The Carrol News

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John Carroll University
Carroll Collected
The Carroll News
Student
10-8-1925
The Carroll News- Vol. 7, No. 1
John Carroll University
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The Carrol News
John Carroll University
CLEVELA
rn, OHIO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1925
REPORTER INTERVIEWS
UNIVERSITY'S PRESIDEN1
Privileges Go With
Increased Tuition !
1\"ith
scme:t~r
tuition
he openin.,. of the current
~
an increased rate of
betame effective at John
1
I
.
~
Rev. Boylan IS Pleased
With the Students
at Carroll
,.......----~--------,
Carroll. The increase amount to
twenty-fi\·e dollars a year, bringing
the tui ion to one hu11_dred fifty
dollars.
The
increaO'e,
however,
By J.:tl" nr<l F. )fa hl'r
really offer con iderable advantage
Stepping int o his room on the secto the . tudent for it includes admi ond floor of the Fac ulty R e!!idence
sion to all Carroll athletic contests.
Building. T W!IS g re led by a pleasThi!' ~ys ·m ha been in effect in ant raced, una sumine: :~e ntl em an,
many institutions of higher educa- who ::reeterl me co rdi a lly. at the
tion for ~>orne time ·with uniformly
.
. .
• 1 ame tnne gtvlllg be a hearty handsucce" tul results. n not on ly m-shake. A tall. robust. we ll proporsures larger attendance at games tioned man whose black hair is
but al"o remove·, to 8 great xtent, clotted with th e silven· ara 1· of thP
~he l'lement of uncertainty from _the j onru hing tide of time.· A m.ild manmcoml of the Athletic A ssociatiOn. nered . joYial individual whose mil-
CLASSES ELECT
HEADS FOR TERM
McDonnell Wins Junior
Office by La,rge
Majority
OTHERS
RE - ELECTED
With all the officers elected in the
various College classes and permanent w orking organizations formed, the leaders and the classmen
are lookl.ng
Rev. :'-Iurtha Joseph Boylan. S. J ..
th e newly appointed Pre id en t of
John Ca noll T..:niversity.
I expl ained my mis ion- to intervi e ,,· him for THE CARROLL ::'\EWS.
He ><tated a fe w words about hi s own
caree r a a J esu it. then coyly avoiding a further discussion o[ the topic,
he related in detail the whereabouts
of Re\·. Thoma J. rnith. S. J., his
predecesso r as Pres id ent of John
Ca rro ll l'niversity. who is now Dea!l
of ~l e n at t. Xa,·ier College, Cincinnati. Ohio.
forward to a record
''J .- . nJ,.l .. r 'lf thi · r,..H.. i~i ~ ~ . . , .. o.:.u.,
acFather
Boylan, "he is advisor both
hotn m chool and cia
in spiritual and temporal matters."'
tivities.
Th e Senior chose John McGro- His office is similar to that of Gender as their President. "Mac" suc- era ! Director in the large univerces fully piloted the Juniors last ·itie-. I welcomed this new of Fayear, hence hi re-election. Jimmy ther Smith , but was suddenly jarred
O'Brien was elected V.-Pres., while with the realization that I had been
Frank Joyce was elected Secretary
led a t r ay from the main purpo e of
and J. Crowley treasurer.
my vi si t. nam e ly to inten·iew the
"Pat" :McDonnell, Carroll's plunging full back, was chosen to lead new Pre ident.
the Junior class, succeeding Ed. McFather Boylan's installation as
1
Aule~·. the Soph leader last year. Pre !dent ot John Ca rroll UniverTh other officer are; A. Burens, sity on July 31st-the feast or St.
V. Presi dent; W. Fornes, Secretary;
c. V.'elsh, Treasurer.
Ignatius. the founder of the Jesuit
"Jack" Sheehan, who piloted the Order-marked his seco nd appointFreshman last semester, was elected me nt to hi native c ity in the twentythe Soph omore leader. A. Lafferty, nin e years he ha been in the SoY. President; J. Toma, Secretary, ciety or Jes us. On his fir t trip to
and J. Cregan, Treasurer, are the
--- year.
other officer s of thi division.
In the Fre hman Class, E. Maher
was elected President: J. Mulcahy
V. Presiden t; P. Cooney, ecretary,
and 111. Costello, Trea urer.
- -On to Dayton- -
NEW PROFS ADDED
TO C. U. FACULTY
Rev. Chas. Ryan Goes
to University of
Detroit
Again the doors of John Ca rroll
UnivPrsitv have been thrown open
to all it!i' old student , and to a
very large number of newcomers.
Of courl<e Freshmen will not appreciat the importa nce of the alter·ed 1\nd aul!mented faculty; a
topic. howe\·er, of large interest
and much cliscu sion among the
older students of the school.
Father Ryan , for years a most
popular Englis h
professor, has
taken up duties at th<> Univer ity
of Detroit. Mr. A. J. K elle r. of the
chemistry clepartment. ha r es umed
st udies at t. Louis t"niversity.
Among tho e whom we are
happy to introdur e are Mr. Raymond J. Gray S. J., formerly of St.
John's University, Toledo; R ev.
Louis Puhl S. J., who has spent the
last two years at St. John' s College.
Belize, Britis h Honduras;
R ev.
Charles Wolking S. J., Mr. Jam es
V. Harrwood, Mr.
. A. Bungart
'lnd 7\fr. Hag~rerty.
JOYCE IS CHOSEN
UNION PRESIDENT
Re-organization Aided
By Enthusiastic
Outlook
Th
Ca rroll union. I e~ i s latlv e
body of the four classes, met on
Wednesday, September 30th, for the
fir s t time this term. Election of
officers was held immediately, the
following men receiving the offices:
Franklin Joyc , '26, p r esident; frank
uhadolnik, '26, vice-president; John
:\lcGroder, '26, secretary; and Pat
McDonnell, '27, treasurer.
Th e Union representatives voted
for more smokers during the course
of the year, and decided to award
substantial
trophies to the class
cham pion in basketba ll, indoor and
track.
A resolution was passed compelling all fir t year men to wear
green and white sku ll caps within
specified boundaries around the college building and at all games.
Definite in tructions concerning this
resolution will be posted on the
bulletin board in the near future
a nd the Union official ask all Freshmen to watch for them.
A complete program of activities
for the year has not yet
been
drawn up. Just what plans will be
adopted large ly depe nd upon the
outcome of the Union Week campaign for dues.
Tonight is Ca rroll :\ight at B.
F . Keith's Palace. It is a night on
which Carroll will mak a public
showing i n the theater district,
and the IJ:x ecutive Council o[ the
College Union urges e ve ry student
to alle nd. It will be the first
.. G t-Togeth e r :\ight"' or the year,
so if you haven't a ticket, sP.e
your class t r easurer about it.
Come and make it a big affair.
CARROLL UNION
PICKS OCT~ 13TH
TO START DRIVE
l ing
rountenanre and whole hearted
wel co me rout all fears one may
en er ain for me tin~ him. This wa s
m~· first and lasti n g impression of
Carroll Night
H~\ •
.lfur1ha ,Jose)lh Buylun,
J.
C'leveland in 1903 h e spent thre e and
one-half years at
t. Stanislaus
Rectory, wh ere he in tructed the
.Je uit :'\ormal students. The last
ix month . were spent at St. Ign alius Co ll ege. wher e he taught Rhetoric. r e li e vin g a professor who was
ill.
H e was born in Cathedral Parish,
.\ug. 2 , 1 74. and spent but a few
years there, as the Boylans moved to
the Immaculate Concep tion Parish,
wh e"'! he rec ived Ills primary edu-
c inn . Th 11 he ' nt t
'.
~,~~
tius Colleae- a school that he was
destined to s e rve in later years, under the name of John Carroll University-for his hi g h school and co llege education.
In 1 96 he entered the Jesuit 1\'ovitiate and took up his preparatory
tudie at Prairie Du Chie n, Wi .,
which at that t im e was a Jesuit SchoIasticate.
His Theology course of four ye ars
was spent at the Jesuit House in
Faulkenhurg, Holland.
His first office of responsibility,
ror which his lona years of tudy
had aptly train ed him, was that or
Dean of Studies at Campion Co llege, Prairie Du Chien. Wis. For
the next six years he taught Philo-
Week is Appointed for
the Payment of
Union Dues
McDonnell Chairman
Union Cards Required
For Partaking
in Events
Octobe r 12th will mark the opening
of the annual T..; nion Week drh·e at
Canoll. The entire student body
will be ystematically canvassed Cor
union du es in a n e ffort to bring the
total up to full quota by the end of
t',• tl ·,~. 'l'\h1 11 ,1, w.t, l>'i 1 -•~
term for the fir t time and proved a
great success.
Pat :\IcDonnell, trea urer of the
union. has been apj)<linted chairman
of the drive committee. and will map
out a plan of campaign to be followed throu ~;" hout the week. Collection or due and i uing of union
cards will be taken care of by the
officers of th e various clas es.
Officials in charge of the drive urge
a ll stude nts to be prompt in paying
their dues and thereby avoid difficulties later on. ~o man who has
fail d to pay his dues can attend
>Smokers, play on any c lass team.
participate in the intra-mural track
meet, or otherwise share in st udent
activities re s tricted to Union members.
Yea rly due amount to one dollat·,
payable in fu ll or in two semester
ophical subjects at St. Xavier's installments of fifty cents each.
Co li ge, servine; in the capacity of t.:pon payment of dues the student
will be given a card, which mu t be
Dean of :\len in his final yea1·.
pre ented at a ll union functions h e
As I nervou s ly fumbled with my wishes to attend or participate in , in
pencil thinking of some question to a ny manner.
(Continued on Page 2)
J
- -On to D1tyton- -
Special Train May Go To Dayton
The Co lleg e nion has taken over will be in well before the allotted
the preparation for a special t rain time, and that a r ecord crowd will
to Dayton. Th e ":\ligration-Day" follow the team .
In the Colle>?;e U nion meeting or
special will be chartered on one co n- Oct. 5th, Tom Shea. student manager
dition, howevel'. that there are two or football, announced to the Execuhundred paid r eservations entered by tive Counc il that these tentative arThUI sday noon , Oct. 15. Unless rangem e nt s had been made and asked
that t he Union take over the work of
check or ca h fo1· that number are
further p reparation.
in by that time and date. preparaThe Union immediately took up the
tions will hav e to be called off.
requ es t and a committee of the four
The round-trip tickets to Dayton class presidents. John B. l\IcGroder
of the Senio1· c lass. Patrick J . 1\[cJ>ecial
on the Carroll
Donnell of the Juniors. John J. Shee$ .00, a real bargain for th e trip. han or the Sophomores, and Edward
practical ly half price. Mr. hea ba · F. :\laher of the Freshman class,
also made arrangements for tickets was appoi nte d with Mr. Shea in
to the ga m e. For students, admis- charge of anangements for the spesion will be fifty cents, and for the cia! train .
The men were empowered to d1·a w
friends or the co ll ege who make the aoded assistance from their own
trip, the maximum admission price c lasse and announced that reservawill be one dollar.
tions should be made as soon as pasThese preparations are bein g made sible. accompanied by $8.00. with
in acc01·dance with th e Dean's inten- them or with such assistants as they
_ha ll publicly an nounce.
tion that there be a ":'l!igration Day"
ln view of the highly colorful bateve ry year, a day wh eu the whole tles which the two universities wage
rhool accon1panies the team to an with each other, the committee exout-of-tow n 'l'ame. cuts free. In view pects early returns to be made and
of the reasonabl e prices obtained urges tho e who are interested to get
this year. it is expected that tlte nec- their fare in as soon as possible.
essa ry number of !la id r ese rvations On to Dayton!
No.1
BLUE STREAK TIES THE
MIGHTY MARINE ELEVEl\
Powerful Attack of U. S. Team is Smothered by
Carroll's Scrappy Defense
lVIcDonnell's Punts Average Fifty Yards
In one mighty effort, Carroll ha cinched for itself a place
among the big league football teams of the country. Last Saturday, at Dunn Field, Mal Elward's eleven accomplished what
Carroll's most ardent admirers had hardly dared to hope for held the ponderous Quantico machine to a 0-0 tie. It was a
feat which everyone but the coaches and players had deemed
impo ible; but then the rest of us know little of Elward'-s
system for making hard things seem easy .
When eleven men of average size •'>-.-- -.- - - - - - - . - .- - - - - . th . t
k
f Jltor6 m a real pos1t10n to score,
can stop 1n
e 1r rae s an army o
·
h
h M .
t
though often they thought they were.
g1ants sue as t e
annes pu on
.
.
h'
Late m the last quarter Brunelle
the fi el d , th ere 1s somet mg more
broke through the scrimmage and
than mere physical strength in their
dashed to within thirty yards of the
method, and that is exactly what
goal before he was downed by· a
Carroll displayed. "The kids" (a
furious headlong tackle.
term applied to them by one of the
Then Pugh registered
another
Marines). outweighed twenty pounds
first down, bringing the ball to
to a man, stemmed every form of
Carroll's eighteen-yard line;
but
attack the Devil Dog quarterback
here Carroll displayed the great
hurled at them, stopped it dead at
stone wall defence for which it
the line. Only once were the visbecame famous last yea r, and
:'llcHenry attempted to score by the
drop kick method. The ball sailed
under the cross bar and Carroll
took charge of the oval to keep it
until the final whistle blew. Quantico had tried several other field
g''ll'll
rluring tr' g .11" . ~... ~ .l'''ll ,,[
them even came close.
The Marines kicked off to Pat
McDonneU to start the game. The
"Blue Streak'' failed to gain on two
attempts and then kicked to Brunelle. McQuaide, Henry and BrunJoseph J acobs. '26, died Sunday, elle made three successive first
September 20th. at Lakeside Hos- downs, carrying the ball to Carroll's
before they
pita I after a two week s ' illness, thirty-five yard line
Death was caused by septic poison- were stopped by the insertion of
McCaffry and Mielcarek.
ing following a masto id abces .
From then on, the strong poundJacobs had been operated on and
ing offense of the Marines failed to
appeared to be on the road to re- rl<>nt th ... r ........ ~n 1:~ __ ,..,,_ ____ _
covery until four days after the I ;i--t;n~~~ ~ ~ .. v . . . . . . e ...... auy con-
SENIORS GRIEVE
LOSSOF JACOBS
uperat10n is Fatal to
Popular Track
Athlete
operation when a blood clot formed
Carroll's offenses was not to be
behind his left ea r .
A
second thrilled over but when you consider
operation was required to remove the avoirdupois which the line men
the clot and septic poisoning set in. had to move, they certainly must be
commended for the work they did.
Thrice blood transfusions were reIn tackling nothing was left unsorted to in an effort to save done. Each succeeding tackle was
Jacob's life, his mother giving the more deadly and more furious than
first on Saturday, September 12th. the preceding one, o that several of
Clayton Welsh. ' 27. gave another the Quantico players had to be caron the following Tuesday, and John ried off the field. On one occasion
McGroder, '26, gave the last on the Brunnelle, the Marines' safety man,
Saturday before Jacobs' death.
caught a punt and was immediately
The funeral was held Thursday pounced upon by no less than seven
morning from St. Thomas Aquinas Carroll men.
Church, Superior Ave. and Ansel
Larry Gaertner, lying prone, surRd . The Senior class attended in a prised a potential
g1·oun d-gainer,
body.
A Mass was said at St. bound for an opening in the l ine,
Mary's Church on Monday, October when he grabbed him by the shoe5th, which was attended by the en- strings and p ulled him down. Toma's
tire student body.
contribution was a beautiful divJacob ' brief pan of years was ing tackle near the side-lines. At
more than ordinarily eventful, for the time Jack was the last man bein the short time alloted to h im he tween the runner and the goal line.
(Continued on Page 6)
fought and won one of the most
heroic battles that any man has
known. Some sev n years ago he
entered Cathedral Latin School as
a freshman and at that time he
wa a little chap forced to wear a
heavy steel brace on his right leg
On Friday, September 25, at St.
as a result of infantile paralysis.
Mary's Church, the academic year or
Four years later, when he was
John Carroll University was offigraduated, Jacob had been awardcially opened with the Mass of the
ed three athletic monograms, two
Holy Ghost.
for tennis and one for basketball.
The custom dates back to the time
Sheer determination and grit had
converted the little cripple into a or the initiation of Jesuit schools,
broad houldered athlete, the hero and at the present time no underof core of bitterly fought con- taking is started in a Jesuit institutests. His class mates remember tion without invoking the aid or the
various high lights o£ his meteoric Holy Ghost.
Rev. Father Boylan, the new reccareer in the world of sports.
After Jacobs started to Carroll tor, formally greeted the students in
be began to hine in local amateur the name ot the faculty. Jn his adcircles. In ba ketball he helped dress he decried the tendency or the
the Cleveland C's win two cham- mod ernistic univer ites to popularize
pionships in their class. In track evolutionlstic and atheistic ideas.
he was a member of the Favorite He furtlle1· added that the Jesuits
Knit team that won the first open were ready to teach the students
meet at Ridgewood, Jacobs placing tho e principles which tend toward
third in the high jump at five feet the making of better men and better
citizens.
(Continued on Page 2)
Rector Addresses
Students at Mass
---
Page Two
THE CARROLL NEWS
"'Who's Who" FRANK MALONE IS
I
G regory Conly
\
McDEVITT LEADER
cafet~ria Que~ches
1
,
DESIGN OF CUPOLA The Collllllonsqueal
I PLANNED BY FLOOD
1
Thirst for Malted
. To
long-er need the malted milk
Word , according to Wordsworth, are Yehic les by which
addicts seek in distant places for
. --one may co~vey or transport one's thoughts. Hence, in th.is
the gratification of their de ires.
column we Will try to use the English language "FOR COMICAL
The Carroll Cafeteria, which conTRJ\. SPORTATION," or the perambulators of our idiosyntinues to advance w1th giant stride
crasie~ . Th e reader may be p leased to learn that the tra in of
in the march of progress, has in·tai led an electric mixer and can
th?ught which ha ·· j ust been shunted into this thi siding, conThe :.\fcDevitt Club, prominent now serve malted drinks in true j ,-tud nts of John Carroll Dniver- tams a caboose load of teers on the hoof . Here goes for the
.
.
.
professional fashion. The student~ .
unloading.
mdependent li terary ~oc1ety of the seem to have greeted the arrival of Fit~· \•:ill recall the magnificent
universi y, its rank s thinned to half I the li ttle spinning device enthusias- steotple of St. Mary's Church, which
Once upon a time somebody took the time to pound off the
their strength by graduation and tically, and the old fa miliar war a.tt<-r defying the e lerr.en s for idea that :
·
the entrance of several members cry, "Gimme a chocol:tte malted:" many years crashed to the pave::\Ian wants but little-Here beiO\\' ,
into Our Lady
of t he Lake Seminis echoing along. the corr .idor. daily me<~ t 1ast spnng,
•
ft
.
.
a m:ts. of ames.
But what he wants,-I plenty of Dough.
ary, held tts fir t regular meetmg from eleven t htrty until twenty , l I ~t a befitt·
·
t
1
·
.
j'".-~·mme
a..
mg cupo a, 111 exac
of the fall se_. s1on on Thursday, after twelve.
try and desi$!n to cany ou t
The above bit of verse ha offered an inspiration for the
Oc ober 1st, 111 the school library.
the Romanesque ar:::hitecture ~£ the essence of this column, wh i ch is main]~· . chemes for making
Only .eleven of the twenty members
facade ha s replaced th e ill-f ated mone y . All the boys need plenty of c:~hn s ince they've discovre!11a1~ at present but num~rous ap..
steeple. This copper dome rises in
p1Jcat1ons. fo i· m<>mbership have
rleasing curvatures from the e ig ht ered they can't bring th eir relatives and "friends" to the games
been within
receiveda few
anddays.
will be acted
"des of t h e t ower t o th e new cro ·s on student passes-besides, next week College Union clues are
upon
-'
ou the p a k. This dom e, even no 1\' to be collected . Now, although t he mark of prosperi ty accomeveral
informal
meetings
we
r
e
beautiful in the r esplendent noon- panies all the students who are lolling about on the campus
The ·oubriquet placed over this h d
e l at the r esidences of the memday un , wi ll, in the co urse of time, after the h e ated term-which is evidenced by the abundant
picture is, of course. entire ly unnec- hers during t he s umm er vacation,
be even more beautiful as it will supply of lead pencils and offi ce supplies (wh1c:h stud ents usually
s ary. To anyone who has caught at the Ia t of whi ch, on September
ta ke on a greenish tint.
don't b uy) - they are in greater need than ever.
tl1e s It. ~ ht es t w h'1 P o f rootb a II g osst'· P 13th, an e lection of officers wa
Fath er Francis Betten , S. J .. an
Indeed, the only one about John Carro ll who ha s a visible
during the past three year. or who held. The following men were
autholity on Church architecture,
of the
and whose brochure "The A. B. C.'s mean of ~ upport is the fellow who wears rub b er u penders
has g limpsed the Blue Strea k in ac- chosen
M D · to gudide · the destinies
h
·
c ev it.ts
u~mg t e ,next si_x
"I mu t "'0 down to the ea aJ.('ain, of Churc h Architecture" is familiar (made of an old inner tube) and that is stretching a good thing
tion for only half a period, his iden- months Frank Malone 27 Pres1
....
·
'
'
· t th I
I
·
d th "k "
to a vast majority of scholars, does too far. So these sure-fire ideas on high finance are to help
tiLY is unmistakable. Oh, you have <lent! Charles Mulcahy, '27, ~ice o Wh~n o~a~e~:·~d a~enne~ th~·t lin e not tal;e any cred it for the plan of
College men work their way, without lighting lamps, by means
6
heard of him, have you? Gr gory ~resi dent; John McGroder,
~ • he obvious lv wa s thin kin g of Ed- this suitable top piece for the deof a higher clas of work. (In the main, the ideas h ave nothing
28 ward W K. elly '28 Carroll's in capita ted tower.
Conl y, present ca J)tain of th e Blue ecretary;
Allan Lafferty,
Treasurer.
·
'
'
·
to do with going to Florida.)
treak football team of Carroll?
. .
veterate deep ea rover who spend
When interviewed on this su bject
Honorary
me
mbership
m t he club hi s summers rollin g dow n to dis- Father Betten had a very interest•
You're ri ght.
wa bestowed on Rev. Charles Me- tant roadsteads in weather beaten ing story to tell. He remarked that
The nickname, Greg, did not last Devitt Ryan
J former Engli h
' · ·•
ships.
one day he noticed in hi cia s a
Here is _a r::roposition wh ich contains a two-fold significance,
l ong with Conly. The tightin "' spil'it professor at John Canoll univerWh e n the America n Sh ippin g Senior who was not interested in that of makmg money, and that of making the vicinity of John
he ha ·d isplayed s in e tlr the donned sity, and at prese nt a member of Board steamer "Am erica n Leo-io n'' the discussion at hand. Father Carroll look a little more decent. (Members of the faculty are
a pa ir of Carroll moleskins, the game i::r~~c~~;~ ~~ Up~~~g~=~~.oit;O~~~ cleared from New York ha rbor last Betten, very courteously 1-emoved eligible in this s<.:heme.)
!<piJ·it he has shown on the ~r idiron , Ed
d M
, 27
W 1
June, Kelly wa numbe r ed among the scratch paper and pencil which
war
cAu ley, ex- ;
es ey th e crew. Thi s was his second ven- had been offering t he entertainin g
It is a well known fact t hat college men have the corner on
call for somethin g mor e impre sive Kagle, ex-'27; and Francis Uniak, t
.1
h h. h
diversion for this Senior. To his II h
than a imple abbreviation, so it's Reginald ~l cCo rmi ck. John Hulhol- Luret as a hsaJ orkond ht. e Ig seas. astont' shment,
t he
stude nt " 'as a t e movable junk in the U. S. A. About the stately porticos
15 way across
land and Charles McBride, who are
as year e wor ·e
"
of John Carroll ma y be een the replica of E. 55th St. grave·'Jrish" only. on the field and off.
the co ntinent to
an Fran cisco workin g on a su itab le crown for the
For t he third year. now , he's mak- ~~~i:!ry~ur Lad~· of the Lake where he s hip ped ab a rd a t ramp tower. Thereupon, th e sketches by yards for slightly used automobiles . These sputtering gas
teamer enroute to :\few York by James Flo(){], '25, were not sen - c hariots are cluttering up the highvvay and by-ways.
ing the ce nte r or Carroll's lin e imWhil e no definite announcement \\•a y of the PanarJJa Canal .
tenced t0 tl1
a te b sket no did
e w
a · '
"e
a~
yet
·t
·s
beJ
·eved
r
ow then, if the facultY would have the Traffic Commisp1·e;tnabl . :\!any a well-intended 11 a beell nla
1
1
1
u
~
'I' h " A
·
L ·
"
d he r ece 1Ye one of th e famous "Biac!; ·
h'b'
k'
· ··
·
e
men can eg-lOn, manne Mar·ks" 1·n F ath r B tten's record. s10ner pro I It par mg Wlthm a radiUS of three blocks from
center rush has l.Jeen stopped short that the McDevitt Club will adopt
by
a
cr
e
w
of
20
,
t
wenty-five
of
J
h
C
11
(b
t
8
10
AM
}\,. ) an d t h en
al the lin e when "l ri h' ' blocked the the same course of proceedure
uch 1._,"'.,. 11 0 m 1'ny, hi·s . o n
arro
e ·ween
:
·" . an d 6 : 00 p .h.
1,1 teacl of
whom were college men, made a
way. It's on ly a J.iLting tribute to his which it fo ll owed Ia t year; that is, direct
run f r om ~ew York to drawings, with a few extra details take over the forgotten ~Yalls of the brewery for a Garage-Starplaying abi li ty and fine
haracter the practice and , tudy of debating Buenos A ire with subsequent stops added by one who is eminent in 1a ge, they co uld make Jt compulsory for tho e who motored
t hal C'on ly is now captain of the and public speak in~ for the fir ·t at Rio de .J aneiro . \Iontevideo, and learned ~ircl e , were handed to the to school to park at the Garage-Storage at a nominal fee.
team. a team which i making Cleve- ~emester and the production of a Santo . On the return trip she pastor who had charge of the re·
land famous'
play in the pring.
docked at
ew York. Au gu t 20th e:o nstruction. These in turn were
In no length of tlme they would accumulate enough TreasWh n not attending classes, swdy - -On to nayto 1__
an d Kelly a nived in Clevelan d on handed to th e architect of the ·on- ury Dept. amples to be able to give conditional exam and late
ing. 01· play ing ~ootba ll , Conly, in
t he 31st.
stru ction company, with the re ult registrations free of charge (see your catalogue for full par1
:-;ome my tt'rlous maimer, has fo nn'd
K;lly
rel~te
;vc
ral
high!;
coL
that1tho~e \vho lww ca t' t heh ey~ ticu lars ).
rime ro manage the 1\.1e rrick Hou e
ored accounts of (']a hes between heaven -ward at th e clock in St.
with his team-mate. AI Burens. The
atisfied
N. B. Students who needed extra credits, could. during
t he va riou factions of t he crew Mal·y's towe r·, a 1·e we ll
work he has can i <I ou among th e
during the voyag . Acco rdin g to with the design of the new cupola. their free periods, run the auto wash at th e Garage- torage
younge r boys mor than ever stamps
the ti me honored tradition, preva(li ted a s a science; 4 hour credit: no lab. re ports required.)
him as a leade r. and a capable one
- -On to nayton- lent
ince
the
old
Phoenecians
went
at th at.
. .
Seven men who attended Carro ll down to the ea in ships all disciAlthou~h
chmbm"' to G greater 1as t year a1·e no" . stu d ymg
·
.
. ' u pended
"
at 0 ur plme
wa
temporanly
.
Now here is another theory of High er Finance which
hl'tghls
on
Ca
rr
oll
teams.
reg
acL
d
f
h
L
k
s
·
Th
·
J oseph Jacobs
.
.
.
f
If
a Y o t e a ·e emmary.
ey whi le the vesse l crossed the Equat.
might work out. It is a well known fact that the mo,·ies spend
1
(J\Ilred qmte a reputall~~· or umse t are Joseph T. Carney, Albert J. or.
cenes that would rival t he
million s yearly for big settings. It is al o a fact that most
1
lll hiS younger d~y~ ..
sbcarelekr a. H orten, Charl es 1\'1. McBride. Law- wildest moments of an inter-clas
11
college men (especially the So phs and Frosh) feel their cultural
St. .John ' Prep IS st1 t e ta
\h
E M D
h J h F M 1
·
f
11-e nce · c onoug , o n ·
u -~ ru h p1·evatled on th e deck of the
1
tastes unfit t h e m for business, and hence would like to sell their
l:loston, a nd when he went rom tJere
holland Franci A. Uniack and Ed- "Le · " ·
h
t
d 51 l
to "'ol r e Dame \Jniver ity what
'
gJOn <~
e
eame
ow Y
dramatic ability to the movies.
·
_
.
.
·
:.
.
,
ward
A.
W
olf.
All
seven
a
re
reg::t(·ro;;" t.hP LinP "n rl thP von t.hfnl
cou ld he more nttmg tnan -w ar ne
- ------ ·· ·
----. -·-- : ·- • - -- -make the Freshman tea m? Gr g was i tered in t he Philosophy cou rse.
tars who had Signed Just for the
Therefore, it would be a good idea to have a Pathe man
a back in those days, and his fine
Howard E. ammon, en ational s ummer took. prompt advantage of
on the grounds at the time of the Ball Rush to s h oot a few
ti elcl work often caused him to be cage star, has e nter ed t he Milford the opportunity . to avenge th emmillion feet of that gyrating, kalidescopic mess of humanity,
mentioned as a pos ibl
running . ovitiate of the J es uit Order at elves upon their would be perseall devoid of collegiate haberdashery, drenched w ith antiquated
mate of th e g r eat Cast ner. Had he ;\lilford. 0 .. a li tt le town northeast cuto1·s.
cackle berries and tomatoes w h ose lofty ambitions of reaching
possessed Castn r·s great punting of incinnati.
ex t vaca t·1on K e II Y P lans t o
the cannery were shattered on the proboscises of the "Blunderability, iL was oHen cla imed that he'd
ship aboard a freighter bound for
ing
Herd." This reel, much more dramatic than the mob scene
riva l th e South Ben d tar as a back.
j t he Orient.
,
.
.
Reorganizatl011 First I
Work of Club
M emb ers
I
Appropriate Dome Now
Old
I Supplants
St
1
eep e
J. C. u_ TAR CRUISES I
TO SOUTH AMERICA
Ed Kelley Ships Aboard
Ameri·can Legion
as Seaman
I
SEVEN J. c:u. MEN
ENTER SEMINARY
1'hat may be-but we lik e your line
pJa.L "Jrisb," keep i t u11.
~·ear.
Captain; a ll the
world.
The last
uccess in the
New President
is Interviewed
(Co ntinu Pd lmm Pagr One)
ask of Father Boylan, he non.:haJant lv ,·oiced his opinion on lhe C'a rroll Ext ns ion Co urses, al!ain taking
me a wa)' frODl the main idea of my
\'isit. namely to interview Father
Boylan.
A discussion of the ·ubject- foothall-brought u natural!.'· to u discourse on the 'arroll lllu e trea k
e leYen. in which Father Boylan ha
been great ly interested
ince the
~ridi r on ~pon made its initial bow
at Carroll.
"I am high!~· pleased that John
C'arroll i. putting Cleveland on the
map in the matter of high c l a-~ athletics," said Father Boylan. " and I
hope that the st udent will continue
to achie ve laurels both in the athle t ic an cl aeademic amphitheatre."
Tile old pro Yerb that ·'Absence
maki'S the heart g row Conder," surely hold s true in the ca e ot' Father
Boylan. who confesses that in all the
yPars th at he ha been away from
his Alma ~lat er he has follow ed her
ri se upon the cholastic ladder. heing
favorably impress d by the uccess
o[ her students in the "Intercolle.!>iate ," which are so familiar to
the upper classmen. Fath er Boylan
in his wide travels has come in co ntact with a g reat many students,
but he admit that he ha been most
favo rably impressed by th & boys
from hi own native city-Cie\'eland.
Syrnphon 0 ch stra
y r e
in the Hunchback of Notre Dame, the Sea Hawk, Scaramouche,
Resumes Rehearsals L. Arth Elected to
Office of Prefect
Football team" are not the only
ones who start practice long before
the season opens. Fathet· Winter,
.J ., directo r of the John Carroll
Symphony
Orche t ra,
had
his
youthful musician keep their fingers nimble t hroug hout the vacatio n peri od . by attend ing ·hort evening rehear als. The r esult was
that it was pos ibl e fo r the Ca rroll
ymphony to make its fi rst a ppearance of t he season at a concert on Sunday e,·ening, Au g . 23rd,
at the Public Auditorium, as the
important part of the enterta inment for the atholic Central Society. After t he performance at
the Public Auditorium, Father Winter received many Ma tter in g comp liments about his mu :cians f rom the
many intelle ·tual men w:to ·were
representatives at the co nv ention
from the principal ities of t he U.
. A.
They all remarked that it
wa, astounding th!\t ninety youth
could perfom1 with practically professional finesse.
Arrange ments hav-e just about
been completed for three concert
at an earl y future date on the S~·m phonies
chedule. Rehearsa ls for
these concerts have a lready tarted
and Fath r Winter claims t hat the
many new members who have turned out for the orchestra mak e hi
s ymph ony the finest that Carroll
ha ever had, due to the fact that
each sect ion is composed of mem ber- who have had years of orchestra work eit her here or el ewhere,
and hav for many year been out
of the amateurish cia , verging on
th pre tige of prod igy artis t..
On 'l'h ursclay. Oct. 1st, the Senior
oclality con vened in ttl Fath rs·
• Cha pel for its Jirst mee tin12: of th e
new term. Th e meetin g wa officia lly
lumed over to the e lection o[ lhe
officer· for the co min g year.
Th e results of the election we1·e a~
follows: Lawrence Arth, ·213, wa s
honor d with th office of pr efect;
Francis Tetlak. '27. Jirsl as. istant;
Paul Sikora. '27 , second a sistant.
Th :\lission s ction has been organized ancl wi ll begin its act.i\· iti es
doing ~ocial welfare \\'OI'k unday,
Oct. Hh. some of the Socialists visiting tile elrl erly peoPI at the Wa rrens\·ille Farms. and other member·
of the Sodality teaching catechism
at the different pa ri shes throu ghout
the city, which either haven't pa r achi al schools. or whil'h have not
eno ugh Sisters to take car e of the
extra students of publi c schools who
are bound to get r eli giou inslruction on Sunday
The time or the r egular weekly
odality meeti ng ha not a yer
been announced by the ~loderator of
th e Sodality, Father Haggeney, S. J ..
until the meeting of t he con ultors
can agree on a time co nvenient to
all the odalist .
The oloist engaged for the big
winter concer t, is the highest priced
\·iolini t of international fame. This
soloi st has played before the Vatican and ha been honored by the
HDly Father by being Knighted in
the Ord er of t. Gregory.
etc., could be spliced into a feature photoplay; for surely a few
more French Historical p lays by Sabatini are to be produced.
And hence, in this mob scene the students would be paid
for their histronic ability and the producers wou ld be ahead a
half-million . The movie houses would get a greater attendance
for they could advertise: "A stupendous spectacle, mob scene
of which is composed of over 200 college educated actors." But
I suppose it's too late now to do that, unle s the Frosh dispute
the decision and have the contest played over again. How about
it? Oh w e ll, it doe nutmeg any difference-we'll do that next
year.
•
•
It must not go unobserved that some general dolling up
has taken place at John Carroll. The muddy water in the
nine in ches. His indoor record in p lacque. of the tableau of Washington crossing the Delaware
the same event made in the intra- in the S. S. Goodtime has been changed and redecorated .
mm·al meet at Carroll two years
ag·o , still stands; and he w as one of
The new tread on the tairways, where before only angels
the outsta nding performers in the dared to tread , are to have Alemite fittings. It has been decla s cage to urnament last Spring, cided that high pressure lubrication would tend to eliminate
making center on the seco nd Allthe queak which at present are proving detrimental to all
Class five .
scholars of higher learning who venture in during the wee
Ja cobs was also a gifted mu i- minutes after nine o'clock.
cian. H e took complete charge of
Athl etic Association Bazaar last
The whole exterior aspect of the corridor on the t hird
June and wa always a favorite floor has been thoroughly revolutionized , due to the lockers
performer at college smokers.
which have been installed, giving it the appearance of a country
club house. Thi will tend to make the boys more congenial;
Randall Miller Recovers that is when one of them has a bottle to share with his fellow
students-ink bottles were always hard to carry around .
Randall n1iller, '27, was welcomed
back to cla sses by his friends after
the operation for tonsil trouble
Garret "Jigg " Marrie has at la t conYinced his professors
which he underwent last week. When that hi reason for taking "The Study of Poetry" is grounded
a ked how he felt Randall replied on the idea that poetry is coming back and that there is an
that he felt rather bad because he
ever increasing demand for it. Quoting Mr. 1VIarrie we have :
wasn't there to ''tell it to the Marine ."
Tho e who have heard "Some of the best farm journal , in order to revive interest in
'Dolly's" booming crescendo at Dunn poetry a well as to be the mean , of finding out, and developing
Field can appreciate the grief this poets, have offered $1.00 to the reader who submits the best
last line to the jingles appearing in their columns."
must have caused him.
( Cuntl!lutd
(10111
fJage One)
THE CARROLL
c.
On
of '25 had a very enjoyable reunion
at the home of Georg-e R. Detzel
near Lorain, Oh io . The cia
i trying lo organize and keep in touch
I
I
As in fo rmer yea r s, a goodly
number of the new-fledged Alumni
have entered other institutions of
learning to follow the profe s ions.
Some, we find, have ventured into
the business world and have already scor ed a con iderable degree
:'-lr. A. Bungart. 'li. at the prese nt
ti m e i teaching Engli h in the colIE'ge department of hi Alma :'.Tater.
From th e r epo r ts or many of his
pupi l he i gi\" ing a \'ery interesting and practical cour e in that ub-
of succe
ject.
in their re pective field
of endeavor.
:\lr. J. :\L Ga llagher, S.J.. i.\lr. N.
Edward }!, Carney, captain and J . Prusser. S.J .. )lr. C'. Hill , S.J.,
center of the "Fi<>"hting Irish" last
a nd )fr. R. J. Grar. S.J.. present
year, i~ teaching History at t . I gmoderator of the Ca rroll :\ews, all
natius High SchooL
of the class of '1 . are teach ing varArthur E. Acklin, till recently in tau s branc le. at Carro ll l'niv ersity
charge of the cigar ta nd at the and ~t. l gn ati u Hig h S chooL
Smith Recrea tion company'
hall,
now operate the cigar stand in the
Union :Mortgage Company building.
Arthur attends the John Marshall
Law chool nights.
John E. Dowling en li sted a group
of Carroll men fot· the F'uller
Brush Company and, after managing them for the summer, left
for Florid a where he will enter the
real estate busine
Vic tor G. Eberhart i e ngaged in
_ _ _ _tea~bin.g ·English at :).lcKin\ey High
School, Young town.
PAPER FEATURES
SIX COLUMN SIZE
---
Appeara 1nce of PublicaI
d b
tion mprove
Y
Change
__ _
new CARROLL ~E\\' enable
Schork, a former th eThe
staff to insert a greater proportion
t r easurer of t he Carroll Union, the
of cuts in so far as a 14 % x 19%
Rudolph
·
th e F ro h were una bl e t o d o more th an t'1e the
one, b u t smce
econd year men the power -that-be • - - . - - - - - - _
.
yard !me where they battled strenuconstdered the affatr a Sophomore
.
h'
h t b
d d
1
1
victory.
ous Y unlt an arc mg s o
oun e
off the screen, tying t he score.
Preluded by a systematic outAgain ca me a re pite, and again
break of kidnappino- on the part of
"
the clas e
sprang to the attack
t he Sophs, and an equalh.- y·tebut the struggle wa s hort lived for
matic series of sen ational esca pes
on t he pa t·t of the Freshmen, the the whi tie blew soon after, nding
C
the pertod. During the inter- half
second ann ua 1
an·oll ball rush the first year m en loca ted an exwas started about three fifte en in ten ive sup ply of extremely uccuthe afternoon. Th e Soph s . mas ed lent tomatoes which went far toat t he so uth end of the campus, ward making the next few minutes
wept forward,
laying down a interesting for participant
and
somew hat erratic barrage of 1904 spectators alike.
mode l egg - Th e F re h men reta 1The third period was fast and
iated with other specimen
p refect of t he Sodali ty of the B less-
of the S cientific Academy, pla ns to
become a doctor. Mr. Schork has
been a dmitted to t he Johns Hopkins
School, Balti m o re.
Francis J . R obben i - attending
t h e t . Louis Medi cal Schoo L
Maurice J. Prender gast, former
general manager or THE IGNAT I AN. has had g r eat success this
s ummer in representing the F ull er
B ru sh Company. Mauri ce p lans to
m anage a crew of Fuller men for
a year before he enters medica l
sch ooL
Franci
T . Mc Donough, former
editor of THE IGNATIAN, has entered Western Reserve Law School.
After clas hour he i employed as
a co t clerk by the Clevel and Athletic Club.
Eugene C. Stringer, Carroll's
great fullback ,is playing with the
Cleveland B ull odgs. Gene will Tun
for City Co unci l this FalL
Franc is E. Teke ky i
attending
oE pre- furiou
sheet can carry several pictorial
feat uTes w hereas the old 10 1-1 xl3 1h
presented a badly overcrowded appearance if it held even a two colum n ha lf tone engraving. The
newly adopted stze ha the added
advantage of being distinctive, for
few American colleges emp loy it at
present, a lt hough the majority of
the CARROLL :-;EW'S exchanges do
favor the larger style of publication _
so the officials awarded the verdict
to the Sophomores.
Albeit their
tri umph was a holl ow one, considering that the cla scs were evenly match ed in numbers, t he victor
immediately commenced a spirited
:elebration .
Probably the mo t colorful part
of the affair occurred before the
actual play be~an. The Sophs . better organized than their opponents,
eized the haple s Freshies a they
arrived for the mornin g cia e and
hustled them un ce r emoniou ly into
t he basement of the s moking room.
The captives, how ever, showed re markable aptitude for breaking free
and the Soph' were k ept busy recapturing their erstwhile prisoners.
A chartered truck
conveyed one
batch of Fres hm en to Shaker Lakes
and abandoned them there, sans a
large percentage of their garments.
Even these r eturned, thou~h in
plenty of time for the ru h, a al o
did mo t of the Sophs who had
fallen inlo the clutche of the
Freshmen. One Sophomore, picked
off by the Freshman field cap ta in
was trussed to a tree on the lawn
of the Public Librar y, where he remained un ti l libera ted by sympathetic pedestrians.
eve ral Frosh,
garbed in outlandish co tume w ere
cov-ered
their
rapidly vanishin11: taken into the downtown dist1·'1ct
breath after ,..,•hich the clas es :.md fo rced to pass handbills adve r-
devoted a lar~re editor, has taken on~!' the duti ,
share of hi s time to t he task of
cheer leading.
Clayton
\Ve l h
s ucceeds MeGrader a
sport editor.
Welsh
joined the staff last year in the
spo r t writer. Wil[red
been promoted to the
rank of :\Iagazine editor. He takes
or
Feature editor. Edward 111ah r ha:s
been made a- istant news editor.
~Iah er formerly han<:llcd the news
of he high chool department.
High sc hool activities will be
co,·et·eu hy Phil Marquard, with
Hus,ey and Ray 1\!ooney having
ch1rge of the spo1·t ev nts.
NOTRE DAME COLLEGE
1345 Ansel Road
Cleveland, Ohio
Standard College Cour ses
for Catholic Women
THE
Arata Company
Fine Candie , Chocolate . Cigars,
Tobaccos and the Be t HomeMa.ue Ice Cream in ihe Uiy
tneGEIGER
I
STORES
IOJI!.\lli~V~.I!.,V..;lig!!&<f
!
I
"MIGRATION DAY"
_
CARROLL
DAYTON
VERSUS
In me m ory of his mother. the
faculty and student. of John Ca rroll niversity wish to extend to
Jack Cregan. '28, their ympathies
for him in his g-reat loss and a
pro m ise of their prayers for the
repose of her soul.
~ I rs. Cregan passed away last
June, after the school year bad
nded, so his friends wi sh to take
this first opportu n ity to express
to Jack their sentiments.
The new
double breasted by
SOCIETY BRAND
Nothing you can wear requires the correct cut as
much as the double brea ted uit. For that reason,
nothing you can wear will
look better on you than
the Society Brand double
breasted for fall.
Wide
shouldered, narrow hipped,
the low wai ted effect.
In Exclusive Fabrics
Special Train to Dayton
OCT. 17, 1925
Reservations, accompanied by cash or check,
must be made before noon , Thursday, Oct. 15.
Round t rip f are, $8.00. Committee in charge,
John McGroder, Pat McDonnell, Jack
Sheehan, E dward Maher , Thos. Shea.
Main 915
E. C. BOCK
854 R ose Bldg.
the place of hi fellow townsman.
John :\L Lyden, who did not return
this falL Other alterations in the
p r.onnel of th
taff include the
return of Charles l\lulcahy as news
e d"Jtot·. R ay 'I
•• a d'1gan, f ormer news
tie . The ophs seemed to have pa er by.
improved greatly during the rest
. d an d th ey succee d e d , f or th e
peno
fir t time, in getting the ball into
the Freshies' territory. After hamm e ring futi ll y at the first year
ranks for the better part of fifteen
· t
th s h
t 1
th b k
Dobe.rr:kJshery
mmu es _ e 0 P. s a
eng
r o ·e
Sporting
GOod$
1
through ~ a serte s of s hort plunges
and earn ed the t1ght to the one ---------------~
·
--
In Memoriam
Club - Class - And Frat Pins a specialty
city of port editor for the pa t
three se m esters. H e wa recently
e lected president of his class, which
po ition he also held during hi Junior year. Aside from hi s po1itical and journa 1·tS t·IC -mterests,
but unproductive of goal' McGroder ha
mature poulb·y and when the first
clash occurred it wa s th e yearlings
that ramm ed a huge gap through
the rank of their opponents, driving the sphere some twenty-five
yards nearer their objective before
they w ere checked by the sideline
and the Soph's secondary defense.
The battle waxed fler:ely for
some minutes, ebbing and flowing
all over the expan e of the Sophomore territory, then suddenly the
ball bounded back from the crimmage and soared toward the d i tant
goa l of the Frosh. Archie Lewis.
a giant Fre hman, was playing a
roving game on the outskirt of the
m e lee and the ball landed directly
at his feet. He prompt!}· hoisted
it aloft with a well ca lculated blow
of his fist and befor e the
ophs
were aware of what wa ha ppening
he had batted the ball clear of the
- truggling ma s and w as we ll on
his way toward the Lorain Street
fence. By the time an ot·ganized
pursuit wa s gotten in moti on he
had he rded the sp he re down to the
barrier and ju t as th e van gua 1-d
of the Sophs swarmed down upon
him he hurl ed the g lobe a,e;ainst the
scr een for th e fir st score of the tilt.
A halt was called for several
minute while the combatants re-
J
ed Virgin last year, and president
..\ !thoug-h accurate fi~ur ;; are no
,-e
obtainable, advance report;.
furni.h a f3irly reliable set of tati;;tJC;; on the full r gistration. It
i~ evident, for exampl ' that Carroll ha. at present th
lar)!e. t
l
phnmor enrollment in th hi;;on ot thE' institution. The secon1l
In a~cordance with the nl'w policy YE':l-r cla: nnmbt>rs about one hunestablis hed by Mr. Gray,
.J .. ctrt>d "ualtwent\" . Th~ F'r~ghntan clas«
<
<
newly appointed moderator of THE i~ an.. 111 •0 ,.·' 1•1n,·'tcJ_." • tJ1'n ~.~ amn~ 1·n st'zn,~
CARROLL :\E\\' . a enior has been a· the opohmo 1·e, but small r than
·
th
"t'
f d't
h
1 or on t e that of last year.
g-n·en
e po 1 ton o
The Junior'
college publication. John B. )fc- total thirty-eight.
Groder, '26, former sport editot·,
Altoo-ether the roll of ;.ludents i:<
.,
has received the assignment. He s li g-htly smaller than it was Ia t
' ll
·
·
ffi
'l
·
wt
remam m 0 ce untt some yeat· but t hi s condition may be
tim in Februarv when the various
1
h f
h
··
· tracel to t e act t at a considertaff positions will be r ed istributed able number of apph"ant!'i failed to
among the member of the th r ee pre ent acceptable credit sheets
lower cla ses .
.
from their respective hio-h sc hools.
i\I
G d
h as serve d m t h e capa- 1 - - - - - - - - - - ... - - - 1 c ro er
I
At a me tinO' o[ THE ARROLI- changed goal and re umed ho tili- ti ing the Marine game to the
• , .
t . _
t qGtl1
Edwin F. Faulhabet· i affiliated : E" S sta~ 00 a Ut da)' ep : ·
'
1
with the :'olarquard R ea 1ty C ompa- t wa dectded to .alter the stze• hof
the pa'?er. T?e stx co 1umn, etg t
ny.
page Size, wh tch was adopted, ~fVincent F. Hlavin is employed fer a "':eater ran ..e:e of O]lpor~umty
by the Telling-Belle \'ernon Com- for the mcot~pol·atJon of new tdeas,
pany. In the eve ning V incent at- and also an mcreased cope for the
of
adverti ing.
The
old
tends a co urse at Cleveland Col- use
IG. A TIAN afforded small chance
lege.
· t y because o f 1't exf or muc h vane
Joseph T. Hodus, president of the tremely limited s pace accomodaCollege Union Ia t year and former tion , and while the adverti ing had
Alumni editor of THE IGXATIA , r eached saturation point it was
JS attendi ng insurance
chool at not yielding s uffici en t r etu rn s to
Northwestern University.
meet expenses .
ophomores Have
Greatest Numbers
F•ft
F h men A re v·lCt•liDS 0f s0p h K l'd naper Other
Appointment
·j
l Y re
.
But Escape in Time for Contest
And PromotiOn
N
The night of October fir t found the ophs rejoicing in a
ecessary
I
technical victory O\'er the Fre hie . \Vhen the contest wa
I
stopped at the end of the third period t he core stood one to
.
t. Louts Medical School.
Frank A. Peterlin mtend: to
work a yea r before he returns to
schooL During the summer Frank
with onE' ano th er. and th t·efore the worked at the Cle'"eland no l office
immediate object of the meetin~
·
was to elect a permanent sec retary.
Frank J. Hru ka, the "Blue
Streak' " tack le for four year , is
Th E' meetin~ resulted in the unanimous lection or John E. Dowlin"' working in a branch office of the
as secretary.
Cleveland Tru t Compan,-. Frank
J
·
I
·
f
tt d th A
0
•,
howe"e
t·,
'Ir·.
Dowlt'ng
a
en
s
e
mencan
nstttute
Recent]~
•
-•
B k
'
h 00 1
has left for F'lorida to ente r t h e
an ers
c
of banking in the
real e~tate business. He ha
ap- evening.
po inted Ining J . Naughton as ternJames A. Flood has entered the
porary ecretary, and Mr. Na ughOur
Lady of the Lake e mt"nary.
ton will co ntinue to officiate until
the next election wh ich will take
George R. Detzel has also entered
place at the annual Alumni banquet
in December.
Our Lady of the Lake eminarr.
Theodore P. Learn, a former
The Cia
of '25
The cia of '25, t he large t grad- sport editor of THE IG rATIAN,
uating clas in the hi tory of t. teaches hi tory at St. Xavi e r ' and
Ignatius College and John Carroll attends the Cincinnati Law School.
Univer. ity, has "hitched its wagon
Irving J. Naughton is employed
to a star" and has already tarted
the uphill climb on the road to Suc- in the loca l office of the Lackawana
cess.
Railroad.
Page Three
SOPHS TRIUMPH OVER
IMcGRODER TAKES
FROSH IN BALL RUSH I EDITORIAL DUTIES
u.
~ unday, Augu t 16, the class
EWS
~~
~M,mtbf.t"i•'i'R;;mtWt',~"tl\"'imtw~wtmtwli<xWtlt"i'illm'rCll
with two pairs of t rousers
sso
I n Our
College Room
Third Floor
/
Page Four
THE CARROLL NEWS
main source from which they can be better directed, more
THE CARROL-L NEWS aefficiently
pushed.
Published fortnightly by the students of John Carroll University.
Editorial and Business Offices, W. 30th and Carroll Ave.,
Cleveland, Ohio.
Subscriptions-$1.00 per year.
STAFF
Editor-in-chief __________________________________ John B. McGroder, '26
Associate Editor_ _______________________________ William J. Fornes, '27
>lews Editor_ _________________________________ Charles J. Mulcahy, '27
Asst. News Editor------------------------------Edward F. Maher, '29
Feature Editor_ _______________________________ __ L. Ray Madigan, '27
Literary Editor ______________________________ Wilfred J. Eberhart, '27
Alumni Editor-------------------------------------Cyril J. Reuss, '28
Sports Editor __________________________________ L. Clayton Welsh, '27
General Manager- -- -------------- -----------------Thomas J. Shea,
Advertising Manager_ ______________________________ Vincent Glas ,
Asst. Advertising Manager_ ______________________ Frank J. Ranney,
Circulation Manager __________________________ Thomas H. O'Reilly,
Asst. Circulation Manager ________________________ John J. Sheehan,
'26
'28
'28
'27
'28
St. Ignatius High
ews Editor ___________________________________________ Phil Marquard
Asst. News Editor __________________________________ Armand Schwind
Sports Editor _________________________________________ William Hussey
A st. Sports Editor ___________________________________ Raymond Mooney_
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1925
To the Freshmen
For the last three weeks the upper class-men have noticed
a rather large group of serious-faced, wide-eyed young gentlemen wandering aimlessly about the halls, each with a white
card in his hand, and trying to find "something" which as yet
has succeeded in evading them. They have also noticed that
these same young men are meticulously dressed, that they are
extremely polite to everybody that they meet in the corridors
or on the campus and that they bear themselves with a new
dignity as they walk through town with six or seven books
apiece under their arms. These men are the inevitable and
· d·
bl F
h
t th t•
th
t
d C
11
m 1spen
p o . e 1me . ey en ere
arro
.
. a e res men.
.
Umvers1ty, college hfe was a thmg of the1r boyhood dreams;
" h d
,
h
d f
d th th . 11 h. h th
t
t
c e u. 1e were
e n w .IC
ey go ou
. un ear o ' an
of cuttmg the1r. first clas
was almost a physical
shock. But
.
.
they are becommg acchmated-slowly but SUI ely.
In the majority of cases, the manner in which a college
·
111s
· F·res h man year de t ermmes
·
. h"1mseIf d urmg
t u den t app I 1es
the success or failure of hi college career; for in this year h e
u ually ets a tandard by which he is guided for the rest of
hi cour e. This standard may be one of hap-hazard study ot·
it may be one of assiduous study, according to the way in which
Lhe student has used the new liberty of college life which he
~-----'-~.1;:..\C''er h for experienced in hi prep-school days. This freedom is given to him that he may know he is approaching manhood and must begin to hift for himself; that he may develop
his character by denying himself pleasures, of his own accord,
when there is school work to be done. This privilege, therefore must not be abu ed because it will either break or make
the tudent.
It is traditional at John Carroll that every student wholeheartedly support every chool activity. When there is question of a Carroll activity or an outside event, his school takes
nr~'>f'~'>rlPnf'P · fm· hi!': intPrPl>.t. il'l 11niliviileil. Tt is exnected that
~~r ~~;;·;r;;e~d~ ~~Dl·t~-k~ -~; -thi~--s~i1~i-t-~~d -;o~ti~u~ the tradi· ·
·
·
tion and that they will mterest the1r many fnends as soon as
pos ible. Everything "Carroll" i worth while, and therefore
need not be apologized for.
From all indication the Freshman class of this year is
not a dead one, for the interest they bowed in the "Ball Rush"
and the large numbers in which they attended the Marine
game are undeniable indication of real chool spirit. We wish
to congratulate them and wi h them the best of luck for the
coming chool year.-W. J. F.
The Carroll Union
That next week has been set aside by the Carroll Union
· d b y t h"1s t·1me. Th a t
as Union Week has been well a d vert1se
an inten ive drive for nion due will be pushed during that
ri 0 d i now '"'ell known to the general student body. But,
P
.
.
.
.
we wonder 1f the true 1gmficance of the movement I really
appreciated by the students· if they realize the reward such a
driYe will bring to them individually and the value it holds
for the Univer ity at large.
The purpose of the Carroll Union ha frequently been defined. "To foster a finer co-operation between the student body
and the faculty and to promote tho e acti\'itie which concern
the large majority of the -tudent " are the aims generally at.
tributed to the Union. Unle the tudents grasp t h e meanmg
of these definitions and the bearing they hold on their college
life, they stand as empty phra e and the Union fails it
purpose.
A id from athlet~c acti\·ities, the_ Union is the one big inftuence at Carroll wh1ch tends to umfy the student body. to
gh·e aim and purpose to iL actiYitie , and to direct these activitie with the welfare of the whole school at heart. The
th th
·
· ·
Executive Coun il of the C arro 11 U mon, compn mg e ree
highe t officer of each cla s and generally mistaken as the
Union itself, should be the clearing house of student proposals
and dl.fficult1·es. It hould be the center of tudent activities,
As a mediator b~tween the faculty and the student body
the Executive Council can carry on as it has in the past without great help from the men for whom it is working. In some
of its work it can still carry on by it own efforts and dispense
with active aid of the classes; but in many of its duties most
of which are a prime importance to every student and every
class, the need of active co-operation is absolutely imperative.
It is here, if at any place, where the Carroll men, in the
main, are wanting. They fail to gra p the fact that each and
every one of them is by right a member of the Carroll Union.
A member by right, but not an active one until he has met his
obligations towards that body, principal of which is placing
himself in good standing by the payment of his dues. The
annual dues of the students are the backbone of the treasury,
in fact the treasury itself. As a progres ive organization the
Union cannot function without a full treasury at its command,
nor without an interested membership among the students.
No more can it do this than can a general wage battle for !'1.
cause without sufficient
If troops
f h at his disposal, or a full commissariat for the we are o t ose same troops.
The necessity of such means placed at the disposal of the
Council is born out by a mere statement of the ends towards
which they may be turned. While frequent smokers are a
source of entertainment to the whole college, they present, no
less, a bill of expense which can be met by no dilapidated treasury. Insufficient means allow only meager programmes, which
would fall fiat in comparison with the pretentious affairs arranged in the past.
Inter-class meets and tournaments in basketball, track
and indoor baseball should be rewarded by suitable trophies,
which, again, must be furnished by the Union. And then there
are the expenses incidental to College Day and similar events
throughout the year; the students' own enterprises which
should be backed to the limit in their own interest and the
prosperity of the chool.
Th e pressmg
.
nee d s w h.1ch mee t th e E xecu t·1ve Counc1.1 are
.
.
.
.
.
apparent. The response wh1ch the students will give hves m the
.
.
.
.
.
very near future. Knowmg the sp1nt wh1ch prevails among
th e men a t th e U mversi
·
·ty we f ee1 con fid en t th a t they, k nowmg
·
th e con d·t·
.
fl."
th
.
t
th
k
f
U
·
1 IOns, Wl 11 1ng
emse1ves In o
e wor o
mon
Week with a whole-hearted spirit. Payment of dues will bankrupt nobody. Dues amount to no enormous sum for any one
man but the total will make possible a year of worth-while activities, which will benefit eYery donor. So everyone is urged
to settle up early. Let "Pay early and play long" be your motto,
opening the way for an eventful year.
J. B. MeG.
Cleveland and Carroll
l
TO THE CREW OF THE P. N.-9
OMELETS
-ByThll Big Butter and Ecg Man
The Safety Convention is over I
ken;
The Tong wars are finished and
everything's grand;
It's safe to be out on the sidewalks
again - . And down in Miami they're still
selling land.
(While values soar crazily up be-
No.1
I am the great grim god
of the
empty spaces
Ruler alone of all of the outer
air.
Why in the name of the stars must
you play in the places
That I have reserved for the circling gulls that are there?
Would you defy me again in the
heights of your madness,
Piercing the barriers fiung in the
clouds of the sea?
yond reach
Ah, then your joyous disdain wilt
They're ·elling and re-selling down
be blasted, and sadness
on The Beach.)
Will drop like a pall on yourhearts and you'll answer to
Th
old world is running in midme.
season form;
The housewives are canning their
What! And you will, though I warn
peache and pears;
you and flally forbid you?
There's plenty of coal to keep
Hark! Are there ro aring propeleveryone warm
lor a broa<l in the ky '?
And sure it's an excellent state
of affairs.
Know then, 0 fools, as you curse at
the gale that undid you,
(In spite of its fineness, alas and
Those who defy me are flung to
alack,
the wave. --and they die!
It's this time of year that we have
Have
at
then, hors s, with manes
to come back.)
froth-white from your tossing!
Trample them, steeds, that are
We ha,·e to abandon the jobs that
we had
galloping west on the main!
Which caused u
to rise at the They shall
who
Owning,
that
dawn's early light,
But som how that part of it isn't
so bad,
W
miss them
the
most when
be food for the conger,
failed in their crossing,
perchance, at the death
their effort were vainf
II.
it's Saturday night.
(For isn't it plain that we all would Mortals who rose from the depths
a lot
of the ocean have found them.
Rather labor than stu<ly? Why,
Robbed of my vengeance, I watch
certainlv_ _ .- .- NOT.)
a their ve sel d parts.
Gods who are greater than I have
Th ese an d Th ose
been stalking around them,
Possibly some of our older readGuarding the valor that ro ots like
ers may recall us a The General
an oak in their heart .
who at one time served bi-weekly
ow at the Ia t it i I who must
portions of Caviare. Well, our comown I am beaten;
mis ion proved fruitless in times
I who must own that the vaunting I made w2re a lieof peace and Caviare was swept
into the discard wth the rest of But how can the hor es devour who
Russia, so we resigned our comwill not be eaten,
mand, abandoned our typewriter and
Or trample to death who steadfastly refuses to die?
turned to more lucrative fields. Now
we have returned to the scene of
L'E~VOI
our previous efforts, one of the new
aristocracy, a Big Butter and Egg
hate them, who hurled them
Once again football rules the land, king of the autumnal Man. As you doubtless are aware,
away to a death they evaded,
months. Gripped by the far-reaching influence of the sport we Big Butter and Egg Men can
Who flung them like chaff to the
do anything; so, if need be, we
steeds as I'll flin.,.. them again;
t h e public is taking a greater interest in the game.
could easily fill this column alone But the scorn that I bore in my
It IS
· a _grea t source of sa t•1sf actwn
· to use, who are so vitally and unaided, issue after issue, till
.
heart with the hatred has
mterested m the success of John Carroll University on the grid- the Calends of Greece or beyond;
faded,
iron, among other activities, to realize that the fame of the 11 but, if you care to send u~ three
For, faith , they were fail ures
"Blue Streak" is reaching farther and farther, that beyond I or eight c~ntributions, all well and
but who can deny they were
men?
local precincts the team is fast becoming famollR-t.hP f'Vn()l'lnr"' good. We 11 be only too glad to get
of critical eyes and is measuring u~ to--the-hi~h-;ta~d~rd"s-~hf~l~ fthem; Wwe maky even print soldme, in
t
·t·
·
act.
e as· you, now, cou
anyspor en 1cs are settmg for great teams.
th"mg b e f a1rer
.
th an th a t , h u h?.
- -On to Dayton-Last Saturday, against the powerful United States Marine
team from Quantico, Va., Carroll made as fine a defense and ·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:..21:
t
A
A
showed as clever an offense as has been seen in this city. But y
¥
~
A
the pity of it-a mere handful in the stands compared with the yy
A
great capacity of the park. For a game of such prominence,
featuring two such powerful teams, one would have every right
y
A
to expect an overflowing crowd at Dunn Field.
y
A
y
A
Such crowds a1·e possible at Carroll games, and such crowds
will be had. Carroll's power as a drawing card is growing with
each successive game, a power which must prove irresistable in y
A
.t.
time. And here's our point, it's up to the students of John ••
A
A
Carroll to hasten that time-they can easily accomplish such
College Courses Leading to
:::
..
.t.
a task.
:i:
A.B., B. S. and Ph. B. Degrees
:i:
_There is no publicity which is o effecti~e as that which is ~
A
ca_rned b) word of mouth. Constant gossip about the team t
will put the name of Carroll on the tongues of many who are i
X
y
A
not now interested and who pass over the headlines the Cleve- ..
A
land papers have been giving the school as matter not of their f
A
St. Ignatius High School
:i:
interest. With students scattered through every section of the :::
••
A
city, such verbal advertising should be no difficult feat .
f
A
y
A
Let "Carroll" be your watchward. Don't hesitate to talk ..
A
about the team, about the school. Those are subjects of which f
A
A
you can be proud, about which you can talk. Communicate that yy
A
enthusiasm to your acquaintances, make t~em boosters of Car- :::
Catalogues
Mailed
on
Request
:i:
y
A
roll, swell the crowd -the team de erves It.
-J. B. MeG.
fY
A
A
ty
~
A
y
~
A Suggestion
v
A
I
~~
~
John Carroll ~~
University
i
:i;
+
..
*
Reminiscent old "grads" are unanimous in their declaration
that the days which they spent at college were the happiest
days of their lives. How often do they look over their books,
their notes, their class pictures and their Annuals, and live
again their under-graduate days. In view of this fact we would
like to suggest that the students at Carroll save their new copies
of the CARROLL NEWS and place them with their copies of
the old IGN A TIAN and have them bound for future enjoyment.
The CARROLL NEWS is interesting to the students now but
its interest will increase tenfold after they have left school.
y
:!:y
:;:
:::
·'·
Conducted by the JESUIT FATHERS.
Rev. Murtha J. Boylan, S. J., President
Y
-i-
:f.
;::
West 30th Street and Carroll Avenue
"J"
:::
:}.
A
·'·
Cleveland, Ohio
~:
:::
f
Y
~
t
:f
......... .
.t..
...........·..·-·-·-·
..·:.·..·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-v-·-·..,.....
..·..·-·-·-·,...·-·-·-·-·-·
......
,... . ...........................
... ,.. ..·.M.........;.:;
--
Page Five
THE CARROLL NEWS
1
Magazine Section
Masquer~de
REVERIE
Carroll at Night
By Pat
Rayburn
Xight, they have been telling us
I.
for s~veral thousand of years, is ~lelodiou : upon the breeze
Th ere- float th
·onP; of trembthe time for sleep; and with the
ling ·trin~Th plan for his joke s lowly shaped.! exception of a few imaginative
A riYal to the- nightingale
it~elf.
D'Artao-nan'
who appear Gibrai-"'- - through the tartled night be
W
. I
"'
The day grew warmer.
arm m 1 tar-like above the lethargic waten:
in g ..
the market district meant sultrin es. of their time, we humans have a cII.
ancl st:ltrine:. meant sheer mi sery ce pted thi dictum quite docilely. The palm trees sha<le the sands of
whit
to the lar ~e man who had to "wait on' W ise ind . ed is Morph u , the artOn which the dancing waters
der pe put.•· but there were f w cu
ful .ender of dream - who would
play·
tomers.
a,·e his delightful realm for him- Wi th l'pendthrift hand Pale Lnna
casts
Later. during th scorching heat of' self hy lulling our sen e into obHer • ilvered wealth until the day.
mid-afternoon. :.\lr . Lanz became livion! Ah, my friend , break from
"Hi face is dead,' ' agreed CathFor thirty years, the window ol
the Ontarian. Jacob Wohl'
aloon, erine, unmoved at her hu band's disRather gaudy, with plots ·no older
arcastic critic! m, "but
had gazed silently upon the motley. play of
han domestic life in the comic
bickering crowd that milled in the there· something burning inside.
·trips, char acterizes more than a
J ust think, we hav lived here for
few of the popular volumes read this Sheriff treet :\Ia rket Square.
In thi ancient window one after- three years and his cat already
summer. There's variety for you,
noon in late s pring a olitary cat knows more about him than we effer
though.
will-stil l- ! like Jacob ."
Much ha been said and much was sleeping.
''Oh, h e's all ri a ht,' ' hasti ly assaid
about
Michel
Passersby
gazed
curiously
at
the
more will be
ured
Adolph , "but that damned cat
Arlen. This young man's smooth st r·anae animal-strange because of
of
his.
I hate that Mark. Only last nenou . Perhaps some prescience
phrasing and clever word juggling his enormous size and ferocious face
night
didn't
I see him caiTying a war n ed her of co min ~ tragedy.
he
will fascinate that group of readers -strange because of his death-like
you
n
g
puppy
down
the
hall?
Who
<'Ire.
·ed
quickly
and
hastened
im tuobility-str ange becau. e of the
•ct 1 h to
who are sophisticatf:d enouO'h to like scar that ran in a jagged line from killed our cats ? By damn . I cou ld :'\inth Street Cathedral. "" o P hrethe intelligence-plus group of
choke that Jaco b when he says I ferr d to her depa t·ture a anot er
Engli sh. I think hi s best is a the tip of his tail to his eyes.
will never find a cat like Mark. What one of ''dose damn praying spells''
The curious a ked Questions. The
I
h 0 rt stories
0f
"Those
sho
uld I want with a cat like Mark? and laughed loud and lon g at her
vo ume
s
'
informed answered. They told of
Charming People" which is not so
One :.\1ark around here is plenty, fear . He sprawled dscontentedly on
new. "The Green Hat" is a cheap how the beast had robbed a fish I - - "
a chait· dangerous ly tilted against
stall, how a nearby butcher lost a
plot construction and what poular" 0, tell him to come o ver for sup- the tore front, da mn ing t h e weather
fine fowl. and they pointed out do gs
ity it has merited can be attri buted
who bore cruel scar
from the per," interrupted Cath erine. "I don't twice as vehemently and three time
to the word-showmanship of its
like Mark, but I like Jacob. Go now!" louder than pas ing friends.
a loo nkeeper's pet.
author. Ten years from now Arlen
Jacob came to his neighbors that
He kept hi joke to himself until
They told of how he had defeated a eve ning cleanly s haved and ~at·hed
will tear down the veneer of popularge polfcedog just last Sunday- in his best. His best Included a tie the following morning, when he delarity and do something worth
how that couchant yellow body had a nd amber-colored glasses, which cided to tel l Cathe rine about it.
while. In the meantime wait until
quickly
"lt's no aood," said Catherine
launched
its quivering, were re served for Sunday use. Durhe does. It will be worth it.
ino· the meal Jacob suffer ed embarbluntly. "you know how Jacob i s. It
scarred mass. a nd how the dog,
ra ssment at every tu rn because of
Intoxicating
pen - clo,vning
by
howlin~ painfully, had fl ed.
This his eyes. Whenever the stone-faced might hurt him-more like a woman
Donald Ogden Stewart has appearwierd eat's nam e? Mark. That name old man would be gu il ty of a breach - that mao- more like a woman."
ed again. Thi s time it's "The haq been g iven him by J acob, the
of etiquette or t r ansfe1· an unaskedAdolph tared at het· with a sneer.
Crazy Fool." Too many pages nearsighted. old saloonkeeper-the fat· dish, Adolph would laugh loudl y
An anger against hi wife flamed up
and slap his fat thig hs.
grace t his volume. The h er o, Char- only man this law less cat obeyed.
within him because she had voiced
Two yea t·s ago one summer evenJacob fed :.\1at·k with choice morlie Hatch, inherits an asylum and
a sentiment which he had battled
ing :\lark had tagget·ed ben eath the sels of food from hi own plate.
falls in with all t he stock charactall of yesterday. He dropped his
s win ging doors of the Ontarion. His
"What the hell, " Adolph s hou ted,
ers which humorists have toyed body was fresh ly welted, vividly "we wlll feed him later. Eat your half- moked ciga r rather defiantly
into the empty grate.
with
ince-well-long, long ago. scarred and dripping blood.
food and forget about the cat ju t
"By damn. I will do it. I will, by
Jacob's
first
thought,
perhaps,
was
once."
There are few enough real laughs
damn," he gr umbled.
to
kick
the
hideous
intruder
back
Jacob n ever replied but continu ed
l'ifted through about t hree hundred
:\lark padded into the store soon
into the blackness whence it had eating in s ilence and generally a
page.
come. But he could not. There was mumbled apology would burst from aft er in search of cheese rinds which
were tossed into a box beneath the
By far the best and, at times, someth ing about the bedraggled his host's lips.
counter.
This gave the troubled
the worst is George Shively's beast that aroused a little-touched
The evening wo r e on. Jacob and
pt·oprietor an excell ent opportunity
corner
of
Jacob's
h
eart-a
heart
as
Adolph
li
o-hted
their
pipes
and
Mrs.
" Initiation." This first novel is an
scarred by vicis itude-eve n as the Lanz dozed over a German new - for comparing the two animal . and
x cellent character portrayal. John body of this strange cat.
to hi amazement they r esembled
paper. At last Jacob left wi th ::\1ark
M alleson, reared under two conSo Jacob suffered the animal to re- at his heels and some scraps of meat. one another far more than he had
thOU,!1ht.
flic:ting religious influences, de- main and a friendship began to grow, At the door he turned and thanked
Again an invitation wa extended
horn
of
a
certain
fee
lin
g
of
akinness
the couple for their hospitality. He
velops a highly interesting and
between this vagabond cat and this watched Adolph cu ff ~fark playfully Jacob, and again that man accepted.
colorfu l philosophy which is tested
The dinner was excellent. Jacob ate
wifeless. childless, friendless old a few times and remarked :
at
the French front . The late war man.
heartily. He had brought Adolph a
--~~~
oon ?.lal·k became enthroned
"You don't like my )fark yet-eh,
as described by Shively is more at the end of the bar where Jacob Adolph? You have never seen one bottle of French wine which. be said,
h ad been bottl ed for Napoleon.
vivid, more brutal and more grip- r ead papers between rounds of like him before, eh? I think you
Adolph drank the entire contents
drink
.
The
late
afternoon
sun
cleft
never
will,
either.
On
ly
one
like
ping than any other portrayal I
quickly and excu sed himself while he
a path to them and enveloped the him. on ly one."
have read . Like the others, it was strange pair in a shimmering aura.
smuggled the cat that so resembled
Laughing queerly, he fumbled mowritten with an eye on the check
.Jacob had n ever realized a perfect mentarily with the knob. Then , :\lark to the Ontarian.
He arriv d just as the "barkeep"
companionshi p until the advent of sensin g that Ado l ph was still watchbook.
wa locki ng the front door.
:\!ark.
Here.
at
last,
was
a
real
ing his almost blind efforts t o locate
The laurel to &Ina St. Vincent
"This is Jacob's cat. He wants me
:M illay for poetry. Since "A Few friend. :.\Tark purred sincere thank it, he angrily grabbed at the porceto lock him in the saloon until he
Fig from Thistles" we expect and when petted, attempted to r eturn the lain, wrenched it open, and quickly
gets back from my house," he
what is more-we receive real compliments by rubbing against closed the door , but. as Catherine had plain eli
Jacob's
legs
and
was
always
at
his
remarked, his facia l expression repoetry who e
charm captivates .
"All right. captain. Drop him ln.mained unchanged.
You'll never toss a Millay volume heels.
Adolph did more than "drop him
Here
was
a
friend
who
would
never
"Damn
him
and
his
cat,"
sneered
on the li brary shelf without favorin .'' He placed the cat carefully on
play
the
hypocrite.
Here
was
a
Ado lph, "alway the same, a l ways
able co mment. She ha s the incomthe bar with a fervent prayer that it
parable elan of the genuine artist. friend who never ta un ted him of his the same."
would remain there until Jacob refailing sight.
And to the credit of the majority of
:'\o w It happened one day soon turned. Then be hurri ed back to his
Jacob
often
knelt
before
the
old
readers she has been appreciated.
after th is suppe r Adolph had busi- own store as Jacob was leaving.
That's just a few. There's more. metal trunk in his small room at the nes in Lakewood. Soon after the
" Gute nacht, missu . and Adolph;·
Too many.
Groupi n
them you'll rear of the saloon absorbed in pho- car had passed into the residence Jacob murmured somewhat selftographs.
He
passed
a
blui
h-white
find specialty authors of the exsection fat· beyond the great Hi gh consciously. "Both of you people are
plosive Menken-. rathan school, the hand across hi s eyes-the hand that Level Brid ae. he saw a cat which was good to me and my :11ark."
caressed
;\lar·k-:.\1ark
who
undertoo-smooth Arlens and the usual
very familiar-one which resembled
"It's all right," blustered Adolph.
stood.
honky-to nky scribes.
Regarding
:\lark! The German hastily paid his "Come on Ol"'e r wh enever you should
":'\o
one
effer
really
lik
ed
me,"
he
choice of popular literature there i
fare a nd descended at the next stop. like to. :\Te and ratherine always
one and only one critic-yourself. confessed to the contented cat. "ex- He had some difficulty in securing have omethlng to eat and''-here he
cept you. :.\fy father. my country, and
t'se your bead. Accept no substimy wife thought I was a fool. Look the cat. As he approached the ani- wink ct l~·ly-" I like your wine."
tute. If you find anything worth He turned to ent er his stot·e, but
at
these pictures! This one when I mal whir led and fled to back-porch
while, write in.
was young-captain of a big ship. regions. Adolph didn't hurry, how- after Jacob had taken a few steps, he
- Pat Rarburn.
This house here (it was a magnifi - ever, but with a coax in g voice fo l- fol lowed the man with the cat back
lowed slowly. never los in g s igbt of to the Ontarion.
cent palace don e in oil and adjacent
.Jacob placed :.\Tark on the bar after
to that of the Wilhemstrasse in Ber- the strange, yet fan,il:u feline. He
lin) is where T was born. I got noth- finally captured the .,.,una! and with entering the saloon and searched
twinl,ling eyes, like a chi ld with a slowly for the light s witch. His e:ves.
In
Jemory of Jo eph Jacobs, ing now. They beat me. They drove
Schoolmate and Friend, Who Died me oud . Told lies. Said J was a loy balloon, hurried to a return car. althou~h. sufficient light filtered
D espite hi s contradictory appear- through the glass front, were not
~e ptember 20, 1925.
thief."
Th e cat purred sympathy. Gr·ey- ance he liked to think himse f a ('apab le of distinguishing anythin,!1,
His eyes.
g-reen eyes searched the face ot c lever man . He ·troked the ye llow and he g-roped for a full minute beanimal during all of the return jour- fore he found the switch. That minWindows bright with blu light
Jacob as he unfolded his past.
Told us that oight-lik
hadows
This ·trang-e friendship was not ney and sang snatches of German ute was an hour to the anxious
(Continued on Pa~re )
Hovered not within
unknown to J acob's next door neigh- ditties in a nasal tenor.
The well-lighted chamber
bor. Adolph Lanz. dea ler in butter.
Of hi liOUl.
egl!s and cheese. whose coarse jokes
and caustic disposition wa balanced
Candles white with flickering li ght
by his ge nerous nature. He pracVi with this sinale white candle of tica ll v fed hi s self-iso lated neighbor
Life;
with 'rood from hi
tore and table.
Wbich hall go first?
Day Pupils and Boarders
.Jacob thought Adolph a veri tab le
In o the land of the Eternal.
angel of mercy despite the fact that
he had ofte n borne the brunt of hi
3430 Rocky River Drive
Flickerin light burning low,
many unkind jokes.
Damp. chill blasts beat to and fro
At thi moment the ruddy-faced
Across the high vaulted chamber
merchant was discussing J acob with
Of his soul, and
Cat herine, his labor- lovin g spo use.
Clutch at the lowering glow .
wh il e s killfully cuttin g a fat ch eese.
"That man Jacob," be boomed. "he
Had the angelic musician died?
don't Jive, I tell you. His face is
Had the heavenly choir cried
a lways the same. His heart beats
Day Pupils
For one in his stead ?
a lready just the sa m e as it did ten
Music of rivers, of winds. of chimes or twe nty years ago, Xo warm blood
14205 Detroit Ave., Lakewood
From his fingers sealed the choice; in his veins. I tell you mam! All
For he is gone.
he lives for is hi s cat- his :\!ark.
-.John R. Toole, '26.
Such a man he is."
-I
I
.....
The White Candle
I
St. Joseph Academy
St. Joseph Academy
III.
hi thraldom if but for a short hour
Like swan the gondola swim past
and behold "how beautiful the
As inks the sun in reddened sky;
nio-ht."
Let the prosaic light of The shore looms like a spectre land
"'
day be devoted to pro aic occupaAnd soft is heard the boatman·s
cry.
tions; but after dark, Carpe
octern!
Omar.
Old buildings have a charm all
their own-arising partly from the
myriad recollection connected with
their history, and partly from the
aged grandeur that they impress
almost physically u pon one. A
light in a lofty tower; turrets silhouetted black against the sky; the
great outline of the building looming mas ively ahead, beside, and
above you; the breeze with just
a hint of a Lake Erie night stirring
softly. That i Carroll from with-
ou~nd
now--inside--the had ows dart hither and thither mu tering up courage to leap upon you,
chilling you, urged on !)y a feeble
light glimmering down from some
far hallway. Through a near window the rays of a ghostly moon
creep stealthily in, seize upon the
old woodwork, and leave it silvered.
You stand awed where yesterdayor wa it a thousand year ago?you jostled and laughed. There i
a feeling of ilence, of re tfulness,
that makes you tread oftly lest
,·ou stumble . and awake to find your
dream vanished. You are alone and
wish to be alone forev e r.
There is one sound in this world
(and M far as I know , only one)
that occurs exclusively at nght. It
is so much an inherept part of
night in an old building that it
often takes place of it own accord.
I mean the creaking of stairs. In
the daytime stair may be noisy;
they may grumble; and if they are
especially good stairs they may
groan.. But creak? :\ever. Only
at night will they do that.
For
atisfying, pine-thrilling creaking,
I am ure that there are no stair.
in the world that are better than
those at Carroll. They can strike
(at will, I believe) any note in the
diatonic seal .
nder the pressure
of your f ee t they will emit creaks
fairly plea urable; but if you are
looking for the very epitome in
purity and wealth of tonal quality
you mu t await their volition. You
tand, shi,·ering with anticipation
for a moment, like a passe ng r at
th e top of a /Heat dip in a sc nic
railway; then with a sudden breathtaking thrill
hear the old stair
creak exqui. itely, running in the
brier space of a thought the gamut
of the human emotions. Then once
again cverythin~
till _ but
.
.
POignantly still.
Only on thing more
left to be
told of, that which lie on the other
side of the door· that are trimm d
with quare.· of orange and green
~·ou
I
g la s~.
thin <Tacks o( golde n li ght
creeping from under closed door
only to be lost in the urrounding
darknc s.; and in your mind's eye
you may se the eternal sc holar beyond probin ;.r deep into th realm
of knowledge. Around the corner
from vou lie stairs who e pos!U · ities r;main fearfully hidden in the
land of the unknown. The atmo.phere itself is charged with shadowy, challenging my tery. Sometime. I swear, I will take my courage in my hand and brave the terrors that lie beyond those doorsthe doors that are trimmed with
quare of orange and green glas
-Wilfred Eberhart, '27.
~ nationallmtitution ~
3rom Cooft t.o Coast~
Bmauning Kmg &:~
Established 103 Years
Yea,-
Carron({
Some
T earn.'
~
712
.
;j
~-~,.0.-;"
~
Often in our ads we !eel
like saying Yea Browning
King! but that of course just
isn't done but we will and
must say,
Some
Clothes
Collegiate styles
that are correct
Browning Kinfr now operate e.xclush·e College Shops at Cambridge,
Evan ten, and Philadelphia.
Downtown, 419 Euclid Avenue
University Store, Euclid at 107th St.
TWENTY·THREE STORES FROM COAST TO COAST
Page
THE CARROLL NEWS
1x
TEAM PLAYS WELL IBlue Streak s_tops
IN OPENING GAME r;,~,::~rl ~~~~~~ ~~,~m
Be
howing I fade on
Defense Sa1ys
Elward
RAE SAMUELS WILL
ROOT FOR CARROLL
McDONNELL STOPS BRUNELLE
)1cDonnell backed up the line in
true Stringer fashion, making one
tackle on the ;yrarine ' ide of the
line.
J\Ia tny meared everything that
came hi way until a giant fell on
him, injuring his knee. Flynn, who
r e lieved him. kept that side o[ the
s c-rimma;!" we ll protected and added a .·hort-lived thrill by picking
up a loose ball and running for a
touchdown.
The referee called it
back however claiming it was an
ineompleted pass. " ass" Parilla
hit the biggest of them, and made
them feel that they were hit.
It is difficult to pick any one tar
for e\•ery man that played scintillated in some jashion or the other.
Brunnelle and :1-IcQuaide performed
the best for th e :\larines.
Cnrroll 0.
Position
Marines 0.
Mn<tny ----- - . L E . __ _ _ __nrougher
Quinn _ -------- • . L. T. ------- _Wiu:more
Vaudeville Star Follows
Her Namesake of
the Gridiron
BY C'L.\. YTON WEL H
' ' \\'e w e re at least two touchdowns
better than they,., declared Coach
:;\Tal Elward in an interview after
the Marine game. "But," he added,
"vou ha,·e to take into consideration
the fac that their weight and experience played an important part
in the outcome.
Every
one
of
th os e
Iarines
had at least ten
pounds advantage
over the man opposite him and
five of them had
four years college
experience ~;:;;,. -:_-::::::::::::·c~~:---=~~=::=~-~~~!~
caught Brun-I defense in the fir t pe riod and was bac·k broke
Press
from t he s id e and
Burens ---- ---- R. G. --- - --- -- McHenry
mak in g away be hind good interferon top of that. Henog
_ --- - --- - --R. T . . __________ __Hunt .1ell as he cut thro ug h the Carroll ence before the Blu e Streak f ull- 'Jrough t him d ow n.
"Another thing:, Fitzgerald _______ R. E ____________ . Stock
I wasn't at all Toma
----- L.
Q. H.
H. -- -- _ . Brunelle
___ _________
-- __________ flacon
Parilla -----s a tis fi e d with McDonnell ________ R. H .---- - __ _ . Henry
Capta in C'on ly & Co. any spinal
some
Of
the Marrie
F. B. _
-- . McQunidc
quiverings. but the truth is that then
Clayton Wei h
t ·b k' de
Sub•titutions: Carroll- ;'.1cCaftery for Cont hey we r e a " first half' team. g r eatquar el ac S
- ~ ly, l'vlielcurek for Burens. Flynn for Mastci ions. The plays chosen on sev- n~- . lllcGuire for Marrie. Fergus for Parilla.
ly hampered by the lack of capable
·
b d t ctical Sapp for ~!cDo ndl. Gowan for 'l'omn
sub t itutes.
!'\ow, how ever, with
era l occ:a,IOn were
a
a
' Ga-rtner for Musty, :>b•ers for Gaertner:
In th ~Iarine g ame. " ass" Pari! Ia
plenty of good r eserves they . honld
.
errors and should neYer have been Conly for McCalley. Bur n• for Mielc.arck . , _,. 1 , .1. . . h
f
.
..
)la•tny for Myers. Parilla for Ferl(us. Me- ul( \\OJ ' WOI t Y 0 a man t\\ ICe 111
be ab le to stand up with the best
attempted under the cncumstances. Donnell for Sapp. Toma for Gownn, Mnr.ic ·
If a more open attack had been for McGuire. McCaffery for Conly. Miel- · IZe. The little speed,·ter fiung himthroughout the e ntir e ;e;ame. Thei r
- d t th
·'ght t i· n1e the result c?rek for Huren•, Flynn for Maslny. Mn- s If into pvery pia>· with great retwo big games last year were with
u~e
a
e 11
rm es Crov('~ for H nry. Shunnvay fvr Me·
Xi aga ra U niv er ity and Dayton. At
might haYe been a whole lot differ- Qunide. Puu:h fo r Brunelle. Zuber for sult~. Offensive ly h e made goorl
Hough. Heru:er for Hunt. Crowe for Zuber.
:\iagat·a they ·aptured a 13-12 vicent ·
Or unelle for Bncon. O'Brien for Groves. gains. ~ome lon g enough in that
tory when the :\ew York State team
"Considering the affair from an- Mo,el)· fo r Brou u:h cr. Clem enL• for Mosely, close contest to
e e m spectacu lar.
8
There is an o ld say in g which may failed to ta ll y on the kicks after
other angle, though, the men did ~~Q.~~i;:r r::r%":~m~~:;',~eB~~onforfo~ ~~: Off tack le he ci a heel. wigglerl. and
touchdowns. Th e niv ersily of Dayvery well to top a team as strong Qu ai ~•: Sp• u ldin~t for Wiu:n1ore.
be aptly applied to the predicament
that
ton beat them by four touchdown
as the ?llarine outfit. My system u~~~tnl\~.~=~~~dt ! ~a ~~~:;1t:' ~";;.~d & 1 i~~~: squirmed to g ain distance
of Can·oll 's gridi ron warr ior . It wh en Duquesne ,,·as unabl e to pierce
takes time to develop a
player; man nyder cH a rn~rd l.
seemed imposs ibl e for auyone.
goes. "There i
no re s t for the the heavy Flyers· lin e enough to
Bill's work on the d e fen<>e was a
after a ~ea 8 on of constant practice
Three of the e scores ,,·e r e
wicked." Whether or not the foot- sco r
a man ha s ,,·orked himself into the
l reat. He ga ;·e Pat pe rfect protecmade in the second half.
balle
r
·
of
thi.
in
stitutio
n
a
r
e
wicked
tyle of play . o that he is a real
tion on his punts . Every time the
After Duquesne, Carroll must
is a matter which we have ne,·er look fOn\'ard to the following Saturpart of th e machine, fitt ing perfectlumberjack enrl of the armr tea :n
ly with every other part and coconsiclered. ha,·ing always assumed day. when they meet their arch-1
rush e d in h e wa
s e nt sp r awling
operating properly on every play;
that they are mucr. like ourselves rh-al. Dayton. Little need be said of
over th e back o r t he little haiL
but aturday we had practically a
rand uncloubteclly we think well of this game for it is well known that
It must h<n e been Bill to \\"hom a ourselves). but, neverthele. s, there when Carroll and Dayton meet the
new backfield in there. The men
were not u ed to working together
hig- ~Jarine back was referring to certain ly i no rest for Lhe padded dope and statistics mean as much to
the fina l outcome a
r efr igerati n g
and friction developed.
Still they
•
aft er
the _gam e when he said guardian s of Carroll' honor.
played a he ads-up game for the
Co::nin!!; out of the Ji rcc truggle plant. do 0 the Eskimos. Dayton
e\' ry Lim e I got the ball and
most pan and probably would have
uch a
with the .\Iarine . they must imme- pt·omi:es to give Canol!
gained m ore consistently if
the
Wh en the bas kptbnll . eaRon roll~ s tarter! running. . om e little runt diate ly turn their attentio n to prepa- trouncing as ""ill make them forplays had been selected more ap- ur·o uncl azain. th e Carroll cou r t will broke in and pull ed me down 1 "
rations for the Duquesne University . g; t all their ambitions for football
propriately.
be some'' ha t more peaceful than in
of Pittsburg, Pa., game schedu led g lory. Carroll vows that after thi
"Our showing was fa irly good, pr vious ye ars. [or ")linnie" Samg ame :'-lah Jong will supp lant footfo r Sat urday. Oct. lOth .
considering that we lost a whole mon, a . tar for three years. will not
When the eleven fro m the city of ball as a m ajo r sport at Dayton.
backfield and several Yeteran lineperpetual fog sal li es forth to e njoy Anyhow. it will be a game well
Gort's sunlight they are determined worth the hardships wh ich the trip
men from last year's eleven.
Ca rl Plumme1 can eel a pleasant that their cu p of joy shal l be filled to downstate may im po-e upon us.
-:.I wa . particularly well pleased
On the 24th of October Carrol l
.· urprise to Carroll fans wh n here<>- the brim, ancl this can be done only
with the performance of Jiggs 1\Iaristered Thursda.v after being num- by defeating Car roll. On the other journeys to Buffa lo to meet the
rie and Ed. Storey. Storey stopped
e,·ery man the Marines sent at him
bered among the missin<>- for more hand. Ca rr oll i eq t~a ll y determined heavy Ca nisius team. From the
that the boys from P1ttsbugh s h a ll be rumor·s t h at prevail is is ev id e nt that
and he broke up more than one
than two weeks. Carl's mother was made to fe el at hom e. so fas t and the Bisons ca nnot forget the defeat
pa. sing attack, not to mention the
,·e ry ill for some time and this de- 1 fnriou is th e attack planned by the they suffered in Clevel and last year.
offensive game he put up, which was
a rn e margin arroll cannot
layed his retum to school.
"!31ue Streak" that. t hey opine. the On t h
all that could be asked.
l\Iarrie
"Ha!:'s" is a welcome addition to Duquesne squad will see as if in a for'g-et the trouncin"' they r ece ived at
played a wonderful game at half,
th e squad. He is sh ifty and fleet- rlaze, tend in ;< greatly to disillusion Buffalo in 1923.
e pecially on the defence. His tackSo the menu sched ul ed for the
them in their joy ous belief, that they
ling wa one of the principal things
footerl, and more •han once. last a r e away from home.
B lu e and Gold defenders i work,
that slowed down the :Marine atyear. a ot away for long gains by his
On paper, the Duquesne r eco rd of work. work. and after that somP
tack to the point where it couldn't
fast open-field work.
. 192-1 i · no o formidab l e as to cause more work.
I
Parilla Starred When
Pitted Against Giants
AFTER QUANTICOS
COMES DUQUESNE
Pittsburgh Team Will
Prove Formidable
Foe for J. C. U.
0
HOWARD SAMMON
LEAVES J. C. FIVE
Popular Cage Star Has
Entered Novitiate I
at Milford
"- -.
Offensive Flash is
Again on the Squad
Poor DuQuesne! Saturdar it will
be opp015ed by two "Blue Streak ~ !"
Carrol r s "Blue Streak " of the uidiron i · a foe formidab le enough ·o
mak e a n y opponent quail, but wh a t
chance hav e they when the "Blue
Streak of Vaud e vill e'' i
rooting
against them from the stands? Fo r
:\!iss Rae Sa mu els . of the B. F. Keith
C'ircuit . will be at Dunn Field chee rin a on h e r t win s-in-name to \'ictory.
Rae Samuels is a Youn g. town,
Ohio, girl known as "The Bl ue Streak
of Vaudeville" and one of the most
popular headliners on the Keith Circuit.
She is one of the rea l perso naliti es
of the "two-a-day." beloved everywhe r e by vaudevi ll e fans because of
her breeze and pep, and the rare
comedy which she injects into her
cha r acter so n gs .
~!i ss Samuels i a c hild of the th~ ater, who began her careet· at th e
age of fou r , reciting "Laska" at
church fairs and cl u b me eti n g .. Soon
afterward s he marle her professional
debut in an act with an older brother
and s i ter. For a while she taggert
along as "littl e sister ," but "Lovin'
Rag-" a nd "W ild Cherry Rag" pu her
rl efi nitely on the map of vaudeville
with a following of her own.
which has gro wn consistently large:th r ough a decade of success.
Thi s success was not achieverl
without h ard work-work uch a
few non-pro~essional people _can ap prehend. )1rss Samuels trams like
an athl te for the theater. Xo. late
hours. no sweets. no alcohol. _or cigarettes. She plays golf. swim
anrl
rid es a horse whe n the opportunity
presents. but just took her first rea l
vacation in fifteen years in the shap P
of a four months' trip to Europe.
What chance, then. has th e team
from
Pittsburgh
agaiust
two
"Streaks'' in such perfect condition'
And there i r ea l harmony between
Duquesne'
foes. More than one
party a t the Palace or trip to Dunn
Field has ce mented the fl"ienrlship
between the star of the sta2:e and
the stars or the g ridiron.
- - - - -- -On t o Dayton- -
I
The Carroll News
Extra Co pies may be obtained
at Bus iness Office; ten
per copy.
cents
pi"rce the line, and niore than once
1arrie cut down a runner after he
had broken through
and
gotte n
away from the rest of the secon-
THE HORTON-GUEST STUDIO
dary.''
PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHERS
TEAM PLAYED IN
MJD. SEASON FORM
Smooth Work Showed
in Opening Game
of Season
22 .'Old" Arcade
Main 4065
Randolph 4629
John Potokar, Prop.
Double Eagle Bottling Co.
be on hand to burn it up. Winning
lette rs ha s a ! ways been a h abit of
"~lin's" and he is now trying to attain his "S. J." at ~lilford :\ovitiate.
:'IJilfo rd. Ohio.
I-l i8 prow e. son the basketball floor
is well known to the follower
of
l'arroll. and on]>· last year the speed.
' te a din ess and consi tency of his
playin g won for him a position on an
All-Ohio :\on-Conference team.
An e ver-read_,, smile and a charact e ri s tic .. How a boutcha ?" won him
la,·or wherever he w ent. The purpos e for which h e departed is the
only thing which compe n ate the
loss r It by th e team. the schoo l. and
his fri e nd .
Th e mo~t , atisfyin g . ight at the
Marin e g a me was the all around
"Ork of the whol e t eam. of the line
and of th e ba c kfield workin!!; in their
own d e pan m nts a nd wo rking together.
'Twould be foolhardy to call th e
f'an·oll lin e a stone wa ll: it would
be better to compare it with a river
of hot lea r! . just a little too hot and
a littl e too fast to cro s.
The :\Iarine · did dent th e forward
wall fo r -O rn e s ub ·tantial .!?. a ins after
the fir::: t whistl e . bnt th e ir anticipation wa ::: short- liv d when the men
settl e d down to real ''"ork a nd seriouslr b gan to outplu~- them. The 1 - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - defense wa;: fa ·t anrl rugged throu gh- 1 to be desired at the defensive fu llout th e g ame. presenting a problem ~ ba ck
position.
diaanosing
pia~·
much too difficult for the :\Iarin e quit•kly and breallin~ right througll
Quarter to hanrlle. _
to th e m . The wings were well secOifen IYel>·. the linemen had too onded bv the ha l fback . 1\!ore than
much beef to moYe out of the way of one ~Iar-ine was spillerl for a loss in
the back!'. hut accomplisherl as much hi s att empt to circle the end. and if
a~ did th e ponrterous Quantico lin ·1h dirl break through . it was right
making way for eight fir . t rlown .
into the arms of the watchful secThe backfield. easier to watch onda ry.
!nee t h m n are- not ~o clo ely
Th e
interference
would
ha,·e
_g rouped. ~bowed fine. both on the routed any team of le s weight or
offense and on the defense.
The abilit>• than harl the :.rariues. The
backR wcnt after :ITarine passes like m e n knew their po. ilion . on the
bi~-league outfielders shagging flies. plays and !mew whom to take out.
A!!:ainst the :l!arine running attack. After the sea onin.!!; obtained in the
the econdary defen P showed espe- opener. they llould work together
ciall~- we ll.
~fcDonnell left nothing , like a charm.
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2- Trouser Suits
$2 7.50 $32·50
(ln chest measures up to 36;
ove r that at $37.50)
The square shouldered wedge
shape figu re is sci ll the vogue.
Trou se rs still wide. D o uble
breasted, blue Cheviot popular,
but grouse o r che pheasant shades
are really newer.
Topcoats at $30
COLLEGE CAFETERIA
-include a small number ofbroad
shouldered styles-most of t hem
however, are the loose fitt:ing rype.
"Four Horsemen"
(of Notre
I
I
[e_:;; •
Hot Meals Served Daily
Leather Jackets
are t he new 24-inch wide, grey
at $10 and $12.50.
in colors at $22..50
Green Slickers
from 11:30 to 12:45
Dame)
Oxford Bag Trousers
This season at
6 and $7.50.
All Shirts are colla r attached or
collar to match. Collars have
longer point at $2..50 and up.
Hats, turndown-fancybands$5
Pull-over sweaters-striking patterns, $5 and up
Good Food at Low Prices
THEW B DAVIS CO
327·335 Euclid-opposite East 4th
THE CARROLL
~E\YS
Groves Threatens To Score
".\Ial" Elward bas lJegun his
ond year of coaching at Carroll.
the ~ncces which the team enjoyed
I
las< ·cason under his tutelage and
;. at of :\Jr. Burke can be taken as an
i!.idication of what will be done this
ye-ar. then surely we <'an prepare [or
great rejoiein;1: when the <:urtain
:-olii< 'lown Thanksgiving Day.
1
I
I
Few of the spectators were I
aware that during the Marine I
game an angry beast roamed
the side-lines and was captured
only by the heroic efforts of
one of Carroll's most illustrious Juniors. Jiggs, the Devil
Dogs' mascot, broke free from
jts guardian and dashed toward Carroll's bench seeking
whom it might devour. Charlie Mulcahy, a watchful protector of the "Blue Streak" players, took three or four huge
, trides and threw himself
the path of the on-coming
beast. After a short struggle
he secured a ·firm hold on the
leash and returned it to its
master.
•
• •
Bill Herzog suggests to the rule
co mmittee that a different sort of
a whistle be employed by the ref.-.
erees of football games. He claim
that he would have made a touchdown if another kind were used.
When he carried t he ball from a
tackle Jllny hr incetl an open field
but he heard the whistle and mis took it for that of a traffic officer,
a nd topped.
Editor's Note-Bill received a
pink ticket for jay walking last
week.
•
•
CARROLL
TACKLERS
HIT
THEIR 1\IEN SO HARD THAT
THE MARl ES WERE U DER
THE IMPRESSIO
THEY WERE
BEIXG
I N T E NT I 0
ALLY
ROUG HED.
THE BIG
MEN
, _ ,_ _-r-7-n-T'T'T'<.,l, DT Fl GURE HOW SUCH
PIG~HE
AS CARROLL PLAYER , WHEN COMPARED WITH
THE MSELVES, HAD POWER TO
INJURE MEN LIKE McQUAIDE.
lt gives us o-r eat pleasure to
com ment on the demonstration
of Rpo r ts manshi p witnessed
duri ng the ball-rush. So fierce
and heated did the co ntest
wage that on one or two occasions a pair of youths, bemirched with to mato sauce
a nd hen fruit, took time out to
im press each other with the
wonde rful advantages of physica l stren gth .
But Jimm y
O"Bri en aw e,·erythin g and
ejected from the game such
violators of the rul es.
Th e trip to the s idelin es
evide ntly proved su ffi cient ti me
Ior them to realize that their
actio ns were not what they
sho uld have bee n. for they ap proached each other with right
ha nd s extended and the grip
hat ensu ed was stro ng enou o-h
to heal the differences of
nations.
'L'hr PlnJ11
Not e,·en when the Quantico a larmed as when halfback Groves I sniety 1111111.
ma chin e wa s hort yards from the broke through for 25 yards before photographer napped Groves as
goal were th e Carroll fans as much 1 being down ed by Toma, the Carroll he tarted on hi run.
DETAILS OF CONTEST
Score. end
Marines, 0.
FIRST Q UA RTER
Th e Mnrines won t he toss and e lected to
kick.
Carroll defended
th e w est
g oal.
SECOND QUARTER
Brunelle punted to Car roll's
-yard line
after fa iling to run the e nds.
McDo nn ell
booted oO ya rds to midfield. Garetner threw
Bru nelle for
a
10-yard
Joss.
Brunelle
punted to Toma. who fumbled. but Bailey
recovered o n Carroll's 26-yard line. Gro,res
replaced H enry f o r the Marines.
Groves
dro?-kicked straight _into the air. Carroll
takmg the ball on Jts ow n 2 -yard hne.
Marrie's pass was grounded and McDonnel!
punted 35. yards to BruneHe to the Marmes
36-yard hne.
Groves shpped around Carroll 's left end for 25 yards o n a fake and
McQunde m ade 9 on the sam e play around
th e other end .
Shumway rep laced McQuade, who wns
C'arried off t he field. Gowen re placed Toma
for Carroll. The Marin e~ lost five yards
for off-side a nd a Brunelle to Groves pass
made 6 yards. The Marin es failed to gain
and Josl the ball on downs. Marrie made
7 ya r d•. but had to kick. McDonnell punted
to nrunclle on t h e Marine 35-ynrd line_
Wi th a min ute to play Carroll sent in n
flock of substitutes.
Pugh replAced Bru nelle. who was hu rt. for the ~'larin eg_ The
hnlf ~nded
with
ball
belonging t<l the
Marine,;; on their own 30-y:lrd linf"_
Score end
of first h alf:
Co noll, 0;
Marines. 0.
Toma ran the kickoff to the 25-yard line.
Failing to gai n. McDonnell pu n ted 35 to
Brunelle, who r eturned to his o wn 45. On
the first play Brunelle gained 10 yards on
a spl it tackle buck. McQuade made another
first down in two bucks goin to Carro11's
35-yard line.
McQuade and Henry bucked
for another fin;t down thru let guard. MeCaffery replaced Capt Conly and !liilchalk
replaced Burens for Carroll.
The Marines failed to gain on two plays
were penalized five yards for offs1de.
Storey broke u p _a McQu ade-to: Bacon pass.
Capt_ Mc~enry mussed a drop ktck from the
20-yard hne on fourth down, and Carroll
took the ball.
McDonnell bucked center for five an d
Marrie and Parilln h it opposite t.•ckles for
first. down_ Marrie an d Parilla made nine
yards on three tackle b ucks, and McDo nn ell
punted 41i yards to the Marin e 30-yard line.
The Marines lost 15 for holding. Flynn rcplaced Mastny for Carroll. Brunelle punted
45 yards to Toma, who returned 10 to midHeld.
McDonnell's pa~s was grou nded and MeDonn ell rolled a 60-yard punt to the Marine
l-y a rd line.
Brunelle punted back to midfie ld .
CnTI"oll balled
up a
play and
f um bled. Bailey recov e ring on his 43-yard
lin e as the quarter ended .
I
nnd
I
firs t
THIRD
Carroll's original
ond half.
Brunelle
fo r th e Marines.
quarter:
Carroll,
0;
I
QUARTER
tea m s tarted the secwent back to QURrter
Bailey ki cked off to
I
Parillo. who returned to his 35-yard line.
Me Donnell rnn right end for .
Carroll got first down when t h e Marines and Toma aiJed to gain. McDonnell
were ofT-s ide .
McDo nn ell ran right end lo Urunell~ in midfield.
Toma
for six a nd Murrie went o fT tack le for first down Groves' long pass to Stock.
down. Ca rroll lost t he ball on downs when went around Carroll's left or 20
a s hort pass failed. Carroll was penalized Ca.rroll 's 30-ynrd line.
15 vards t.o its own 40-yard line. A Brunelle to Groves pass gai ned 3 yards. Gro ves
Pugh broke thru Carroll's
tried to drop-kick, but was short. Toma re- for 12.
O'Br ien replaced Grov~s for
turning to his 20-yard line. McDonnell lost Marines and :Flynn and Myers r~licved
3 around end nnd punted t.o Henry, who Carroll ends.
p "II
h
'
I
signled for n. fair catch.
Mastny tackled
an a t re'"' brune le
him. Carroll taking a 15-yard penalty . The 3 -yard loss .
O'Brien failed to J<!lin
bal1 wa~ on Carroll's 30-yurd line.
HerzOJ.r.
Flynn knocked down n pass
fourth down.
Curroll taking the ball
Brunelle lost eight yard~ on an attempted its own 1 -yard line_
pass.
Groves punted out of bounds. on
Parilla ran around his own right end
Carroll':;; 30-yard line.
Parilla out thru
tackle for 10 ynrds to midfield.
Herzog 27 )"ards to Carroll's 46-ynrd line.
replace-d
Mosely
and
Wigmore
came out o f the line on n criss-cross and
ran right end for nine yards. The play was Burger. Bailey intercepted a Carroll
but
the
MarineM
w~rc
penalized
15 ya
called back for an ille).!al pas~.
Marrie
made eil:ht of them back as the quarter tnking the ball on their own 17~ynrd 1
Z immerman replaced Ba(·on for the Mar
ended.
1\lcQuHclc
r placed
Shumway
for
Score: Carroll 0. Marines 0.
:'\1 m-in<·s 13runelle ran Carroll's left
FO RTH Q UA RTER
for 12 yards .
Brunelle punted o"er
Mesely took Brougher's left end job for go:tl line. !lacon went back to half fo•·
t h e Marines.
Toma failed to make first M11rin e~.
down on a quarterback sneak. The Marines
T<>ma fumbled and McHenry
took the ball on their 40-yard line. Toma for the· ~1arinc~ on Carroll's 25-yard
intercepted a Marine pass on his O\Vn 42SpuuldinK replaced Zimmerman for
:rard hn<'. Bailey intercepted Toma's pnss Marin es.
on Carroll's 42-yard line.
McHenry 's drop kick was six inches
McCaffery replaced Conly.
A Groves to low . McGuire,
app and Fergus took
nacon pa~!ll; failed to guin. Storey ~mean"'<l Cnrroll back flcl<l.
another Marine pass.
Groves third drop
Game ended with Carroll having the
kick try "··as sad . but Carroll was forced on its own 30-yard line.
to iLo;; ·>·ar<l line.
Final scon": Carr oll 0. 1tfarines 0.
Positions Cared For Despite Absentees
Considerin g Saturday's performance, we do not feel that the team
has uffered g-r eatly from graduation
and other evils. :'ll cDonnelr punting mad e on e forget that Bri ght and
his soa rin g kicks were gon e. ::\loreover, Pat donned Stringer's shoes
a nd fou nd th em a good fit. He hit
the lin e like a battering ram and
backed it splendidly.
Storey fitted in perfectly at Carney's old position. His passes were
perfect and he was a bulwark on the
defense.
The win gs, thought to be weakener!
by We lsh's absence. proved almost
impreg nable to the army onslaughts.
Quantico attem pts to go a round end
generally r es ulted in s ubstantial
lo ses.
The halfbacks mad e a strong,
. bowin g, and the regim ent li ghting
ror these positions has been augmented eYe n s ince the ga me.
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IJUt 11eiorr it <·;m be 1111t to ttti~ u~e ;
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The Blue Streak vs. Duquesne University
See Carroll in action Saturday, Oct. lOth before it goe
the road for its out-of-town games.
Saturda y,
Oct. lOt h
Tickets are on sale at
Newman-Stern Co.
Che ter and E. 12th
on
~
Our Telephones-Superior 640-641
THE CARROLL NEWS
PLAYERS TO
I
FORM NET TEAM
en Racket Wielder
Represent High
in Tennis
S. I. H. Sodality
The Revs. Peter O'Brien of
Creighton
University, Omaha,
Nebraska, and J. E. Barlow of
St. John's College, Toledo, Ohio,
have been named directors of the
Sodality of the Immaculate Conception.
Father O'Brien is in
charge of the Junior division,
which meets on Mondays; and
Father Barlow, of the Senior
section, which convenes on Tuesdays. Meetings \viii take place
immediately after classes are
dismissed on the days named.
Twe nty ca:~didates turned out for
he t e nni team at the tournament
eld on the Edg-ewater Park Courts,
'riday, Sept. 25. Ignatius expect
.o have a first rate team this year,
nd al t houg-h the previous teams
la/en't amounted to much, prosects for thi. yea1· are pretty good.
'Red" Robben and Bill Dolwick,
nder th e direction of Mr. Lockieyle r . J., are doing their bit to
lace
t. Ig-natiu in the tennis
'eld with other teams.
The following ten players have
m
making the team,
mon .e: whom G ri<lina and V. inters
rd.- The
the brightest prospects: G.
WARREN, 0 ., Oct. 3
Win te 1·s, .T. Grid ina. J. Robben, G. locals were o ui ck to take advantage
Dolwick, R. Reali, H. Woodward, J. of a pair of Ignatiu errors and
M;ittinger, T. Vande
Motter,
D . converted both into touchdowns .
iOlm e rly . and W. Uolwick.
t}1 reby defeating the Clevelande r ,
HI DROPS CONTEST
TO WARREN TEAM
Capt. Brickman Stars
as Vincernen Lose
First Game
ew Professors Are
Added to High Staff
Th e fa culty of t. Ignatius Hi g h
1a. und e r .:.;one several chan~es thi ~
•ear. :\lost of the form e r instruc tors
laY e returned, but scv ral new memer<; have been added to take the
la ces of those who have left.
Among those "·ho have not r eurncd are i\Tr. L. A. Bloomer, S. J.;
Tr. ('_ A. Burn , . J.; ~Jr . W. P.
Hagedorn, S. J.; i\lr. C. E. Ma llon ,
'. J . ; ::\!r. A. A. Bungart and l\lr. J.
V. Harwood. The two latter are now
nembers of the faculty of John Car\·ol l University.
:'>ew members of the racu lty are
ight in number: Fr. J. E. Barlow,
,'. J ., formerly of St. John's Univerity. Toledo; Fr. P. O'B r ien, S. J ..
ormer professor at Crei"'hton Unier ity, Omaha, :-<eb.; Mr. J. Galagher. S . J ., who taught two years at
he University o f St. Louis High
chool; ~1r. E. l\1. Lochbiler, S . J.,
'ormerly of St. Xavier Colle"'e, Cin.innati; :'llr. E. Healy, who rece ntly
ompleted his studies at Maison, St.
ouis, and J e r sey, England; and Mr.
·. Pre usser, S. J. , who taught here
hree years ago. During the interim
e was at St. Louis University prea ring for his Master's Degree.
~fr. J . J . Ambrose, '24, a n d Mr. E .
M . Carney, '25, both graduates or
ohn Ca rroll University, have also
ee n added to the faculty.
rizes Are Offered
in Handball Tourney
Masquerade
(Contino..! from Pall'• 5)
Adolph , who had "'lued hi s flu s hed
face to the pane which fronted the
'.)ntarion .
Sudde n light blinded Jaco b. H e
threw his hands to his face until the
afflicted eyes accustomed them se lves
to the gla r e. As he withdrew his
hands. he saw the form of Ado lph
at tbe window. He r ecognized th e
s ilhouette with t he large round head
and protruding ears. H e cl e verly
pretended that he had not noticed
his friend, but was fr ank ly puzzled.
Why was Adolph at the window? He
glanced dubiously at :>1a rk. There
was Mark and the masquerader. H e
realized then with rapidly Increasing
anger why Adolph wa s at the window.
A joke, eh? He bit his a lready
trembling lips. Didn't the fool at
the window realize that a ll he had to
do to determine which was his cat
was to call ~lark? His pride s moth·ered this plan before he had determined upon it. He would decide for
bimself in a mo r e e mphatic fashionhe would-be must. The fool at the
window must be shown.
He paused as he noticed the similarity. God, which was ?.!ark? Th er e
were two ).farks there. He beat his
stomach awkward ly with cl ench ed
hands. He must choose quickly
Sudd e nly it came to him that he
could not tell which was his beloved
;\lark.
'"You devil," he sc r eamed at the
frightened Adolph. He was trick ed.
Where were his eyes? H e ll! He'd
show him. Unc lenching his n e rvous
hands he ran to the bar and grabbed
a bottle. There was his :\lark--or
Saint Ignatius High School hand!>all players will hav e their annual
handball
tournament this week
when the handballers will show
their wares. Over twenty pa irs
have, a l ready
entered
for
the
:loub~s, and Mr. H ealy S. J., who
is in harge of the tourney expects
about fty in the s ingles.
A h ndsom e prize is offered by
Mr. H ly for the winners in both
Ies and the doubles". One
ost promi ing candidates
rown is Lenny Liniverse
een one of the best play~rs for t ree years.
Anybody wish-
13-0, here this aftemoo n. The gam e
wa played on a wet, soggy gridiron that offered scant footing to
the back and made f orward
ing well nigh impossible.
For the greater part of the opening quarter
the elevens battled
evenl y, the play be ing
confined
mostly to midfield. After ten minutes of ineffectual battering, however, Kellar of ·warren hoisted a
beautiful punt to the Saints' tenyard line, where Brickman, receiving, was felled in hi track .
A
smash at t:~c kle was stopped dead
and another at guard netted less
than a yard. Playing it safe, the
visitors c hose to kick on the third
down, but Marsgall
of
\Varren
broke through a n d smea r ed Brickman's attempt, Baker recovering on
the one yard liM.
On the next
play
quarterback
Polena
slid
through center for the first touchdown.
McKee's dropkick was good
for the added point.
Again in the second period Warren succeeded in getting a man
across the Ignatius goal when Ailes,
a substitute halfback, inaugurated
his e ntranc e into the fray by scoopin g up a Saint f umbl e and sprinting twenty-five yards for a score .
This t ime McKee's efforts flew wide
of the upri g hts.
I n the t hird fra m e the Cleveland
lads mad e a heroic bid for victory
but after a barrage of passes had
been sprayed all over the field Warren tightened up and checked the
Ignatius advance on the five yard
line . After that the visitors never
seriou sly threatened, a lthough Capt.
Lenny Brickman broke away
several s ubstantial gains during the
closing period.
Neither team showed to
good advanage, owing partly
playing conditions. The play was
slow
for the most part, and marred
ing to e ter may enter his name
by freque nt fumbles . McKee was
with Mr. liealy before Oct. 3rd .
the s hinin g light for the Trumbull
the masqut r a cier. He ran his fingers Co unty o utfi t whi le Brickman did
beneath th• si lke n jaws of one of t h e the best work for the Saints.
Lineup:
anima ls and with a s udden blow
W arren 13
Postion
St. Ignatius 0
shattered the h ea d.
Blakely ----- - -- --L. E .. ______ __ ____Martin
The r emainin g cat plunged from Sabo - -- - --- - -- ----L. T.. _ -------- ----Bush
the bar and ran beneath ft. .Jacob. Consider ------- - -- L. G.---------- -Sprankle
- _--------C.
-----------Stroh
______ R. G,___
________
___ Mathews
reeling back, saw the mutilated body Baker -- --___
Brnunberns
__
___
__
n.
T
.-----------Mievel
on the floor attempting to crawl to - Minotti _____ __ ___ _R. E,___ ___ ___ McCafferty
ward him. Th e n realization-a piti- Polen a ------ - - - __ - -Q· --- __ ---- __Brickman
.Horner _________ __ L. H. _____ p, Schmucker
ful cry escaped him as he sank to McKee
___ ____ _____ R, H .. _____ _ ___ _ Mulligan
the floor.
Conway - - ----------F. _--------- ----Kellar
Score by periods :
Ado lph was [rig h te ne d into action,
and he, with th e aid of a st ran ger, Warren ----------- -- ---- - 7 6 0 0- 13
St. Ignatius ---- -- ---- -- 0 0 0 0- 0
ga in e d e ntran ce through the rear.
Touchdowns- Polena. Ailes.
Point after
touchdown- McKee (dropkick).
S ubstitu·
They ca r ried the limp figur e to a tionsW arren: Grove for Polena, Ailes f or
ca rd tabl e and soo n Jacob opened hi s Horn e r , Kempkl for Minotti, KHpper-t for
eyes. They were the eyes of a man Marshall. Thornton !or Conway, Horner for
Ailes. Conway for Thornton. Polena for
who has see n Christ cr ucifi ed . Adolph Grove, Ailes for Pole na, Yount !or Sabo,
fe ll to hi knees and p rayers that be Bryant for Conway, Grove lor Horner: St.
Ignati us: Conaton !or Sprankle, J. Schmuckhad long forgott n ro se to hi s lips.
er
for
Conaton . Dillon
for
Brickman,
"I'm sorry. Jake, oh God, I'm Brickman for P . Schmucker. Reidy for
Martin, P. Schmueker for Dillon. Sprankle
sorry." he whispered hoars e ly as he for Mathews. C. Brickman for Reidy, Conheld ont his hand to the little old aton for J. Schmucker. Referee--Scullion
alem).
Umpire-Vivian
(Struthers! .
man-the little o ld man who cou ld H( ead
linesman- AtkinRon
(Mu.sklngum ) .
no longer see.
Time of period:;-1 21f.t minutes.
Man~hall
J. W. BAKER ICE CREAM CO.
REAL HOME MADE ICE CREAM AND ICE
And Individual Moulds For All Occasions
Lakewood 5563
We Deliver Two Quarts or More
12003 Detroit A \'e.
VJNCEMEN DOWN Seniors Rejoice in , TOUGH CONTESTS
WEST COMMERCE Bell~of St. Mary s REMAIN ON SC D
1
"Bi!;:?;er and better bells for
:\lary's" i the latest slogan of Fourth
Hi~h B. which i
now ~ loating O\' r
its room iu the s econd floor front.
Rec<> s e not cheduled in he cata loe;ue are be ing enjoyed almost daily .
For when e \·er th e re is a fun e ral o r
X cx t S a t u r day t h •
· t Ignatius High a wedding the bells beg in to rin!!; .
The light
am
and wh e n th e bells b egin to r ing it 11 ee t t he !'t ro tH:: Cent r al H i d
football team opened its season,
•Ie ven of Er ie . Pa. , on the Ia te r'
last Thur da~·
ft
t W t is ne x t to impossible to mak on e 's
a ernoon a
es
)Wn fie ld. , (>a:<o ned hy t he pa~c
.
Tech field, by overwhelming the self h ea rd in Four B's room. H e n ce
We s t Commerce team 33-0.
ac tiviti e are u pended for the tim e 1wo ganH's t ht• \ -iiH'I' m t> n o· r ~h• 0
rt> p ea t t hei r pa :;t t riumph s over h
Ignatius wa s held scoreless for a nd lh e ta ·s enjoys a r ece
P n ns ylvania team.
the first quarter and scored but
Th P f oll ow ing w ee k the ~· itl\' i"
on ce in the econd, when fullba ck
Det r o it 'C. H igh lw re, and th e t'e ·,.,.
Keller circled left end for 25 yard s
.vh o we n t to th!.' :'ll it· h ig-an C'ity Ja,;~
and fulligan crossed the line.
<e:lso n kn ow tha t th!.' Dt> roit<>rs
Th e Fre hm e nt a t S . I. H. we r e
In the second half, the Saint
1re no e as y pic kin g. .\ nothe r o u tdisplayed a fine defen ive game, A 10t the only ones who experienced )f- town tea m visits us wh~n s•.
Pas to Dillon followed with an end :h at " - urprised f ee lin g " when cla s - \.inc e n ts o i .\ k r o n comes h '1"' h"
run by Re idy re ulted in a touch - I ;es were re~ um ed f or t he curre nt fo llowing aturday. Th e A kroni te ,
down for the Saints. In the final •c hola. tic
ye ar.
Old
s tude nts,
11·e n't r ec kon ed a . t he be:t in h.
pe riod
the Saints scored thr ee 1oting- the improve m e n ts a bo ut the
t'
h
I" ll
i\Iullig·an and )Ui!di nl!' whi ch w er e e ff ec t e d during 'tate, but will g in• the be:;t o f
Ime · w e n \.e er,
he vac ati on. ru b b d th ir e ~· es and : he m a r eal sc r ap.
Dillon cro , ed the line for Ignatiu · "·on tl t>n• tl wh e th e r or not 1h!'y w e r e
X e x t o n th
li:s
('0ll1C S
Ea ·t
Although the inexperience of the still in t ht> o ld. fa miliar qu arte r !'.
I n th i ' te u m, Coach \ ·inc
wa
noti ceable Coach Ralph
.-\ co mpl ete r eno,·ation ha d bee n
'las a seriou;; w orry.
The Eas tfound
o m e new
n a d e ; wa ll· wen· f res hly pa in ted,
Jbli ter ati ng t h o names and qui p, • id e rs alwa y s ha:; had 1 stmn gand
tringer, mainstays on f p a,'t generat ions. :\ew ~tairs r !.'- t• am . a nd th i: Y!.'ar, :;till ,:;trung-er:
the lin ' and Mulligan and Kelle r in ola ced th ose which had bee n h oi- they will g-i,·e \Ve,..t T ec h a r eal
the bac kfi e ld. Lenny Brickman, the low ed o u t hy t he Iag-)!ing feet of ight fo r t he 'e na tl' H o nors. Ir! a
aints' capta in and S chmucher an- : oun t les. forme r s t udent.·.
.
'
In a w orth\_' a ttemp t t o mul atc or c limma ry to tlw L'l t in ga 1e .
othe r half, were on th e sidelines
t he fam ou s Clark Bro th e r s of gas- :omes \.'an Hill's hea vy H o ly . ·am
with injuries.
~ ronomic fam e , th e e nte rpri s ing tea m, and Yan seek r e ve nge o 1
~ uthorities
remodeled th e lunch [gnatiu!'l .
room into a moderniz ed cafe t eria
,,·here wholesome viand s are di _
A s a fitting climax, our grea test
oen ~ ed in a capable mann e r.
d \'al Cathedral Latin is met , t
But the most welcome change i
Dunn Fie ld! We all know wha t to
:he installation of steel lockers. ~ xp ect in thi s encounter: . ha rd
Th e Cleveland Catholic football Thi welcom 4mprov e me nt will be fought vi ctory for the Blue and
teams have an added incentive for appreciated by every tudent for it
!liminates the confu ion which in- Gold! The fighting team alway
winning the chamipon hip thi year , ;ariably
prevailed
at {!is mi ssal • win s . Go to it. Ignatius!
the
General
Assembly t ime.
because
tourth degree Knights or olumbu
have ag r eed to give a solid silver I
TO AN ALUMNUS
cup to the Catholic football champs
The faculty and student body
for th e season of 1925.
of t. Ignatius High School wish1532-3-t West 25th treet
The move was decided upon in the
Lincoln 4599
e to extend their dee pest symtirs t regul ar meeting of the Knights
pathy to Chris Wilhemy on the
pre. ided over by former Judge Dan
occa ion of the lo s or hi s mothB.
uti.
er .
The year ly battles for the athoBud wa a member of the class
lie Championship have always been
of '25, and began his universitY
2-t3 THE ARCADE
course at :'>otre Dame but since
vicious ones but the addition of a
CLEVELA::-f D
the unfortu na te event has endetinite prize will undoubted ly make
Main 5856
tered Carroll.
them a great deal more interesting.
Erie, Tech and LatiL
Lead Li t of Hi
Grid Foe..,
Hi Eleven Romps Away
From Neighbors
In Opener
Changes Greeted
by High Students
Trophy Offered for
Catholic Champions
B. A. MARQUARD
PHOTOGAPHER
Dress Suit Rental
RESERVED
SEAT SALE
For
CARROLL'S
HOME GAMES
at
New-tnan-Stern
E. 12th and Euclid
and
Boylan's
7811 Hough
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