378.771 C557C.1 V.19 MR ALLIANCE R00 the Chronicle

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378.771 C557C.1 V.19 MR ALLIANCE R00 the Chronicle RODMAN PUBLIC LIBRARY 378.771 C557C.1 v.19 MR ALLIANCE R00 The Chronicle. 3 8212 00118 465 1 TnB CHROM r=i 0CS3 a Q o irz^y a-a THE nnn nnn nnn nnn Published Annually by the GRADUATING CLASS of ALLIANCE HIGH SCHOOL VOLUME XI. MDCCCCXX ALLIANCE, OHIO I a QQ p^jQDt^nnQ.q Qp XI^^JQQ Q C^JQ Cj a ^ CHROMECLE Q £=^7 QDP^d C3 Q ttC^^J Q r^oC==nm Q rfa. 37177/ C5 Braclshaw Printing Company Alliance, Ohio CUan P^Qd^Dao.Q QP C^QQ Q C^^IQ C) J TnB CHRP MI CLE , Q Q O <^=TJ ^ O 1926 CHRQMICLE, PHOEBE KING Editor in Chief JOHN BOHECKER Business Manager ARNOLD LUTES Asst. Business Manager MILDRED BIERY Stenographer Associate Editors: Selma Grether Wallace Heiser Eleanor Elletl Arthur Akins Florilla Shatter Elizabeth Scranton Arthur Guittard 1L. ® ticiQCi C^j Q D ^^Z3 DQ.Q a a QQ Q Qcj i ^B CHRP MS CLE pQ^I?=!OOC^Q Q 0 1=^3 00(^=3 Q O ttC==7 Q I o all, who, either by thought or labor have aaaea to or taken from the life of Alliance High School, —Oreetmg. CLOQ p^,QQC^3naq QB cr^aq o tr^jQ r^ I i E, tnRPNECLE QQQI .^OC^=3 C3 Q « VaQQ P^jCiDC^nQ.Q TnB CHRP ME CLE i r^x Q Q i ®0 is hzhxtv&tb i\\t (Efyrontdta of 1920. (Senile in all \\tx ministrations, slje leabs anb boes ttrft brtoe; stje inspires anb boes not biscourage; stje requests anb boes not commanb- ^Tl|c keynote of tjer life in our mibst is |Cooe~ I ciQU QD QQ.Q c\& a Q Q i^r^j Q r^J TnE tflROMICLE >CiC}t> Superintendent B. F. St anton I « Q Q c=^3 Q D C=CTJ a Q.Q Qc C^3»Q 0t=53QCj ff TniL tflRPNECLE r^x oC^^n QQQ £=^7 QOC^j Q D en .c^I^Sf Principal J. E. Vaughan \a QQ C=^*p D fcnnQQ Tn^ CHRONICLE fpQf> / 7/ I QQ P^qnc^nQ,c Qp u^3 DQ Q IQSj ! TnB CHRP ME CLE QQQl O0C^r=r3 Q D a A New High School Building for Alliance The present High School building* was intended to accommo­ date four hundred students, but is now crowded with twice that number. Within a year, however, the city will have built a High School suited to the needs of a rapidly growing- population. The plans, not complete as yet, make provision for all modern equipment. The new building will be erected adjoining- the pres­ ent one, and connected to it by a passage-way through the center. The auditorium, an advantage which the Alliance Hig'h School has never enjoyed, will be large enough to seat twenty- five hundred people. The entrance to the auditorium, and the main entrance to the new building, will be from Linden Avenue. Tlu1 High School will have the largest auditorium in the city. It will be a great encouragement to school entertainments and activities. Another improvement, and a very important our, is the new gymnasium. It will be modern in all respects, and suited to all the needs of the Athletic I department. The plans include not only a new building, but extensiw changes in the present one. The three Science Laboratories, Physics, Chemstry, and Biology, and necessary lecture-rooms and storerooms for apparatus, will be located on the second floor of the new building. The rooms now used as laboratories and recitation-rooms of Physics and Chemstry, will be revised as rooms lor the Department of Nome Economics. This new and complete course lor the girls is balanced by an ei ual opportunity for the boys. Four years of Manual Arts will be <offered. Instead of cloak-rooms, such as are in use in the present building, a system of lockefs will be installed. Additions will be made at- the Linden Avenue and Arch Street entrances. The new building, together with this addition, will contain twenty or more new rooms, including- assembly halls, recitation-rooms, and laboratories. The first floor of the present building" will be considerably changed. The offices of the School Physician and Supervisors will be located there. The offices of the Superintendent and Principal will be enlarged, providing" for private offices for each. A room will be set aside for the use of the Board of Education. On the second floor, the room now used as the Supervisors' Office together with the recitation rooms on either side, will be equipped as a reading-room and school library. In the plans for the new High School, the Hoard of Educa- VaQCt P^ciD1 'DD Q QP DQ Q J THB CHRP ME CLE £^=3 r^x O C^==a r^x Q Q i - (GO tion has provided every advantage, as well as every neccessity, for a modern High School. The curriculum will include all the courses offered in up-to-date schools. Pupils will have every encouragement to do creditable w and will enjoy many opportunities which should prove to be profitable and pleasant to them. Have You the School Spirit? Are you intensely interested in the activities ^\' the school, athletics-all that the school does in a public way? Are you willing to talk, to plan, to work and to pay for these activities when opportunity comes: Do you take pride in the achievements of the school of individual students who do something worth win! Do you believe there is a standard which every right-mil person should try to reach and that he should help othei reach? Do you know that the school is a bigger thing than youi and that some of your own ideas must be made secondary I greater good of the larger number? Are you anxious to make your own personal record o which the school need not be ashamed? If you can answer the above questions correctly you say you have true school spirit, and you will be entitled to the badge labeled "Loyal". ci Q^ P^jqD QQ.Q Q* LT^T^Q QP^JQ^ a CHRP ME CLE QQQ iZ=^? c=i o C^==3 Q Q a c^^i j Q Q^ & f> fflfififtk Z NU£xnm_ raeuxry QP XZ^QQ Q£r^3Q r^\ IQQ^C^^QD t===inQ Q ^^^CflRPMECLE l ex Q Q £3CI C3 Q « FACULTY ALICE L. BELL MARY E. KAN English American History, French W. H. CHENOT CLYDE STANLEY Book-keeping, C ommercial Arith. English, Gei R. S. COPPOCK MAUDE STEVENSON Physics, Athleti : Director Stenography RHEA DAVIS ELSIE A. R< >BER I - Modern History Civics, 1 Iist<>i\, Eci>nomics MARGARET DAY MARTHA TR< ». r Mathematics, Typewriting Mathemal ics MARY T. DFLLEY B. II. TEMPLE Mathematics Chemistry JANE DILLEY IDA REEDER Mathematics, Latin English, Dram a 1 SARAH E. DRAKK WILDA DAVIS Latin English JUANITA FITZGERALD [RENE \\ A( II I EL Spanish Mathemal ics MILDRED FORDING C. L; BURELL English Botany, / Agriculture RUTH HIER o. \\. BEARD English, Shorthand I Mi\ sics, (General Science ETHEL HIVELY ELIZABETH Z( >U\ Ancient History Domestic LOIS J. HULL W. P. PF< >il - Physical and Commercial Manual Training Geography MARY HENRY-JOHNS E. E. KIDWELL English Manual Trainin JANE LAMON HELEN MARKLE\ French English ADELINE GEORGE RENNA ROSS Secretary to Mr. Vaughan Mathematics ISIA E. McCLURE HOWARD SARGENT Latin Mathematics VUQQ QD naq Q p x^r3QQ Q; IQ^ I T^L CflRPMECLE r^ o C^=d QQQ u=^7 <QOC^=J Q D a C=^=3 Q ^ri ^=*=^r^tj "^iTcnRPMECLE CLC==Z=3 C3 Q «£^ci Q« i Q C*G==3 ^ oP=d QQQ £=^7 & 1 tUtm P^QDC^onQ.Q •u^jaQ Q £=^3Q r^\ TniE cnROM Q ^ r> r^==m r^x oC^^a m a Q £^r? QQ HqQ Q C=^r Q D ^=3 Q CUQ Q^ il^jaQ Q l^^IQ q J rn^ CHRP ME CLE You Will Never be Sorry For telling the truth. For living a pure life. For doing your very best. For thinking before acting. For hearing before judging. For forgiving your enemies. For helping a fallen brother. For being honest in business. For thinking before speaking. For stopping your ears to gfossip. For bridling a slanderous tongue. For harboring only pure thots. For being courteous and kind to all. For faithfulness in keeping your promises. For asking pardon when you have done wrong. d&ztt- Pagre eighteen niQCt P^QD ncuQ QP t^r3 QQ Q IQC^d GRADUATING CLASS Senior Officers. President Mervin France Vice President Lynn Hawkins retary Florilla Shaffer Treasurer Eleanor Elletl • nineteen I on C^QDC^JDD.Q Qp il^^CiQ Q tQO d TnE CHRP ME CLE rzx Q Q ( £3Ci£^rrJ QD« ARTHUR AKINS Chronicle Staff 4. Class Basket Ball 2,3,4, Secretary 3, Hi "Y" "A laugh is worth a hundred groans in any market." Skabootch! Sacaramento! Oscomolovitch! Vason Draco! These un­ intelligible phrases form the bulk "ArtY'vocabulary. Inclined to be some­ what fickle he never has a "steady" but always has a girl. "Pep" 1- "Art's" out­ standing- characteristics. His bobbies class basket-ball and r.,to driving, ESTHER ALLEN Pembroke Club, \. Ring and Pin Commit­ tee 4, Literary 1. "A lively, black-haired maul I kn< She is petite, vivacious and all the other things that go to mak.- uj what Bo Burns calls "a wee, sweet thing". Est has taken part in all our cla since her High School 1 n trance.
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