Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI)

 - Class of 1929

Page 1 of 160

 

Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection, 1929 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1929 Edition, Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collectionPage 7, 1929 Edition, Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection
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Page 10, 1929 Edition, Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collectionPage 11, 1929 Edition, Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 160 of the 1929 volume:

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J sri .. --f-my 1 E X I X 1 1 I 1' X , I I A ..- f k, 3 I K K E Q 4 r Q If DA 'V' a X if fi gt N ig f 4 xiii THE LEGEND 7 fx X + THE YEAR BOOK i 'K' of X OTTAWA HILLS HIGH SCHOOL Q 4- lf. GRAND RAPIDS, MI E 2.4, , , 4 Volume IV 1 -'sf fir E ff it Aikigfnf J NH ' fa XT 'F X if is is ' jx 343 H, 'V 'l 4: ,E it-W 1 X1 4 i 4 1' I ak 1 4- 4 Xxgk X X I M t 3' It 5' 4 7' 4 I 5 11441, HS, if I F ,I K 1 r it f 'R F 1 X- I. are A it I y ,1 l 4 JK f fi 45' K K Trees 4 I think that I shall never see A poem lovely as a tree. 1 kv J A tree whose hungry mouth is pressed R Against the earth's sweet flowing breastg k A tree that looks at God all day 3 Q' f And lifts her leafy arms to prayg A lf A tree that may in summer wear A E A nest of robins in her hairg Q B A 3 Upon whose bosom snow has laing 5 Who intimately lives with rain. Poems are made by fools like me, al But only God can make a tree. F i -JOYCE KILMER f . 5' X if 'P x R 4' I 3' M i HT , 'R 4 If if 1 'ix .Ak 4' Bak MXL an .4 f 2: X X 'K ff 4 Q or ff '- s t 4' n ' G Aa. f-' KX F if 4 fx I tl if 1 Q + X I K. 1 I Dedication Q X Q I O our fathers and mothers we X 4 dedicate our year book, that as we . 4 leave our high school and go one , 3 H , step farther from the strengthening Q influence which only parents can give, they may realize a reward in A f the form of young men and women RK' ' who will be a credit to the world i i and its achievements. .4 X n IV 4 an X, as 4 X' uf' 1 4 gk af Bef 'K X If I whisk kg, ba If i7ffc'lr. 3-1 If 54' 3 'lp Z- + rlvxi J X W , P A 5' '? Qi 4 'T' 'wi' ff + A- if k sk? k Ak - Contents G+? if Q i k J NTR ,H X 4,43 8- ggkif. .wk I 'sq if 4 1 ff R 2 3' Q :K if if 'M' I Whi A 7' 3 if ix G 'fig 'fniffifn 'Q 4' Wk .JWU 1- ar..'S'?ff 4 .ww H, 1 ,fix KS, I ffk: I: Q' WWQ '54-QW W EW J A . 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L I A in la-5 .f ,W ,ff ,S ' 4 'M f xx -'14-wj, , M 1, gg vii-- Jw ,' 'f in 45 Y il , , x:f?5.f 4fY, , Q N ,- si - L '-1, -L-i , 'i ish ' y ,f -Q: W f ffa-' -- , f Ai' X UE IME N IME X ,J f if Hfux 7 f ul, 1 gay. , 3115? , ,f,., .iii 3 NWQ3- . 4. hu . mi, 21' .f :..,,,. at fs ' N r ' V ' V ,,n,!, 3 . ,ut ' , vel. 1 2 - .. ..,mY 3, ', ,mu .vi . .5 w .4 up 1'-v .K Y. V Q, -,Mr.:5F 'L - ' ,f,1.:Qmr4xQu-.giiik L E V ..-aw' 'gf-Q ve' 49' J'i1: 1 JT , . V ' w . 'I 1 4 N XI ix I Q , if? sh ju if ni R if .4 5 N 4 Fil' 5 Q, ' jig X ,2 'V ir he Y Bl il 4 14 4 4 ,fs 242' fig QQ. 4 wi + 'if x ff if 4 5 ENTRANCE K ii, x- 1' 1 I 15 6 so i xt 'Rx B I 'K k R, 'F feisty, ET an I 4 4 'iivi-1 -v aff-fa 'ww' Our .flmb1'l1'0u,v 4ifrlz'f!.v Wlzencf Comm Our Ofiawzuzian PAGE 8 AQ- Aga-1 W Tfzc' Rafquffi Reign Our New Sckrzfz' 1'r0.fpyrJ PAGE 9 'L mai Tim Sl'7I1'Ol'J'7 Domain The Habitat of Our Book Friemif PAGE 10 ,fs ew., F fe J ,A, ' H N t fix Af 'WV 'wi 'mf 'U ,in-IA bl X- . I 'l 'fi 'Aff , - f-Q,-N 'J 5' '95 ' 0 VZK -I A' N K, V luikkvsi -Mfrgiii afjgf, 'gg - if . A NK ,, 5 f FA px Fi f 4 .c YZ , 3 ' n- 194 e 1412 if 9' 2-.N QA... I X 'll L - ' :r f ,X i F fl Am! f 0 UV, Imffz F f h a. IQZ7 'M ,gf ,. L, f lf, W :pf 'f flllllf, , Q xjr QA f ' J 3 N' Q 42' 'X flfyf ww w' 1 W wff -4 Qkflfallx 612: uh a If J, N-V71 'if Q 'X uf v f WZ, mf , . ,S 5 L Mjhgul 'I 1 ' J ' ,gf wi -, .SWK Qin I fa - I Av J I V .N f fxy .W 'X K X' I LII 67.4 Jimi! wmv' -H n 1 f,, Fi ,fffl g rfb , V7 J 'lf g Q X-A: Q: X Wh 57' '57- SWN -, N N X 3, 2 x 4 43' mm? x ,N y 1 ISK D x ' ,' 4Al 'em fx X N- K, L 45 - 'A ' 1-5 fx V X :!!1 'f 1 E' 37-f 21511 V, M' if 'U Y'-'X 1 I fA,!f'X Huff V 'A 'Q L QQ! ' 111 '1 fl .,, ' ! ,,-' SX x,-.',k,.1, 1 N 1 'ww -51,4 'CJKWQ Q! Har Illia.,-kg - - A f-594' I' -w ' X ' z ' Q. K 'K-5, vgf :ML N 9' 571311715 7 KF px Nw!! HU x'k 4 ' ' ' ' f JL 2 Q 9 f. 5 ff, -fr, 'KURAW ,, Ig - ' L ,fa gr . I N4 ' ',gl:,f,iZMf5:'-5 L- 1 1 f- 4 ' 2 ' fpfft N, ,fi fu-giye Q . , ,. -. 1, ' Vrf. ' ' I f ' .f 4 -A K , .,- 'f 2 - - , lar' ---1 ?Y-infi' r , -Qld 1-1 4, --' L I Ml Q 4' BN W A Ak' A MM' Wylw X lx N ff 5 f f f- gf- - ----.-X , -rf M 'lf f Q '14, 55 ? M 41 W? M, , N 543, :QQ . ff 'Wx k '29 ai K QI,-N Q , H A. - .5 ' . A 1 'F . -X V K 3 ar fn, 1-4 -me - + . Q 8 J wx If v :Z an at k- ,ir M al 4 471- Ii 'lg i f 4 ,g fu 2 + ' 'f 1f' 47 WK 'P it ,Q , N -aw X 1 f '3 as fe F w 'F 1 A 5, a -nr A 4 'F X Q- 1, , if-f-:yn i Y lk ix K is 1' X Qi 3 'fi 5 X 'A 7 , F f f , f ' X ' 'WF -+ u+.w, Us ff 1 f I I If 1 'W S ' K xx .Q X A f 8 J HARRY P. BUBOLTZ, B.S. , Prinling K 'H ZORA BARNABY, B.S. MARIE Boss, A.B. Typ nography f English va- ' ,Z ' 1 4. , , I I I 'Q' I f CAI.DwEI.I.,A.B. MARIE CARLING, B.S. , Iligmry Session lfrmm, English, X' ll i.x-tory I I it I A. E. COOK, A.B. I Scnlnr .11Ivi.war, llislnry I 9 i Ai I , ,, XX X51 X X 1 1 IDA A. CREGO ELSIIQ D. DAVIS, A.B. AILEEN DEJONG, A.B. CHARI.o'r'rE L' ERT, A.B. Ar! Sessmn Room, Latin, - Enylivh Cnglis , ranch Algebra Q 6aAA'0 1 4 I - I l I ll f ,fffzw I - P ,, - - Q in M I 4 i f I I ' I ' ' K' f ar SIDNEY ELEVELD BERNICE EVANS ERNEST E. GIDDINGS, A.B. , M- ,Vcchalzical Drazrirzg, Art Scminn Room, Ilistory 5' Jlaclzine Shop K ' I , Q I Y' ! PAGE 14 f I f X IN, A, I if A... FT if fain ,af if if 4645 ff I LL fy' I N I, Cf' 4: ln. , ,f A f wr? 4 n , f , W X , ,, FOREST D. BEN GREGORY, B.S. 'BIARGAREET HARMON BIADELINE HOLBIES I English, l'lzysicx, General Swifnnc Gzrls' Ph1f.vzcalE1l1u'ali0n A.B., M.A. P blfc English, Scfzrml Pa rr Q I1 x . If N 5 f' f ' Ax 'In f ,+V i ' '. ,lg f LLOYD F. HUTT BEULA1-I JACKSON, B.S. FREDERICK Ko SICK 4 , Wnnrlwnrlc Home 13011110111 Im r B., . 'nvxfn om. .llfyhru X f ' I' 9- 4 - ' M , I FLORENCE KORTEIQINKQ GEORGE J. KREMBLE, A.B. BERIIIA B. LEXYIS, A.B. FI,ossIE P. LoEw, A.B. A.B. Sz'ssiunlt'rmn1, llfxlnry, Sznvxfnlz lfrmm, Ifllfllikll Smxinrf lfnrml, llixmry Englixll l'fr'nlm1n1'r-.v -. R V . I! X 'Ii' I 9 . L , . Q ' N IE, Eff' fkfft A. HENRY LUDNVICK V EI,Iz,xBE'rH MATI-IESON FRANCES IWAYROSE, B.S. Boys' Physical Educulm l,un1'h Room Dirc'r'tar Sffnoyraphy, Typing, 110 my Ecmzomics Business EIIQIIISIL R 'f 77 'H ' PAGE 15 , I ,,., 1- - is 4: I N X I , 5 , f 'N 'K if X x L U IC . C if , X f f fi I ,J ! f 3 lx V i - 'f 4 4 In I fa- I v xx D R kk Q Q EEIA. 11 LEONARD NIEYERING, A.B. LEON I. MILLER, B.C.S. INIERXVYN 1X4ITCHELL, A.B. KATHERINE NICCARTY Sesszon Rqom, English, Sesxion Room, Iiiisiizfss Director Hand, Orclmsira . A.B.. Q - History Arilhmeiic, Bn0kL'm'ping History, Lrztln, Cwzrs Q- , V - fi sr BERTIIA PI.AC EVGENIA PLUMII, A.B. H. A. RICHABDSON, A.B. llumz' 16111110711 its Frr'm'h lfolrlrlll, lovloyy SIDNEY RYCISMAN ALMAA SEEGIIIIIIER, B.A. KATHERINE SI-IEEIIAN FRANK SHOXVERS Ifooklcerpzrzy, Business Lau' Session Ronrri, Algebra. Girls' 1'hysia'nl ISIIIIITIHKIIL Voice Cullurc, Glec Club, Geomefry, Trzyonnmctry X lllfmhrr Siinzmrr Faculty rg' ' If Univrrsify nf Jlichigun Q X J I R X KATHERINE SMITH A.B-, A.M. Latin ,fa ivf w JE' IWABLE TENHAAF, BSS? DON TOLAND, B.S, Session Room, Efrgi H Session Room, Geomelry X PAGE 16 M-M E W X , H X f , I , 1' f' If f , 1' M K is I Ai. I I Q I if ' I' HE 45 i K R15- If Q f f D Q 'Rf , ' 'Q .1 Agf- N K X X ' , Q if if N fx' i' I 1 + X A X V W M FERX TRUIE, B.S THEODORE VANDER PLOEG JEANETTE VANDER Varna MRS. I. VAX DYKE, A B X Arvlhmvlzr A,B., M.S. A.B. Sass-z'o1z Room 41 'll I R Q Cl i y General 5'c'ence English ' If X v I U 1 'P y HAZEL ZELLNER Ari, Interior Dec I J . Baslcelry C l Z i 0- K Q 1 f 16 In X Teachem' W zfk out T1 dures MRS IRE E BURNIS FRAXJCES KILSTROI V c C I Phy c I I I fiorz LOWELL PALMER A B JEANNE PWTDN itll I L h F I Session Room, Ili I 11 S 1 B ta If C'1'1'iz'.v V, ,I 5 ' 7 ' a DMV! Rf, My f M N 1 f X wr 'f' 4 ui 15 0' y ix PAGE 17 M xx x fl ND X , 5 . 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'fum 1 v.n 5 , L 1 N Q Wie 1 1 , Q f K, C 1 It .C x .Laf- 1, + X NORDELLA DE YOUNG XVEIFFENBACH J fl, us. 'X 1,-l-if Class is XVALTER MANUEL NORDELLA, Jr., President HONOR STUDENT Dodson School Leland-Stanford Cordelier C2, 3, 41, Secretary C413 Dramatics Club Cl, 2, 3, 41, Vice-President C415 Glee Club Cl, 2, 3, 41, Vice-President C4-1, Hi-Y Cl, 2, 3, 415 Student Council C41g Basketball f C319 Yell Master C415 Ottawanian Assistant 4 Advertising Manager C31. FREDERICK DE YOUNG, Vice-President HONOR STUDENT Alexander G. R. junior College Parthenon Cl, 21g Rho Pi Alpha C3, 41, Vice- President C415 Debating C3, 41. C67' HARRY EMMONS GLASS, Jr., Secretary HONOR STUDENT ,-Ilexander Rho Pi Alpha C41, President C4-1: Parthenon C31, President C31g Dramatics Club C2, 31, Secretary C315 Debating CZ. 31, Student Council, Secretary C41. JACK WEIEEENBACH, Treasurer East Grand Rapids VG. R. junior College Hi-Y C41, President C415 Glee Club C315 Track C315 Ottawanian Snap Editor C3,-115 Legend Snap Editor C3,41. fIlIf0Tltl7'l'-RCIAURICE HENDERSON Writer of Will-JOYCE DE VRIES Pf0PhEl1lONE SMITH Poet-HELEN SPENCER Song llfriters-VIRGINIA RCIURPHY, JACQUELINE FRYE Senior Committees Choice of Play.' ROBERT BLACKFORD MAURICE HENDERSON MARION IVICFARLAND Advertising: WILLIAM OSWALD FREDERICK DE YOUNG MAYNARD MYERS Ticket Sales.' DOROTHY ABBITT HELEN MILLER RALPH DAMSTRA LAWRENCE JONES Stage Manager: MAURICE HENDERSON MARIE SISSON Costume: Program: Senior Play KENNETH REXEORD HELEN SPENCER Publicity: SYLVIA DREISEN AMY-JEAN VENEKLASEN HARRY GLASS Properties: RCIARIE SISSON RUTH SHAEEER ROBERT BLACKEORD Student Directors: PAULINE CARYL HEILA FISHMAN GEORGE BIOELOW NIARCELLA GIBSON Electrician: JOHN APRLEYARD Carpenter: WALTER COOK Stage Hand: CARL WILLIAMS Class Color Committee ROBERT LEIGH DORIS WHITE RUTH GILLISSE KENNETH REXEORD Memorial Committee i NAN RAICUEL NIAURINE HAMMER CHESTER SMITH PAULINE JOHNSON WALTER COOK MAYNARD MYERS f Class Day Program Committee .cgakfi 44 R111 THALIA VAN HOOVEN IONE SMITH EVERETT BURROWS KATHRYN THOMPSON PAGE 21 4 fl. , J 4-L ai. gf X lk I at f X li mg! x 1 F' 4: 4 Q K I f 'I' if if 4 f t lr 1 Q ks if x ll N Yi 4 A I llHlI lostout illlll1lllllDlIlEiNllllN it DOROTHY V. Asairr 5 Strong junior High G. R. junior College N. T. C. Cl, 2, 3, 41, President C31 Historian 443, Girls' Athletic Associal tion C41, President 4415 French Club C41 Secretary 4415 Student Council CZ, 3, 41 Chairman XVelfare Committee C41' Ottawanian Assistant News Editor C11 v y 7 Chairman Activities Committee C315 Girls, Athiotio Editor 429, Assistani Literary Editor C31, Literary Editor C415 Legend Editor-in-Chief C415 Senior Correspondence Committee5 Senior Play Ticket Committeeg Basketball C2, 3, 415 Hockey C3, 415 Volley Ball Cl, 2, 3, 41, Indoor C2, 3, 41. JALICE XVELLS Sigfbee U11 i:'er.rity of lllichigan French Club C41, Vice-President C415 Student Council C3, 415 Legend Social Editor C41. RIARIE SISSON fllexander G. R. junior College Dramatics Club C3, 415 Ottawanian Literary Editor C415 Legend junior High Editor C31. HELEN SPENCER Q Strong junior High ' Univerfily of llfirlzigarz N. T. C. C1, 2, 3, 41, President C115 French Club C415 Girls' Athletic Associ- lg- ation C415 Ottawanian Assistant Liter- ary Editor 421, Literary Editor 439, Editor-in-Chief C41, Advisory Board Secretary C31. JACQUELINE ANN FRYE Alexander G. R. junior College Kapi Cl, 2, 3, 41, President C415 Parthe- non C2, 3, 41, Secretary C31, Vice- President C415 Dramatics Club C41, Treasurer C415 French Club C415 Otta- wanian News Reporter Cl, 21, Assistant Ottawanian Editorial Editor C415 Legend Business lX4anager C415 Student Council C415 Glee Club C21. ROBERT O. BLACKFOED Alexander lllieh igan Stale Cordelier C3, 41, President C415 Parthe- non Club C2, 31, Vice-Presi Football CZ, 3, 41. PAGE 22 - 'IT dent C315 , if f KY ri N FFF 454' 'Iii Q 4 F 4 I' 'F 'z + I Z if 5 IllHllIWl1IIll llllllllllblllthlllliii ff French Club C415 President C41, Blu-Si N Q C415 Parthenon C2, 315 Glee Club Cl, 215 Pirate's Daughterl' C215 Ottawanian Exchange Editor C215 Legend Humor Editor C415 Student Council C41. SYLYIA DREISEN 'A Cfntral G. R. junior Collfgf h Parthenon C3, 41, President C415 Dra- f matics Club C35 415 Student Council C415 I Ottawanian News Editor C41, Otta- . wanian Exchange Editor C315 Legend C Assistant Senior Girl l.Vrite-Ups C315 'K Legend Senior Girl XVrite-Ups Editor 3,3 L X C41. 4 1 xvIRGIXIA XIURPI-IY . Strong junior High C. R. junior Collfgf N. T. C. C2, 3, 41, Secretary C315 Glee Club C315 French Club C415 Girls' ' Athletic Association C415 Basketball ' C2, 3, 415 Hockey C3, 415 Ottawanian f News Editor Cl1, Assistant Humor Editor C415 Legend Girls' Athletic if Editor C415 Rosamunde C415 Volley B311 C1,2, 3541. FERDINAND BEYNE f South High Cordelier C3, 41, Secretary C315 Club Cl, 2, 3, 415 Football C25 3, 45 Basketball Cl, 2, 3, 415 Trac 5 f Baseball C315 Indoor C315 Speedball C31. F XNALTER COOK I Strong junior High C. R. junior College yi X R. O. T. C. Officers' Club, Secretary if C415 Glee Club C41, Vice-President C415 ' Rosamunde C41. X NIINERVA RYCKMAN Alexarzder G. R. junior College Student Council C215 Glee Club Cl, 215 Orchestra C3, 415 Dramatics Club Cl, 2, 315 Hockey C35 415 French Club C415 Pirate's Daughter C215 Rosamundey' C415 Legend Snap Assistant C41. ,- gg ii X ,C C -C i l 'K' dl.. ? In Y Xe al l. if I N! X l--s 'I' 4' , 1- Q' 1 l x N . , X of K I i q I z 5 ri jigs' if- Q ' 9 3 - A - mul in ui ilnnflulnawsastiwmn Q 1 'ur LEOXORE SNYDER Strong junior High K N. T. C. Cl, 2, 3, -U, President C-H, Secretary QU, Historian Gjg Dramatics Club Q-Hg Girls, Athletic Association Q-Hg Parthenon C-Hg Student Council fl, 3, -Hg Senior Picture Committeeg Senior Nominating Committeeg Legend 1 Art Editor Q-Hg Ottawanian Special . Feature Editor C-Hg Basketball fl, 3, 'Hg Hockey 12, 3. -Hg Volley Ball fl, 2, 3, -Hg W Indoor Q2, -Hg Rosamunde C-H. HELEN Ezixca Clxriflian High Davenport-.llcLaughlan Iurlitutf , X. Commercial Club L-lj, Secretary Q-Hg w Yolley Ball 42, 43, Girls' Athletic Q Association C-l-J. XIAURICE M. HENDERSON Srroug junior High U1lif'er.riIy of illiflligdil Athletic Association CU, Secretary- x Treasurer fljg Ottawanian Humor Editor CU, Ottawanian Circulator Q-lj. MMUAN F. AICFARLAND Jlrxandfr Jllichigarz Slat: f Kapi Q-l-J, Secretary f4Jg Parthenon CZ, 3, -Hg Dramatics Club C-Hg Glee Club 12, -Hg French Club Mig Pirate's Daughter Cllg Legend Honor Student Editor Q-Hg Ottawanian Assistant Liter- ary Editor Q-Hg Rosamunde Q-Hg Senior Play Committeeg Student Coun- cil Q-U. - X IONE Smrra i Alexander G. R. junior Collcgt I N. T. C. Q3, -Hg Parthenon Cl, 2, 3, 41, President HJ, Secretary fljg Glee Club Qlg French Club K-Hg Ottawanian Humor Editor CZ, 3, -Hg Basketball C4-jg Hockey Q-lj. J Q I PAGE 24 N 1 F Q , 2 , 4 it if if no 1 .' -N x, 1 M- g if ,Q 5,8 C A K' Seniors ALLEN NIACOMBER ALLOR X mlzeview High School G. R. junior College 1 Glee Club Cl, 2, 3, 425 French Club C425 f- Legend Junior High Editor C32, Associate L Editor C42. I X X JAMES .-XRLON - 1 Teehnical G. R. junior College KENNETH BATES Caledonia Hi-Y CZ, 325 Band C325 Orchestra C325 .fd Glee Club up, I A NIARY LOUISE BECKMAN Jr Central High Davenport-rWeLaughlan ' 'C Kapi 43, 42, Glee Club Crip. F 5, ' KATHERINE BEHAN Q Petoflzey High Sehool zllarywood Mu-Si C42, Vice-president C42. GEORGE SIDNEY BxcELow South High Hi-Y C325 Legend Circulation Manager C425 Football C325 Glee Club C3, 42, President C425 Rosamunde C42. X EVERETT H. BURRows - Albany High, N. Y. C. R. junior College PAULINE CARYL ' Alexander G. R. junior College Dramatics Club Cl, 225 Glee Club C425 French Club C425 Student Council C125 Rosamunde', C42. FRANK CRAWFORD X South High Calvin College 1 Glee Club C2, 3, 42, President C2, 425 Pirate's Daughter C225 L'Rosamunde C425 Photograph Committee C-42. N RALPH DALISTRA Q Strong junior High Paezjic College r lf I ix PAGE 25 it- 4 to in tk it R g, 'Yi' 51 if K fl 7 , J af ai I ,- F 1 x 1 N 1 I i 'K' 1 ifnwvlff f if yj C17 l r .5 4 l fd, Jiffwilrfk nf74,fVf,. 1 fx .J 4' , L i J if X 'A I X 4 1 F in , wal. LAURA DARBY Sigfhee G. R. junior College lXIu-Si C3, 415 Glee Club C1,2, 3, 41, Vice- President C415 Parthenon C2, 315 Volley Ball Cl, 215 Legend Assistant Advertising C415 Ottawanian Assistant Advertising C415 French Club C415 Pirate's Daughter C215 '4Rosamunde C41. - BETTY JANE DAVIES Pirate's Daughter C215 4'Rosamunde I C415 Basketball C115 Girl Reserves C115 Glee Club C1, 2, 3,-11. Strong junior High Davenport-MrLaughIan I DOROTHY DEBONTE South High Commercial Club C415 Reporter C41. lX'IAR1E DE BREE 1- Falmouth High Davenport-McLaughlan 4 IDOROTHY DELL Strong junior High Wf.l'f6f7l Stott' Normal Y Glee Club C31. JACK DE VI,IEGER .fllfxander Uniwrrity of Pfnnryloania CARLTON DODGE jejtfrfon C. R. junior Collfge MAY DURRANT Strong junior High G. R. junior Collzge Mu-Si C3, 41, Secretary C41, President C415 Glee Club Cl, 2, 3, 415 Dramatics Club CZ, 415 Volley Ball C215 Piratc's Daughter C215 Rosarnuncle C415 Student Council DOROTHY DYKsTRA Strong junior High G.R. Comrnfrcial College, Glee Club C315 Commercial Club C41. I JACK EASTMAN South High G. R. junior Collegif Cordelier CZ, 3, 415 Football C315 Track CZ, 31. 5, i if 9 ,Y A 1 ki W' it f I 5 4 N jackfon, illiffiffippi High t C. R. junior College f H 2 FRED ELLIS l Strong junior High Uniwrfily of Michigari Q Glee Club Q1, 2, 3, 41, Secretary C41g wa Orchestra Cl, 2, 3, 415 ROsarnunde C41. V, , 8 Q l lil Q f i . 3 G, - Af' X N JOHN EDWVARDS NICKOLAS ELLIS Strong junior High Unioerfity of ,llirhigan J 4 N i lb le la If NORRIS FARLEY ' SZ. Andrewbr G. R. junior Collegf ' Band CZ, 3, 41. F f I ANNE FISHER l , m Illurlergon Hackley High 4 Q Glee Club C215 Girl Reserves C21. ', f HEILA FISHMAN 6 six i Strong junior High l N. T. c. qi, 2, 3,41,Vice-President gn, Q President C21g Student Council CZ, 415 f f Ottawanian Alumni Editor C41. LAURA PAULINE FORMAN Strong junior High K A G. R. Cornrnfrcial Collfgr French Club H15 Band Cl, 21g Orchestra Q15 Volley Ball Cl, 2, 31g Legend Assist- ant Snap Editor C41. AIARION FULLER Alexander Michigan State College N. T. C. QI, 2, 3, 41gVolleyBal1 CZ, 314 Hockey C3, 415 Basketball C415 Dramatics Club C415 Glee Club fl, 215 'LROsa- f 1nunde Q41. -i AIARCELLA GIBSON fi X Sf. .flndrfw'x Glee Club C41, Secretary C415 Otter- If wanian Typist C-11. 'l VERNON GIBSON Q Cenzral High 0. R. fum,-C0116-gf 4 V Cordelier Club CZ, 3, 41. ll I f V L y Y H r PAGE Z7 I at 1 x -Q on K 4: W X E, N N wg- I I I 5 I ,ll , gi fill- ,Q- N , Q C is ak 9 --t AL .. RUTH GILLISSE Sirong junior High Nlu-Si C3, 41, Treasurer C415 Glee Club C315 Girl Reserves X CORA JAEGER Alexander Commercial Club C41. PAULINE JOHNSON Strong junior High G. R. junior College N. T. C. Cl, 2, 3, 41, Vice-President C215 Glee Club CI1, Vice - President C115 Pirate's Daughter C215 Volley Ball C31. EDGAR B, JONES X, Debating C415 Rosamunde C415 Hi-Y C3, 415 Rho Pi Alpha C41. ' RUSSELL KAP dr PAGE 28 ,-X F Q f ff 4' f gi 1 X if -4 .fl it BR . RCIAURINE HAINIMER f I1 , Sigrbee G. R. junior College Mu-Si C41, Secretary C415 Parthenon I C2, 3, 41, Secretary C2, 41, Vice-Presi- 1 dent C315 French Club C415 Basketball C415 Rosamunde,' C415 Legend Assist- ant Senior Cwirls' Write-Ups C415 Girls, Athletic Association C415 Glee Club Cl1. FAYE Hosic Sigrbee G. R. junior College Dramatics Club Cl, 2, 3, 415 Glee Club Cl, 2, 3, 415 Volley Ball Cl, 215 Pirate's Daughteri' C215 Rosamunde C415 Sen- X ior Nominating Committee GEZINA HOEKSEMA 1 Baxter Chrirtian j Commercial Club C415 Basketball C31 JANE ldULSWIT Q Sigrbee G. R. junior College Kapi Cl, 2, 3, 41, Treasurer C41, Presi- dent C415 Dramatics Club C3, 415 Glee Club C31. xx Northwertern High, Detroit f ff Alexander Chicago Art Inrtitute i A af W C X 'N ' 8 c 'fr' R 4' C F L. 5 93 , N K IRVING KESSLER Q fefferfon ll , f ALICE KIEVIT Commercial Club C41, Treasurer C415 Girls' Athletic Association C415 Hockey C415 Volley Ball CZ15 Basketball C41. W Baxter Chriftian 'F 1 5' GORDON KREISER St. Franeir l , ELIZABETH KROMBEEN South High 11 F ,Xi ROBERT LAWTON LEIGH 1 Earl Grand Rapidr High Q G. R. junior College NELLIE MAAS Creston High X Commercial Club C415 Volley Ball CZ, 41. CHARLES MAJOR Norwalk High C. R. junior College Hi-Y C315 Glee Club C315 Cordelier C3, 41, Secretary C415 O Club C415 Track C3, C 415 Football C3, 415 Basketball C31. GERALDINE MCCUE Alexander Lawrence Unioerfity Parthenon CZ, 3, 415 Kapi CZ, 3, 415 Glee Club CZ, 415 Pirate's Daughter CZ1, HELENE MERRYWEATHER ' Eaft Grand Rapidf High F' Chicago Conferoatory of Nlufie X French Club C41. HELEN E. MILLER Slrong junior High N. T. C. Cl, Z, 3, 41, Secretary CZ, 315 k Girls' Athletic Association C415 Otta- Wanian Assistant News Editor C415 Legend Assistant Girls' Write-Up C415 'A Hockey C35 415 Basketball C415 Volley Ball C415 Baseball C41. - TR ' ,L W i X X X. PAGE29 'W an 'N' X5 X i Q. 5 It , as , f if 1 f 3 . 'A L kg f 4 lf ai 1 of G , 1 A ar 4' 4 l x C g 3 i., X. if if if 1 'npr 1 4 In is X an ,J 4- V ff K W1 l fy Er iv V f lk? W ,C Wt .S 4 f C 'u 7' . 't A -. BERNICE R1ISNER South High Dawlzport IlIeLaughlan Girl Reserves Cl, 2, 315 Glee Club C415 Commercial Club C41g Rosamunde', C41. 1-'N JOHN MOLHOEK X ' Oakdale Chriftian High ' Glee Club C-1-1g Student Council C115 Legend Assistant Organization Editor C-I-1. NIARY NIONTGOIIERY Sigfbee Oberlin Parthenon C2, 315 Dramatics Club C3, 41g Glee Club C2, 3, L1-1, Vice-President C41g French Club C415 Mu-Si C415 Senior Ring Committeeg Pirate's Daughter C21g L'Rosamunde C41. CLAIRE NIUMA Ionia High GRACE E, lVlYIiRS Sirorig junior High G. R. junior College Glee Club Cl, 3, 41, President C31g hlu- Si C41g Pirate's Daughteri' C21g Rosa- munde C415 Senior Ring Committee C-l1. Wveflerrr Stair' Teacherfr College f S X NIAYNARD B, MYERS Slroug junior High C. R. fuwior College Glec Club Cl, 213 Cordelicr C3, 41. XVILLIAM PIIILIP OswAI,n Strong junior High ANcELIixIE PARKs South High Glee Club Cl, 2, 31, Student Council C-l-1. NVILLIAM SEABROOK PAPWORTH Porter School Syraeufe Unioerfity Dramatics Club C4-15 Football C3, 415 Ottawanian Assistant News Editor C41g X Senior Nominating Committee C41. KATHLEEN Pocn Alexander 1'ogue School l PAGE 30 F y X 1 ,if t if IF fl ,f If use f 'U it 4 4 7, 4 i jaw I In A K' FREDERICK WILLIAM POEL, JR. Strong junior High G. R. junior College ' Glee Club C2, 3, 415 Hi-Y C2, 3, 41, Secretary C415 Senior Play Committee5 Dramatics Club C415 'ARosamunde', C415 L Tennis C3, 415 Student Council C415 Legend Assistant Boys, .Athletic Editor C31, Boys' Athletic Editor C41. ' C NAN RAIGUEL EX 4 Cl 5 D Y l - Strong junior High i . ' K NVQ iq ' gf 1 Chemphybio C415 D1-amatics Club C41. 5 KENNETH REXFORD - Alexander llliehigan State Glee Club Cl, 2, 3, 415 Drarnatics Club Cl, 2, 315 Hi-Y Cl, 25 3, 415 Ottawanian Advertising hlanager C35 415 Pirate's Daughterv C215 Rosamunde C41. MORRIS RODEN f Sigxbee P Glee Club C41. 1 X Louis SANDLER Q Central High Leland Stanford RUTH E. SCHAFFER Key School, Chicago Sargent College 1 N. T. C. Cl, 2, 3, 415 Girls' Athletic ' Association C415 Hockey C3, 415 Basket- ball C3, 415 Volley Ball C35 415 Baseball C35 41. MORENE SCHEFMAN Sigfbee Unioerfity of .Miehigan Dramatics Club C25 3, 41. L BERTHA M. SCI-IILDHOUSE Alexander Commercial Club C415 President C415 Volley Ball Cl, 2, 3, 415 Student Council C415 Girls' Athletic Association C41. HELEN KATHERINE SCHROEDER Alexander G. R. junior College Nlu-Si C3, 415 President C415 Parthenon C215 Secretary C215 Glee Club C25 35 415 Student Council C415 Orchestra C115 Band C115 Pirate's Daughter C215 Rosamunde C41. EDMUND SCI-IUMACKER Strong junior High Davenport Buxineu College Rosamunde C41. W PAGE 31 gill? i ff 1 f 5 , 'villas if fra, 5 K 6 - ar 1 If x K. n E l 6 N 3 If Ak if xl if ,wk 354 if :M- PW X It 1 , i K N 'T A f is 3 F A if 3 9 5 - X.- I J I Q KJ 'T A. rf JEAN SEHLER Immanuel Lutheran C. R. junior College N. T. C. C-Hg French Club H-jg Girls' , Athletic Association C-Hg Legend Assist- ' i ant Organizations Editor Q4jg Basketball 4 l Q-Hg Senior Nominating Committeeg 'N Volley Ball QU. K f ,f ROBERT E. SERFLING l ' S Alexander C. R. junior College K F f RUTH SHERD 'A ' sown High 1 'I' oiee Club 42, 3, 43. HARVEY M. SLATER N Alto High illiehigan State 4 1 Q NELSON SLOT X jf-fKf.Y01l G. R. junior College I Chemphybio MJ. N Q f 4 Q CHESTER WHITFIELD SMITH Strong junior High Kenyon College M, kk X Hi-Y fl, 2, 3Dg Glee Club Cl, 2, 35g Legend Assistant Boys' Write-Ups Q4jg Student Council C-H. N ANDREW SPAMAN Strong junior High lllichigan Slate College Football Q4jg Baseball UD. BERT STADT I Alexander Commercial Club C4-J, Treasurer Q4Qg -Glee Club CZ, 3Dg Pirate,s Daughter C25- WILLIANI STONE DeWitt High Baylor, Texaf Hi-Y Hjg R. O. T. C. C3, 459 Track UD. , f ORPHA THEDE ' Wayland G. R. junior College Home Economics Club CZJQ Commercial Club G15 Pirate's Daughter Q2Qg 4'RosamundeU- Q95 Glee Club Cl, 2, 31. 1 , f 1 5 x ' j dr l 1 PAGE 32 mt X , if f ,f ti N WK nr 'U 'I 'fi' 5 I I - .Lge- N GENEVIEVE THOMAS N Strong junior High G. R. junior College f Commercial Club 445, Glee Club 445. fi L j KATHRYN THOMPSON x Strong junior High G. R. junior College I N. T. C. Cl, 2, 3, 41, Treasurer C21, Vice- NC President C315 French Club C41. BERNICE L. TOMPKINS South High Butterworth Nur.fe'5 School E51-HER TOMPKINS jejerfon Davenport-McLaughlari Commercial Club C41, Secretary C415 Ottawanian Typist C41. If ' EDITH LENORE VAN HARN Q Alexander Girl Reserves C115 Glee Club Cl1. THALIA VAN HOOVEN Alexander N. T. C. Cl, 2, 3, 41. f 1 WILLIAM VAN Loo Strong junior High G. R. junior College N ELLA K. VAN OOSTEN Alexander Commercial Club C415 Glee Club C215 Dramatics Club C215 Girls' Athletic Association C415 Hockey C3, 415 Basket- ball C3, 415 Volley Ball C2, 3, 41. FLORENCE VERNON VENAELE ,I Liggett School, Detroit Girls' Glee Club C215 Dramatics Club i C215 Parthenon 433. AMY JEAN VENEKLASEN Alexander .Michigan State College N. T. C. Cl, 2, 3, 41, Vice-President C415 Hockey C415 Basketball C415 Legend E Organizations Editor C415 Ottawanian 5 Assistant Humor Editor C215 Senior , Play. I 4 X W I-' X PAGE 33 in We if C 'Ai' .. -If ff Q ki 'F D l x 5 1 ln 4 Dx 6 if '14 HY F Q A HN l X if mf Q 1 5 A JEANETTE NVALL Cadillar High JOSEPHINE XVEISEL 1 K 4 South High Chicago Art Inrtitulc I Parthenon C215 Nlu-Si C413 Girl Reserves 'iRosamunde C41. LESLIE WELLS Strong junior High Dftroit Collfgf of Pharmacy Student Council C11 . C215 Legend Assistant Art Editor C315 f HARh'IINA WESSELS X Alexaiider G. R. junior College 4 Girl Reserves C115 French Club C41g Hockey C41. f q IDORIS WHITE Slrong junior High G. R. junior College Mu-Si C3, 41, Sergeant-at-Arms C31, Treasurer C415 French Club C415 Girls' Athletic Association C415 Elasketball C2, 3, 41G3ley Ball CZ, 3, 5 o ke C35 41. C Il, A Union Iligh G. R. junior Collegz Glce Club C3, 415 Track CZ, 31. GERALD XXCORDHOUSE South High C. R. junior Collfge' XCERONA YOUNG Sfrong junior High ,Q Volley Ball Cl, 2, 3, 41. f KA'fHRYN Zo ET Union High PAGE 34 Vw , 1 X if jf is PV an . i X fag .fa 73 F X X f x Xkjlki ff. I x 'F 5 , 'K' K, nf? gh X l 1 .5 il- A K ,F skit 5+ in 't is 242' ii ik 4 'K silky +C 5 X- ix K ka Pic W2':!z fl! 763' Q . Q O J J I xx - R I s 1-44 Tia in oy! Q X M44 'f ,vw Q1 T A , W irdga -ik' PAGE 35 ffl K w'4 :r ,K+ 'I' a,t f, A ' X L 11411 IK IF X 1 , 1 I ' its la 1- , 9. X 4 K ,ki if -:AL Ar G T .A Cfass Hz'sz0ry IN the fall of 725 a group of boys and girls filled with eagerness, wonderment, and hope turned their faces from the setting sun of the grade schools and junior high schools toward the East where the new sun was to rise and shine on them for the the next four years. They left the more densely populated districts for the open space at the east of the city known as Ottawa Hills. It was here that a beautiful new building had been erected. This group, however, upon entering found the grand structure to be nothing more than a great empty shell. Of course there was the usual school equipment, but there were no pictures, landmarks, memorials nor signs to guide them. They were somewhat dismayed at first for they began to realize the tremendous task that stood before them. It was to be their duty to set the records and prece- dents for the coming classes. Their task was made as easy as possible by the capa- ble advisers in the various activities, and they soon began to organize and adjust themselves to the new surroundings. One of the first accomplishments was the organization of the Student Council which proved to be a great aid in the promotion of the many undertakings. Cnc of these resulted in the beautiful drapes and curtains the auditorium. Next came the Otlawaniavz, a record book in which to write their ac ievements month by month. A call then came for athletics and competition. Before this could come about, it was necessary that an athletic board be organized. This group had as its first act a tag sale or membership drive. Being very successful it fostered and carried through a track meet in the school. On Arbor Day each home room in the building set out a young maple tree- Shortly after this the first year of the new school came to a close. After what seemed a very short vacation the group again returned to its tasks. By this time the building did not stand in the open all by itself for the section was rapidly developing. The interior as well as the exterior was assuming a new at- mosphere. Pictures were rapidly taking their places in the more barren spots on the Wall. The first football team went into action and finished its season Without a defeat. Their record was nearly equaled by the basket ball team. With the spring exams came the close of the second successful year ofthe school. When the group returned the next fall, it did so with the title, junior Class. It took a great deal of interest in the activities of the senior class, for these were the only ones to leave any traditions or customs. The various athletic teams entered class A competition and had a very successful year. Every one in the junior class will always remember the famous Central basketball game. It will also remember the Way in which it came into national prominence through the efforts of one member of the class, Harry Glass. In the spring of that year the athletic field was sodded, and a track was made partially by the students themselves. A May party was given for the benefit of the band. Soon came the spring exams which ended the third year. They entered the school again the next fall for the last time. They were now seniors and they immediately bent their efforts toward class organization. This was followed by the customary senior duties of selection of rings, pins, and pictures. A senior play benefit dance was held that the play might be properly financed. The play Minick itself was a great success. Then came the Senior-junior Party which proved to be as successful as the other senior activities had been. The class now leaves with the knowledge that it has done everything in its power to aid the school and the coming classes. It carries with it a pleasant memory of the .- I jf W .59 Q four happy years spent at Ottawa. X W -Maurice Hmzderson l PAGE 36 RA. T i J 2 ,x 3 if if if it l t lf X tg ,fl il x E J 4 Q 4 v X 1' ,- 'ffv ' I f ' ,Q c X 1 ng , . X AL f' The fpurpose gf 5a'uc'afz'0f1 AFTER a tenure of four years of academic training, it is altogether appropriate that, at their close, there should be a statement of the ultimate objectives of such training. You have delegated me to epitomize, as far as possible, the thoughts which arise in you upon such an occasion as this. It is impossible, however, for me to perform such a task with any degree of accuracy. Consequently, I have selected as my subject what I believe to be the three most salient purposes of education: first, the building of a cultural civiliza- tion upon the tremendous materialistic prosperity of America, second, to use every possible means at hand toward the extinction of warg and third, the development of ourselves to the very fullest degree of character and proficiency of mind, and to the early adoption of those ideals which can best guide us throughout the course of our lives. America is confronted today with the monstrous incongruity of an industrial and financial supremacy without precedent in the history of the world, while at the same time myriads of its people eminently lack a proper appreciation of music, of art, of literature, in fact have never known the spiritual exaltation of those fine and wonderful interests which raise men and women above the level of the best, or the automaton to the very summits of the sublime. Forward looking citizens must realize that America can never achieve immortality upon her widespread reputation for speed, eHiciency , and amass production . Large as they loom in the present, they must, in the ultimate reckoning, give way to her cathedrals, her forums, her Parthenons,-to those imaginary buildings of the intellect which, if allowed to prevail, would place her as a white mountain peak among the civiliza- tions of all time. With all due respect to those masters of industry and captains of science who play such an exalted part in the life of the nation, I would bespeak a lN'fichael Angelo for every Henry Ford, a Chaliapin or a Beethoven for every Raskob, a Browning or a Tennyson for every John D. Rockefeller. It will only be by the perpetuation of such a spirit, militantly and indomitably within ourselves that there shall emerge that divine fecundity of culture which is the hope of thinking mankind. One of the foremost purposes of education today is to provide another mode of settling disputes among nations other than by the refined means of scientific barbarism. A famous general, in an address not long ago, said that the next war would see civilization annihilated. The heinous contrivances by which entire com- munities can be wiped away, the magnitude of a war which would primarily be under the sea or in the air, and the inevitable embroilment of all nations, taxes and terrifies the imagination. Humanity cannot stand another warl Two thousand years of Christian culture, the illimitable resources of education and science, a code of international manliness sprung from the ever productive founts of religion and morality, democracy, that divine progeny of the sins of kings and the yearning of slaves-all look down upon us and ask when this infamy shall end. If history has taught us anything, it has taught us of the folly and the useless- ness of war. I-Ieretofore, something primitive within ourselves has made us glorify the warrior. There was a sort of romance and glamour and heroism about conquest and triumph which thrilled us and captivated our imaginations. Ten years ago, however, when a bereft and bankrupt world in recounting its losses discovered that ten million lives in the full Hush of young manhood had been drilled to death by the dull monotony of machine guns, or the insane chicanery of submarines, war began to lose some of that romance and glamour and heroism, and men and women In PAGE 37 is X grit 5 l f 5 , I 1 O f , my 1 5 cl.. lrxl 1 if vw ,gf , if ,ll is X 9 . U 1 A. gs K K I if -5 +4 at , 'F -I -Us if if 4 if i x i af determined within themselves that it should not happen again. Today that spirit still prevails. There is a stern and silent resolve beating in the breasts of mother- hood the world over that they will not bring sons into the world to be offered upon the altar of international intrigue. But what of the next generation? What of us? Will we silently fill the blood allotment, will we contribute to the endless lists of the noble dead as prodigally as our fathers have done before us? I see those two great Hfailures' of history in immeasurable contrast. I see that veritable superman of physical force and power languishing in misery and loneliness upon the island of St. Helena, and I see the broken body of the Prince of Peace, and I say that God has called the disillusioned, the unembittered, the unsurrendered youth of the world to come forward and stay the hand of man and say, UNO, you shall no longer kill your fellow men! Speaking for the last time from this platform as a student of Ottawa Hills High School, I would say: Let us go into those channels of life best suited to our natural aptitudes, but that no matter what occupation or profession we enter, let our minds and hearts ever be lifted by a high sense of duty and of righteousness. 'Constant as the northern star of whose true-fixed and resting quality there is no fellow in the f'irmament.' In conclusion, I think I voice the inarticulate sentiment of every one of us when I express our appreciation of the work of our instructors. Ottawa Hills has been for us a great democracy where principal and faculty and students were one, marching onward and upward into the fullness of life, where the complete, mellowed per- sonality of the master has blended with that of the novice, where the higher being has reached down to urge the lesser upward, where four stimulating years of rela- tionship have initiated an activity and a contact which can never end. Fellow students, if all the hopes and aspirations and ideals which our families, our teachers, and society itself have placed in us means anything, then today is not an end, but a means to an end, to that end by which we may go forth strengthened and refreshed with an inextinguishable fire in our hearts and a prayer upon our lips that we may lead fuller lives of labor, of service, of love. --Harry Clay: 1 I F f if X wg if W . +- I 1 PAGE 38 s iT if X f if if iffy it 6 Xi ff + 6 if I A YF Hx it F I ,f-' f is f l X fi ' ff f Q 4' 1 Q Q . F Er N 1 t fi' I N 1 +Y If 45 Q f 4 6 4 in ik Class Troph eg' T0 the tribe of Twen-tey-nine, To their chief, the great Nor-del-la, There has come an urgent message Telling them to move their wigwams, BW Leave the camp of Ottawanians For new places and unknown ones, For new hunting grounds and forests. X Fearing for his people's future, Chief Nor-del-la sends a maiden To the prophet, Tensk-wa-tawa, 4 I Of the Rustling Leaves a prophet, ik 4 J By the music of their whispering, Tensk-wa-tawa told the maiden All the future of the tribesmen, Told the future of the maidens: l Listen, daughter, to the story , li G That the Rustling Leaves have told me, l t 1 For your tribe will have good fortune, A g Far from Ottawa will they wander. W A Ah! Your chief, the great Nor-del-la, f Will become a famous actor, And the tallest of your tribesmen, Russell Kap, will be an artist. Alice Wells, an all A student, Will become a night club hostess. Ginny Murphy, of the Irish, I see as a Prima Donna, Singing in an opera, written By the famous Norris Farley. Joyce DeVries will be the owner Of a lurid tabloid paper, Her assistants, Helen Spencer, Frederick Poel, and Helen Miller. Missionaries to frozen Iceland Are Bob Leigh and William Oswald, Doris White, and Catherine Behan. PAGE 39 XR f 5 , A 'sr -if All-.rt an 4' K i 4 X 4 ff' x FT 'Ji I Q W , 1' X v il I lt 1 4 K it if it I x l Q A L n j f Then we find Ruth Sherd, along with Nellis lXfIaas, and Ruth Gillisse, Also lXfTay Durrant and Thalia As five Congresswomen sturdy. Rlaurine Hammer and Jane Hulswit VVill be partners in a tea room. Johnnie hlolhoek, Gordon Kreiser, Dorothy Dykstra, and Ruth Schaffer- All are stars in Fishman's Folliesn. Laura Darby and Jim Arlon Do just what We all expected: Call their papoose, Jimmie Junior Robert Serfling is a dentist Painlessly QFD extracting rnolars. Vernon Gibson is a successor To Carl Williams, fight promoter. Bill VanLoo and Bernice Misner Take the prize as Marathon dancers G. McCue and Cora Jaeger Juggle dishes in a restaurant. Gracie Myers and Bertha Schildhouse Take as partner, Morene Schefrnan, In their Arte Moderne Gift Shoppey. ,Mongst the gun men of Chicago, Charlie hlajor is a leader. Amy Jean and Dorothy Abbitt Find success as dietitians. Edgar Jones will be a boxer, Challenging c'The Killer Allorf' William Papworth, brave young warrior Is a second Julian Eltinge. Kenneth Rexford and George Bigelow Find success in being hucksters. Kathleen Poch and Pauline Caryl Act as clerks in Bert Stadt's bookshop. Helen Ezinga, Verona, Sally Gibson, and Jo Weisel Blake stump speeches in Nevada For the Democratic President, William Stone, a southern tribesman. J v 5 K f 5' X4 F+f RI N i 1 N 1,11 Q x XX of 'W -if dr PAGE 40 1 . , l iv Q 1 if-5 A X i 5 X Q diff 1 fi H f. N I i ag: W Hi ' l f ' Q' r 1 in f X . T N K x ts, 'lf 'X 1 if F f 4 x 4 V2 Lgf-' Irving Kessler, and Jean Sehler, Katherine Zoet, and Johnnie Edwards, Not forgetting Everett Burrows- All will find their work in teaching. On the great Olympic Track Team One will find our friend Clark Johnson. ln New York will be Fep Beyne Dancing the Faye Hoek Scandals. Warrior Weiiqenbach remains here, As John Ball Park's popcorn vender. Sylvia Dreisen, news reporter, Nfaurie H., Supreme Court Justice, And Ann Fisher, gym instructor- All are happy and successful. E. Van Oosten and Fred Ellis, Tight rope dancers in a circus, Are the rivals of H. Carey And Appleyard, clever jugglers. Walter Cook, a second Lindy, And M. Myers, a Wall Street broker, Look with scorn upon Jack Eastman, Famous laclyis gown designer. hfary Thompson, M. Nlontgomery, Betty Krombeen, and L. Snyder-- All determined Wimmins' Righters Follow Jackie Frye, their leader. Dorothy Dell, and Betty Davies, Carlton Dodge, and Jack De Vlieger Demonstrate their skill in vaudeville. Leslie Wells and Louis Sandler, Both are well known bridge instructors CVery pleasing to the ladiesj. Andy Spaman, break-neck speedster, And his wife, nee Kathryn Thompson, Spend their summers in Grand Rapids VVhere the mayor is Frank Crawford, City manager, Ralph Damstrag And the speed cop, lN'Iorris Roden. Gerald Vvordhouse and lXfl. Sisson Klanufacture gold fish perches. hlarion Duiker, and Gezina, .1 x, t K ,J 'S N 7 I i f , 4 if if N lax' . ,il 6 ti' Fx .lj fig' iw 5 ii ', as 4 PAGE 41 I if X 'K K 4 in '41 it if vi- X F . :vi T 3 i N L ll. if 1 4 is if I -x N F' I Q I Lk is Q 5 1 . I, A ,rx fn 4 'V 1 .QL x Katherine Schroeder, and Nick Ellis Sell ice cream cones at Ramona. Peggie Thede, and M. L. Beckman, Chester' Smith, and Polly Johnson Try reforming Pauline Forman, Heartless vampire of the movies. Alice Kievit and Clair Muma In history outclass Mr. Muzzey. Jeanette Wall, and Harvey Slater, Bernice Thompson, and M. Fuller File the notes and write the letters For Bob Blackford in his work shop Where he mixes strangest potions Used by Genevieve Thomas In her chemical inventions. F.. Van Harn, H. Merryweather, Kenny Bates, and Angelina Make their dough by twisting pretzels. Harry Glass and Nelson Slot will Find themselves obedient spouses, Whom they'll domineer most harshly. M. De Bree will be quite famous ' As a drama queen in Greenwich. Fred DeYoung will be a lawyer, And his steno, Manley Hansen. Minnie Rykman, M. McFarland, Ed Schumaker, and Harmina, Florence V., and D. De Bonte- All become cross-country hikers. From his place rose Tensk-wa-tawa: Go now, Ione, to Nor-del-la, Tell him all that I have told you Of the future of his warriors, Of the future of his maidens. Tell of all that lies before them In the dim and distant future. Then Went Ione to Nor-del-lag Went, and gave him all the story Told to her by Tensk-wa-tawa, Of the Rustling Leaves the prophet. -Iona Smith I pi' 1 S sb? if E PAGE 42 F 4 film is 'F X 'Y Bs: sswkz 11 - Q 4 'Z ' K aff! !, Q f f 4' G' F 3 f . X - Auf' X I Cfczsr Wi!! WHEN the Indians of the Nor-del-la tribe of Ottawa Hills realized that only a short time would elapse before they must leave the wigwam Ottawa High School, their home for four years, they recognized the immensity of the breach to be caused by their absence. Appreciating the futility of any attempt to fill this gap, they nevertheless decided that a few of their marks of talent and superiority be left at the great wigwam in order that it might not become utterly ruined and desolate. These gifts they bestow upon those Indians next in wisdom, skill, dignity, and character who are banded in a tribe called the Juniors. To the junior class as a whole, the senior class wills that thrill felt upon answering to the name Senior , Also to the class in general is willed the ancient and inalien- able privilege of snubbing all and any underclassmen. To Steve Ralston, of the junior class, Bill Papworth, one of our stalwart braves, unwillingly, and only by force, leaves his walking stick and derby hat. Virginia Murphy tearfully yields to Pat Woodburne her most cherished posses- sion, Hthat school-girl complexion, while lVIary lVIontgomery Cnot without many sighsl reluctantly gives the priceless sunnyness of her hair to a worthy successor, Nlargaret Linn. Heila Fishman regretfully endows to I-Iillis Rigterink perception into her art of giggling in which she is notoriously proficient. It is generally conceded that this gift is made to an apt student of the art. Katherine Schroeder is heroic in proffering to Janet Aspinwall the perpetuity of abundant Hdatesf' To the most experienced applicant in the Junior class, Chuck hfajor wills his mania for the invention and extensive use of innumerable, juicy bits of slang. To Roberta Fowlkes, Dorothy Abbitt whispers the dark secret of her close relations with the A,s strewn so plentifully along her path. Harry Glass, with a gesture of resignation for the inevitable, relinquishes with an oration his public-speaking genius to Walker Smith. Jacqueline Frye is mournfully engaged in playing a dirge as she offers as her contribution, her musical talent which is eagerly wrested from her by Margaret Wloodson. As the crowning sacrifice, Grace lVIyers sorrowfully steps forward with her gift of it , which is joyfully claimed by Chickie Bradbury. So through the generosity of the senior Indians, we hope that the junior band may uphold the standards of Ottawa as staunchly and well as we. As well-that is- as is in their power. And we hope that by earnest endeavor and rigid application, with the precedent of the present senior tribe ever before them, they may meet with success in their role as Ottawa's Indian Chiefs. -foyce De Vrizr :R PAGE 43 Qt- ay xx . is ...xfi , N X -1- Q ti, I ' 'K 5' si. 25 YY I f i Fx if if 7- 6 A N - -'npr 1 1 N 1' ,K ,X D 'Hr Q f TX A f uf Farewell f With pride and joy we gather here i To celebrate our graduation K As we have passed the first milestone , f Along the road of education. 'F 1' if J W' f ff gl PF Q i 5, ir fl ,g , K I X K But, Ottawa, we loathe to leave The comrades we have made, and you But other hands are beckoning us To come and win their laurels, too. These halls have echoed our footsteps Through many a long and busy day, But now you say we've finished here And each must go upon his Way. We'll ne'er forget you, Ottawa, Though time and fate may bring us fa Our guide shall be your good precepts, And we'll be loyal to your name. Like chaff before the blowing Wind We shall be scattered far apart But memories of those happy days Will stay forever in our heart. HIC. -Helen S pence' t 'N T' fri' 1 S A X l g 4' Ho fii Jr il A, AGE 44 X 4 ff if 7' if im i 3' X ,ttf ' 1 wg 'K JFK 1 T ff :F fr 1 Q fm Q A' 'A 1' Q 1 J i' N CLASS soma , K if Gsggflsffxm Ogofgmfggggg bi , ' may 2 'Q N ,FQ t - Oh we'veQometotheend of our daqs h re-Wv. hopawcilofhonxo 5 W 1 ,t 'i1EQFlJFF4f?Fg:F5FL5 ' iy fix jg Pt af ' 543 BE rf?QLH ' D A to ourdQ0rh'xQhsQhool our Qt. ,Wd Qh W was the 'x 4 ,F 1 - ,Q 4 , sift ggi qfH5pWQgU1 z,,,, I if iv fb , I QQ E Q l E ,it ,f 1 first an our gem nQfL'1mhQlinQ weoi twenig- ml Qi mmm 4 ' ask fig HWS 11 ff 'Li 1 pa i ma WW WW QOUEDE- TM 'I-deolsviamoi harewqgmy gq uig N ,4 D3iEE'9?,S5'V if ,J ,fr E I avd. K A Je, ,UYTIQJ-lf'QX5 on' gg know i E L E x . 1 ww ffm W , 1 'W at wx N HE 'I 3 R at ix 3 N B K ff , If x I v 1+ NWHK -+ ,wg ',.W + 1+ x . I 4 lfxf I f 7' 4: It lx it I , l 4 - f X f 4' ,I f 'fix 4 I 1 H K 4 A Cl N , -- , ' W f Top Row: Virginia Murphy, Carl lNilliZ1TllS, Nan Raigucl, Harry Glass, Marian McFarland, Faye Hoek, Amy .lean Vcncklasen. First Row: Morene Schcfman, Frank Crawford, Kathryn Thompson, Walter Nordella, May X fl Durrunt, Fred Pocl, Hcila Fishman, Charles Major. X at 4 A . . f Jilfznz efi l xx THE Senior Class presented 'Wlinicki' in the school auditorium hflarch 14 and 15. xx Xlinick is a lovable person who realizes that real enjoyment is found with his A 1 i cronies in an Old men's home rather than with his son and daughter-in-law who I t willingly Offer him shelter. .Minicle . . . . WALTER NORDELLA ' f Lil Corey . . Nettie Miiiiek . Annie . . . f fini Corey . . x Fred Miniele , 'K fl! Diamond . . Mr. Dietenhofer . . . NIAY DURRANT . . KATHRYN THOMPSON . AMY JEAN vvENEKLASEN . . . FRED POEL . FRANK CRAWFORD . CHARLES NIAIOR . . HARRY GLASS N 1' Mr. Prince . . . CARL WILI.IAMS f MH. Sniallridge , . . NAN RAIGUEL i A , Miff Craeieenwezld . NIORENE SCHEFMAN ai M1'f. Lippincott . . NIARIAN NICFARLAND y Miff Stack . . . . . FAYE HOEK Ma1'ge Diamond . HEILA FISHMAN i Lulu .... . XXYIRGINIA MURPHY I X 'F ' ' W PAGE 46 MX F X , 4 , f ef ' f. 4 L, if t il f A, , T V 4' 'I C f 2 N gi K Q Q 'k HF 1 Mu.. W i 2 J ,I il 7 . ef f V 'mi C , 13 Mfg., .UM whiz .4 S NIHDIRS reign ! Q Y! F in 1 X J 9 5 L 1 1 I b I! f A .J Senior Scandals QD hrlay Durrant failed to state her ambition, .Q ' X We thought she'd elect the career of a musician I x Because Kay Behan likes history books, t To these alone she will not confine her looks. Ti g- of F Ferdinand Beyne, so the tale's tol' , X x X Caught the ball, and made a goal. V ' 'l '-- . . K Elizabeth Krombeen will keep books on a shelf, For her employer-not for herselfl F- I f For skating in winter try to beat .J i Leslie Well's nimble feet. I Wg Sylvia Dreisen a journalist would beg ft If she succeeds, we soon shall see. MAMA --v. x As Gordon Kreiser pounds the drum, BOYS ' He Wishes good music would only come. v ' ' W W K Ice-skating is Helen Ezingals sport, Q' ' 1 f But she'll pass that up for lVlr. Davenport. 6, Thalia Van Hooven likes her tee on the links, And not in a cup as everyone thinks. ' 'X , Florence Venable, of French fame, i 'A . ll Has for herself made quite a name. X P l Tennis and horseback-riding would make jerry 5 X 1 McCue jrk 'N Vv-'N-f ul Happy, but for one little thing-a canoe. '9 R , . . 1 l Jack De Vheger will be a financier. 1 W f That's one less ambitious engineer. Dorothy Dykstrzfs fingers show k That on the typewriter they can go. U 'lug-3. , , z 'L' Nlest-ce pas, parlez-vous? X! b X 4 Nlaurine Hammer, this is for you. qi ,J 7 Jack Eastman is a man of great open spaces. XX He wants to be up and out, and seeing places. I -L ii i Alice Wells a-skating goes X With a book up to her nose. j f , HThe yanks are here, for teeth, we said, 1 t W Q With Robert Serfling at the head. Freddie De Young, vice-head of our class, l K- x ' X Will be a lawyer if hopes come to pass. ' WIN , Swimming is hlarie De Bree's favorite sport, X , ' But she'll be a stenographer when her ship makes x Pm- Norris Farley for music yearns, 5' -,-11 While Q fire of melody within him burns VN PAGE 48 1 I f 7 f , f X v , f X fi Jr 4 W' HF f gifs 4 l BW, W 5 f 4 ft A I fx N I l k t X ,pf 4 gil ,. E ll ' si, -3- I 4, ' dl H sings , -fa. f I ' as ? WN ..,. fab. ru 7' .........-. . 'lla Q' 1 .,. Senior Scandals Bill Oswald would like to paint Things that are and things that ain't. An interior decorator will be Doris White, She'll try to refix everything in sight. Leonore Snyder would costumes design, And she's certain to be the best of her kind. List, to Vernon Gibson's ambition: A highly successful business position. A second Nurmi is Carl Williams, He certainly ought to be making millions. Ruth Gillisse, it will come to pass, Will soon be teaching a large art class. Robert O. Blackford, of football fame, As an engineer will earn his name. Ann Fisher from Muskegon Hackley High Says: ullll decorate interiorsg do or die.', Bernice Tompkins for a nurse will train Her ambition to attain. Studying books is Bert Stadtls hobby. Don't faint here-free air in the lobby. Dorothy Dell has just decided An orchestra shall by her be guided. Louis Sandler's wish is a bond concern The business of which he's soon to learn. Ed Schumaker hopes to be a business man. One might be made of a cartoonist fan. Listen to Pauline Forman say, Never do a thing half way. lf Carleton Dodge gets a banker's position, He will have attained his highest ambition. Books as a hobby, but for her ambition Amy-Jean wants to be a dietitian. lone Smith, with her tennis skills, Nlay someday out-play Helen WVills. Harvey Slater, with a golfer's form, Now knows some are made and others born. Students of Ottawa get into scraps To be the subjects of Jack Weilifenbackls snaps A successful political leader is Nelson Slot, He'll tell you whether a bill will pass or not. PAGE 49 X N ' 1 ,.1. -1 fax CQ F ls V' X L 4-1 . .ga ,V X . L, ff s.-Ax Dxlkfj AG a All 1 , - -F,.JL X iii ft T -el .l a , is M if gl. X JB i f l- 'I' if 16 if Z X l l'F 1 J T YY F' K L. 4: it T X 9 at l Q .I , ' A A an sl f X rl 4' 1 l X K, -I4 ik! mi, .'f,i,r1'nn Room Tmrfzrn' lvlll. ToI,ANn ,, fl ll ' ' Fl D' Session ' 00771 104 I t I S 1' - 4 Xi If 'W' E ' f in X In it 4- y Sim! it 'l'oP Row GeoI'gell5lgelow Richard Simkins Hiilliam lValker Harry Sullivan -lohn Byers George Krombeen Chester Smith Harold Houser Leo Hemstreet Clark VVhitman Douglas Clintsman Wiillard Delioning William Schatz FIFTI-I Row Dorothy Dolson Esther Tompkins Lawrence Muma Claude Slaughter Rlaryin Tenelshorf Foster Bishop Xelson Slot Ralph Damstra Howard Kfunshaw Nathan 'Waring Harold lklartin Neil Newhoff Virginia Clarke l' f friuziril lffprfrfulafz'z'rf.' BI:vI':RI,Y RAIaINoIfI1', .IANIQT Ollawauiznz Cirfufalors Louisrc WOOIJ Fo II R'I'I'I Ro W lrniengarde Richter Yivian Valliere Louise Wood Marian Fuller Dorothy Abbitt Mary E. Drescher Leonore Snyder Christine Scott Edith Muskin Faye Hoek Rosemary O,Connor Rosella 0'Connor Mary Frances Scheicfer Dorothy Wloodford Klarian Williams THIRD Row Helen Spencer Kathryn Thompson Klaxine Bevens June VVarsaw Roberta Fowlkes Harmina XVessels Minerva Ryckman Ruth Gillisse 'Virginia Simons Elizabeth Slater Grace DeYrucht 1 Anna Bruggink xluaneen Roach Nellie Maas SECOND Row Joyce DeVries Charity Haddad Janet Aspinwall Beverly Rabinoff Dorothy Aspinwall Elizabeth Apsey Pauline Forman Helene Klerryweather Florence Venable Ferne Payne Mary Louise Payne Janet Helmus Ruth hluskin FIRs'I' Row Arthur Dom Franklin Tiggleman Fred Ellis Louis Smith John Nordella Vliilliam VanLoo Gerald Behler Clayton Donahue Hillis Rigterink INsPINwAI,I, AIIsIQN'I' Robert Berger Ferdinand Beyne Vfilliam Bradbury lien Cueny john DcWilde Wfilliam Dursum Harry Graham William Haight Nlarian Hake Ida Hoekstra Edward Holland jane Hulswit Leo Kelly Roderick McAlevy Helen Nliller Mary lylontgomery Grace Nlyers Stephen Rawlson Nita Schultz Lureatha Scott Nlarian Smith VValker Smith Donald Steketee Donald Thomas Jeanette Vander Sloot Josephine Weisel Doris 'White Edith Wieland Eleanore WVhittington f PAGE 50 mx I X , 4' f , 5 D fig-g . 6 Fit Q 7. Haig. 1 i Nl N W I m to if gl Q J. I A 4 E T , -nr vt' 1 I Q 4 ' 5 0 AL- x 4 F . l kph Session oem 212 Serfion Room Teacher: XTR. KREAIBLE Student Counril Reprerenzaziver: AIARGARET LINN, JOSEPH TOP Row James Yared Carl Bowmaster George Vink Curlee Magaw Gordon Van Ry Stanley Weitz Albert Van Dyke Don Van Ostenberg Jay Tanja James Brierley Ed Zeilstra Orland Tetroe YVilliam Norton James Nlurray FIFTH Row Evelyn Vander Sloot Thelma Carmein Ellen Louise O'Connell Clarice Dekker Nlary Sillje Donald Burback Herman lX4iller Ray Pratt James Christensen XVilliam Ryan in D41 K x Ollawanian Cireulalor: NIILDRED DREISEN Jack Donaldson Jack Van Oeveren Walter Watson lklr. Kremble fTeacherj FOURTH Row Laura Gillette Patricia Sullivan Margaret Brennan Marian Oswald Eleanor Bates Katherine Lindemulder Patricia Woodburne Elsie Sneathen Helen Perry Jennie Eckman Georgianna Hoffman Barbara lIcCallum Katherine Miller Joseph Renihan hflark Brower THIRD Row hfignon hloshier Evelyn Bradbury Esther Zoutendam Barbara Hurley Elma DeYoung Nella Baker Jeanette Balish Jean Porter llargaret Vlfoodson Esther Beukema Florence Shields Caroline Ezinga Helen Grandy Xlarie NlcCallum Edith Jones SECOND Row Margaret Linn YVava lVarren Klildred Dreisen Clairbelle Freyling Francene VVright Katherine lfveirsma Angeline Bomers Klaxine Bentley Nluriel Pivouitz Alice Zaine Carrie lVoodford Ruth Mitchell Alyce White Esther Thompson Alice Harkema FIRST Row Eugene Ackerman D PAGE 51 l X N ,Fa RENIHIAN Clarence Eisenga George Wvoodall Robert XVells Lloyd Chapman Henry Sprik Elmitt Eastcott George Razzoog Roy 0'Neil Frank Tatroe Pierson Smith Chancey Norton QXBSENT Klildred Bosma Jacob Bradshaw Evelyn Brower Robert Crabb Xluriel Frey Louise Hurley Anita Malek Henry Nlersman Thomas Strahan Zora Van Oss Emily Weber hlarjorie Ylfhitmore Earl XVierenga Stanley Hvilson Edward Zeilstra ik A ff N i 1 dr fa: 1- Q, , - J 1 5 R x X i' ia if x 1 7 i1f',, 5 l 4' , if l x 1' N i K a 4 fi an N X 7 f FF , 3 Q xc K P ex .XXL J .-L .- A . . i' . ll-Mffuff Sermon oom 208 , phi' ',Nf'f lf T I 1 Sl',l'J'1-O1L Room Tfnflwr: Miss TRAVIS Siudun! Cuuucil Rcprrnrfzalaficmfx RICIIAIIIQ Pucximm ANI GEOIIGIANA MURPHY Toi' Row Rex Chapman Arnold Osgood Ben lfuller Harold Nyberg Yernon Moore Arthur Hobart Xlonroe Conklin Balfour Augst Frank Lass Raymond Rapaport Thomas Bott Elmer La Dow Harry Signor FIFTH Row Grace Anderson Lena Belle Cherrym James Ostdyke Israel Roden Donald Strickland Harold Brink Bernard Berg Thomas Gill Robert James Herbert Baker Eustace Ruddick Roger Peteham Alston lngell l HH I Oflawmziau Circulazor: TSRAISL TQODILN Kenneth Barnes lfouizrii Row Frances Chandler Erma Scruby Xlarie Schneider Jean Edwards Jane OlBrien John Olson Henry Thomas Abe Glazer Alfred Sorensen Richard Klarquardt Rex Keister Judd Barnes Aurelius Douglas THIRD Row Beatrice Porter Florence hlackin Yiolet Hendrickson Harriet Hall Ann Timmons Saraphine Lindhout Elizabeth Daane Sylvia King Gayle Spicer d, r 5 X or rt Q A ' 9 PAGE Neva Stevens Phyllis Crabb Klary Alicc Sherwood Lucille Wright Nan Robertson julia Schefman Elizabeth Anderson Hazel Drew SECOND Row Bliss Davis QTeacherj Norma Caro Suzanne Marrin Kathryn Applehof Genevieve Ryskamp Virginia Ulrich Nlarjorie VVagner Helen Lattin Jane Lake Alargaret Smith Jane Hall Gretchen Vander Noot Georgiana hrlurphy Jean Ter Kfeer Ruth Knecht Irene Sherd Lucille Turoff 52 'rx 4 N l'lIRS'l' Row Nicholas Missad Leonard hdallory Gene Barney Kendrick WI'iglI1. jack Biggam Arthur Engel VVilliam Taggart Richard Peckham Nlerton Davis Ben Engel Frank Gordon ABSENT john Borst james Bosma Adrian Bostelaar X Ross DeWindt Julia Ellis Sherrill Ellsworth Edward Field Beulah Kendrick Claude Lewis Glenn Lewis Peter Pastoor Ruth Setsma Q Eldridge Thomasma Louis Wlalbridge X r1l v' ivi f an- W4 f 5' wi' K' i f 4 ii K .4 i 'l X . K , Q r I 'F it .f Af' ' TOP Row Cecil Watson Dick Scott lylark Dolan Junior Adams Albert Terrell Fred Briggs Charles Ouendag Rudolph Holtrop Elwyn Beach Robert Schelling Theodore Haven Donald Gezon Ralph Guthat Donald YVoodstra Otto Wierenga Russell Wvottke Robert Yelton FIFTH Row Fred Schairer Van Dunakin Leonard Krause Harry Blackburn VVilliam Thielmau W'alter Nlills Thomas Schriemer liienzo Van Single Ralph Anderson Fred Zwald Tlx Dx Wx Sessiofz oom 209 Sfrrion Room Taarhfr: RTR. KOEPNICK Sludenl Counril Rz'prf5f'ntalizw.' BETTY YVOODBRIDGI-3, ROBERT TWYNING Oltawanian Cirrulators ITELEN Taiiclc Ted Allen Russell Weda William Cavanaugh Robert Brummeler Joseph Evans Howard Fish Nloray Hoard FOURTH Row lVTr. Koepnick CTeacherD Jacob Dykwell Lucille Fox Angie Heyboer Yvonne Taylor Roberta Van Antwerp lXf'Iary Beth lX'1arks Nancy Papworth lVIary Knappen Robert Twyning Neil Richardson Jack Christensen Dorothy Cook Virginia Seymour lXfIary Swier Irene lXfIolhoek Frank Solomon THIRD Row Lorraine Doughty -,..,J X Nlarian Carpenter Shirley lkiladdox Dorothy Cheseborou gh Peggy Comey Ethel Chadwick Helen Dedinas Dorcas Baars Edith Botma VVillemina DeLeeuw Dorothy Tennis Florence Hoekstra Esther Boss john Barker Alfred Rlurdrich Maurice Houseman SECOND Row Carolyn Nlorman Bedelia Ellis Kathryn Veneklasen Elaine VVhite Nlarjorie Locke Helen Truck lXIarion Bertsch Betty VVoodbridge Virginia VVagner Evelyn YVhitman Helen NVisberg Jacqueline Strahan PAGE 53 Josephine Zomer Esther .Xpplequist Cathryn Drushel Virginia Ackerman Doris Jones BOTTOM Row Albert Dekker Sietse Harkema Lyle YVillis Fred Schefman lfred Prescott Frank Lusk Joseph Hall Lester Sutton Lewis Huls jack Evans Donald hlilmine Raymond DeVries Howard Rogers John Tibbs ABSENT Martin DeHammer Robert Deliline Reva Greenwald Charles Olthof Chester Ozinga ai gig ft if f5L i V, 1 Q NI . . 'F' 4 n it 9 K O I JL f ' u I ff X 11' I K it 1. ff. at If 'wr 194' I ff -il N X 4 , i Y Session F nom 206 Q Sfr,vz'on Room Tracker: Bliss SEEGMILLIZR Sludmzl Council Reprz,rM1faiic'ef.' CLAX'TON BILLINGS, RilAURINE PALMER TOP Row Francis Bell Billy Lyon Bernard Miller Raymond DCx,TUCllt Donald Grant Limell Clark Wayne Smith Ralph Lindemulder Max Halloran Albert Niekson VVilliam Dykstra Roderick Smith Roy Rowden John Yan Norman Phillip Nliller VVilliam Nlclntyre FIFTH Row Howard Cleveland Vllarren Boetsma Edward Louis Read Harvey Foote Paul VVright Richard Kress Glenn Sehuiling Harvey VVoodstra Edmond Oakley Leo XYinick ANN Fiziguxuck, PAUL wVRIGHT Offawaazian C1'rculafor.' IKODERICK SMITH Robert Broderick Bruce Gill Rohert Nlyers Don lngell FOURTH Ro vv Catherine Rooze Vera Goodrich Alma Hayes Mamie VVessels Mildred Stroup Louise Sytsma Agnes Hager Ardith Richards Ellie Spoelma Dorothy Krombeen Jessie Bolle Consulla Seegar Jessie Vander Veen Gertrude Speckin Elizabeth Simons Agnes Soukup THIRD Row Nlarjorie Lamberts Virginia York Bernice Lardie Rlary Kranenberg f PAGE Mary Delnay Maurine Palmer Catherine Melnerney Ruth Renihan Katherine Shields Evelyn Baehelder Ruth Nibbelink Doris Carr Elizabeth Goossen Leona DeYries Leona Joslin lone Darling SECOND Row Helen Rlajor Ann Fredericks Klargery Smith Hildegarde Beckman 'Winifred Van Kuelen Bladeline Poch Crystal hilurray Esther Bouwkamp Kliss Seegmiller QTeacherJ Katherine Sneathen Agnes Nielson Carrie Cole Doris Koessel 54 Evelyn Grandy June Clark Lena YVitte lklildred Stevens BOTTOM Row John Beyer Paul Rowden Robert Ellwangcr Ross Perry George Geisendorfer Clayton Billings William Barney Justin Rlorrison Gordon Taylor Kenneth Stonehouse Jack Carpenter Ansel Smith Leonard VVatkins ZXBSENT Vllilliam Beaman Rlartin Den Boer Bernard Groenick Pearl Groteler Sherman Hampton Jack Jansma Ruth Yan Harn X I X x ,f 'W if f if f S if ,Q 7' fi ah , k F , q 'H - O Q lit Q' ,L ii li Q K i 4 X 4: D I A F I x .4 A X J Sessiofz Mom 319 Seyrion Room Teachfr: MR. TVIILLER Sfudfnf Council Repn'Ienlaliae5.' LOUISE REAN'IS, RUTH KAP TOP RO w Rex Larsen William Eggebrecht Charles Woodsen Elmer Kreiser Russell Thompson Edward Kalawart John Maas Joseph Bolema Carter Jefferson Ivan Douglas FIFTH Row Gezena Berkhof Linamae Roon Dorothy Poll Marie Van Ravensu av Ruth Vander Veen Dorothy Olcke Rose DeGrOOt Katherine Timmer Cornelia Peters . Tl X unfit Olfawanian Circulalor: LOUISE REAVIS Doris Eastman Wilma Hays Dorothy Endres FOURTH Row Helen Dikkema Julia Ver Wys Marie Hoolsema lN'Iartha Cornelisse Adele Sanders Kathryne Zuidema Joan Schuitema Frances Woltjer Ruth Kap Coila hlorningstar Grace Cook Helen Holm THIRD Row Ellamae Hutchinson Thelma Winter Prima Cross PAGE X Regina Van Hesteren Helen Sprik Ellen lVlartin Florence Lindeboom Betty Hansen Wilhelmina Schildhouse Rosalla Foote Betty Dursma Louise Medendorph Louise Reavis SECOND Row June Breen Susan Brink YVilma Vanmanen hflolly Jack Katherine Johnston Jeanne Schreliller Ivy Lillie Doris Grant Louise Groom Lucille Schlintz Helen Greenfield Bedea Yared Marie NVright Dena lVIusclI Olive Williams lVIr. Nfiller fTeac FIRST Row David W'est David Haddad john Emerson Sydney Parks YVilliam Lithn Lloyd Leiter Arland Lucas Frank Behan ABSENT Virginia Burnett Nlarjorie Heller Adrian Oppe Helen Sikkenia Della Sytsma herb i i 5 S 'I 3: f 5 T! ez if Q .N 'D , X I 'D f,,, .TWT F X' 0 ' i' F x li Q5 ll ,X-'1Tvmffffl?f!' V2 5' f f x Nfl. 1 , Q if C ai 5 X . , 1 i N fc I .lef- GRADE 9-2 Jeanne Allen Evelyn Bachelder William Beaman Hildegarde Beckman zmior Hzlgfz School Students George Geisendorfer Genevieve Glass Gibson Gleye Elizabeth Goosen Donna Goodwin Florence Goudzward Dale Porter Bernice Postma lrene Preusse Maurice Prince Robert Prince Doris Rademacher X. Francis Bell Donald Grant Donald Ramsing X ' Henrietta Bergmans Ethel Grant Genevieve Razzoog 'X Clayton BillingS Robert Granstra Rhea Ralston Warren BOetSma Bernard Groenick Louis Read Jessie Bolle Lois Grieg Ruth Renihan Ned Bomers Pearl Grotelen Ardith Richards Harvey Bowen James Griffin Eulalie Rice ,E Kathryn Bradbury Herman Grooters Roy Rowden i , Gordon Bradfield Agnes Hager Paul Rowden Frederick Brandt Fred Hall Anne Ryckman Barbara Brown Ruth Hanson ' Alitha Rynbrandt Jack Carpenter Alma Hayes Louise Schriemer Paul Carpenter Elizabeth Hesse Hazel Schilling 4 Doris Carr Ann Hoffman Mary Lou Shelfer ' Harold Cassel Donald Ingell Betty Shaw June Clark Jack Jansma Norman Shroeder Lionell Clark Leona Joslin Ann Sherwood Virginia Christenson Elizabeth Jones Katherine Shields Caroline Clare May Jones Theodore Slot Howard Cleveland Helen Fouras Ansel Smith Carrie Cole Richard Keister Marjory Smith LeSage Crocker Doris Koessel Wayne Smith lone Darling Richard Kress Kenneth Stonehouse Avis Delano Margaret Lachniet Betty Sonke Mary Delnay Betty Lamb Jeanette Sprik Martin DenBoer Marjorie Lamberts Ysbrand Sprik Henrietta DeMann Bernice Lardie Gladys Sytsma Leona DeVries Ralph Lindemulder Edna Mae Tatroe Raymond DeVrucht Catherine Mclnerny Betty Timmons Lucille Donahue William Mclntyre Gertrude Vander Kaay Harry Dursum Helen Major Theresa Vander Molen William Dykstra Leland Merren Florence Vander Sloot Helen Eastway Lester Michalke Helen Vander Sloot Jack Eleveld Bernard Miller May Van Hartesvelt Mabel Elias Philip Miller Carl Van Loo Fred Elliot Justin Morrison Henry Van Sweden Robert Ellwanger Crystal Murray Gertrude Veneklasen Gail Everest Helen Munshaw ' Evelyn Voltz Charles Fairbanks Robert Myers Lawrence Warren Harvey Foote Thelma Nieboer Esther Weemholf Ann Frederick Bill Nienhuis Marguita Wepman Irene Francis Ruth Nibbelink Helen Wheeler Betty Freeman Jack O,Neill Victor Willwerth Robert Freyling Judith Osterveer Gail Winchell Betty Gibson Maurine Palmer Barbara Windoes Gertrude Gietzen Ross Perry Harvey Woodstra Bruce Gill Ferne Poole Elaine Zaine I X i PAGE 57 Q Q 'k K N. ' i . M ' s J-Kar xx S N w I0 if an 'F . ,Ar 7 X X i if 'nf Q, ,Hg GRADE 9-l Doris Anderson Gilbert Bailey Harm Baker Florence Baklaar William Barney Carl Clifford Berg Margaret Blackford Joyce Blain Joe Boogaard Phyllis Boston Lilian Bovee Florence Breen Marion Brown Morman Calkins Michiel Cassone Ardis Cowdin Helen Crawford Arthur Cross Helen Damoose Robert Darby Edna DeAllen Nellie DeBoer Betty DeVries Eleanor Dobosz Jay Dutmers Jacob Duursma Genevieve Farnsworth Irene Ganzeveld Joseph Ghareeb Robert Gietzen Vera Goodrich Cornelia Gorter Dick Gorter Douglas Hall Max Halloran Marion Higley Alfred Hoekstra Barbara Horton Harold Jefferson Alfred Johnson Glenna Johnson Orrie Kesler Norman Klunder Jacob Koning Robert Large Dan Lillie Marquerite Lindeboom Kenneth Logan Frederick Maile Eleanor Malek Howard Markham Barry McGee Elizabeth McIntyre Leona Molson Marion Monroe Margaret Murphy Jack Newhouse Edmund Oakley Marian Ogden Jack Otte Roberta Pape James Parkhill ,,,., Carol Peck Harold Phillips Jack Poel Donna Porter Phil Raiguel Victoria Rice Helen Roden Alice Rylands Jacob Scholters Eli Smith Robert B. Smith Robert Perry Smith Alden Stander Roger Stander Maurice Story Theodore Stresman Susanne Sytsma Audrey Talsma Margaret Thomas Evelyn Thompson Clarence Tornga Gerald Tornga Howard Vander l1Vood lXrIaynard Van Duinen Edward Van Dyke Senetta Van Ham James Van Heulen John Van Slooten Robert Veatch Lucille Ver Merris Marie Ver Merris John Verstraete Edith Viau James Vos Lester Walthorn Eldred Watkins Melvin Watkins GRADE 8-2 Earl Appelquist Hamilton Arthur Jack Arthur Forrest Aspinwall Alice Baker Robert Bart Earnest Bates Carolyn Beck Ted Beyne Ruth Blok Vivian Boersma Helen Bomers Ethel Britton Harold Brower Henry Bruinsma Jane Berkholder Isabel Churchill Betty Clare Anna Cook Glenn Cook Dorothy Cornelisse Nlargaret Croll PAGE 58 -XAL Kathryn Crawford Walter Cronkright Marian Curtis Douglas Dawson Tom DeAllen Della Dedinas Lewis DeKraker Elizabeth DeLeeuw Johanna Delfstra Lois DeVries Sebastian DeWilde Lewis Dillenbeck Mary Ann Dilley June Dolan Ivan Douglas Rodney Douglass Evelyn Eastman Edna Elenbaas Vera Ellens George Ellis Janet Emerson Dorothy Enders Henry Faber Maxine Field Richard Franks Delores Frontjes Margaret Frederick Dick Furtney Sylvia Ginsburg Charles Gordon Cladd Graham Julia Ellen Gray Donald Green Harry Griese Donna Ruth Hampton Phyllis Hartung Alice Heslinga Chester Hillsburg Helen Hoffman Mary Holland Abram Horner June Hunt Dorothy Imrie Dick James Carolyn Jelsema Walter Johnson Eleanor Joiner Franklin Kerr Arvid Kiander Mendel Kitzmiller Richard Knoblauch Harold Korndyke Robert Kress John Lachniet Gilbert LaGrand Gordon Lake Alta LaMoore Rex Larson Anne Later Lloyd Leiter Irene Lindberg Clarence Longstreet , li' xx J 'X i B-S Y I G I U if Q .4 N E F 1 X x T I I l P? Q -it 'fr 4 ,Tx Q .Laf- Robert Loomis Carl Martin Jean McFarland Joe McGee Donald McKinney Louise McKinney Evelyn McMahon Jessie Melis Robert Michmerhuizen Billy Miles Paul Miller Nlargaret Miller Lily Miller Robert Montgomery Fred Munson Donald Murray Vivian Murray Adrian Okke Ruth O'Neill Bob Louis Oom Joanne Osterveer Barbara Otte Jack Palmer Robert Papworth Jo Ellen Perry Robert Porter Abel Potts Donald Press Ralph Prince YVarren Rich Bayard Richardson Jack Robles Rozell Rosenow Alice Schaaphok Jack Schelling Billy Schick Tressa Schildhouse Joanna Schievink Arthur Schroeder lX'lax Schwartzberg Byron Schuiling Betty Scott Wendell Seegar Kate Sherd Orvall Shotwell Harlow Simpson Anne Spalink Franklin Sprik Donald Stelma Frederick Stiles Doris Stobler Marion Solomon Richard Strong Bruce Taylor Betty Jane Teele Philip Theobald Janet Tetro Robert Tumy hlurray Thwaites Betty Anne Ummel Gerrit Van Ravensway Catherine Venlet Johanna Van Den Berge Tl i 'fi H X ini as 8 s i I Robert Van Oeveren Elma Vander Noot Frieda Van De Roer Louis Vanmanen Tom Van Sluyters Fred Van Campen Nlargaret Veenboer Robert W'all VVillard Ward Claire Rae Weil Betty Wells Beniamin Werry Gertrude Wieland Pauline Wheeler Jay Whittington Ethel Williams Virginia Wyatt Barbara Wykes Sam Yelton Kathryn Zimmer lilarie Zuidema GRADE 8-l Richard Allen Leonard Bacon Eugene Baker Voneceil Bailey Henry Baraeer Mary Jean Bale Fred Balish Marguerite Bentley Ruth Bertsch Paul Blake Kathryn Bont Marian Bostelaar Beatrice Bowen Frederick Bowman Janet Brower lrene Brummel Fred Carr Albert Chadwick John Connors Garth Cook Robert Damstra Adrian Danker Charlotte Dell Florence Dettling Arthur Dewey Lyle Dodge Alex Dolinka Anson Dreisen Christine Dursma Kermit DeBeck Forest Eckert Phillip Eddv Barbara Elliot Charles Ghareeb Harold Gillisse Raymond Grinage Nlargaret Hadley Dorothy Hammer PAGE S9 in N. Katherine Hoitinga Thomas Hess lVilliam Heyboer Henrietta Holtrop Gertrude Hoogerwerf Nlelba Kallid Nlargaret Kalt Ruth Kammen Lorena Kennedy Dena Kuyt Elowyn Krause Vivian Larsen Florence Levenburg liflorris Levenburg Dorothy Nlarkham Fred Missad Mary Jane lNflcCarthy Martin liflyers Richard Nason Parthenya Nickerson Juanita Nickerson Sam Oppenhuizen Harold Orth Shirley Orwant Betty Parkhill Angeline Penning Rachael Perry Robert Pound Lena Prins Jane Quimby Nayif Razzoog Fred Rexford Ethel Richards Ray Ritsema Betty Robinson Lois Rolston Maurice Rypstra Walter Sanders Doris Sherd Morton Shipe Janet Sillje Elizabeth Swier Warner Bruin Slot Ethel Smith Harry Smith Margaret Solomon Robert Soules Ruth Steliins Jack Stiles Eleanor Swanson William Taylor Frances Ten Elshof Clarence Tornag Charles Te Winkle Alfred Top Howard Van Dusen Elizabeth Van Houten Pauline Ver Merris Ruth Warren Harry lYerkema 1 'x I G K i 1 N l i' I 1 al W f 'E+ 5-. 'I' . ,1 o ir, l 4' 14 l i H i X' X J ,ft N , ay, r 5 , J - i' F F 1' 5 a I FTF 1 '1 1 4 rg In 'R fs J k Q 1 N XX- ' l ' I Robert Whaler I Karl Whittington 7 Hilda Zigter X GRADE 7-2 l Q' Bob Anderson Emmet Anderson Avis Anthony Anna Bafar i Harold Baily I 'I' in J ,4 I .ff lx , ,ef 4 P I Ar ri f if i R 50 AS 1 Frank Barnes Elmer Batts Ruth Ann Bedford Helen Bennett Lois Billings Bernice Boshoven Louis Botma Sara Brink Pauline Brown Hugo Byt Werk Betty Chamberlain Russel Cole Kenneth Cook Ruth Crawford Hazel Dart Norman Davis Theodore Dedinas Marie Deurloo Henderson Dudman Herbert Duthie Henry DeVries Alyda DeWilde Jane Edwards Frederick Eisenga Billy Esler Phyllis Fishman Clarence Ganzeveld Rita Geoniaine Jean Greene Robert Grubb Glen Haan John Hammer Trena Harkema Marguerite Hoard Helen Hoekstra Ernest Horn Kenneth Howk Frances Hulswit Nannine Hurd Bob Irish Sarabelle Jackman Wilber Johnson Lorraine Joyce Ruth Kalawert Helaine Kratzenstein Richard Leavenworth Marguerite Lieffering Charles Luce Richard Matheson Jean McGregor Frances McMahon Stuart McAlevy Gloria Meeth Jane Merrill Bernardine Miller Herbert Moore Betty Morgan Floretta Mulliken Pauline Nelson Edward Neumann Jack Nuthall Albert Oates Edwin Payne Lorraine Pelton Jean Perkins Stanley Philip Marion Quartel Marcia Rapaport Ruth Reed Martha Roat June Salter Donald Schantz Myron Schefman Dorotha Shepard Miller Siegel Milton Simpson Marion Sohus Janet Swain Bertha Taylor Gertrude Tennis Kathleen Truck Dorothy Tuinhoff Wilma Van Amerongen Cornelius Vanden Berg Edward Vander Sloot Fred Van Dyke William Van Hestern Esther Van Houten Woodrow Van Houten Tena Van Huizen Robert Van Keulen Jeane Veldman Cynthia Venable Mae Frances Walker Eleanor Weda Robert Weemhofi' Dorothy Wells Arthur White Alice Whitwam Ruth Wierenga Dorothy Will William Willard Donald Willwerth Robert Woodman Margaret Woodman Dottelle Yarrington Valaire York Avice Young PAGE 60 f EXA Jeanette Zaber Gertrude Zigter GRADE 7-1 Jane Ahl Esther Barnes Escha Barney Dorothy Battjes Robert Beck Betty Behler Barbara Billings Henry Bont Cornelius Boogard Laurabelle Bouwmaster Melissa Braxmaier Ruth Breas Roselle Brinks Mary Susan Buckner Alberta Butler Mary Louise Cam John Cook Bertha Dabakey Robert Dunn Barbara Dursum David Eason Dorothy Friedman Barbara Ghareeb Paul Gleye Jane Greig Helen Hills Fred Hubbard Virginia Ingell Evangeline Jouras John MacDonald Barbara McIntyre Dorothy McFarland Robert Medendorp Frank Metz Glenn Morse Marjory Nickson Catherine Norden Janet Read Estelle Rogers Earl Scruby Peggy Spencer Clarence Sprik Katherine Steensma Robert Strickland Norman Timmer Olga Van Harn Norman Van Hooven Harold Van Slooten John Veneklasen Monroe Veneklasen Evelyn Ver Hoek Margaret White George Woodford Mike Zimmer John Zomer IV' I I . cf X 'WF va ur ,fx if fri' ,gi 4 X -r +- fa fi IF nh 'P' ' 'J 3,1 L If xi' .-j2v'r:,fgq QP xx f f yjxxfff N ,fl ,f' , af-2, ,1y -- fafnfffff 4,,fHxS .qx Q 2 , . 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A fl' A , 53525 ' 'T f- . fr f'MffRQQ51 N- :'1 Y M, x 1 - -Wx Y .qi 'gg f11U7av! - Nh W Q 1- V fx h .--2 -uffa , ' ' w ak X?rM 4w-ff J X x K fff X X I K . ' N h 41,-, , , : 'WQ', ff' . , , :N acl? ' T, f' rf 3- - v . - -X, -- j-. ff- LF A R -Q, -H4 Wi- H '57-12'-f-+11-'fri' ig -1 - - -- - Wag., W V V - 'sf ,df ' 7 L ' -K-, - K? - , YQ 4 K I g ' L:.. AK 4ilUUf IHI W WI WNW llll IHEXX 1' w 1 ih- my mr 1-rvl-gwgfgfw.,: tg , Arg J pi '26 giypf 13741: ,' '35, ., S .J WM-1 ' a., Q. M14 A1175 1 5 w X- '11Q1f5jkig k, 'W' rgw 5 Q- 1 H-15. 5 .n W, 4- M ff. 1 V . W:4,,,? 'A , W L .1 'xv 'mn' . ' W W, .. A A Q A -V ff, 4 ,, if eff Y 'Ti ' 4 ' vig Ly J 6' , ? -ff ,rg -f 'J 'H 1 . .- w , A fl. 4- -4 'X f,5zi'5'kt , KJ. 'E M N, 1 ,ht u 2 A f 1? I ,Lima am 'f 45 IVV' 71 f i I f X 1 3 . lf x AL ,ff- N . L ft. R i N f l F Top Row: Minerva Ryckman, Marian McFarland, Maurine Hammer, Jack Appleyard, Maurice Henderson, 7 Stanley Vlfeitz, John Molhoek, Chester Smith, Kenneth Rexford, Nathan VVaring, Laura Darby, Mary Mont- ' ,' gomery, Josephine Weisel. Second Row: Alice Wells, Pauline Forman, Jean Porter, Miss Eckert, Miss Crego, Mr. K Buboltz, Mr. Miller, Mr. Vander Ploeg, Mr. Cook, Florence Venable, Irmengarde Richter, Elma De Young, . Anna Ryckman. Third Row: Marian Bertsch, Patricia Woodburne, Mildred Dreisen, Margaret Linn, Jean Sehler, Virginia Murphy, Miss Holmes, Dorothy Abbitt, Sylvia Dreisen, Amy-Jean Veneklasen, Helen Miller, Winifred Van Keulen, Leonore Snyder, Jacqueline Frye, Joyce De Vries. Bottom Row: Fred Poel, Edward Zylstra, Jack Weiiifenbach, Charles Major, Allen Allor, Gordon Van Ry, Mark Dolan, Joseph Renihan, Dick Simkins. Absent: Janet Aspinwall, Georgiana Murphy, Robert VVells, Clayton Donahue, George Bigelow. X r N D. Heard in Me Sfaf Mm , SCENE: Staff Room. TIME: Before April 15. CHARACTERS: The Veterans. K HZDOROTHY, what shall I say in the Legend staff write-up?', The editor-in-chief thus addressed responds optimistically, Oh, just say that the staff Worked faithfully and deserves much credit. About two hundred and forty words will fill the space correctly---now, letls see, where was I? Oh, yes, 79-80-81--H. In comes a representative from lNIiss Crego. Have you any more snaps, Jack? You know it takes time for the art department to mount them for the engraver. Allen, asks someone who is identifying group pictures, who's this boy on the end of the first row in the band picture? I think we have all the others. Does this sound all right for my conclusion F-'Regularmeetings of the staff were held every other week. All ofthe work-planning the pages, giving assignments to staff members, composing the write-ups, identifying the pictures, making the drawings for all the art work, mounting snaps, proof-reading and checking in i material-all was done by the students themselves' Xi There goes the ubellll' and Dorothy gives a sigh. 'II wish we could keep on work- ing here instead of going to Englishf' l PAGE 63 'T 1-A xxx in dl it at 5 U! Q f N l N ff , K , Q r mx! f nf N Eg S 1+ X, Q in C Q f ll ' kj Tfze ufrtnztal Staf ,J Editor-in-rhitif . . DOROTHY ABBITT X flffociate Editor ...,.,..........,.. ALLEN ALLOR junior Editor . - ................. JOSEPH RENIHAN ' Afriftarztx JANET ASPINWALL, MARIAN BERTCH, GEORGIANA MURPHY I Snap Editor ..... ..,...... . , . . JACK WEIEEENBACH f Arfirtantx MINERVA RYCKMAN, PAULINE FORMAN . Sfnior Girl Write-Upf ............... SYLVIA DREISEN A5,virtant5: HELEN MILLER, MAURINE HAMMER X Y K Senior Boy Writr-Upf ............... JACK APPLEYARD I ' . K Afrirtant: CHESTER SMITH Organizationf ................ AMY JEAN VENEKLASEN Aluiftantf: JEAN SEHLER, PATRICIA WOODBURNE, JOHN MOLHOEK j junior High Editor . . .,..... ....... A NNA RYCKMAN i Afsixtant: WINIFRED VAN KEULEN Humor Editor .................. JOYCE DEVRIES Anirzantfs ELMA DEYOUNG, FLORENCE VENABLE, CHARLES MAJOR Boyr' .flthlflirr Editor .... . . ...., ...... F RED POEL Axsiftantf: GORDON VAN RY, NATHAN WARING X Girly' Athletirx Editor ............ ..,. V XRGINIA MURPHY A l Arfiftant: IRMENGARDE RICHTER J Social Editor , ....... . . ALICE WELLS 7 flrfistantf: MARGARET LINN, STANLEY WEITZ l Photograph Editor . ....... . . MILDRED DREISEN D l Honor Point Editor . .,..... . MARIAN MCFARLAND ' Art Editor . . . ...... . LEONORE SNYDER K .N Arfiftarit: JOSEPHINE WEISEL f 4 Bufinzff Managfr . .,..... JACQUELINE FRYE f Auiftant: ROBERT WELLS Advertiring Manager ....... . KENNETH REXI-'ORD Auirtantf: EDWARD ZEILSTRA, CLAYTON DONAHUE, MARY MONTGOMERY, LAURA DARBY X, MAURICE HENDERSON, RICHARD SIMKINS X Circulation Manager ....... . GEORGE BIGELOW A 1 l Afriftant: JEAN PORTER I K' f A MR. BUBOLTZ Adwfofy Boafd MR. COOK MISS HOLMES MR. MILLER MISS CREGO - MR. VANDER PLOEG MISS ECI-CERT DOROTHY ABBITT ' Others besides the regular staff Of the Legend have taken suflicient interest in the school annual tO Contribute to its suCCeSs. The Staff Wishes tO thank the following students: ROBERT BLACKEORD Literary ALICE WHITE MARIAN HAKE ELIZABETH MCINTYRE EDNA TATRO WALTER NORDELLA WALTER COOK ROBERTA FOWLKES ELLEN O,CONNELL BEVERLY RABINOEE DOROTHY WEPMAN T ' t Nl I .Y MAURINE HAMMER ypl HELEN EZINGA I.. DOROTHY DYKSTRA ANNA BRUGGINK if X NELSON SLOT Cifwlafion ROBERT WELLS i FERDINAND BEYNE ROBERT BRODERICK BARBARA BILLINGS WILLIAM PAPWORTH BEN WERRY MARCIA RAPAPORT CARL BERG LOUISE REAVIS JOHN HAMMER IRENE FRANCES HELEN TRUCK FRED REXEORD ISREAL RODEN HENRY BRUINSMA , K , Art ' CHAUNCEY NORTON lX4ARK DOLAN MAXINE BEVENS l PAGE 64 XTX iw I fs 1 if ,f ' f nie I f ' i X K X fa HC 1' f lk m ,, . an ws' Q f if ' -I as C .g F' Q, vi .. La. 'Y-,7 1 l . . Top Row: Robert Tumy fassistant humorj, Mark Brower Cassistant circulating managerl, Mark Dolan Cassist- X , ant artl, ,lim Christensen fexchange editorj, VVilliam Papworth Cassistant newsj, Kenneth Rexford Iadvertising managerl, jack Weiffenbach Csnap editorj, Hillis Rigterink Cnews editorl. Second Row: Mary Ann Dilley Cassist- ant humorb, Jeanette Balish Cassistant newsj, Marion McFarland Cassistant literaryj, Mr. Buboltz fprinting adviserj, Mr. Vander Ploeg Cadvertising adviserj, Mr. Kremble Qbusiness adviserl, Miss Crego fart adviserb, Miss Holmes, Cstaff adviserj, Laura Darby, Mary Montgomery. First Row: Beverly Rabirioff Cspecial feature editorj, Ione Smith fhumor editorl, Heila Fishman Calumni editorl, Eleanor Bates Cart editorl, Marie Sisson Cliterary editorj, Helen Spencer Ceditor-in-chiefb, Roberta Fowlkes Ceditorial editorb, -lean Porter Qathletic editorl, Iiiji6abethSMcIntyre Cjunior High editorj, Elizabeth Daane Ceditorial assistantj. Absent: Louise Wood, i iam chatz. Otmfwafzian Staf THE Qttawanian is made up each month by a staiqf of twenty-three members. Each one is responsible for the material appearing in his department, while the editor-in-chief cooperates with the board in finding a theme and planning the make- up of the whole magazine. Of interest to the staff members was a convention held at Klinneapolis, April 11-13, under the auspices of the National Scholastic Press Association. The program, including five convocations and over fifty round table discussions, offered a complete course in scholastic journalism. Helen Spencer, Elizabeth Daane, Hillis Rigterink, and lliss Holmes attended this convention as representatives from this school. On hlay 2 the members of the Ottawanian staff enjoyed an All-Staff Banquet. All the high school staffs in the city, annual, newspaper, and magazine, were invited. The event was held in the cafeteria, which was transformed into a spring- like atmosphere with its decorations of spring flowers and colors. The students in charge of this banquet were as follows: Helen Spencer, toastmistressg Beverly Rabinofli, and hiark Brouwer, sale of tickets, Eleanor Bates and Roberta Fowlkes, decorations and menu respectively. The principal speaker was Klr. Frank Sparks. whose address proved to be exceptionally interesting to those present. Other speakers were students from the various high schools of the city. The Ottawanian is an all school project. Don't forget to bring your stories, essays, poems, news items, and jokes to the staff room, number 211, or give them to your English teacher. PAGE 65 f 'ni . X x it 'K ,Y X N 5 N , i 'K ii Q l is I' 1- , K I if -x ' ls as JU' f mf 330 F T A if ' Q N 9 U 4 nz W Q V lx ig' , ag, I Q. A. .. 1 4 ,Y NX 4 I R H! R N v Top Row: May Durrant, Elizabeth Hesse, Gibson Gleye, Walter Nordella, Robert Twyning, Maurice Henderson, Nelson Slot, Robert Prince, James Grifhn, Harry Glass, Israel Roden, Margret Linn, Dorothy Will. Second Row: Anne Fredericks, Helen VVheeler, Dorothy VVepman, Marian McFarland, Ruth Kap, Ione Smith, Bertha x Hulswit, Heila Fishman. First Row: Joyce DeVries, Louise Reavis, Edith jones, June Warsaw, Betty Wood Schildhousc, Leonore Snyder, Dorothy Abbitt, Ruth Mitchell, Rosella O'Connor, Clairbelle Freyling, Jane Q bridge, Roberta Fowlkes, joe Renihan, Beverly Rabinoff, Janet Aspinwall, Betty Ann Chamberlain, Jean Green, Alyce VVhite, Betty Parkhill. On Floor: Glenn Morse, Bill Miles, joe McGee, Barry McGee, Paul Vxfright. Student Council X THE Student Council of Ottawa Hills is composed of representatives from each session room and from each organization connected with the school. Thus, in cooperation with the entire student body, the council is able to carry out projects connected with the school as a whole. The first big undertaking of the year was the Harvest Party given on the 23rd of November for the benefit of the Andy,' Spaman Fund. College Entrance Requirementsn furnished the topic for assemblies for both X Junior and Senior High School. X On the evening of February 21, in conjunction with the Parent-Teacher Associa- tion, the Council sponsored a program, the theme of which was a study ofthe extra- curricular activities of the students. was issued by a special committee of Council members. In the spring the second edition ofthe Indian Guidef, Ottawa Hills handbook, kt X First Semeftfr ROBERTA FOWLKES ROBERT CRABB . HARRY GLASS . . BETTY WooDBR1DcE is OFFICERS P refidfnz Vice-President S ecretary Trmfurer PAGE 66 Second Semefter f . ROBERTA FOWLKES . JOSEPH RENIHAN . BEVERLY RABINOFE BETTY VVOODERIDGE dv f I 1 ss 'IT . f , 4' f ,xk , C 1 Fix 2 i Hx f i j Q 'W I' X J f , Q' Q I A Q F . x LL r' y 1 Top Row: Robert Wall, Barbara Ghareeb, Katherine Steensma, Elizabeth McIntyre, Barbara Horton, Robert Papworth. Second Row: Dorothy Freidman, Claire Rae Wilde, Jo Ellen Perry, Eleanor Doboez, Helen Roden, Barbara VVise, Sylvia Ginsberg, Helen Bomers. First Row: Mr. Gould, Barbara Otte, Mary jean Bale, jane Berkholder, Robert Smith, William Schick, Margaret Murphy, Cladd Graham, Dorothy Cornellisse, Miss Boss, Miss Lewis. Seated on Floor: Anson Dreisen, Carl Burg, Alfred Top, Paul Blake. The Forum Junior Hzgh Scfzool THE Junior High School Forum was organized from those students in the Junior High School Whose Work in the auditorium classes Was rated at B -l- or A. It was established for the purpose of encouraging pupils who have shown exceptional speech ability to develop themselves and their interests along these lines until such time as they can take part in the senior high school speech activities. Thus we feel that the future debaters, politicians, actors, and orators of the school will be enabled to get an early start in their efforts to put Gttavva Hills into her speech supremacy. The activities of the Forum have been, first of all, the production of the play, THE DUCHESS or TIDYTOWN, and then the promoting ofthe Declamatory Contest in the Junior High School. The Winners of the preliminary contest were Anson Dreisen, Helen Roden, Jo Ellen Perry, Elizabeth Mclntyre, and Robert 'Wall. The little silver loving cup, the first award, was Won by Anson Dreisen in an assem- bly before the school, with Jo Ellen Perry placing second. Sponsors of the club are Niiss Boss, Bliss Lewis, and lXfIr. Gould. OFFICERS President . . .... ROBERT P. SMITH Vice-Prffidmt . . . BILLY SCHICK Secretary . . JANE BERKHOLDER Treafurev' . . RTARGARET RTURPHY PAGE 67 N Ai 'K X - gqik f 5 I X 'K if A QL 2' 4 1 I , K R l J is x Q Rb N yy AL .. , ,- X ,, , 1 . 1 1165! f WX! - f . ,Nl f X 4 fi f -if x i 4 X 4 W i Top Row: Robert Broderick, Jack Christensen, Eustice Ruddick, Raymond Rappaport, Robert Prince, Herbert Baker, jack Biggani, Loyd Chapman. Second Row: Rex Chapman, Fred Schier, Franklin Tiggleman, Frank , X my Gordon, Mr. Gregory Cadviscrl, Mr. Van Brook, jack Weiffcnbzicli, Mark Brower, Leonard Krause, Fred X Prescott. First Row: Bill Thielman, james Christensen, John Olsen, Roger Peteham, Hillis Rigterink, Gordon Van Ry, Frank Lusk, Harry Signer, Elrnitt Eastcott, Thomas Bott. Absent: Fred Poel, Dick Simkins. Q N 1' A Hz-T an THE purpose Of the Hi-Y is to Create, to maintain, and to extend 'X throughout the school and the community high standards Of Christian X 5 character. The Hi-Y Club is a national Organization which has one or more units in nearly every school in the country. The Ottawa Hills Hi-Y Club has ended its fourth year with a fine record. At the Weekly meetings speakers were Obtained to talk On every-day questions, and frequently one of the members would lead a Very interesting discussion. Nlany members of the club attended the Annual, State Older Boys' Conference at Holland in the fall. hir. John Van Brook, City Boys' Work Secretary at the Y. M. C. A., is the sponsor Of all the Hi-Y clubs in the City, and lVIr. Gregory is the Ottawa Hills X club sponsor. N OFFICERS f First Sernryter Second Srrnefter f JACK XVEIFFENBACH . Prrfidenz .' ROBERT WELLS R DICK SIMPKINS . Vice-Prffideriz . GORDON VAN RY FRED POEL . Srcremry . HILLIS RIGTERINK ,Q ROBERT XVELLS . Treasurer . . FRANK LUsK Q X I 1 W PAGE 68 F xx' Q f , if if ,+R ,f R ii is f if q xt ' fi fi P X li' nh .4 ,, D Q Q 3 446 ' l Kjfa ff f I A4 4 At! f K x F S xx 5 ' x K I ' Top Row: Virginia Murphy Cbasketballj, Wava Warren Cswimmingi, Marjorie Vilhitmore findividual sportsj. X l W Bottom Row: Ann Timmons Ctreasurerj Jean Porter ivicerpresidentb, Dorothy Abbitt Cpresidentj, Margaret l f Linn Csecretaryj, Miss Harmon Cadviserb. A A 1 i r -f gk +- ' .f'-M3 girls' elrfzlefic QAfrs0cz'afz'0n IN December of last year the Girls' Athletic Association of Ottawa Hills waS organized. Its purpose is to promote a greater interest in things relating to girls, athletics in our school, and by means of a centralized organization to keep better in contact with school and civic groups having objects like our own. At the hrst meeting it was decided that membership should be open to all girls having come out regularly for after-school games such as hockey, basketball, volley-ball, and indoor. The big project of the association this past year was the supervising of the Girls' Annual Interclass Meet held in the spring. The first social meeting of the group took the form of a pot luck supper held on February one, in the cafeteria. The speakers of the evening were hliss Katherine Sheehan and lVIiss Caroline Mimnaugh. Miss hlimnaugh spoke on The Englirh Game of Hockey. Miss Sheehan then gave a farewell toast to the girls. OFFICERS Preridenl . , . . . DOROTHY ABBITT Vice'-Prfrident . . JEAN PORTER Sfcretary . . RIARGARET LINN Trfafurfr . . ANN T1MMoNs gf I ' wr 'I , A PAGE 69 , 71 'F X R 'R -i I A nl- A If I k N, N fx It I 5, ' X I r if AL Top Row: Ray De Vries, Don Milnine, Merton Davis, Robert Brummeler, ,Toe Broogaard, Stanley Wilson, Lloyd Chapman. Fourth Row: Judd Barnes, Henry Mersman, Frank Lass, Albert Van Dyke, Carl Williams, Robert Yelton, Alston Ingell. Third Row: Robert Wells, Chester Ozinga, Frank Soloman, Earl Wierenga, Robert Barney, Jack Biggam, Donald Burbach, Donald Woodson, James Christensen. Second Row: Lieutenant Harrcl, Roderick Smith, Sargeant Mclntyre, Rex Chapman, Ben Ingell, Phillip Raiguel, Jack Donaldson, Paul Wright, Theodore Starlsron, ,lack Newhouse, Arthur Oom, Howard Vander Wood, George Woodall, Chauncey Norton, Tom Gill, Lieutenant Morrison, Sargeant Clawsan, Walter Cook. First Row: Frank Tatro, Robert Strickland, Fred Schairer, William Dursum, Gerald Behler, Ralph Guthat, Morris Roden, Rex Keister, james Yared, Harvey Slater, Lewis Walbridge, Leonard Mallory, Gene Barney, Curlee Magaw, Kenneth Barnes. Seated: Eli Smith, Fred Maille, jacob Schaltens, Henry Sprik, Sidney Parks, Barrie McGee. YQO. 71 C. THE Ottawa Hills R. O. T. C. originated in September of 1927. It was composed almost entirely of new men inexperienced in military drill. Some of the more experienced students volunteered their services, and drill began. After a few months the unit, turning out in smartly policed uniforms, had a slight semblance to a military organization. was formed and drill became more diflicult. The men were just becoming acquainted with their rifles when federal inspection rolled around. With the coming of spring and outdoor drilling, we improved greatly. The men were good at stacking arms, and this was to prove important on Field Day. The battalion was drilling hard when Field Day halted further improve- ment. The Army-Navy club of this city offers an eighteen-inch silver cup to the unit drilling best at the competitions staged each year at Houseman Field in June. If one school ,wi-ns the cup three times in succession, it becomes a permanent possession. We went to the field on Saturday, and the appearance of the other battalions annoyed us, but when it came to stacking arms, Ottawa and South were leading. South was winning but one of their stacks fell, disqualifying them. The cup may be seen in our trophy case. A battalion PAGE 70 F ,,-. I , it I I I . G X il wi' Wnr4f'f'A i 'lx .f lr F A4 1 , ki x -3 X ti Q r If A.. 1' Af I Top Row: Edith Muskin, Allan Allor, Claude Slaughter, VValter Cook, Virginia Murphy, Jacqueline Frye, Helene Merryweather. Third Row: Helen,Spencer, Laura Gillette, Pauline Caryl, ,lean Sehler, Laura Darby, Marian Mc- Farland, Pauline Forman. Second Row: Esther Zoutendam, Minerva Ryckman, Harmina VVessels, Charity Haddad, Ruth Muskin, Ione Smith, Maurine Hammer, Virginia Clarke, Doris 'White First Row: Lenabelle Cherryman, Lucille Turoff, Beverly Rabinoff, Alice Vvells, Miss Plumb Cadviserj, Joyce DeVries, Dorothy Abbitt, Mary Montgomery, Alyce White, Virginia York, Helen Lattin. Absent: Janet Aspinwall, Florence Venable, Joseph Renihan, James Christensen, Irene Sherd, Jane Lake. 4tQj.v Qffmrzfeurr Fran mir ll LA seance est Ouvertel Mlle. De Vries, president this year of the French Club, announces: The French Club Was a new undertaking, and contrary to most new undertakings, it Was a tremendous success. Blunders in French are much more interesting and amusing than blunders in English. Both the business meetings and the programs are carried On in French. The programs usually consist Of French stories, poems, plays, and games presented by members of the club, at one meeting, however, llme. Ferrand of South High School spoke, and at another meeting, lyllle. Plumb, the sponsor, discussed her trip to France. The French Club was Organized for the purpose Of familiarizing the members to a greater degree with spoken French. The membership is Open to any student who has had at least one semester Oi French and maintains an average Of C , OFFICERS Prerideizt . . . . . JOYCE DE XYRIES Vicf-Pvwidmzt . . . ALICE XYELL5 Secretary . . DOROTHY YABBITT Trmfzrrer . BEVERLY R.XBINOFF li- J PAGE 71 X as il X l I . Y 'Y hz if ,L l 5 9 , 1 2 Y N I K 1 l ! su, i K If f' i I f' of 5, is Q 9 l - 4 Top Row: Robert YYells, Alston Inqell, Tom Gill, Roy O'Neil, Jack Donaldson, Ben Cueny. Second Row: Allen Allor, Charitylcladdad, Irmengarda Richter. Clairehelle Freyling, Nan Raiguel, Marjorie YVhitmore, Mildred Dreisen, Henry Sprik. First Row: ,lim Christensen, Rosella O'Connor, june YVarsaw, Nelson Slot, jack Van Ucveren, Hillis Rigteriuk, Rosemary O'Cunnor, Mr. Richardson ladviserj. Absent: Lloyd Chapman. Tfle CA 677Zp!l.ybZ'0 Club THE Chemphybio Club was organized in September of this year by pupils so interested in the sciences that they were anxious to do extra work in order to learn as much as possible about the various sciences. The name chosen for the club is a composite from the names ofthe three principal high school sciences. The club has already fitted up a three inch telescope for a more comprehensive study of astronomy. Every two weeks programs are given at the meetings, in which one or more speeches, illustrated lectures, and demonstrations are given. Questions are asked, answered, and discussed informally from many branches of science. During each semester each member must present at the meetings at least one original project. Nature study trips and hikes are taken, and Visits to industrial plants furnish the members information as well as enjoyment. Rlr. Richardson is the sponsor. GFFICERS Prfxidmzr . . . . . NELSON SLOT lice-Prefideuz . H1LL1s RIGTERINK Secretary . . . JUNE VVARSAW Treafurer . J.-xcK XvAN OEVEREN PAGE 72 ff' t , 1' , lr tt , f K -ia 5 75 it fa l 4 X ii ' , Q ig i I A .haf .L N. if M 'Fi' I 'K Top Row: Thelma VVinters, Kathleen Poch, Genevieve Thomas, Dorothy Dykstra, Ella Van Oosten, Helen Ezinga, Dorothy Poll, Linarnae Roon, Gezina Berkhof, Bedelia Ellis, Jeanne Schrefher. Second Row: Florence Lindeboom, Betty Dursma, Betty Hanson, Fannie Breen, Louis Groom, Dorothy Okke, Helen Holm, Helen Martin, Yvilma Vanmanen, Pearl Berg, Edith jones. First Row: Miss Barnaby fadviserj, Gertrude Van Harn, Q Esther Tompkins, Dorothy DeBOnte, Bertha Schildhouse, Bert Stadt, Nellie Maas, Mary Louise Payne, YYilhelmina Schildhouse, Mr. Ryckman Cadviserj. Absent: Alice Kievit, Neal Newhof, Ivy May Lillie, Kathe- ryne Zuiderna. f f Commercial Chai THE Object of the Ottawa Hills Commercial Club is to promote a higher standard of scholarship and friendship among the commercial student bodv to better . 7 appreciate the value and operation of training for business, tO sponsor certain definite projects for the benefit of the students. Each member must carryor must have carried two commercial subjects, passing with an average Of C7'. If his grade falls below CH, membership will be forfeited. Kleetin s were held ever two weeks. Prominent business men were invited to 8 Y address the club. Abasket Of fruit was sent to Andy Spaman, and a sleigh ride was given followed by a party at Garfield Lodge. Kliss Barnaby and Rlr. Ryckman are the sponsors, and Kliss Xlayrose and Klr. f 'U' X Fin! Semeftfr BERTHA SCHILDHOUSE EDITH JONES. . . . HELEN EZINGA BERT STADT . 4 NE.AL NEWHOF . DOROTHY' DE BONTE f 'I X gg 'K ,J N Xliller are honorary members. OFFICERS Preridfnz Vice-Prefideni Secrftary Treafurer Sergeant-al-Armf Reporter PAGE 73 N Second Semertfr BERTHA SCHILDHOUSE . . . . BERT STADT . ESTHER TOMPKINS . . .ALICE IQIEVIT . . NEAL NEVVHOF DOROTHH' DE BONTE K 6 2 -nfl Gtr Dx if G .it 4 v 1 li, K X , 4, 45: fx nr 4 1 All U' R 1+ 11 if Q 11 I 9 9 c 1 I Ns. A - I f -rl lu af Wrlk .ff 2 Ai. i X 'l J 4 C, Rr fl' 'N 3- Montgomery. Second Row: Mildred Dreisen, Patricia Vlbodlaurne, Jacqueline Frye, Muriel Pivowitz, Nah Raiguel, Kathryn Crawford, Helen Truck, Ruth Muskin. First Row: Frank Crawford, Leonore Snyder, Marian x McFarland, Sylvia Dreisen, Clairbelle Freyling, VValter Nordella, Edith Muskin, Faye Hoek, Esther Zouten- dam, Elinitt Eastcott. Top Row: Jane Hulswit, James Murray, Robert Berger, Yvilliam Papworth, Fred Poel, Neil Richardson, Marv f 4 The YDnzmafz'cs Chai 0 0- TIIIS year the Dramatics Club established a new standard for W membership and a new method of entertaining, both of which have Q Q50 been considered a delightful improvement. A free program was given Q every two weeks in the auditorium. Each club was asked to present an -,ng-' act in keeping with the interest of that club, and every program ended with a one-act play by the Dramatics Club. To attain membership in the Dramatics Club a student must take part in some stage production and must receive a certain average grade by three judges. November sixteen, the night before the final football game with Creston, the club sponsored a novel pep meeting, carrying outva program of parodies, dances, yells, and speeches in a night club setting-'4The Night B-4 Club. The club gave a Klid-Semester Dance on January twenty-four, The Melody hlohawlts played, and a delightful and successful dancing party was the result. f I I Orrrcisas Preddezzz . .... CL,-XIRBELLE FREYLING Vice-Prf51'cZf1zf . . 'WALTER NORDELLA Secrfrary . . HARRY GLASS Treafurer JACQUELINE FRYE PAGE 7-1- C if f l f is 1? Mn x 5 P N , I 'lb it 'fri' 4 W 4 l R U af' 13 Q f ' -If Q ' I A ' - LL nr K 1 I f 1 I Q K N 1 X k I 1 . ' K W I Top Row: Charity Haddad, Ruth Blok, Helen Martin, Sylvia King, Clarice Dekker, Helen Holm, Orpha Thede, X 1 ' f Florence Knapp. -FirstARow: Barbara Elliot, Edith Jones, Ellen O'Connel, Genevieve Ryskamp, Miss Matheson 'X , Cadviserj, Katherine Timrner, Doris jones, Margaret Brennan. 1 l ' . 'lt f 1 Home 5007107721 cs Club ., , f , u dm THE Ottawa Hills High School Home Economics Club is a branch of t I the Klichigan and American Home Economics Association, and the f members of this club are the proud wearers of the National Student 4 YRS,- Club pins. I X A The club has had a very successful year, and at present it boasts an K active and enthusiastic membership of twenty. Any girl who is interested in home I economics is eligible to membership. The club meets every other Thursday. The first meetin ofthe month is entirel for business matters while the second one is a . 3 Y social meeting. During the year the club took an active part in all school activities. The girls sold refreshments at the Harvest Party and tarts at after-school sales, as well as X sandwiches at a football game. Plans for a trip to East Lansing for all the girls late in June have made them work S 1 harder in their projects While following their slogan, Something for ourselves and i something for our school. X OFFICERS Firft Semexvter Second Semeftfr Q ELLEN O,CONNELL . . Preyidevzt . , . . EDITH JONES Q CHARITY HADDAD . . Vicf-Prffidenl . . . HELEN GR.-XNDY , HELEN GRANDY . . . Secrezary . . GENEVIEVE RYSHAMP Q RIARGARET BRENNAN . . Trfafursr . . . KATHERINE TININIER f R PAGE 7.5 t I yt- g . . Q Q 'K l K X f 5 x 'f We -I . Q 'wb' 'li 1' i Q sf ,af 'Ilya .1 f yi qi A IF fi . 9 a 'V ' 1 ' 'TA - 1 l, if if 5 li 1, lf 4-, Xt If 'W f RC 4: , 8 6. .1 4 4- 4 -Q 4:4 ' 4 X Standingtvllildred Dreisen, Beverly Rabinoff, Geraldine McCue, Mary Elizabeth Drescher, Leonore Snyder, I Patricia YK owdburrze, Pauline -lohnsori. Seated: Roberta Fowlkes. Sylvia Dreisen, -Iacqueline Frye. lone Smith, X Miss Vander Yelde yadviserj, Maurine Hammer, Marian McFarland, Heila Fishman. Absent: john Appleyard, Harry Glass. , W 'Pa rfb en on Club X, ,, F PRIRTHENON Club, which is the only literary club in the Senior High School, has enjoyed an active year. Early in the fall semester it C presented to the school library the twelve books which had been received through the Book ofthe Klonth Club during the past year. In January, 1929. the club subscribed to two book of the month clubsfone fiction and the other non-fiction. Parthenon Club sponsored a Lincoln Day assembly at which they presented a bronze medal to Elizabeth Xlclntyre and a book to Stanley Philips, the prizes for a Lincoln essay contest for the Junior High School students. It also sponsored an after-school program at which the Rev. Wlishart gave an illustrated lecture of his trip to Europe last summer. The proceeds from this talk were donated to the Andrew Spaman Fund. Parthenon also made up a Christmas basket. and Patricia lYoodburne. Firyt Sfnzeftfr SYLy1A DREISEX . RIAURIXE Ii.-XBIBIER JACQUELINE FRYE I'I.-XRRY Guiss . . I New members this year are Roberta Fowllses, Klildred Dreisen, Beverly Rabinofl, K f 1' OFFICERS Second Semertn Prfrzkieizt . . Ioxe SMITH ' I'ice-Prefidfzzt J.-XCQUELINE FRYE Q Secretary RIAURINE PI.-XMMER ' Treafurer JACK .APPLEYARD ' PAGE 76 , I F i- 'ir 'Tx f , . 4 1 X .C X, fa ,f.. w-me f 4 if , . A ' V-, yi 'i l R111 a. ' . Kg ' . A.. -si I K K 1 i X B K X 1 Q x f 1 U . 'F Q lg W N i 'K' I f X 4 l 'F ' . X Top Row: Norma Caro, Doris Eastman, Mary Frances Sheffer. Second Row: Marian Smith, Bernice Lardie, 1 I ' F I Donna Qoodwin, Ferne Payne, Ellen O'Connel, Katherine Lindemulder. First Row: Hazel Drew, Betty Shaw, X l Alyce VN hxte, Miss Tenhaaf, Elizabeth Anderson, Suzanne Marrm, Betty Lamb. ' 'FQ 'Q' - , it , 1 W. 14. T C. H. Club 6 -E 'I' 1 THE VV. A. T. C. H. Club, which was organized in February 1928, with Miss At Tenhaaf as its sponsor, has as its object the furthering of an interest in scholarship, 4 in sportsmanship, and in athletics. Since this is one of the newer clubs its projects Y have been rather limited, but plans are under way for a very successful year be- l ginning next September. K Candy and doughnut sales have been held to raise money for the Athletic Asso- l ciation. The girls also had charge ofthe candy which was sold at the Harvest Party. 4 Nleetings were held every Tuesday after school, and once a month a spread at the 7 home of some member was enjoyed. - New members taken into the club during the year are as follows: Donna Jean i Goodwin, Betty Lamb, Bernice Lardie, Katherine Lindemulder, Ellen O'Connell, Betty Shaw, and Klary Frances Sheier. R, OFFICERS X Fin! Semefter Second Semefter ALYCE XVI-IITE . Prefidmzt . . . . ALYCE XYHITE f FERNE PAYNE . Vice-Prefidenz . ELIZABETH IXNDERSON Q Q BXIARIAN SMITH . . Secretary . . . . BETTY SHAW i I DORIS EASTMAN . . Treafurer . . SUZANNE XLXRRIX i Q HAZEL DREW . . Correfponding Secretary . . HAZEL DREW' NORMA CARO . Sergeant-at-Army . BETTY LAMB K f 5 PAGE 77 y . 'Vp E, ff 14 X X 1' Maia w if K 4 i, Q . my if if 1 wx! 1 Q Yi N -. X 5 vt' 'X X U J J . i I if 4 f r ,J tl if . +I I , nf I It 4,. ,fr fir X if 4: 'wa s -. A Top Row: Mary Knappen, Eleanor Bates, Josephine Weiscl. Second Row: Josephine Zomers, Grace Myers, Laura Darby, Virginia Clarke, Kathryn Johnston, Margaret Smith. First Row: Joyce DEXIYICS, Maurme Hammer, ltlax' Durrant, Miss Deilong Cadviscrj, Catherine Behan, Doris 'White Marv Montgomery, Ru uiiiisst-. ' ' ' Jlfu-Sz' Club THE Blu-Si Club, which was organized in the year 1927, has acquired several new members this year: Grace hlyers, Catherine Behan, Nlary hlontgomery, Josephine Xveisel, Doris VVhite, hlaurine Hammer, Virginia Clarke, Joyce De Vries, lX'largaret Smith, and Nan Robertson. The sponsor ofthe club is hliss Aileen Dejong. During the Christmas holidays the members of the club gave a formal party at the Rowe Hotel, which was well attended. The committee in charge consisted of Katherine Schroeder, Laura Darby, lXIay Durrant, Klaurine Hammer, and Vir- ginia Clarke. During the winter a bridge-tea was given at Herpolsheimefs Tea Room, and another of nine tables at the home of Virginia Clarke. To raise money several candy, cake, and doughnut sales, as well as a series of matinee dances, a rummage sale, and a food sale were given. The proceeds of these numerous projects the club has used to buy two new pieces of stage furniture - 5 V, X K + th 1434 9 X, which were presented to the school this spring. OFFICERS First Semaftfr KATHERINE SCHROEDER . . Prerident :XIARIAN XYILLIAMS . . Vice-Preridfnt KIAY DURRANT . . Secretary RUTH GILLISSE . . Trearurer PAGE 78 d, 4 I if 1 G X T f ' I I 41 .sq X X If Seroud Sfmfrtzr . NTAY DURRANT CATHERINE BEHAN RIAURINE HAMMER 9 . . DORIS WHITE ' ? I H ff I, if ff if :riff 3' V x 'K Ji 'fi' J ' Xi if I P T Q . . f f 1 ,ij VD . x A- 't t 4- X I Us I 1 1 f Y 77 1, I K+ ' R I X . 4 W f A Q as ' K 1 I Top Row: Mary Louise Beckman, Marjorie Locke, Marie Schneider, Jean Edwards, Mauzine Palmer, Betty ,X 1 ' f Gibson, Elizabeth Daane, Betty Sorike. First Row: Mary Elizabeth Drescher, Roberta Povrlkes, Geraldine ' McCue, Marian McFarland, Miss Smith ladviserj, Jane Hulswit, Marian Bertsch. Patricia YVoodburne, Jac- ' f K. queline Frye. is 4 , if , Tfze IQ 101 Chai O ' Q I 've-5 TI1E school year of 1928-29 proved an active and a profitable one for it , the Kapi Club. ln the fall a bridge-tea was given in the tea room at 4 ' Herpolsheimefs, and in the spring a series of small bridge parties was 1 1 q c ' giyen at the homes ofthe various members. ' t The new members taken into the club this year were Marie Schneider, 'W K Rlarjorie Locke, Klarian Bertsch, and Klarion XIcFarland. J I The club raised money by candy and doughnut sales, some ofwhich it contributed H 3 K as ltS share ofthe Andy Spaman Fund. . During the Christmas vacation an alumnae party was held at the home of K Kliss. Roberta Fowlkes at which the members exchanged gifts. On the first of June Q the club sponsored a Sports Informalw at the Cascade Country Club. Another N June eyent was the annual luncheon at the Hilltop Tea Room in honor of the I graduating members who are Jacqueline Frye, Jane Hulswit, Geraldine McCue, Q' F Xlary Louise Beckman, and Klarian McFarland. X OFFICERS Fifi! Sc'1rzUffr Sffond Senzfrzfr . JACQCELINE FRYE i . Prfrident . . . JANE HL'LSXX'IT i F f ROBERT.A Fowuuss . . . l icf-Prer1'df1zf . . PATRICIA XYOODBCRNE Q f PATRICIA XYOODBURNE . , Sfcrftary . RIARIAN BICFARLAND 4 JANE HL'LSXX'IT . . . . Treafurfr . Ri.-XRIAN BERTsCH If f PAGE 79 K ii -ni H it K X V 4 x ag- . I .1 N if , f 9 I if + , f' 'K 5 Q Qi- 3' il I-'. f f amid' 5 I fi A X l N 9. . , 5 ii ' ' Y K E 4 1 Ali na 'E f +4 X I . ji gffif, ff xt 'I' 4 Q I Top Row: Margaret Norcross, Kathryn Thompson, Thalia Van Hooven, Jean Schler, Marion Fuller, Georgiana X Murphy, Vivian Vallierc, Virginia Murphy. Second Row: Betty Timmons, Margerie Smith, Kathryn Brad- . bury, Pauline johnson, Peggy Thomas, Mary Beth Marks, Helen Miller, Kathryn Veneklasen, Anne Timmons, Helen Spencer. Bottom Row: Mignon Moshier, Beverly Rabinoff, Amy-jean Venel-clasen, Betty VVoodbridge, Leo- nore Snyder, Miss Seegmiller Cadviserl, Louise Wood, Dorothy Abbitt, Ruth Schaffer. Absenttlone Smith, Q Hcila Fishman, Evelyn Bradbury. -TQ, 71 C. Club 5 ft THE N. T. C., organized in 1925 with Bliss Seegmiller as its sponsor, xl I 1 has at the present an enrollment of twenty-seven members. 1 f One of the iirst activities of the club was the sale of orange and black I -I pencils with the basketball schedule printed on them. The proceeds from this sale went to the Andy Spaman fund. S K The most important event of the year was the All-Girls, Banquet, the first of its kind to be given at Ottawa. Of equal importance was the giving of a ' large silver cup for the trophy case to the best all-around senior girl, and a smaller R cup to the girl herself. K Among the social activities of the N. T. Cfs were after-school dances, spreads Y at the homes of the members, a house party at Ottawa Beach, and a luncheon for I the girls' mothers. OFFICERS ,f f Prefidenr . . . . . LEONORE SNYDER l Vice-Prffident . . AMY-JEAN VENEKLASEN . a Sfcretary . . . BETTY WOODBRIDGE q Treayurer . . LOUISE Woon -, X Hiftorian . . . DOROTHY ABBITT ' Sergfanz-at-Army . . EVELYN BRADBURY 1 PAGE 80 xx 1 V J- , X l if 1 ' 1' f ,f fl f , I f , A ., X ,sa 'K ai' i tail Ii . , 1 ,C Vrlj I ' , Q f fs . f if if 1 f Q X y 6 Q t ,cyl Q f K ... A I X A i X' i J 1 x X I I f , ,. 1 ' In + W f X4 M ,oylv I J f' . 1 ,ff 3 ' 1 lt- if in al K T I f W 3 ' Top R0w:- Doris'Grant, Virginia Simons, Katheryn Shields, Mary Helen Kranenburg, Peggy Comey. Second t l' I P X Row: Lucille Wright, Mildred Bosma, Rosella O'Connor, Mrs. Haight Cadviserj, Clairbelle Freyling, Rosemary N , , O Connor, Ann Bomers. First Row: Dorothy Aspinwall, Catherine Mclnerney, Janet Aspinwall, Marian Hake, M Ruth Mitchell, Francene Wright, Ruth Renihan, Ann Fredricks. i if , Q .u S. Tl E. C. cm , 4' f Q-'T THIS year the S. T. E. C. club planned to give a Junior College 5 scholarship to the girl having the highest scholastic record. Fifty 5, dollars will be awarded this year, and a silver plaque bearing the name l Cilfl-W-l'1fEv of the girl winning the scholarship will be placed in the Trophy case N each year. A committee of teachers and students will select the Winner. A formal party was given at the Women's City Club, December thirty-one. The Stecs have sponsored many matinee dances also, and have given a house party 3 and a spring dance. g During the absence of Bliss Sheehan, who had gone to resume her studies at I Ann Arbor, Nlrs. Haight was sponsor for the club. New members this year are Ann Fredricks, Ruth Renihan, Catherine llclnerney, j lVlary Helen Kranenburg, Rlarian Hake, Kathryn Shields, Virginia Simons, Doris Q I I Grant. I' X OFFICERS Firm Semefter Second Semffter , ROSELLA O,CONNOR . . Przfident . . RUTH RTITCHELL Q ANN BOMERS . . . . Vice-Prefidevzz CATHERINE ATCTNERNEY I E' FRANCENE WYRIGHT . Sfcrezary . . RTARIAN HiXKE i 1 ROSEMARY' O,CONNOR . . Trfafurer . RUTH RENIH.fXN Lv' Hiftorian . JANET AsPINwfxLL Af Sergeant-at-Arm: . FRANCENE XYRIGHT L l PAGE 81 K . TR 'f 5 , l X ,Q f I X, V ,F X If - x 5, 'if 1: if nil .gi if 4 'in 1 , R ,ff w i N 9, n.. lk if . 3 5 , ' A 'K r X I r T 1 -14 if J 'xi l' We af -4 ka ,r 'W f T f f 'NI K 4 ' 4 5 , 4 Top Row: Dick Simkins, Nathan Vlfaringz, Balfour Angst, VVillian1 Haight, Leo Kelly, John Van Norman, lxlayuzml Myers. First Row: Ferdinand Beyne, Vernon Gibson, VVilliz1m Schatz, Charles Major, Robert, Black- lorrl, Ben Cut-nt-y, Robert Wells, Vlnlter Yorzlella, Mr. Kocpnick C l ' J N Cordelzef Club Tlllf Cordelier Club has ended its fourth successful year as a school club. Xleetings are held at the homes of the various members. livery X fewweeks spreads are given for new members and candidates. The new members taken into the club the past year are Balfour Augst, Dick Simkins, Bill lllalker, Bob Vllells, Bill Haight, and John Van Norman. X The club has given sales in the halls to raise money for the treasury. lt also sponsored the sale Of Uttawa pennants early in the fall. The Cordelier boys were in charge Of the dance music for the Harvest Party. In addition they put on a Hpepl' assembly for the Central-Ottawa basketball game. A dance was given at the Hotel Rowe the first week in January for the members and their friends. A stag party for the members and alumni only was held at the same place the second week in February. Firft Semefter TYILLIAM SCH.-XTZ . XvERNON GIBSON . OFFICERS Prefidevftt 1.66-P7'6JiLiK7lZV . . . N , 1' Second Semerter ROBERT BLACKFORD VVILLIAM WALKER Q XYALTER NORDELI..-X Secretary . CHARLES NIAJOR FERDINAND BEYNE Trmmrer , ROBERT VVELLS h ' 4 PAGE 82 I if f , ,, 4 pf i if f f T , f , x vi ,xi If 41 ,T Q 4 73 Hx Q f 'K T O il Q if it T 31 ff if if H ,i , ' Q fl Pg I It i 7 A ef rr N ll if 2 s 50 QE . 4 2 i 2 K l 1 I lr- ' Top Row: Judith Osterveer, Joan Osterveer, Janet Sillje, Ruth Hanson, Margaret Blackford. Second Row: N l , ' X Marian Sohus, Mary Ann Dilley, Jean Edwards, June Clarke, Barbara Horton, Ruth Ann Bedford, Marquita K ' VVendell. Third Row: Gene Conklin, Gail VVinchell, Marian Ogden, Miss McCarty Cadviserj, Audrey Talsma i 0 M Dorothy YVepman, jane Merrill, Helen Bennett. Absent: Ethel Grant. ' l my t f B if 'H T Qfffzsm Club ' ar - THE Arista Club has just completed its second year of activities under the spon- 4 sorship of bliss KIcCarty. 1 X The Organization has made it an annual project to present a prize to the room K in Junior High School which has the highest percentage in scholarship the second 1 quarter cf the second semester. Last year the prize went to Room 22-l which had a percentage of 41. 4 This year the following girls have been taken into the club: Helen Bennett, Ruth Ann Bedford, Klarion Sohus, Klarquita llcndell, Klargaret Blackford, Gail llin- B chell, Ethel Grant, Janet Sillje, and Gene Conklin. X I This is the only club for Junior High School girls in the school. It requires its members to be on the Honor Roll Or Honorable Rlentxon. 1 7 OFFICERS I 'i X First Semefler Sfcond Semefter BIARY ANN DILLEX' . . Prerident . . . All-XRIAN OODEN . DOROTHY XYEPMAN , . . Vice-President . . DOROTHY XYEPMAN Q AUDREY TALSMA . . . Secrelary-Treafzlrfr .... AUDREY TALSMA E GAIL XYINCHELL . . Sergeant-az'-Army . . Al.-XRGARET BL.-XCKFORD I , r P. oe 8-S K . , , A ff 'Y X Nb or ik 'K N, Q A l Q 1? v 4 'ir fa -v Ura, rx 1 rmxiw I 1 Ari' as , Q 1' X S I xy - j AL ir r ff' al 3 r fs Al. V M l p I 'nr if K I 1 .. f I 5 ii X Top Row: lYayne Smith, Harry Yan Dyke. Third Row: Eulalia Rice. Joyce Blain, Paul Carpenter, Michael Cassone, Kenneth Logan, june Clark, Esther YYeenihof. .lack O'Neill. Second Row: Anna Ryekman, Edna Tatroe, Gertrude Geitzen, Gertrude Vander Kaay, Evelyn Thompson, Betty De Vries, Vera Goodrich, Donna Goodwin. Genevieve Razoog, Evelyn Yoltz, Marie Yer Merris. First Row: Gertrude Yeneklasen. Betty Shaw, Helen Cqrawforcl, Mabel Elias, jay lldttington, Dorothy lYeprnan, Ann Hoffman, Genevieve Farnsworth, Elaine Zziin, Cornelia Gorton. znzfz grade Ci arm T115 Ninth Grade Chorus has just completed its first successful year as a school organization under the able leadership of Klr. Frank Showers. As it has just been organized, we haye not heard from it as a school groupg but now that it is a regular school organization, we hope to see it in many public performances working for Ottawa. This is a preparatory course for the senior high glee clubs, and any ninth graders who have ambitions along that line are urged to join. The chorus meets three times a week, and one receives one and a half credits. ll'e urge all of you who haye just completed the eighth grade to be a member of this group next year, for we want a ninth grade chorus at Qttaxya in all its future years. X OFFICERS Fifi! Sewzffffr Second Sfmerffr RIARJORY SMITH . Prffideazzf . DOROTHY XYEPM.-XX HARRX' XWAN DYKE . Vice-Prffidfzzz' . JAY XYHITTINGTON Jack 0iNEILL . Secretary'-T1-farmer' . .ANN HOFFhI.AN Q EYELYX X-OLTZ . . Acconzpanirf . . GERTRUDE XEAXDER KAAY i GAIL XYINCHELL . L1'b1'a2'1'a1z . . JOYCE BLAIN Pace 8-1 F ,fr t If ! fr X 1 if Y f Mo l , C I it J LK t lr X ,gf K L, X 1 l. mfg 5 , . i ' J I K X, A f X Q 1 T ,fi 4 wewi i x Top Row: Violet Hendrickson, Fannie Breen, Esther Beukema, Charity Haddad, Mary Montgomery, Mary Frances Scheffer, Norma Caro, Margaret Woodson, Geraldine McCue, Helen Lattin. Fourth Row: Irma Scruby, Jean Edwards, Helen Sikkema, Ruth Vander Veen, Jeanette Balish, Bernice Misner, Eleanor Vlfhitting- ton, Regina Van Hesteren, Alyce White, Adele Saunders, Mary Louise Beckman. Third Row: Kathleen Poch, Dorothy Dolson, Katherine Lindemulder, Genevieve Thomas, Gertrude Brinkman, Clairbelle Freyling, Maxine Bentley, Laura Darby, Pauline Caryl, Esther Zoutendam, Mildred Dreisen, Bedea Yared. Second Row: Saraphine Lindhout, Jane Hall, Gretchen Vander Noot, Iean Ter Meer, Mary Knappen, Effie Spoelma, Mil- dred Stroup, Lenabelle Cherryrnan, Suzanne Marrin, Grace Anderson, Jane Lake, Kathryn Roze. First Row: Ellen O'Connel, Mignon Moshier, Virginia Ulrich, Faye Hoek, Grace Meyers, Marian McFarland, Marcella Gibson, Virginia York, Katherine Weirsma, Esther Thompson, Louise Groom, Irene Francis, Irene Sherd. girls, Q! ee Club xx THE Girls' 'Glee Club was organized early last fall and oihcers were j5 'wX elected.. During the tall term the glee' club sang at several programs in the auditoguin, abnd in conjunction with the Boys' Glee Club gave the cantata, oum usf' The opera, Rosamundei' by Franz Schubert given during the Schubert Centennial, was the biggest undertaking of the year. The combined glee clubs sang in both the Shepherds' Chorus and Court Choruses. hlembers of the glee clubs took the minor singing leads. The opera was given on December twelve and fourteen, 1928. During the spring term the glee club sang two numbers at the program given on the Gpen Night sponsored by the P. T. A. and the Student Council, and con- tributed to several other programs. The annual spring concert was also given this year. OFFICERS Firft Sfmefter Second Sevzzemfr NIARIAN XVILLIAMS . . Prfficient . BTARIAN 3lcFixRL.xxD NIARY BIONTGOMERY . . Vice-Prefidem! . , LAURA D.XRBH' lXfIARcELL.i GIBSON Secretary . RTARCELLA Cresox BIAY DURRlXNT . Treamrer . GERTRUDE Barxitnrxx F PAGE 85 51' . X it if 'S 'J T' R 4- I 4 1 'll' Wi if , 1 5. if f of 1 Q N fl N x Q 9 ' U . 4. X K 4 rf il Top Row: Dick Simkins, George Bigelow, Henry Thomas, Fred Poel, Curlee Magaw, Abram Glazer, Donald Bur- luack, Aurelius Douglas. Second R0w:vCarl Xvilllillilii, Richard Marquardt Donald Strickland john Molhoek Viallcr Cook, Edmund Scihumakcr, Vi alter Nordella, Clayton Donahue., First Row' Rex Chapman Cecil K Hartson, Bon Fuller, Bert Stadt, Grace Myers, Frank Gordon, Morris Roclen, Franklin pliigglernan, Alleri Allor. 7 The 3911 glee Club L ls, ,s 9 '- WYITII the opening of the season of 1928-1929 the Boys' Clee Club lcolted lorvi ard to a tery successful i ear At the beginning, of the year he combined chorus began to work on the cantata Columbus After v N 7 . V br, V N 7 b Y . .' r V 2 ,S t - Y ' , at 1 in practicing with the orchestra, they sang it for the Columbus Day assembly in Qctober. hir. Showers chose as the next project the Schubert operetta URosamunde,,' which was given in December. This was well interpreted by the cast and proved an enjoyment to those who saw it. The Boys' Glee Club comprised the leads and chorus and produced some exceptionally fine singing. Following the election of oliicers the Glee Club began work on the annual hfiay Festival, in which it played an important part. OFFICERS Firm Semeffer FRANK CRAWFORD . Preridenz XY.-XLTER NORDELLA. , . Vice-Prerident FRED ELLIS . . Secretary FRED POEL . Treafzzrer XYALTER Coors Lib1'a1'z'a1z PAGE 86 if , , G X F , as' 5 X N 1, 0 Second Semerter K GEORGE BIGELOW . XVALTER CooK f . ALLEN ALLOR . ALLEN ALLOR i, . CURLEE BIAGAVV Q f if lf? . f ,, W f jg 1 K , P AGE 87 J cF, 2554- 9033152 :MQW 52525 pzfiif-!'.0f5'5 5-53- 09041. 5.1-tl Epxzw- 25535 -Flihmoc SOO mi Maia ggfifpvx ,QQUJEQ S5 i ff': 32535 V, E2 CE ,CQ ,,.O Sui, 3+-'51 gba. ii 5 if .. ., .f 4-1+5:.-2:1 b1J'..m,CZ EELS, Af-'5-cufj Som- enigg QEZQ ,Q , V .EP-wgwfi :.,,,..p -,..g:.1v0-'S .:g::,EP: ig.g:n!i,.'Z' bf, 52 Qviie rwdmfqw O5-P1'U .502 : wvmfw Sm 3.35. c'iE.u.sbEfi pq s. vEEfE H:E,COcs .-Aves E I3 mica . '11 ' -...na md: 'E'5C'-:So 'Aww'-CD 91.09 divan '-1 ,f,,.: 22090 ...:gg,415 FT-vg.. Qc t5E,j 55522 L who Uf.r.uw 4.,..w.-. L25 '52 zCi-gq 0134 5555, 551:35 ggifii ZH 'iii , L, ',- moi: ..Cd+,gm,i 505: Cl Q' '-- LC- H- 1, o-'Cuff U aff QCZEQ ,...:,.J. , 55553 :c,Hf fn ' '-E E S E-4 d E : E L, 1 ,E ,.1 SU .CZ 5515 -P gm 92 :E SJ: ': A-. go U: -S D- E OE mi SE 2: 9.2 is lf! E -C23 Q: C5 L- SZ.. 3? N 1,91 :E gem ,E-1 . ffl . .IA 5:0 CUC -12 95 PL' fic, fm :mx OS Je- LJ we E: og. Qw- GE Z: fi E. ,L GF 55 '53 L- ,c 'B PAGE 88 fi x.. S UDL If-+2 QE B 'I cd I-11 L- 41 C..- 'VLH un C'- as H an 'c 9- 0.12 EU UE EP1 Cf! 5 o E .9 o U2 mb 5 n Ld L- 9,0 N u LD L.. sl cu is 'a it if! 3: O FQ ft' P- cu 3 cu Q 525 5 H Q .M u zu Conklin, Frank e1Ka mme J G O Q2 O'U HC cu ca fu P E Sz Qfcs' 544: 'D E N v ws E Gi P1 03 gm .2 N... Q-1 uz +1 G H2 L- GJ Q-2 45.-4 -T14 s. 4, 4 , .535 , 5 's fi O H bw to A . CI KH ,-1 E Ce atson Arthur Eng +2 M IU 5 432 ME do 0,4 G EQ K, o .usp-, Bo o Oi 'U ci O u cu .-VJ if C1 O an L4 eu 'U C fC ni .DC 4- 4-' im I5 .23 2' as Di B o Ta .99 FD o an O 3 o C4 Q. o H GJ O aw' K-1 fn 5 D4 4-1 rn DD :S 4 I,-4 :f Ta CQ 'Pj f- 2 r-I ,ii an .54 Cl cu C! sl Cl of! O I1 O G' 5: 2 CJ Q cu s- x-. 'S3 -4 4 Cf O Q M. .2 vi: as W -IE E IU 1. as LD BE go A O 'U 41 'S GJ VJ 5 Q C1 km P 'O 5- fu B o E 4-2 'U L-4 cd 5 o L2 aa +- L4 o D-4 ..- G' an V1 .G 4 ...- CD 6 U' 'S ea: AE 'O gm 'GE LI 0 Tv Cl A 0- O +2 U cv .EI 'U V xl 2 rf as C cv E F: ms 5 2 5 cu v-I vi .54 C ld ,D .51 N FI-4 up as 'T'-1 M if U cf CU E n. a.: J-4 U 'C 1. as 'T- ru if-4 ,Q 1-4 U4 O Z O rd ,E as Cu 303 DOJ L1-I o 54 .Si U rn n: rd E L4 P A aB E L53 an 1- if-4 +1 L-4 -1: .D O M E ar 'F , 4 'E 5 K Q 'Ha t ill it um me if yr aff by 1 in 1- f , - kt l 5 4 IX , I 7 af Soezal Calendar + i N 1 X 1 October II-Fire Prevention Assembly. Wlhat price fires! R October I2-Columbus Day Assembly. Combined glee clubs present a cantata. October I6-Declamatory Contest. Lewis Smith gains the medal. October I9-Senior Election of Oilicers. The boys have it-Pres. VValt. K November I2-Armistice Day Assembly. fd November I6-Pep Nleeting. Yea Ottawa! Did We beat Creston? And How! I November 22-Dr. Palmer's talk on Japan . Don't call 'em Japs . November 23-Harvest Party. Sorry Andy couldn't be there. X 4 ' December 20-Rho Phi Alpha Dance. The sedate debaters make whoopee! December 21-Nlu-Si Club Dance. The first Christmas party of the year. December 31-Stec Club Dance. No one saw the New Year enter. W'hy? january 5-Cordelier Club Dance. Wlhere was Rlr. Koepnick? january I8-Dramatics Club Party. Nlr. Gould shows his vocal talent. january 24-Commercial Club Sleigh-ride Party. Beware of parked cars. February I-Girl's Athletic Association Spread. Au revoir to Bliss Sheehan. February 8-Senior Benefit Dance. Some money raised for Senior Play. February I2-Lincoln Assembly. Harry entertains us. February I5-All Girls' Banquet given by N. T. C. VVe fall for Klrs. KIacNaughton. February I5-Dr. Ferris Smith's talk on the Ear . February 25-Junior High School Declamatory Contest. VVon by Anson Dreisen February 28-Open Night. Proud parents invited to see our teachers. March I-Senior Oratorical Contest. A victory for YValker Smith. March I4-I5- Minick . Walt. gets a free meal. March I9-Girls' Athletic Nleet. Sophs win the cup again. April I-Indian Frolic. Balloons, confetti, whistles, and no A's next morning. April I2-Track lkleet. Boys strive for honors again. April I2-Cordelier Dance. Too early for Silver Lake. Brr! April I6-Awards Assembly. iNfIore f'O men for Ottawa. April I7-Mr. Puller gives us pointers on vocational success. X April 23-Professor Eich, University of Xlichigan Speech Department, Readings, April 23-Nlr. lN'Iitchell's Orchestra Concert-Our Spring Klusicale. May 2-All Stall Banquet. VVhen stall members get together. May I7-Stec Party. The Tennis Balll' was some racket . june I-Kapi Club Dance. A sporty party. june 7-National Honor Society Banquet. Brilliancy abounds. june I4-Class Day. Seniors' Triumph. june I9-Commencement. Wie finish to beginf' f t December IZ-I4- Rosamunde . The King brings down the house the first night. ll' 4 l y 4 1 ,i,,+ . 4 if y ' 4 1415. -me i f XX D 4' 1 If W i W PAGE 89 dk k Q x ill Q 1 'V 4 ll F' 1 5, iv A if Q Q n T - - Q f J i ' 'RAL - t 1 C X . f 5 lr , f fi 'ff 4 ..f.wg,f, ,f ,ix ig was 5 f f -If r B A T uf!! girly, Yiafzguef THE first all girls' banquet to be held at Ottawa Hills was given by the N. T. C. Club in the cafeteria on February fifteen. The purpose of the banquet was to pro- mote a more friendly relationship among the girls of the entire school. The decora- tions were attractively carried out in yellow and green. Leonore Snyder, president of the club, acted as toastmistress, and the principle speaker of the evening was hlrs. Carrol Emerson, whose topic was What the Community Expects of the Girl of Today. A toast to the girls was given by Klrs. H. D. RlacNaughton. Each class was then represented by one speaker: freshmen-Catherine hlclnerney, sopho- more-Louise Reayis, Junior-Beverly Rabinoff, senior'-llarian lXIcFarland, alumnae-llarcella Heintz. Entertainment was given on the harp and violin by Rlrs. Harley Bertsch and hflrs. C. Willey, which was later followed by 'cello selections played by Bliss Blade- line Holmes, accompanied by hlarie Sisson. Community singing was led by hlrs. Roland Burns. Beyerly Rabinoff was general chairman of the affair which proved a success, .nf li .X i I av 1 4 P ,K if i 50' PAGE90 I W, I 4 fr T if T ' 'az' ,j.51'K,g YK HF 3' Q l wx 1 4 ' 8 4 ' I ii .. AL M' kk N. x 1 4 n f ' 7 2 'F 1 ' ' xg 1 R f . 4 'K ' W f 1' 4 fl Q N ' 'FQ ' if - ' if f f Q K ir I Qram wide ' 4 I TIIE opera which was given in our auditorium on the evenings of December twelve and fourteen was considered the most difficult task which had yet been l X undertaken. Its production was not limited to the undergraduate students en- 7 K tirely, but some of our alumni not only took parts but also helped behind the scenes. The two leading characters were played by Kliss Elizabeth Tatum and XYilliam Kutche, both of Junior College. The other leading roles were enacted by Xlaurice Glaser, Edgar Jones, Dick Simkins, Lawrence Jones, Fred Ellis, Fred Poel, Klary Montgomery, Xfarian KIcFarland, and Clairbelle Freyling. Those who took charge of the production were: Kfusic, Kfr. Frank Showers and X Klr. Rlerwyn Klitchellg dramatics, Klr. Forest Gould, dancing, Kfiss Katherine Sheehan, costumes, Kfiss Hazel Zellner, Kliss Elizabeth Xfatheson, and Kliss i f Bertha Plagg scenery, Kfiss Ida Crego and Kfr. Lloyd Hutt. i The plot of the play centers around Frederick, Prince of Candia, and Rosamunde, li the rightful heir of the kingdom of Cyprus, which is now being ruled by her uncle. The climax of the play appears when the throne falls at the death of the king, and Rosamunde is restored to her entitled position. K' 1 1 - I A IR i PAGE 91 . K 7t Q ik . . tk Q 1 I K X 4 T x t ' ' X' 5 ' ' 4 f 4 or fs we ,1v4,c. up . . .1 Wx? f Q YW wl - If 'ii' . 1' F f 5 Q tl Q 'I X A i OTTAWA FIGHT SONG X jWfmf52d W Words ond Mczlodg A OCQUQQHQ EWAQ J FOYQST. D. Goul at . Eigfgglfiffl Ag I f , Q k Oh lei us smgi the prose of Much- 1- gon J oftis the Sirwt- est state of E E You! RohWoh!fsph1,f191wt,fugSh+ for O11 - 0-vvq and for Gmnd Rgp- ldgj Mlgh - Q , 6 X , f : ? F f -e EE ie 1 Jr J suizzzasz X k xx-J 1 'll V 4 X Q f i 9515 Hnd leiua amp ow own GmmIRop'Xd53 famqba-fovcwhose poweroll forzs must fi gun? Porta!-om' wo-wuhx oh for Ori - 0. -gi get m Jmw Team and mf ya? F X if ' r' E? 'F QT T 71 ' 1' Q' 4 H ' ' 1 v 16 f 4, 1 1? A M' . ij Z i Q 3' ' x 5 wk, J I Q 1 -, as If i 'fo1l,mos1faIl.Tnm vaxsetmtvyofqrovgbgfmp mpg . bwqllK1bmQR.1.Or.,an5fz SNNPW Sw for New I MQ Q-gem,xfcowuhmfahl6phT,f1g1hT,fugfnkwe'reTNQ TO qou,LzT bl0cbv+Oy '-Ongq gwqp Hqq gyguformwglp f -s 4' .m FFF 1? FF FF? f EE Q in f V' FU? aggwf ff? E1 f A , 2F0ixSF0fM clad, ?vQ Plym Que? MEN ond Qm,o'for OU-QNWU Hnils I-hgh v g Q 'S m '19 5951000 vm MS pomQoro1Qf0rOH-u-wg: Hdls Hugh. i . X l g??gEffi,,gf gi .. if i lg 15 i 1 W - ' at , W P' F f H d 45 , 4 iv 4?'X' X f 3' Jr' ,WF3 wr ar sig 1 7' K , In ' Q l ' '11 .. ' 4 f' Y' K. X R x x X E Mfg 'Fira ll 4 4 'N X 'F 1 i St if W- f Ak Then raise that wondrous banner far above, K Let Black and Orange sweep the sky. Q' For like the braves of old we tight and love, Ozmfwcz Hz'lls Fzgfzf Song Oh, let us sing the praise of Michigan For 'tis the greatest state of allg And let us sing our own Grand Rapids' fame Before whose power all foes must fall 4 must fall. And sing for Ottawa Hills High. You! Rah! Rah! Fight, Fight, 4 hyd, ii Wh, iff' iiff' of tr' Fight for Ottawa , And for Grand Rapids, Michigan. t Get in there team and hit that line again. You! Rah! Rah! Fight, Fight, Fight! N We're true to you. Let Black and Orange sweep the sky, For we will Fight, Fight, Fight! 'and win this game Or die for Ottawa Hills High.-Rah l l I 5 For otta-Wah-Wah-Wah, for Ottawa 'K l t , i 1 4: N , A 'U' ' PAGE 93 d KX if X X fs- -lr 'Ti it N N , x at , f 1 'W' 1' -iltgiii UV., as 4 5 1 ID K 11 R IL i 1 ,E 4, J , E N 'IV I XF mn- -I ,A My N W WW 0 Mg. f f ' , W, , L n' ' ,' iiqfmf 415 if ,c. ' 1 Yr. , -' ,' 'fgfw 7 , V if iii: in Y 3- wg 1 ff l W ' W ff fx X M -N X1?,,L? W f- M 121 'ff W ? f W If ff :'L',:, I, 9 I :W - fda, '-,H ? N.: ' A -'Zr,4 , If ., Y 1.. 75 FF I I J W K J v Wf f mme: . 1 K2 f Nr 4: 14, I. Q 5 1 . i Q f X , 7 luv!! 17, Af- ,H L' :LMI f f ,ff ll R S tx SG! ' I 7 fk Xu Q c. in . Z L I I ' If fl., W-X. 1 lv ff f ' if , f v 'wf,g?9a'.,,1,. -f .. If ,ff f ff H f . if fa ' 7 ff,,f Y f 4 ff Wu 76 A , ' fx.. H ,, 0,431 4- ff1 .:v11 7251, , : ., fy, .Q :gr-,', 4-ff ff ' 1 44' ,Xi ' thy 'Ah' , xv fx xl X 'J -A 'A 0:2704-gg N Wy'-X A . I ,Y Ywuxf ll!!! fm Q. ,bb fglgdf lhjea 5-. , .pw V L N af ' J ig'-K , 'X Qwflhdfuw hymn ! ,f1f, fZ: f wp! I .. aff, if 7 1 ff fm WI .U 1,5 ,. hey A I fl .zWfffd- '43- fefig 'gf 'ZA ffgj - xx K x N Mrluuul IHLIHE11VVIHIeHQg . , ' 5'? ff Tiff, 3 i .1f'- ' UM wif' 91 wif -1' .f,'f!,f' 4l. Y ,-rx -. l,,..,.. M Jw ,ph . -. , A, ' 1 Wu f br W.. A- , 5: ,pf :aa in iz. 34 , 45' X, if 3- :JB-1 4 .-wg 11 , 1 4 .PA 'QQ .' Sy - 's . jew, f-. . gtk, , fy. ii s n x. , nw fit may f 1 . , 4 Q-Qkmfi-' , -, ,f4,,,,, , ,J .-g, UW Q Y 1 ,, , 'fix 5 'tg' X, ?fwJ.f,,wfujl' 4 'J' V 5, 5,1 1 ' J' ' fivffi ' ' i wr , w L if, :R ' . ? 1+ .1135 I -'U . , ,' 1 wr : 41 5' Wm .L ,, . u fir- in ,.,, ' 'WST 1 , -1, ,Q ,, ,V w a W f 'P l,.. : ,.-Q M I H, ,, ,Q . I ' :F I , , -.a , .. 1 K 4 1. rw ' -v . X 11 A . , ft lv Puxw - 211--,ww - Im. ,iv y..., ,r 5,9 Q' fh v M46 X 1 ..w. ' Q4 if 1 . f . ' 11, 1 -,'..n,, V 1 2 ., .iffgiifm-,Z -1-m:s7.L,h3m . X , V 'K of ' , Q f ' if ii' T 'i , I K x 4 I 1 1 N fs 1 if X X 1 f 1 L Top Row: Nathan Waring, Foster Bishop, William Bradbury, john Van Norman, Raymond Rapaport, Wil- Q ' I f liam Haight, William Papworth, Stephen Rowlson, Harry Sullivan, Harold Martin, VVilliam Schatz fmanagerj. ' Seated: Mr. Palmer fcoachj, William Walker, Herman Miller, Herbert Baker, Ferdinand Beyne, Robert Blacks Q ford, Monroe Conklin, Charles Major, Aurelius Douglas, Nicholas Missad, Bob VVells, Mr. Koepnick Ccoachj. K A if , , X.. 1928 Foofdall Qpzew , I BY winning the last game of the season from Creston by a score of six to nothing, I Ottawa Hills successfully closed its third football season. Coach Lowell Palmer deserves much credit for the good showing of the Orange and Black this season. This was his first year, and he developed the team from comparatively green material. The team showed a splendid fighting spirit and pluck all through the season, and Captain Robert Blackford deserves credit for his splendid leadership and devotion to the team. The team bore up bravely after the Catholic Central game in which Andrew Spaman was severely injured. Andy was confined to bed for several months. Those awarded major letters are as follows: R. Blackford, Xl. Conklin, C. Klajor, H. Baker, H. lyliller, N. lblissad, R. Wells, A. Douglas, F. Beyne, R. Simkins, XV. VValker, and A. Spaman. The regulars graduating this year are Blackford, Beyne, lwlajor and Sparnan. The captain for next year is Klonroe Conklin. iivx X1 ll x if ev' in X, SCHEDULE Ionia ....,..... 6 Ottawa... . . . O Grandville ...,, 0 Ottawa . . . . . ll Central .,...... 13 Ottawa. . . . 7 Catholic Cent.,l2 Ottawa. . . . 7 Zeeland ....... O Ottawa. .. . . . 7 G.R.Vocational l9 Ottawa. . . . 6 - lXluskegon Hts. 37 Ottawa ........ 6 Creston ....... O Ottawa. .. , . . 6 45 Total opponents ........ 87 Total Ottawa ............ 53 P w it Paoli 97 K rt 1 l . th ik K ss. 'sl' , x 4- , si 'mba dz 5 Xin i us' 4 IBCDY PJTIHILIETT 1 if fig! 'll 1 N 1 K, J : p ' 7 7 ,i William Walker, William Oswald, Ben Cueny, and f QW 7 .f' , , 1 ..- 'T ' W fl X YI i LL , D y E N 5 i +V 1 , Top Row: Mr. Kremble Robert Schelling, Stanley Vlfeitz, Harold Brink, Nathan VVaring, Mr. Ludwick. Bot- , gslmrtllowz Vlfilliarn Schatz, Williani Oswald, Ben Cueny, Ferdinand Beyne, Leo Kelly, William Walker, Harold ,V B. IH. 4 Baifiefbazz WITH a fighting, fast offensive and defensive aggregation under the coaching of Mr. Ludwick, the Ottawa basketball team ended a very successful season. Ottawa won eleven games, lost two, and for the second time lost a chance to tie for the city 1 championship by not having a game with South. Ottawa's total number of points was 290 while that of the opponents was 166. In the i ' state tournament Ottawa lost the first game to South. The second team under Mr. Palmer should also be mentioned for they gave that true Sportsman-like spirit for which Ottawa stands. The outstanding players of the second team were Bott, Douglas, Brad- shaw, Lusk, Van Ry, Schriemer, and Conklin. Tom Bott won the silver cup which was awarded by Mr. Palmer for the pliyer having the highest percentage in foul shooting. S ,X Ma'or O's were awarded to Ca t Beyne Leo Kelly Dick Sirnkins. First team R's to Harold Brink, Nathan Waring, Orland Tetro, Stanley Weitz, and Robert Schelling. CAPTAIN BEYNE, playing at left guard, finished his fourth year of basketball with Ottawa. From this i position, by his quickness on offense and his good X eye in shooting he was able to score Seventy-One Y points during the season. The team will certainly , miss Beyne next year. - K X l 'D I le la al Why' if, , ,l in f ti l i . an if ff K i , 1 Bryne - is ,J PAGE 99 4 R X ,AX K in WK X, 'N' 4 , fs -if '.s, ns TF. Qi' 'v' lv f Q 'W N fl 1' xy 1 g , Hy. . 4 X f 1' r K 1' 1 Q A 1 ka if X 'X i ,X Wt ,S - 0120111 a' Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Ottawa Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Hills Total Score . . Y? .4 BILL OswALn, the only other player lost by graduation, played at the pivot position. He had more fight than any one else on the team and was a valuable player. From his center position he scored fifty-six points. LEO KELLY, our six-foot-two guard who played center on the tip-off, was the main factor in our strong defensive team. Although he played guard he managed to score eleven points. Leo has another year with Ottawa. 1 - 'a ek, Ms. .- Sc'fzea'u!e . 27 Technical . . . , 29 East Grand Rapids . , 15 Creston .... . 26 Union .... , 9 Central ,... . 25 Catholic .... . 27 East Grand Rapids . . 33 Union .... . 16 Alumni .... . 17 Technical . . 29 Catholic . 19 Creston. . . 18 Central . . . . 290 Opponents . BEN CUENY, high point man of the season, made seventy-five points. Ben played left forward-with more fight and determination than last year. He is a junior this year and will be back on the job next year. BILL WALKER, playing at right forward, is one of the fastest men Ottawa has ever had on the basketball court. Although Bill is the smallest man on the team, he scored seventy-one points tying for second place with Capt. Beyne. Bill also has another year with Ottawa. ml Krlly . S 15 . 9 . 22 . 10 . 12 . 14 . 18 1 . 166 - Q CNHI? Walker PAGE 100 X.. f' Fl K F! il' if Kp if 4 sk if Ras rf 1- 1 -1 -- 1- I ,Q c, if as ' I M H 1 x x I We 1 il ll ll X i f . Q 1 I 'lf W f l 1 fs 1 L Top Row: Edward Garner, William Haight, Balfour Augst, Howard Ziel, Monroe Conklin, Vifalker Smith, l I Walter Cook, William Hickok, Adelbert Baker. Fourth Row: Henry Thomas, Louis Walbridge, Donald Gezon, , Clark Johnson, Ross De Windt, Robert James, Harold Nyburg, Robert Brummeler, Richard Luth, Richard , Marquardt, James Brown. Third Row: Ray Ver Merris, Maurice Glaser, Nicholas Missad, Edward Lamberts, ', 3 Q Fred Poel, Dick Simkins, Walter Watson, William Stone, Aurelius Douglas, Charles Major, Robert Ogden. 1 Second Row: Robert Welsh, Harold Sprague, Carl Williams, Kenneth Hodge, Mr. Koepnick Ccoachb, Elmer f. Liskey, Donald Renwick tcaptamj, Wallace Wendell, Carter jefferson. Bottom Row: Harold Ackerman, Egbert Van Wyk, Cecil Alden, Howard Cleveland, Jack Eastman, Carleton Dodge. i ' i C Traci f OF the forty fellows that answered Nlr. Koepnick's track call last year, he built K a team of which Ottawa may well be roud. Ottawa Hills adminstered defeats . . f p . . to Central, Union, Technical, Creston, and Catholic, bowing only to the South Hi h team. The laced eleventh in the State Nleet at Lansin in Class A. 4 8 Y P 8 1 The records set last year are as follows: ' . ,. . . 1 120 yd. High Hurdles .... 17:8 . William Hickok 100 yd. Dash . . . . 10:4 . Donald Renwick 1N'li1e Run .... . -l:50:8 . Ferdinand Beyne , -H0 yd. Dash . . . . 56:2 . Richard Simkins 1 220 yd. Low Hurdles . , 27:0 . Donald Renwick 220 yd. Dash . . . , 23 :-I ..... 'Donald Renwick 880 yd. Run . . . 2:15 ,... Edward Lamberts 9 880 yd. Relay . . 1:38 Augst, Sirnkins, Johnson, Renwick i Pole Vault . . 10' 2 . VVrn. Hickok, Harold Sprague Q High Jump . . 5' 6 ..... Robert Wvelch Shot Put . . 38' SM .... Adelbert Baker Q Discus . . , 104' . Adelbert Baker Broad Jump . 19' 6 Clark Johnson X I Javelin . . . 128' 7 Edwin Garner PAGE 101 if ' 1 folk QM. if 1 f 8' ks' '24 T A 'Y ' W 4 Q Q 1 T Q A Etanding: Stanley Vlfoitz, Mr. Gregory Cadviserb. Seated: Roy O'Neil, Nathan Yifaring, Herman Miller, Tom Strahan. Term: 5 OTTXIPVA Hills Tennis Team placed second in the city last year. Wiith Grant Ellis as captain and Robert Cowden as manager, the team had a very successful season. Stanley Weitz was the up and coming member of the team. Great possi- bilities were also developed in William Schatz, Nathan Waring, and Leo Kelly. The team was successful in all but two out of fourteen matches. The doubles teams composed of Ellis and Miller, Cowdin and Glaser, and Kelly and Schatz, were particularly good in the city tournament. Future prospects are very good, due to the three new concrete tennis courts in the athletic field, and due to the fact that the team has an experienced supervisor, hir. Gregory. QW 7-'HE Golf Team last year was composed of Kenneth Beukema, Herman Xliller, Harold Brink, Wiilliam Rupley, and Thomas Strahan. The team won victories over Central, Creston, South, Catholic, and Technical, losing only to Union. Gur golfers completed the season by coming in third in the Regional Tournament. With only Kenneth Beukema graduating and under the supervision of Rlr. Krem- ble, the prospects look good for this year. The spring season has not yet started, but it is certain that the team will show some real form. In Herman hliller there are the makings of a champion, and Harold Brink is another promising player, who 'N 5 ,f 4 if . I X x I 9 , if -it 1 with a little practice will be a real asset to the team. I PAGE 102 ,lf 3- 1? ' if f ff x t r i it K fi 4' T r K 9 X a ' 'K O Q Q H Q ,, W Q X Rfmw 4 f' if 1 , in If 5 I ,f ' F i it . r ,,. A 1 F' X . Top Row: Maxine Bentley, Marjorie 'Whitrnore, Marion Fuller, Amy-Jean Veneklasen, Gail Spicer, Ruth Mitchell, Ann Bomers, Julia Ellis. Fourth Row: Alice Zaine, Virginia York, Irma Scruby, Marie Schneider, Marjorie Locke, Francene Wright, Jeanette Balish, Lenabelle Cherryman, Marion Hake. Third Row: Ann Timmons, Maxine Bevans, Vivian Valliere, Ella Van Oosten, Helen Miller, Helen Truck, Wauneen Roache, Helen Spencer. Second Row: Grace Anderson, Helen Lattin, Elma De Young, Seraphine Lindhout, Margaret Linn, Jean Sehler, Leonore Snyder, Louise Reavis, Jean Porter, Katheryn Lindemulder, Mary Louise Payne, Ruth Muskin, Frances Chandler. First Row: Bedelia Ellis, Virginia Ulrich, janet Aspiriwall, VVava VVarren, Beverly Rabinoff, ,lean Edwards, Virginia Murphy, Dorothy Abbitt, Ruth Schaffer, Mary Alice Sherwood, Doris White, Maurine Hammer, Ione Smith, Lucile Fox. fasfefbalf OF all the sports which girls enjoy at Ottawa Hills ,basketball seems to be the favorite. Throughout the winter months teams representing sophomore, junior, and senior girls, played a series often inter-class games. So great was the appeal of basketball that nearly hfty enthusiastic girls met regularly on Tuesday nights. The improvement they made over preceding years was so great as to be an in- centive to our next year's girls. At the beginning of the season the sophomore girls organized themselves into two teams, one of which hilary Alice Sherwood was captain, the other of which jean Edwards was captain. The juniors likewise had two teams, lVava liiarren was captain of one, and Beverly Rabinoff of the other. The two captains of the senior teams were Irene Boss and Dorothy Abbitt. Dorothy Abbitt's team was champion, having come through the season with ten victories and no defeats. The members of the team are as follows, guards, Dorothy Abbitt, Jean Sehler, center, Ruth Schaffer and running center, Doris White, and forwards, Leonore Snyder and Virginia hiurphy. hiiss Katherine Sheehan supervised the games that were played, and at an early meeting Virginia Niurphy was elected chairman of all girls, basketball, She was assisted by the managers of the respective teams. i X ni, M! X PAGE 103 X it 'K X ,i , , 4 , X. f x 1 i I if M v N 1 i X 6 Q X f I O f' 5' . 1 iv, xii 5 jx if I nr af 1:-if Q.. , 'T' FW Q 'W 34 we N .- it is Q ' 9 l I . i AL t. if 1 K r 1 U Rf -Q 1 f 4: r ' 6 f fx- Qirf 'J Qfffiletic Qlfeef .M.JRC'I1 19. the sophomore. junior. and senior girls of Ottawa Hills held their third annual athletic meet. under the direction of Xliss Klargaret Harmon and Xliss Florence Kilstrom. As president ofthe Girls' Athletic Association, Dorothy Abbitt was general chairman. Ruth Schaffer was manager for the orange team, the seniors: Vfava Vliarren for the blue team, the juniors, and Klarjorie Locke for the green team. the sophomores. The meet was one of the finest ever put on here and comprised the following events: class dancing. running hop-step-and-jump, hurdle race, baton relay, numerous stunts including pvramid formations, as well as a thrilling volley-ball game plaved between the sophomores and seniors. The encore dancing numbers, made up bv the girls themselves. were especiallv clever. The seniors won bv a wide margin in this event. However, the Hgreeni' band of sophomores led bv Klarjorie Locke won enough points in other events to secure the cup for the sophomores for the third vear. Deserving of especial mention are Klrs. Klartin Delldndt, presenter of the cup, Kliss lla Krurnheuer, clerk of the meet, Ben Gregorv, ofhcial announcer: and the judges, Xliss Foster of Creston, Bliss Campbell of Union, and Rliss Ellinger of Central. lm PAGE 10-1' 7 qv xx. , I 4 Q5 f .5 X , K 4' 41 ,wg was X' 1 N ff. L 1 tj Q' 1 re Lt! 4 X X ll' 4 Q i 5? ii 1 I f, . algf' 1 ,I 2+ f' ' l Q 4 f I ni M . K E Qxffer Scfz oo! games Hockey AT the beginning of each new school year the girls come back full of energy-for hockey. This is the first year that we have been able to welcome back experienced players, for the game is in its infancy here at Ottawa. However, judging from the improvement both in the facilities which our new field offers and the calibre and number of our players, we predict a very bright future. 'Uolleybczll EVERY year after concluding the basketball season the senior high girls play inter-class volleyball. During the games this year the juniors were eliminated from the running, which meant that the seniors were to play the sophomores in the meet. The volleyball game played at the meet, received the enthusiasm of all the specta- tors. Leonore Snyder's senior team won. ...QM S fw zhzming SWIMMING is required of all girls working for awards, so a class was held at the Y. W. C. A. every week under Miss Harrnon's supervision. The group is divided into classes of beginners, intermediates, and advanced pupils. Wava Warren, who is now a junior, was made head of swimming. , vw,- funior H zgfz gamer THE junior high girls have played volley ball throughout most of the year. After all ofthe seventh and eighth grade teams were eliminated but Ruth Bertsch's and Margaret Murphy's, a championship game was played in which the eighth grade won. The junior high meet, held March 22, included the seventh, eighth, and ninth grades, and was a good exhibition of teamwork. This year the eighth grade was rewarded with the cup. -Qi Qffz'fzletz'c ufwa rdf T0 earn an award for senior girls' athletics, it is necessary to secure points for health, leadership, good sportsmanship, organized school games, and individual outdoor sports, including points for swimming. The number of points required to earn a class numeral is 1000, and the number for a school letter 2000. The highest athletic award that a girl may earn is called the all city honor which requires a minimum of 3000 points. This year Ottawa has produced two all city honor girls for the first time-Dorothy Abbitt and Virginia Murphy. Girls winning their O this year are: Margaret Linn, Wava Warren, Elma DeYoung, and Nlarjorie lVhitmore. Requirements for junior high awards are quite similar to those of the senior high. The award given seventh graders is the triangle, the eighth grade the dia- mond, and the ninth grade the star. 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Efgiilfzfif, ing A' ' ' x 1 - fini Y, Y, gig, -91 f- lfdxx Ak ? K+, ' 5 'Lvl-'f'i'-flfikxx V 1 H Hx 'ffm- 1 TT-54 z1Qj2g+ZZig14. 1 ' M, Q , fs-1.1.4.'?' Lg,g A X-N - -'X 11 ' ,f-Qgfgg wg sxa-2,JZ'-11-.gxx : . x 5.334 ,ngg dbg I fx-B l A34-,:aL'qE.5gq sig ,x Xffiff .gk .f-X fig VAfi2f:6xy3.,'.XfKw'2 A-X 'irdfff- -2b. iQRNi N shy 'Q-I f1'151.,1f':yg AQ, Mfffkg wf- 'Q ,Nh ,A 'f-Aw 211' -3:-.gf:.1,gf:,g. - fp ,fn 11, 'Yr-.',5. 55,1 gg fx-' , 1 ---if.-'I' gy, 5 , Nfl-I VMI. .iv ,,.N.-,.,',,4.,i-ii, Q X K Q A ,Xl , X, AQ., fr , . flxtvriagf 1X.ff4Xv!,.X,y.,A9 hy.: Q1:4:f.:-7:4445 QM M: ff..-1: fffza- 'Q-ffi1'lr'!gNf f'1vffw::f -af,Nuff?ff? 4?,i:2f: f' 30313-:Q,f2j,bg21 d? viii!! 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N ,aj .-n f' fr' .4 , ,eefmv A, ww, v D 1,1 , fm .1 A ww .1 f,-u , Q fn ,Xiu 'L ..-yy..-X V, - ,QW I 5 ' 1 fl as C 1, C k 4 J 'L' ' A . 6 x X QC x t 3' I E A 4 I ,. 'Y 'f ,D is ' N I it N If S THE LEGEND IS A CCM, Q if PLETE PICTURE QE ALL l THAT IS FINE IN STUDENT LIFE ' AT OTTAWA HILLS HIGH B '90 .fr SCHOOL SC CARGILL CREATIVE f SERVICE IS THE COMPLETE tk , 'W 55 EMBODIMENT OF ALL THAT IS vi Q WORTH WHILE IN THE ERC- jg f DUCTICN OF FINE ERINTINC. 6 fn, I' 4' it A 4 1 1 x I Q 7' ' 5 X 'I I K 7 wr' we Sf' R. 1 i THE 1929 LEGEND IS A CARGILL PRODUCT 4 A X X . W, ,R M I ,I if ft' 1: I .E X an 'ft ,Y 3, 'T X ,Ct LX K 1 X N '5' .. nv i.'fN5-T 'xx' 7 it X , 4 if it lc I S to 6 1 as P ' A fb 1: H ff COMPLETE COMPOSING ROOM SERVICE X for Zlie Printers of Western Michigan K VVe have at your disposal, day and night-SIX LINO- f k TYPE RIACHINES - FOUR NIONOTYPE 1? KIACHINES, and HAND CONTPGSITORS. ' I lk Mort Complete Plant of the Kina' in Michigan 1 K Central Trade Plant of Grand Rapids K f l5-17 LYON STREET GRAND RAPIDS, BTICHIGAN l l 'I' 9 - GARNER S DRUG STORE I f k Diamond Avenue and Wealthy Street 1 'W f 5 'F WW- S Q 4, Up to the Minute Pharmacy - K Where Service is Paramount Q x 1 A 5 l 4, oiafipUArioN: Q X r it j 3- Then W hat? . . . . . , f Will it be F1n1s,' or will it be '4Commencement ? , 'Whatever the future may hold, your education may be continued if you take advantage of the opportunities offered. f The daily newspaper is youth,s most modern text book- ? modern because it is revised, rebuilt, rejuvenated every day. A careful reading each day will enable you to keep abreast of the times and make Graduation day a true Commence- j A ment day. ' i -of courfe youlll read I '9 i ' -if l he Grand Rapids Press it X A Nezwpapei' for the Whole Family X 'F 5. x it ' ' 2 P 110 F x f 1 if , , ar 16 Ts 4 t .I l f -fr P as to W4 4' Bu fs--K A 1 --A 1- P -4 lx Q if is W vi X knew Q , M J .ij qi! dl'-,, A-ff ' an his 0 Proposing U, fl' H5 H T si 44 6040 Partnership in Progress THE Old Kent Would like to be a partner in your career. You have youth, energy, and an established aim. We have i Capital experience-plus the desire to 4 Sami help you help yourself toward wp us success. 04,000,000 X Assets We need each other. Why 038,000,000 not drop in at one of our down- Ow town offices or neighborhood branches? Let's get acquainted! l x Qi Three Downtown Offices - Eleven Community Branch vi ,, ' 4i lk it ik XY X PAGE 111 r N tn 14,2 , 1 xg! 'x N li x X fl Q4- .Bali 4, pg xml? fini 454. '14 41 :awk 4' ' fi X Pv- '4 as li wr' if I nf may ff, 'F f , 1' , , is -if 3' Akai. .5 if if dlfllvxiw 1 v f I X w ' f N Abi' t it F- y 4' B Q 1 I -k e -4. , if ni x f 7 X Winnerszf X K K ja Towers Grocery if R so G-'fo 53' A Q Distributors of the f of gn ,, A WLM? famous E E J N xr Xe Q . v N i- f ,GL T - - - U 0 . it f vga 1,5 5 Rlehelleu Brand , ' 'At' af r P if M Foods is if f X ' ' W-ALK-OYERS are winners --o-4ssb'o-- r f Q N 'F f U J' - Timmons WALK-OVER o . 4, OI' CVCTV OCCHSIOH. a r , 15 ii X 1f d 4 BOUT 1509 W lh Ph 23826 96 Monroe Ave. 1 -uf 4' Qff r wb 5 , cff'D 6N 1 if t Walter E. Miles Coal Company I 7 f It X Phone 72479 Q X 1 X ,t 17 Leonard, NE. K' K 1 R N 'NQJIIIIQI70 5 ,, x ' Q W ,,, N 'Y fm if , 1 if ' , 4 R ,g 75 -14 1' 'V 'Q if . V X f ef if 7 4: ' .',1Y 4 wr :riff 1' 4 4 it 'ft I Ki X , M f iff 'Zag 5 'Q ,it f Q f r if A43 A f' at '3 3 si B :iff A X A -l iff is-es.. t . , - ij, Q 'Ne 531 9- Vx 'ff Y Mark Brower thinks Breezy stories are about the weather. -OZ The teacher was giving a lesson on Snow.,' As we walk out on a cold winter day and look around, what do we see on every hand? she lnquired. Gloves,', answered the red-haired boy in the rear seat. 101 So WOULD WE I'd like to be a could-be IffI could not be an are, For a could-be is a may-be With some chance of touching par. I'd rather be a has-been Than I might-have-been by far, For a might-have been has never been, But the has-been was an arel TO, Was it very crowded in the subway?', Heavens, yes, even the gentlemen had to stand up. 101 L. Snyder: What do you suppose makes the trafiic lights turn red? f I l i VVaiter: How did you iind the steak, sir? Patron: By simply peering round that X sprig of parsley. K -0- J X She: Hhly father's a doctor, so I can be sick F A, for nothingf, I He: hIy father is a parson so I can be good .X for nothing. W X ao, 3 X I Mr. Palmer: And what is an ascus?', 'E Caye Behan: Don't ask us.'l if f .4 H r 4 She: How dare you swear before me? He: How did I know you wanted to swear? santa f -0, X N K I Bill: How do they get peanut butter, bright boy? Second Unpaid Debt: Simplel Feed the X C. Smith: Maybe they're blushing to think Cows peanuts' X how green they've just been. i -0- f I -Q1 F I Pupil: I'm doing my best to get ahead. Q 5, Mr. Kremble: Yes, you surely need one. , as Q lb ' ll :Zim f ' --i -0- A Q h Mr. Gregory: 'lGive me a definition of I , space, Mary. K ,Ben Fuller: .ivzkat S the most nervous Mary LI.: Space is where there is nothing. thms next 10 3 glrl' I can't explain it exactly, but I have it in my Jake Bradshaw: Me head all right, K , F PAGE 113 7 ii X - ef P I v X fin 1 X in E lf I X , X if in if yx 4 S lx j 1 l A t . t, ,, li, l x Q X The 4 'f . WELL GAS APPLIANCED 19 4 I Kk K , X . K Home K in it f Is the home of 1 Comfort ff Convenience ff Cleanliness 1 it 5' if 2 X i 5F as If h ma rseluiieiin bhd b th K B A P and priobalily cheapervv h Q f' G A S 6 55+ iii K 5 k. J, x E U K t Cooking Ranges f Water H - f L Emiguiiiiiiifiaiziisge L dy 4 fi Q in I +n1111n111n1K .1 Qnnlninnnnnn 1 N C , 1 if Q' 5, I9 Gas Company 4 X' Phone S-1331 47 Division Ave., N. i is f 2 W PAGE xx qc N 4 - e 2 if E i ,J f ly 1 I x ,t f I f 41 6 -FQAK4 I i I 4 Q45 Q X ik 7.1 Q P f af 4 2, 'F 1 1 I , A , ' f K A N ic if 1' ar ' Wie handle High Grade Goods at Popular Prices ll .,4ggg,.,. x Wall Taper and Tuul!! Q N Q ,G See Us About Decorating ' 1 J Q 2 Q K+ N RYSKAMP BROTHERS N A w 1 Clnforpomtedj I I, 531 Eastern Ave., Cor. Baxter St. Phone 8-6512 1 K 'K' H VlElL,lLlENlA'S PHARMACY X422 Robinson Road lx 'i i 4X GRAND Rf-wins, Miei-HGAN 3 t Phones 21196 K i , 4 91320 if f al K fl- te tt Jlffaie U1 Tour Tazrtner ,xseey fa 'lxllm 4 HE young man or Woman enter- f ing the business or professional X k Sui ,, World today can make no better K -, , beginning than to select a bank as his 52 li silent partner. fl f fi The bank will facilitate the keeping 1 ii, ,,,, 'F of his books by means of a checking x !,,,' :Q Ei account, Will give him substantial 4 1 financial aid when needed, will be his adviser in matters of investments, S A 9 and will provide him with valuable I i5.E:i i il ai' if :E fill ' d't ef en es. 4 Nv., KL girl!! H+: cre 1 r er c Nlake us your partner. Wie will do K , all this and more. To bring you suc- x i ' ' cess will be our task, to accomplish f F The Bankor-the Square our task will be our reward. i f Grand Rapids National Bank l3,ff5fQi,i2lS5 X . Nine Community Branches Resources over Twenty-one Million DC Tlx P E115 +4 is 2 I in EK If f + if T it af it ,Ja if A X. NA I. xi 4 4 l J 5 4 if , I x X ii Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed Frames Fitted t Sex C. N. SMITH, O. D. 553 Eastern Ave., S. E. For Afppoinimfnt Call 87155 Congratulations to the Class of 1929 Abe Sehefman S Sons Mothers Patronize STRONG'S BAKERY because we use Butter, Fresh Eggs and Sweet Milk in all our Baked Goods 1223 Bl.-XDISON :XVENUE TELEPHONE 33352 X X AL Found on a freshman's registration card: Name of parents: Papa and ftlamma. -O- Klr. Cook: Bill graduated last year, didn't he? lYhat's he working at now? Alumnus: l'Rare interyalsf, ,Ot Harry, Jr.: 'APapa, what is a bolt from the blue? Harry, Sr.: 'Z-X Yale lock, my boy, now don't bother papaf' -Oi johnny, to oil station attendant: Have you any of the gas that stops knocking? Attendant: Ulllhy, yes. johnny: Then give my girl a glassf' EO., Doctor: You cough easier this morning. Rus Atwater: ul ought tog llve been practicing all night, tot Your son must be the idol of the family. Yes, he has been idle for twenty-one years. LO, He: 'Al guess l'm just a little pebble in your life. She: VVell, l wish you were a little boulder. -Oi James Arlon: At last we have spring chicken. lYaiter: 'KHOW do you know it's spring chicken? J. A.: 'll just bit into one of the springs. PAGE 116 M I l . G X l!! f f 2 I R fit 5 gk x H' if .fg 1 'lex -4 L ll 4' 39 x XG 'lk ii 45 'R , k lj, 454 K wk 1 ni! 4' g , me Af x xt A 3' 1:4 za 3 5 ffl' ' J 11+ ,Q 2 ,g I' N X -I Q 4- K f 'fm x 'P ,f W wr K' Ice Cream ,iff 4- 4374. 4 4 Q, gk it P 4' i 74 5 3 'V I F 5 Q' r 5 in 16 I gr NV ,N ff' KK 5 , X 4' W' K 54- it 3. B 3 1+ x 1 5. Wig- -f 5144-1 'ul 4' is ul f l 4' A' U, 4 X ' in 'V' A All X' ' 4' W 113 DC Heth 81 Piuenger Thomson-Lockerby at HPLEASING PLUMBINGM COIIIPHIIY 4 f ff 1' H 52, :fi1Zz5H5s3fs'1f - fi' ig K 1119 Wea1thyS s E I3 f 4 1 f U b i ' Get Your I C -l 8, 4 DRUGS and ICE CREAM IQ k at Your .l A Community Drug U if I 3 k 1158 Wealthy 1444 Lake Drlve Q if J it Y if fr A-I DIQEAID gg as K DCLLY MADISUN 'ZAKIES 1' li DULLY MADISDN IZIQIED CAKES .ff , li R 4' +4 Sold by All Grocers K 1 X , A G' ef 3' wa KI 'F f P4 F I , if 1 3 'F as .folk L Tl 342' at -4 k 5 I X lk ,ik 'l ,Q if 1 5' I Q Q, ,U A 4 E . X ar - f E11 A 4 Yi If t Above All Else- RELIABILITY 'ol' I . N I tar ' ' ' ,K+ I Diszinczifve DRY GOODS ' HTL , t in 1146 WEALIHY ST., S. E. PHONE 21233 I be If A if Watch Our Wz'nd0wxf0r the scarf Word in good ,Qokzkzgfff X 4 k 4 FOOTWEA gl f i i 'f f . . 7? ' 'HQ Elliott-Yeiter-Schauweker Company Q li, d 1217 Madison - - 2 STORES - - 1156 Wealthy' A K t if f Wlndmlll Gardens 4 1 i illilllllmln SSI- 5 19iiW r:..ii:asaesseaeea: Seed Store i in E X GEO. DEN HARTOG p p OOO GARDEN, LAWN and .O FARM SEEDS 'l Fertilizers and Insecticides S 1 A Garden and Lawn Implements or Pei Birds, Goid Fish K , and Pet Supplies , W I 'I oy 1 4 fb 1505 Wealthy st., s. E. ,Y ' Nearly Opposite Old Wealthy Car Barns 4 A X 3C K 'RN J PAGE 119 4' 1' it ir- N 4 'F I I af. is if iffidi, .rbi If W A 'if' i' x 7 if x gc 4 X X 9 I .I L x I ., I'tl rather be in love with an army oflicer -IA. .. The last word in beverages . . . Carbolic I than to be a sailoris sweetheartf, acid. l Xie, too. I don't like salt with my mush. i i 'O' Y -O- I 1 K'YOu didn't happen to run across a red X 4- Suspicious Old lady: l'Vi'hat's that funny cow down the road a piece, said the farmer. ' SU-11209 that Sheepfw NO,H was the reply, but I'll bet I gave k Voolf' her heart failuref, K ' ' XVOOlI Hush, I'll bet it's half cOttOn.', 1 K K -0- io- K 7 f Mr. Tolandz i'Vl'hat would you call two UHOW is your boy Fred getting along at i planes that came together? Schoolpff ' I':lWYn B5 HA Smash UP-ii Ohl Heis half-back in the football team and all the way back in his studiesf, ii -O- N 'V OVERIILARD IN A BUTCI-IER SHOP X r I' 1 Step lively now, and get those orders Out, f' 4' I break the bones of Mrs. XVhite's chops, and The beginner Chopefullyjz DO you think put Mrs, Johnsonys ribs in the basket. l'll ever be able to do anything with my ' if Peter Pastoorz All right, just as soon as Volcefn K ' I have sawed Off Mrs. Brown's leg O'muttOn Mr. Showers: 'WVell, it might come in , X and weighed Mrs. Smith's liver. handy in ease of ship-wreck. 1 A H' FC if 5' CONSUL l X , 1 I 'i'we- It ' 5 Mac Naughton, Greenawalt 85 CO. , Conserfuatifve Investments I X GROUND FLOOR, MICHIGAN TRUST BUILDING I If It ix Phone 4791 Q I I it 'C X PAGE 120 AX I f If x I ! Y n l h X r PK fu L 78 .ni N sr f 1 n as if if K H . J 1 N The Extra Hood Protects is N 1 fp . . 1 L af This Better Milk 1 f 5 9 + Y ' X- 1 Insist on a hood which covers I the entire bottle top-the same X style hood tlz at is used on certzflecl f K' mills. Unless such a hood is I used your milk is not protected. X 4 4 is Phone 4621 to 1' I 1, I' start tomorrow NA -I l . 1 1 1 t f j T ' i 'K f' Ask Your Grocer or lX4eat Market for Grand Rapids Q + Creamery Company Products f Easily and Quickly Obtainable by All Grocers and hleat Nlarkets l X M .X -pq 41 X 1 1 1 t 1 Be Sure You Get This Better Mille j Served by Leading Hoiels, Restaurants arid Cafeterias A 4 Y f Y i I Grand Rapids Creamery Co. K 1 305 Scribner Avenue, N. W. . w DUDLEY E. VVATERS, Vice President FRED E. SCHORNSTIRIN V K Owner of .Maryland Farms Presizientand General lla g JOSEPH H. BREWER, Treasurer 4 Owner of Blythejfeld Far Q i at .. it-4. clerk 3, yi- .., ,ef W M , , f-X X N w ,, '5 .K P 5 Fi 'V K 21 'W' X 4, af 'flu' 6 i4 ff'g gs' , Q, as kr , in 4 A sk 9 it ' f it 1 f XJ? 1: f' fIPIElR1F4DlNll!L3? , ur:wu'uwv:s:-,743 M, Y 4 S , as T 53, M 4 Y K W ,Gif ,.. K ll XZ Fi JXMNX - X XX IQ -li f fx N WW A V' 3 dk WS-2 fi Rx ix DI, IW- H ' 1 11' X ',j QIQ9- fb mi U W '225Zss, 1 Q 3 J -.flap .h JJNXQ H' tl?-EL I --Y q 3 . in 161 be , QW 4 'Ai 31530450 XSD atv, +E -ING F , HARK, ' q 'T' -PAN 1 W 48 6 !1EI5g!EgSING A L, u A ' fx xx , l -A.. V- ID - .1 1,-4 Qx MORNQNC, is A 4 ff ,www W se 1 , ' ,W 3 it + H0555 A144 T QQYV 4' ir M X i g Q ' If wk V we M I it 'K +8 Q iff ,wa TM 6 - ,, , 5 15 , E1-f gf . S Silvia? 6 ' Cb X MW 3 Ny -f D' , X ' - 'XML .,f 'SA 'g I 2 's't'X Q ii 5 -9 'v ,f f V 4 . 1 'uv X F A. if if .DODGE i bg. N- 'B J K IT . 1 A J f If ig 4 'F Bk. f .3'KL vu 1-lf!-' ,L . ' , Fm ,W 11, 1 , 1 41 A 1 K Q Uv , , ,E K Q 1, K- U- 4 Aff ' 11 K S .K x t X BEAUTIFY and ENJOY THE,sU:,53g:','g::GS K.. I Come and look over our line of 1 5 Trellises Lawn Seats Bird Houses Bird Baths N I L fm Porch Boxes Pergolas Gazing Balls 5 A' ,S X Q 2, as 'XX W 1 ' 1, BRoWN2s SEED sToRE p Q 9-11 Ionia Avenue, near Fulton street N C A L L Q fl I Wallie G. Campbell Electric Co. 4 i Ki- Electric Wiring Electric Fixtures Q Q Electric Repairing V 1 F f Q' Zenith Radios Radio Repairing N 'FQ X 1505 Lake Drive, 5' E- P ONES: 21213 and 22168 if 'K J O H N G. O O M 1 Hardware, Sporting Goods, Paints and Glass .tt if ' 3 .iq ki 1 1 Household Necessities 5 49 QP , Q IV 'F 1 K fa 1 . 6 if Phone 64592 - : - - : - Eastern at Franklin F 1 f United Hardware Store K r P ,1 ,C , 'I -4- 4 1 1 - Q 1' 1 F5 gg 'KX X 3, at so E 4. 4 2 A 8 4-if fly' 5 ' X x. 1 'Q 4 lj X 9 F N 4' I f , Q . XX A t 1: if x ' X l B A 0 Q E FRESH FILMS X HEXRY KIERSMAX-1742 X l' Ave.. S lf Phone 52766 l 4, direct agents of N K, 1' B. 8: M. Transfer 15 4 . Eastman Kodak Co. , ' ' Local and Long Q K Distance Hauling 24-hour service on K if f ' Photo Wvork 'lr 19 , T. J. Haven Elec. Co. , K' K' General Repairing N ' and Fixtures e l K t 7 tj ' 1' f Q, a FLETCHERS 4 I. f, J Wholesale Prices Drug Sto I. e S I ,Q 'K 1 1118 xxmlrlmy sf., 5.15. Dial 23642 i ' 6 I V Q ' 1. X 1 , X ,.,, ,, M , ,q b,.,. Q X ' -i' V D ..1 .QgQg lfi1',?l Q ffeg 5 1 21 t ' if w Y' i r I W i X .ll JW?-YS .LJ 4- Rf ,r Q . .llwllll - f ?Qr+iEQ.l.' V'VV L if K l Jfemnmwwwnkmkl 4 b ,WL M a1ia'MeSERVlff 2 I 4 1 X 3 - fi fr. '4 'T W 1 'M I . . ,,.. M iw ' , 9. , . ei 3. 1.1, ' if.:-rf !1 fl i,V'. Qi J f -. .,.. , ' or of i ' Ai r ffwlf ' ' R 'lI k'll 'X ' i 1 l ' x . f ' f lt x P 1 4 xx F x ' 1 'R ir x 4 iv f it i' pg 4 f +P 4. l .6 FXE is f i i 41 ,sfo Film ' If .ut , K Q 'Y X 'lf .X A 9, fi n W s 7 'F Q X he Qrezduezte-- the box adds gift selection UUR narre on prestige to your f . from cur store, it represents quality and is a gift that will Qh last through the years. 1 , ERKNERSS Bring the store to your door. Your telephone and ours make this possible. was Phone Your Order Automatic 93469 W e Deliver 15 Q , Q l 1 A l . Explorer: Hjust to show you the advance of civilization-in the past. the Eskimos used to eat candles for dessert. Xlargaret VV.: UAnd now, I suppose, they eat electric light bulbs? ,OL Eugene robbed the bank yesterdayf, l'What! V, Yes, he got his first week's pay as assist- ant to the president. LO, Mr. Miller: '4VVhat famous man said, 'Don't give up the ship?' H Nl don't remember his name, but he must have been a Seotehmanf' Zo... Nliss Caldwell: VVhat's guerilla warfare? Hillis Rigterink: :'Dunnofbut it sounds like monkey business to rnefl .-OJ 'Which reminds us of absent-minded pro- fessor No. 1,589,645 who walked into the bakery and took the roll. ?O,. I ,Leo Kelly: 'glfunny thing about those ,,,. fifteen-cent sox. X crm side Kick: 'fWhat's the matter? lieo Kelly: Every time I walk, they run C. Vander Ploeg 'Y' 85 Sons 'Om Q GROCERIES AND DRY Goons I The lad was sent to college, 601 EASTERN AVhNUE And now Dad cries, 'H-Xlaekfu He spent a thousand dollars x gg And got a quarter-back. I . R ,., PAGE 125 71 fl l R '- X X I 'I is l 5 , X N f I, ni 5 f g r ny! f R F v 9 f N gk 1 in lf- 1 4 L I A m til I N! 2 , X 4 1' FN kr f x' 21 uf W , 1 1 13 , al gb 3 Congmtzzlatiom' to 3 X 4 W the fluff of twenzjf-nzhe 2 12 4' 6 1' rf A Walter M Nordella . i, at Q Real Estate BMQW XX 6 ig Q. , 'V , K as f F 'T f 4 2- ,, x . 3 v 1 3 j if 5. x .. W I' Eg J M , if 14 ax J, T 4 is if nk af ,L 2 T 'ar ,MW 1 fri' 4' 4 I , i K xii 4 ,if W 'Q 11 I K. Lg f' f 63: x is xt 4- ' x graduation Coryagey 1 f an VVhen you want X X L M FLOWERS OF QUALITY W X E -ORDER OE- I 1 . , ARTHUR E. CRABB 1 we K+ H 13 Jefferson Avenue S , Grand Rapids' Most Beautiful Flower Shop , x X Q Q' ff Bring U1 Your Second Hand Book.-A SMLTTER EOOR COMPANY E 4 ,Q , 513 L A SE 11, 1. Eas ern ve., . . I The House of Good Literature N Q 1 1, Egq- PRICES AND SELL AT T S i L K 4 E ? S . 4 4 4 Complzments 1 X M Q ati CAST MOTOR SALES Co. T4 'Y' N , The House ojf K i' 5 Friendly Ford Service u Q Lake Drive--Wealthy at Norwood K ' Q f A 5' .R x 4 1 L Q i K R, at X if ag- , L '1 514- -f NYJ 'za' 'F in-4 irlfxl' 1 if iff! L J. P X , i 1 a ' 'X a X' ' J , k fl ' The felicitous matrimonial hook-up is Nlr. Giddings: Who can tell me a thing j when a vegetarian marries a grass widow. of importance that didn't exist a hundred K A years ago? X Frank Crawford: Me, , -O- I 10 4 ' lYaiter: 4'Yes, sir. We are very up-to-date. , N I iq lx Everything here is Cooked by electricity. Man who fell Ihffmgh the ICC: Hey- X f X hir. Koepnick: I Wonder if vou would Canit You do something to help me? I f 1 give this steak another shock. i BYSfaUdC1'3 USUTC, ef, what do You Want K me to do? Shall I fetch you a towel? F J I , f -0- -O- . 'P ' X. H , ,H Aunt Penelope: What do you think of ' vllcci Arc You takmg art: these new-fangled husking-bees the young Norma: g'No, hc's taking me.' folks go on? Aunt Prudence: lVIy dear, positively N Y sliuckingln K at l F ik I f A i if X -0- N if A lst.: 1 can spot a Brooks' tie every timef, K I K 1 Znd.: L'Why don't you use a napkin She would have been the belle of the village Q B V, 0CC35l0l12lllY-M if someone had only tolled her. ff f v ix X X -C it xi 4-' STAND RD B ILDERS 1 1 as Q- B 'ld ' ul ers Supphes-Coal ,f 4: , 4, l i 1535 Kalamazoo Avenue Phone 33655 I in if PAGE 128 'K ff tf 4 as f if ur f 3 f 'A X ,fx X is A: fi. 2. in Bo it f y 7 ' N f sw . 'E+ 9' f K xffi C It '13 v f ,f ag -af , an 2 if if XS fqt Ryskamp Brees, , 4 , , f YL, , ii' va Markets in , 4' 4' ' X QQ Xe 4 tw 'af t f 3' 'W WHULr:sAL1E and RETAIL K if I i s ie- A 55+ tr 1 QQ X ix k M rt P5 44 Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats, X F' Sausages, etc. r , ' 4 , 5 1 Butter, Eggs, Oysters, Fish if , and Poultry i 'W X H 4 X 'N 1- .2 'f r 4 t rrggg X , A L viii! -f AXA Su! +44 ia IA yx 4 5 Q, ' - if sc A :N St 4 I UTTAWA HILLS HIGH A4 , JK I SOIIOOL STOIIIE fi' K IIGTOMIIMZ FYLOOTH F 4 16 4 I , 51: ' ' ' ' 5' STATIONERY Sp 'gi SCHOOL SUPPLIES z k Q Rf A A 3 if A 5 it OO by Ik if ,I f Sold to Students at Cost I 1 x cw be X A I ' 41 For T12 eff Conv enieme Q' I If 1 A F it I W I If X , ,I ON 4 i if gh ,f , -ya if is 4' 'H IRI w yJ minds kv fl' Q fu I up 3 v lf g f ,- me A., N N t. Q kt A KA at 'Ain K+ 19, X r 1 Ygatromke Our Q1 dv erizlferf i NN N in ' X 4 ij. H4 'l ,ii 4 ,gf it i We D0 and Sell Everything ,.,.o it lPlHlUT'UGRAll9HllC Artists Materials, School Art, A Kindergarten and General Educational Supplies 5 Picture Frames and Pictures 116 Monroe Avenue :zur and 2 Sllrellrilon ve., X. if 1 8+-Rik as 14 -ik' fi, Ns sf, in , 5 4 in Tlie Carnera Slliiop Stores, llnc. 3 A NE K Q 4 If 'R r ii at 4 Rn X PAGE 131 N it 4 jf. 451' i U swf. W 1 ru Hr' X lu f Q 'Q gf 0 wi' ik F 1 Q 2 l k J A K East Indian Dignity Cto American sentryj: 3 X h! l'm the Bey of Bleharajputh Sentryf' Sentry: 'CI don't care if you're the Gulf X of Rlexicog you can't pass here. Y' f THEATRE f -O' The Paramount Motion Pictures Company f needed a theme song for their production, 'KRedskin. jackie Frye contributed one entitled Redskin, Why Are You Blue? Best Wishes -0- to the Class 7 Bride: My husband had a hope chest, too, before we were married. Neighbor: For Mercy's sake! What was in it?,' ' Bride: A bushel of socks. He hoped someone would darn 'em. Coming-All the Best 1 'La TK aj 4 if E R ...0.. Daughter: Of course, l've seen your wedding ring, Mother, but what happened to your engagement ring? Mother: There was none, my dear. Ours was a one ring performance, io.. We wonder if some students take algebra because of its X appeal. ioT Very few women have any knowledge of parliamentary law.', You should hear my wife. She's been speaker of the house for the last twelve yearsf, ...O1 Since Science has discovered this serum we can save a great many people who for- merly dl6d.H x PAGE 132 x TALKING PICTURES 3 'it l: :t HEF N ER ART GALLERIES Metz Building 49 s e Etchings Fine Color Prints Paintings Peqfeet Framing Regilding and Restoring W:.:i - ,T Q ,Q I X, if ills fnfb 424 K. 02,5 VI 4. x R f I' qi K! 4 rx ju if si A fr , X it A f' x x 4 if X' ir, ig 4 i if To the Graduates ' g, X N 7 k 1 0f1929 X I Q' Xe is 4 May we offer our M Q, i QW Hearty Cojiiutulations qi k A B t W' h A qi ' I es LS es g. Q- 4 for u Successful Future X -1, mg U Q. VH t Pk 1 X . 4 H. R. TERRYBERRY C0.,1n,C. I 5 Michigan Trust Building if in GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN ' i 15 4 if K IK '4 ac af st 4 W PAGE 133 ' ,gh it X 3, ET X am Sf 4 if Q, af uwixif 'f W-fx if I V 1 '- g g E f? 'F aff ID ll R IM - 1 N' 'V 4 'Q W 4, , 'f 2 1 1 Tran 11 5 it ! 4 S' g Q ' 18, 'ix x 1 sc ic K X. M TW Y .4 4 4 e 4 H f i mini Allersma Greenhouses O00 Do You Eat to Live or Live to Eat Flow errfor Every Occasion cm Phone 2 15 34 Corner Benjamin and Dunham - BAKERY RELIABLE SERVICE PEARL BAKERY Specializing in Bread, Cakes and Pastry Pecan Rolls a Specialty AND Phone 82401 1106 Wealthy St. ..q..5,g,.. Regardlefs of Your Ama-ev' Continue to Patronize Cha? Lwz Taffy Food ENJOY GOOD HEALTH 971 CHERRY 970 LAKE DRIVE Going on to Seliool? SELECT your College carefully. Davenport- Mc Lachlan Institute offers advantages you cannot find elsewhere. Chartered as a Class A College, its courses are broader and its graduates get better positions. Its new build- ing offers surroundings distinctly educational. Sami for Catalog 'EOS' Davenport - Mc Laehlan Institute 1 Tl X f'x. lffli xi 1 ak , I Xe my .H vi 141714: 4:4 95 3 31 'V 1 W, K if- ar 35+ Q., yi l t P X 1' 51- it X af if it f 3 1 X Url vb 4 b ,R 'v WK li fs '1 a VFX! I 5 N ge: gn 1- 9 X P 1 - n Ax A .. t x :fc I H7 , Essex Z21fVf '?7 ' ZJQEEVMTV? K ai 5 ef It 1 1.1, f 2 , -Q V at ' fa -es -. sm lt 1 ei ,N If 1: ' :1- A 5 ,a SEI, f f I, Ejii 'Q' t 4 E 115 5. 2 ..: I9-' . 2 ' Z iii, gif! '2 iifp -,-:- 5 ' W' ' Ir 5 f ' lc l e r r ea ' 1 4' '41, was 'g 11,1 1. fs 4 'ttsilsfk 'fr Me. was ,4 1 - :fi lf rw' f 'iff 4 ,Q,,1gEf 'Es f rj r. ' .ag 1 2l.rahi:'l r X . 15 , '? ':,g E4 23 QI: 11 Mag i QE I lf 00 , i A 4 . 1.., mg - 1?fe 'a-1 A ' -:A af w.1ft.,,f's FQ' r cdad ra r 1 r Q' ygiigiilis r, -1 ,lj-fi, pn, ,Chr in , ,Ex 00 k t Ni. f N' A' 1, tl flgfffk AAQ, H ..g i AfA-A ,g g -elf: 0 g if' ' 7 Q, Q-2' ' 'A '-,,, V . f,5' A E ' The Directors, OHTICCFS The importance and and Emplgyeeg of The value of continued educa- Michigan Trust Company 'QOH Cannm be OVef?mPl1L' are happy On this Occasion srzed, and thls organ1Zat1on IS whole heartedly 1n accord to extend to members of with you in your epforts to ' a . . f Ottflwa H2115 1929 Class acqurre knowledge that Wrll i therr heartxest congratula- properly equip you to face t1ons. the problems of life. 4 0 0 X - Th Much 0' T t C 4' 4 Q 1 GLJUI TMS 0. 5 N 1 is X 53 Qc PACE 136 F I 3 WFT ,bil ff: KIA W f i 4' , Q gig I A A ff' 1-WITH Y .I RIGHT HAND gk 4i :' N Q f OF .ww y I 'W 2 ,Q 435, '15, ,ly Cyp .eilifeiia-9300! .14 'i' . ' 'I-illilii l' liful.-in 'l7:'ll!Iiil I l !lf!ll'!!l'5 l Z' ilii'-H5615 . 7' i f -- ff-ff Q if 4 I ,V C: K 'fi f r 'aw ? ?-1:15 177 il A 1 2:-:!-' .ff '- W 3 - 'FJ 1' C5 -? , .1-i-1 -., ':F- A F I F :F 7'-'-2475612 Chuck M.: Everyone has a peculiarity. Fred P.: 4'Oh, I don,t know! Chuck M.: I,ll bet you do. With what hand dfo you stir your coHee? Fred P.: My right hand of course.', Chuck M.: Well, thatis your peculiarityg most people stir theirs with a spoonf' ...Ol A conductor was helping a young lady to alight a car. If you would eat more yeast,', he said, Hyou would raise better. Well, sir, came the answer, if you would eat more yeast you would be better bred. MO, Mrs. Van Dyke stood on the corner of Monroe and Ottawa the other day, meditating which way to take. Her decision was shortly made by a big burly policeman who took her by the arm and escorted her across lNIonroe. When they had crossed Mrs. Van Dyke said, That was crossing deluxe! The policeman replied, Oh, no, ma'am, that was Monroe Avenue. ,Oi Jack W.: Say, how did you rate in the glee club try-out?H Chester S.: Made first bass on four bawls. 'R PAGE 137 ami 5' has jf I Heila: Cstanding by the Elcar, which has stopped dead, five miles from homej. Bill: What are you looking for? Heila: Nothing, why?', Bill: '!Well, you'll find it in the tank where the gas was. MO, Pauline C.: Hasn't that cow got a lovely coat? Helene IXI.: Yes, it's a jersey. Pauline C.: A Jersey? And I thought it was her skin! 101 I X 1 J 1 x 1 N i x 'K' Ralph D.: Spring in the air, Ellis. Fred E.: '!What?', Ralph D.: HI said, 'Spring in the air'! V I?,Fred E.: Why should I? Huh, why should 1 -OZ Maple rolls her hose. Whenever she goes out, the birdseye Maple. ..O.-.. EOINX 40 Flag? Muni on gf X A GALLO . ting? 'f 0 I' A Q xXy ll 6 'Nils I . 2 with Q Di ' fl c 9 - t X 2' ...,::1:j-1 ig' f3k . YD T I fi -VV 'T V K Z -Y is ,5?: K M Bob Wells: I can go forty miles on a gal- lon of gasoline. Lloyd Chapman: Yea, how's that? Bob: Light a match to it. A 3 1 f 5 JF arf +4 if if Y f r 'lr K lv f 4 vw ,bf if A K- n 9 F x ye Q 5 , w' 'r ff l t , V A tn' l A , 4 RX Q ,fd ' A A 3' ' K .. 'Ui, tt 4 Nj 'X K E, ffltl K f Qi A 53 tml .lf A Wmlfftltt .5 lf?3,5Eg5tfi'! lQ'?llT!r!iF llllllTT 1 Q 3 J l flllil A ls D A Mtfgafiiei o rift ' + ff ir GIQEETINGS 929 4 If ' B' 5 5 OUR best wishes go with F you. ln many of the problems of your future We can help x and We cordially invite you to share them with us. L A 35 1 ...,.A,.,,.. N jr! 'I r GRAND IQADIDS 1-DUST CU. i X GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN 5 A A x 3 W' V PAGE 138 lk 79 'f 44 if ' ll 4 N if if 'F 'Q' 49 ' 0 wg . 51: ge,,,5Kg 1 :wif 6 4 'lf if ai K Xi Ili f If k Q 5 Q D' ' 4, I A ix .. AL ,f X fx x fi xt 4 . 1 kg xx Students Noon Day Lunch ig 5 W ,,,, 1? e 1 'T 5 9, N DUTMERS DRUG STORE N ' w Corner Giddings and Hall I t if sf g a Oakdale Fuel 81 Materials Co. ff 1500 Kalamazoo Ave., S. E. 614- Eastern Ave., S. E. X 4 i 4 Phone 33054 Phone 21672 Q 2 Q L X xllllllllll ure: nxnllll 1. We Serve Ourselves Better by i 1 Serving You Best. A N 4 +R 'I f . 14 + 1 Cofzgmiulalzom to the Clam xx ,ix 7' M of IQZQ 4 i 3 i I .4 . f 'J A-0 x- 4' 4 4 The Spencer-Duffy, Inc. K S x H 1 P-we 139 x 1 4 K 1? 4 x A . J 1' H A 1 . X x t i 'S X L. Q- Q' FWQNA Q' 4 i 1 I if .ff KN I ,af -4 P , if P i f F K I if j Q ax in if F 9 X on 1st. friend: And then he gave me the awful- lest look. 2nd, friend: '41 wondered where you got it 77 ..O.. The dictionary was thrown into the cor- ner. Crushed against the wall, its last words were, Zootar1y, Zonane and Zymologyf' 10, lN'1any of the girls think they are getting dates when all they get are prunes. OA.. Kenneth B. fin history classjz Louis Xl had his head cut off by a small majority. O, SYNONYMS Folk OUR 'TEACHEICS NAMES Jackson ....... State Prison Mitchell Highest peak east of the Rockies Showers ......... April Mayrose . Flowers Brown . . John Brown Hutt . . . . Cabin Plumb . . . . Fruit Matheson . Automobile Co. Miller . . . Moth True . Good principles Plag . . . . Pestilence Palmer . . Penmanship Burns . . . . Fire Giddings . Avenue Boss . . . . Chief Loew . . . Valleys Ryckman . The right man Cook . . . Book Lewis . . Saint Louis Van Dyke . . . Cigars Air. Krernble . Tremble P V I G RAL -. H X C omplimenff qf THELEN LUMBER COMPANY 1534 KALAMAZOO Avis., S. E. 'x 4 pl EAST END BAKERY Fresh Baked Goods Daily From Our Own Ovens Special Prices to Clubs 1510 Wealthy Phone 83345 W 1454 i W e Corzgratulafe tlze Seniorr on their Qraa'uatz'0rz GYO 4' Dress Well and Succeedl' AST TYLE ND HOP JOHN W. NIEMEYER Corrfct Men'5 Wear 1112 WEALTHY ST. GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN Xi f W dr I il X it AGE 140 F ff if if if fab ax 1 YK . -.L k 8 i l H I it i . . , K Y i 8, '. f v , Q X ga: A 4 3 if k kt 5 V X X' fe Young Mana Q 4 ' 1 ft S 'FQ we 1 1 H t ABITS are the foundation of K life. lf you would in the later Q 'K' years have ease and comfort, then cultivate the habit of thrift While you are still young. 444. Y Y Q Q, 1' I X I ' A Business Men are looking for young 1. men who have formed this habit and t Q know how to conduct their personal A -K affairs at a profit and have a growing Q i bank account. 4 1 Let this friendly bank be your silent N f K a partner. We are ready at all times t r to help your success. 3 I N ' 'V 1 'Y 7 . . w' 5. Grand Rapids Savings Banlk get 4 4 The Bank Where You Feel at Home I6 CONVENIENT OFFICES X A at x K 'Y' if X N f nifty so Q ai, it if X Q ,, v if 3 ,f 5 , ,,, if qvilfic if ga-,in my 'V 4 iN NX x. W Q ummm 'f ,P-fs, - 'Y' Q i9 vh' K 'V 5345, .R-' 7 A. 38 vw ai knlflvi ' 9 ' if ' 'ip N 42 A- E ' 2 ff Ep af N 14 4 CZ!! Us for Your 7 1 'FQ a gk t is ke R My 4 Eg EE. GARDEN -f,,,,.E 'lk V? Q PORTRAITS N if Q N , 4 'Y iw R 3 QE mf ' P5 3 X I ' 1 Ai N 'J LE Clear-Dykhuim 'F .E f' HClass Photograplzerll 4 4 FOR APPOINTMENT RESIDENCE STUDEO K Phone 68275 61-I C resce nt St.. B. E. 4 75 x N K if Q it +iXYXQx9,NT X X F T, K it 4 In 'I' X X1 f Q '1 '41 if y x Q, fx X' A 4 4. Q . i x tl , X r , K 0 0 4 f , Whlte Engraving Cog 19 A k 'jk 136 Division Avenue, N. ,I if 1 Wt' aa sf f 'Ap I 1: ' I Q X 5, Ti - 4 5 Smfz'072er.y cJfC2znufac'fzn'ea'j9r X' Social and Commercial Use Y : K A t 4 an if in Lt' 6-1 Wedding Announcements and Invitations X4 Commencement Invitations out Specialty if ,Q ,Q f F 1 W so F3 t 'I' an ia , if 11 4 nf 1' 4 lr in gk if 5' lx t .ftt X 1 K 'fn ,fhfz 1- :wif 1 4 I I ai K X ,bfi fl' ,. - K. f I gr f ,W up 4' X 0 P. . '.J'p D K fy if AL ff' 1 - '32 ,Aw Mr. Ludwick Cwhen called upon to speak ' at an assemblyj: I don't know exactly what K ' s Q r to say. I left my notes in my oflicef' I Mx- Voice in the audience: He,s just like a I I , plumber, isn't he? Q ..x f X -.H-uf' WOW ra Say, girlie, are you very fast? , l I I l uusten, big boy, Isve had three track men HNNIrs. Holmhes Cduring cgisixssikon ogdwriteisjz J X after me for Over a monthly, ame anot er writer o s etc es, ouis. X, X Louis S.: John Held, Jr. H -O- .-O.. l She: My hubby does so enjoy smoking in f his den. Has your husband a den? Leslie Wells: What's the matter, Rex? Other She: No, he growls all over the Rex K.: Aw, it's the eternal triangle house. again. Me, my studies, and my ma. M -0- -O- X i l 4 Faye I-Ioek: I'm very fond of Kipling. I , i l , hll. lyllpslgnzk ulwflever kippled. Is it any- Eg gf 6 . t ing 1 e oc ey. ? . WO' id if Dx W x He: I am looking for some hnancial X l succor. t She: Well, it Won't be me. Bill Walker: Dad, I won the loving cupll' if Mr. Walker: You young scoundrel, is that what I send YOu to school for? K M -aw -O- lX'Ir. Vander Ploeg Cafter having told his pupils several times to take their placesj: mrake Your Sears, must I talk French to YOUFH Doris W.: Did she inherit her beauty? u G0fd0T1 Vaflf NaW,ta1k Dutchlu Catherine B.: Sure, her dad left her a I drug storc.', -O.. -o- 1 I -r' N X X 3: -R ' Guide: This is a skyscraper. is K I . I . X X K1 ' , Fannie: 'lOh, I'd love to see one work. if S '. ' Y F -f - --'W if T, t 2 ew- HQ da. we r 1 Ferdinand BGYHC ffumllllg down the hallli Anne: Wheel I wonder how fast we're K , Oh, Isabelle, Isabelle! goingyf ' Monroe Conklin: Hlsabeue Whoin Ruth Qbrightlyj: Let's ask the motorcycle- Fep: Is a bell necessary on a bicycle? cop. K 4 f-ef PAGE 145 X Wx li K. 'Si fi lf i 1 srl.. fern f if Q ,gg r fn 4 X 9 K 5 l Q A 7 . A -A+ fb 1' W A A 1 N . . f Good Coal ew is We Time-5 ll 0 's e S lfngiffflfi Suiifffl lffglaiifffff , G. who care also specialize in repairing and rf- Q 0 T F firing of all kinds. fx 4 l ' E di SOD Tai lofi ng C O' I H f 1505 Lake Drive, S- E- T A Phone 21213 Auto Deliverv K f ff u. nnin Q Complzknezzfr fa Offafwa 'i k hp J Hillf Hzgfr School X 5 'X we 4 Q I k Wholesale and Retail WE A I M T O P LE A S E j A b qs A Franklin F'ii'555ZLff' We 1 H' 1 X Fugl CQ, 52222 Clyde L. Draper, Bar-bw 4 ff 4 L A. WM. HONECKER, Mgr. 1133 Wealthy Street Q- Where the Fan Beginsw Ladies, Attention! xr 1 t L A Yf Reduce where you Want K Q Ggelbell S BTUXNH to. NO harmful drugs ' or violent exercising 5 I Golf Supplies UCCGSSQTY- rgglgiillgigsiglzgllllsiiligiment Treatments 5510.00 a month. k FiSl1if1g Tackle We Specialize in all Branfhfr Sweaters of Beauty Culture H f i F OOO u I, 'il EAST END BEAUTY -yi R Next to the G R SSHOPEVE I i . . torage an an B dg. 'R Yo MQ Cn An Phone 23163 E 2 , x X A DC N PA 146 .. X V 'I' 4 2 , 5 xo A, ,, is JK fain .ABU an- 1f 4 , K f 'ia at f Q ,P 1 J 1 ni X inf ff r Congratulations and Best Wishes to the x Class of 1929 ti B'l Th 1 tII10I'C 621116 + X- 963 Cherry-Near Diamond x Come and Get Acquainted See the Best Pictures X SOME MORE TEST PAPERS F The subjects have a right to partition the King. The population of New England is too dry f for farming. A vacumn is a large empty space Where the Pope livesf, L -0- 'f lX4r. Vander Ploeg: There is nothing that Q won't freezef' Nlary: How about hot water?', QC IKE PARSONS 308 jefferson Avenue, S. E. Office Phone: 89033 , l, Ottawanian News Reporter: HI understand that you began life as a newsboyfi hflr. Nleyeringz Someone has been fooling you. I started as an infant. ,O..... The next person who interrupts the pro- ceedings will be Sent home,', declared the judge. Hurrahl yelled the prisoner 10, lNIiss Boss: Is 'trousers' singular or plural?,' Don Green: I think it'S singular at the top and plural at the bottom. Ada is as large as Grand Rapidsfl You're crazylu Well, it isn't all built up yet. .-01. Helen Trick: Have you read :PreckleS'?', Kathryn: Nope, mine are dark brown. ,OL Miss Caldwell: 4'Can you name a city in Alaska? Catherine Voulet: No7m. Nliss Caldwell: Correct, CHAS. H. PARSONS 146 Eastern Avenue, N. E. Residence Phone: 92740 I. K. Parsons E5 Son Contmttorf and Builtfers 308 Jeliferson Avenue, S. E. if 'C if I GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN I xg xt Bef' ,tpxivi AW. is PAGE 147 5 .N 34- xx 'S R Xa 1 I 6 r I i f, 41 viii' l ia, i' 'I' 16 .-in if I 4 7 I i if rugs 1 - p 1 N ,Ht ,R if J Q 9 4 I ' 15 A hz IN D E X P f at PAGE Advertisements . . . 107 Junior Forum . . . if 'X All Girls' Banquet . . 90 Junior High Students l A Arista Club . . . 83 Kapi Club . . . K Autographs . 149-150 Legend Stall . . . Baby Pictures . . . 142 Les Amateurs Francais I K Band ...... . 88 Miscellaneous Snaps . i , Boys' Athletics Snaps . . 98 Musi Club . . . Boys' Basketball . . . 99 Ninth Grade Chorus . , Boys' Glee Club . . . 86 N. T. C. . . . . b 6 Chemphybio Club . . 72 Orchestra . . , Class History . . . . 36 Ottawanian . . ' 7 5 K Class Oration . . 37 Parthenon Club . . Q 1 f Class Poem . . 44 Rosamunde . ,I l Class Prophesy . . 39 R. O. T. C. . D Class Song . . 45 Scenes . . . I X Class wan ..., . 43 School Calendar . f -' Q Commercial Club . . 73 School Song . . 5 I Contents . . . 4 Senior Committees . ' Q Cordelier Club . . 82 Senior Officers . . k Dedication . . 3 Senior Play Cast . . i I 1 Dramatics Club . . . 74 Senior Scandals . 1 t Faculty Pictures . . 13 Senior Snaps . . . Faculty Snaps . . 18 Senior Write-ups . . , k Football . . . . 97 Session Room 104 . I Foreword .i .... . 2 Session Room 212 . 1 Girls' Athletic Association . 69 Session Room 208 . . Girls' Athletic hleet . . . 104 Session Room 209 . Girls' Athletics . . . 105 Session Room 206 . x Girls' Athletic Snaps . 106 Session Room 319 . Girls' Basketball . . . 103 S. T. E.C. Club , Girls' Glee Club . . . 85 Student Council . . Golf ..... . 102 Tennis . . . ' -1 Hi-Y ...... . 68 Track .... ac. Home Economics Club . . 75 UI1dC1'Cl2SS Snaps . Honor Students . . . . 22 Watch Club . . Fw K V' PAGE 148 fr ! 4 f if , 1- 1 '+R ...77 IT lj 3 PAGE . . 67 S 7-60 . 79 'i .63 . .nt ' . 94 . 78 . 84 .80 W . 87 . 65 . 76 . 91 . 70 5 ., 89 9 . 92 . 21 . 21 . 46 X . 4849 . 47 . 25 . 50 . 51, . 52- . 55 . 54 . 55 . 81 . 66 . . 102 nf . 101 56 and 134 1, 1 1? if riff S 4F .J-M 1- Q74 in 9' 2 14 M-qlK ',' ' if, X Q X I 8' A ff 1' If K if Af' 4 11' ' wM4!'g,,Qnf' ,I 1 ulogrhpij ' xl L L1Q +.4J . ,f , 5 KMQHX 9 t QQ Q MW 1056 J Q JUL. ,. 0 5 'TVA , My fP dm 'A r- ' ti R 8 ii ii' f 1 i 7 if ZWV-V nv 'ff 4 X M f X, - Q. ' , , r if if -3 'Q .R Q2 5 in -5? 3 W f 1 dB:. ,K,D ' 'Nm J . WW i X in 41 'tbgggyg X ' I A pT7! 29' 'Y' f - ' K X 5 if 575-N,,A,,:3j,-,,?7'm'i' I . l! A + 3 ,f' I X ,MI QV' N , . 'v-:K x X NQff5V QX i I 4 i K fy M 5 ' . K , . :bam . -Y' if All-Ze Q XX, jx ' Q ' ALA, 'H' In 1 5 ' Y 1345 !MQw 444' i A - . J V ' . 1 Q5 3 T , J 'A '- . 3 A wx X ggi ' f 7 ? . , Qi ,L ' W Us N . x .M V x . X Lf' X P 1 1 D, . ' KR dj 5 WJ .A 4 X J A,V, f gf ' , ' ji' ' 0 w 4 A, f 1 :Vw I P . 4' 0 ' X E , L ,f , f ff ' Y N x if ,. I : QN Q E J I fa ,ZW 'Q-1 fwf ' 9 4 ,N In u. , . gif H ix F In xl., U i YJ? if 4 '2 f 'iff if UP ,. xy gg 9 2 X NX -, Y 'L 1 ,J X54 f . X! ,Q Q it X J ,ff E ii? 1 X , A-f.,'+-vf.d4.f N , X AR - .


Suggestions in the Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) collection:

Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Ottawa Hills High School - Legend Yearbook (Grand Rapids, MI) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934


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