunities, as ours, we do not intend to fail those who have had the faith and vision to make these opportunities possible. It was not accidental then, that we chose to in scribe "Deeds Not Words" on the shining surface of the bell that twice daily calls us to work and to play. As the singing towers of Belgium and Holland are loved by their people and increasingly exert an in fluence upon their lives, may the significance of our bell increasingly inspire us and make for a finer citizenship in the greater Upper Arlington that is to be. We commend this little volume to you as a substantial proof that we are doers of deeds, and not dreamers only. —.—+ CONTENTS Page Dedication ------ 2 Miss Marion Irwin - - - - 3 Foreword ------ 4 Old School ----- 6 New School - . - . 7 Faculty ------ 8 Staff ------- 9 Farewell Poem - . - . 10 Seniors ---... 11-15 Valedictory ----- 16 Salutatory ------ 17 Class History ----- 18 Senior Autographs - - . - 19 Class Prophecy - - . 20-22 Class Will ------ 23-24 Class Day Program - - - - 25 Commencement Program - - - 26 Senior High ----- 27-28 Junior High ----- 29-31 Elementary Classes - - - - 32-40 Literary .-..-- 41-48 Snap Shots ----- 46 Organizations ----- 49-58 Activities ------ 59-68 Snapshots ------ 62 Sports ------ 69-76 Cross Word Puzzle - - - - 74-75 Jokes ------ 77-80 List of Advertisers - - - - 81 Advertisements - - - - 82-106 Autographs . - - . 107 UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL O Q •J l-H « o o w Q O UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL O 3 »—( M O o om UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL ANNUAL STAFF Top Row: Wilametta Morris, sport editor; Cornelia Shaw, art editor; Ivan Creager, ofReial stenographer; Stuart McFarland, WaiTen Armstrong, Nash Kelley, assistant managers. First Row: Frances Sayers, editor-in-chief; Dorothy Francisco, business manager; Louise Hill, advertising manager; Betty Bonnet, associate editor; Elisabeth Ben- bow, joke editor. 10 UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL FAREWELL POEM In the memories of tomorrow. The joys of today will be known. As the fruits we glean in the future, Are born of the seeds now sown. Friendship formed by common joys. By common sorrows proved, Forever in our hearts will live. Though we are far removed. Thorny is the path of life, Sorrows are in store. Failure, bitterness, and woe, Lie waiting on before. But less weary is the way, When the lesson once is learned. And from dear old Arlington, Our footsteps we have turned. — EVELYN FENTON UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL 11 WILAMETTA MORRIS —"Billy" Ohio State Civics Club Di-amatic Club— (Set.-Treas.) Staff Class Will Basketball, '24 Golden Days The Turtle Dove Ambition — To have many friends. "Bubbling with knowledge; spark ling with wit'' IVAN CREAGER — "Ire" Ohio State Civics Club—(Sec. and Treas.) Dramatic Club Staff Basketball, '25 Student Council Hi-Y— (President) Golden Days Enter the Hero Ambition — To be a doctor "The Ford is my auto, I shall not walk" EVELYN FENTON — "Evy" Ohio State Civics Club Dramatic Club—(President) Staff Class Poet Basketball, '22, '23, '24 Golden Days The Turtle Dove Ambition — To travel "Not that I love to study less. Rut that I love fun more" 12 UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL FRANCES SAYERS —"Pete" Ohio Wesleyan Civics Club— (President) Dramatic Club Staff Class President Basketball, '24 Operetta Golden Days The Turtle Dove Ambition—To be twentv-five years old "Gentle of speech, Beneficent of mind" EVELYN BODE —"Bodie" Cincinnati Conservatory Civics Club Dramatic Club Orchestra Golden Days Turtle Dove Ambition — To be a violinist and story writer "Modest and simple and sweet, The very type of Priscilla" MARY LOU KIRKPATRICK "Boo" Civics Club Dramatic Club Class Prophet Operetta Golden Days The Silver Lining Anxbition — To have ambition "She is a winsome wee thing" UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL 13 DOROTHY FRANCISCO "Frisco" Wittenberg- Dramatic Club Staff Class Historian Class Vice-President Operetta Golden Days Enter the Hero .Ambition—To act dignified "What she undertook to do, she did" ELISABETH BENBOW "Betty" Ohio Wesleyan Civics Club Dramatic Club Staff Salutatorian Student Council — (President) Opeietta Ambition—To be an interior decorator "She who thinks the most good, And speaks the least evil of her neighbors" DOROTHY FULLER Dot- Ohio Weslevan Civics Club"- (Critic) Dramatic Club Basketball, '24 Golden Days Silver Lining Ambition — To be a social worker "Talking is one of the fine arts" 14 UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL CATHERINE GIBSON "Sparky" Oberlin Civics Club Dramatic Club Valedictorian Operetta Golden Days Turtle Dove Ambition—To rival Paderewski "With music she drives all care away" .lOSEPHINE HUGHES —"Jo" Ohio State Dramatic Club - (Vice-President) Civics Club Class Secretary and Treasurer Basketball, '24' Golden Days The Turtle Dove Ambition—To be a success "The joy of youth and health her eyes display" DOROTHY SIBBALD —"Dot' Ohio State Civics Club Dramatic Club Class Song- Golden Days Enter the Hero Ambition—To get married "She doesn't shine as a student, But why should she care, With her disposition she'd get anywhere" UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL 15 STANTON WILSON — "Socks" Ohio State Basketball, '24 Dramatic Club Hi-Y Class Advertising Manager Ambition—To be a banker "Nowhere so busy a man as he, there was. And yet he seemed busier than he was" APPRECIATION The Annual Staff wishes to express its sincere gratitude and apprecia tion to Mr. J. W. Jones, faculty advisor, for his great interest and untiring aid; Dorothy Francisco, for her skillful management of the finances; Mary Vivian Beale, who is responsible for the cover design and part of the art work; Cornelia Sawyer, for her assistance in the art department; and every other person who in any way has helped to make this book a success. —THE EDITOR 16 UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL VALEDICTORY We who stand this afternoon at the meeting between a happy past and an unknown future, have not reached the end but the commencement of our lives. And what those lives are to be, depends in a large measure upon the foundations we have been building in our high school years. We, the class of 1925, have now come to the time when we must leave dear old Arlington School, some perhaps to go on into college and others to enter the business side of life. However, we will take with us sweet mem ories of the fellowships that have been ours in school. We not only congratulate ourselves on the advantages that have been ours, but ask ourselves where and how we are going to put them to use. There are still too many who enter the world of action with only a meager knowledge of what will confront them who are unaware and unacquainted with the obstacles in their pathway. Dear friends, we, who are passing out of high school life into more active citizenship today, feel that we have a place in the life of the nation. We feel that each one of us has a work to do in serving our country. We are overflowing with class patriotism this afternoon and we are stepping forth realizing our responsibility. Members of the faculty: if today we go out from this school filled with the lofty conceptions of the world's needs and our duty to assist in supply ing them, the credit belongs to you. You not only have taught us the proper attitude toward life, but have at the same time inspired and encouraged us. Wherever our lots may be cast, or wherever we may be called to toil for man's uplift and betterment we shall be mindful of your vast influence on our lives. It is with profound reverence and gratitude that we bid you farewell. Class mates: let us make loyalty our controlling spirit for in being loyal to ourselves, to our class, and to our school, we shall be loyal to every larger claim that the American nation can demand of us in any hour of her need. Let us show the world as we step out into its fields of endeavor that we are the stuff, the best citizens are made of. The hour has struck. Now the time for parting has come. Though we must separate, let us not separate in spirit. Let us often think of our high school days, and as we go out into the world let us face our duties with hope and courage. To you all our beloved friends the class of 1925 bids a last farewell and with our sin cere regret that our high school days have gone forever. —CATHERINE R. GIBSON UPPER ARLINGTON ANNUAL 17 SALUTATORY Friends of the Class of '25, we welcome you to our program this after noon. To be sure, you have demonstrated your interest in us by your presence, and we trust that you will be indulgent as you listen to our efforts. This day marks an event in our lives which is a step into the future. As we look back over the days when we were with you in school as well as on the playground, we have a feeling of joy in the fact that we have been with you and that we have been a part of this wonderful school,—this school where we have been as brothers and sisters, and our teachers have been as friends.