Abilene High School - Orange and Brown Yearbook (Abilene, KS)

 - Class of 1933

Page 33 of 34

 

Abilene High School - Orange and Brown Yearbook (Abilene, KS) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 33 of 34
Page 33 of 34



Abilene High School - Orange and Brown Yearbook (Abilene, KS) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 32
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Abilene High School - Orange and Brown Yearbook (Abilene, KS) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 34
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Page 33 text:

Charley Johnson and Richard Funk leave for Miss Giles their College Humors and hope she'll make 'ein all laugh next year. Alfred McKanna leaves his true devotion for Bernadell to Claude XVebb and hopes he'll treat her kindlly, Dwight Hesselbarth and Charles Hensley leave :1 vacant space for Clarence Rutz. John Allen bequeaths part of his length to Dwight Pick- erell. Blanche Bowersox and Janice Monroe will their melo- dious voices to Ruth Mary Nelson and Eileen Jones. Flossie Beck wills her i'diamond to Hazel Huston. Iona May Morrison leaves Jeanne to finish out her dancing contract. Mary Forster, Wilma Coulson, Elizabeth Hargreaves. Ruth Howie, Marie Kugler, W'ilma Phillips. Cordelia Stroda, Margaret Tinkler. and Hermine VVili. leave their bicycles to all the girls who have to walk home. Ralph Hinkle, Charles Chaves, Claude Mangel, and Rob-- ert Cananova, leave their it to the poor freshman to de- velop. Howard Myers wills his mania for regular student coun- cil meetings to Joe Bonfield, George Buhler leaves his weakness for candy bars in study hall to Oliver Hartenstein, Lucile Jordan and Gladys Theil bequeath their boy friends to Bernice Berger a11d Burga Yorgenson. Rexford Phelps bequeaths his journalism grades to Mr. Rock to distribute next year. Marion Atnip wills her VVesleyan dates to Fern Sampson. Phyllis Seaton leaves the management of Cleobelle to Bob YVils0n. XVillmith Scott leaves her soprano voice to be copied by Eileen Jones. Sam Long wills his density in psychology to VVillard Bethe. Paul Hopkins leaves his love letter writing ability to Mary. ' Alvin Johnson can't leave anything as he needs all of it next year, Allen Nottorf leaves his debate question to Donald Die- ter. Margaret Tinkler leaves the twins to follow in her foot- steps. Kermit Monroe. Clifford Daugherty, Doster Chase, and Vern Comstock leave their naps i11 study hall to Bob Brooks. Bernadine Steele wills her sewing ability to Bernadelle. Pearl Bangerter bequeaths her brown eyes to Vivian Martin. Lester WVisby leaves his good humor to his brother. Albert Martin, Arthur Bloyd, Kenneth Marshall, Les- ter Moore, Cleason Phillips, Loren Iloffman, Kenneth Jen- sen, a11d Harold Kelley leave their profound silence to Robert Froelich. Nadine Wells wills l1er alto voice to Edna Flanagan. Percy Keller leaves the contents of his cramium to the cemetery. Alice liees wills her history grades to Francis Kauff- man. Lucile Murphy. Allene Murphy, and Marjorie Eggleston will their fun with lflndy to Adah llaniilton and Stelouise llockensmith, Max Beamer. Virgil Bennett. Richard McAdams, and France XVilson bequeatli several first inortgaged parking spaces to the faculty, Ruth Fengel wills her various interests in Chapman, Enterprise, and Manhattan to Ruth llurd. Mary Fair, La Vern Beadlc, and Florence Boughner be- queath their peroxide bottle to Lois Coulson. Ellen Krisher. Dorothy Hout, Alzina Howard, and Na- dine. Holmes leave Miss .Pinson several well dilapidated typewriters. John Graff leaves his base viol to Mr. George to dis- pose of as he wishes. .lane Case, Lennice Jean Baer, Lois XVelsh, and Vvlliltllll Green will their acting ability to Stephen Hollenback, Mil- dred Yancey and Hazel XVeber. A Frances Switzer bequeaths her di-awl to Ila Scheu- fele. Frances Blaesi Ellld Reynold Coffenberger leave their dancing steps to Ivan Schiller and Alfred Makins. Nelva Pepper and Beulah Jones leave Orville Schwen- ilener to walk the halls alone. Max Ferguson leaves his Hmillion dollar smile to Mar- vin Tinkler so we can tell them apart, Junior McNall a11d Gilbert Burchard will their paper routes to Robert Buhrer and John Ayers, Marvin Bogart, Frances and NVayne XVoolverton be- queath their pool cues to Herbert Meuli, Arthur Nichols and Bill Shearer. Lois Schrader leaves her affections for Percy Keller to Hliotw Buchanan. In Witness hereof. we have hereunto subscribed our of- ficial signaturcs and our seal, this twenty-sixth day of May in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and thirty-three. SENIOR CLASS OF 1933. Signed- XVilliam Gragg, President. Josie Conn, Recorder. XVitnessed by- The Other 110 of Us. As a Lasting- Memorial to JUNIOR HABERMAN Our beloved classmate, a devoted and true friend of all who knew hinx. A willing worker. equal to all tasks and duties placed in his charge. A good sport, cheerful, whether on the winning or los- ing side. A promising young journalist. active in both reporting tlllfi advertising work. An interested and talented member of the scl1ool's art department, A youth, whom the entire community could value and with pride claim as its own. We dedicate this page of his and our school annual. '

Page 32 text:

also had a familiar ring, how impossible to forget Blanche Bowersox's voice-and what was that? Oh yes--Mon- sieur S. Long, grand opera favorite, in his Jacksonian hour, rendering Charles Hensley's latest hit, Silas, the Soup Sipper's Son. Moving at this terrific speed there was of necessity a look out suspended from the plane to tell the pilot when we had arrived, Lifting his head over the side I recognized Allen Nottorf who informed me that Mrs. Nottorf qliil- lian SeelyJ was quite well. We were dropped off at the front door of the ranch and were met by the hostesses, Dorothy Hout. Jane Keel, and the little French maid, Ellen Krisher, who sent us out on our evening's tour. The guide explained the presence of Jane, not verbally, but you see he was XVayne Mellor. What a beautiful place to forget the hum-drum of city life. There silhouetted against the sky was the head ranchman. VVhat a resemblance-ah yes-surely that was France Wilson. And another solitary rider--Chain ley Johnson. It looked as though he was talking to him- self but they told us he was only reciting poetry to the appreciative cattle. , Just 20 years ago tonight we were graduated-and now-WVilliam Gragg is with the circus. He and his performers, the Hawaiian dancers, Alzina Howard, Al- berta Brooks, Glenna Sexton, Velma Hoover, Phyllis Sea- ton and Cordelia Stroda run close competition with the other bally-hooer, W'illiam Green, His specialty is The Harmony Six, Loren Hoffman, Opal Medley, Herman Bath, Wilma Philips, Kenneth Marshall, and Elizabeth Hargreaves. Lenniee J. Baer and Alden Carney were affiliated wi.th the trapeze department, but Jean fell and now Alden takes consolation in the auto races, fquite antiqueb, but he and Ralph Hinkle can't decide which is the world champion for concentrated autos. Nadine Holmes is still trying to induce Alden to come back to the big top. Marie Kugler and Max Furgeson, happily wedded, supervise the concessions. But we must go on to the cave of the mentally derang- ed man, Percy Keller, who, because he could not live with tl1e dead, came here after killing Lois Schrader for 11ot returning his affection. WVhen he saw a few of his fellow classmates, he began to ramble, and soon his words be- came coherent. Loren Guthals is in the east, the most sought after crooner in the world fthe only one leftj. Lois WVelsh is there also-her purpose quite evident. XVillmith Scott is on the western coast and when Lore11 and she clashed-oh my! Lester Moore is employed as head sampler for the G. Rawalt Chewing Gum Works, Nadine VVells is in charge of the exchequer both for the company and George, Only a few are left in Abilene. Snid and Georgia are there raising Johnny-Jump-Ups. Wilma Coulson still undertakes many things while Donald Fink is janitor of the high school. Ethel Hensley operates the singing alarm of the school, Robert Casanova, Bruce Pucket, and Vern Comstock hang around up there. Graduates? Yes. but with a sense of unfamiliarity elsewhere. Marjorie Eggleston is a very efficient newspaper wom- an now. Editor, proof-reader, reporter and type-setter of UThe Abilene Aimless Adventurer. Her only assistant is 'Fhaine Engle, who occasionally has the rare fortune of getting an advertisement. Gilbert Burchard and Junior McNall assist with the circulation which includes half of H-Abilene, The story of the week had the break of the sensational divorce case of Virgil Bennett and Ilernadine Steele. It has been appealed from Reno to Abilene. A special re- porter, Rexford Phelps, was hired for this important story but because the radio operator of the event, Max Beamer, was too lazy to tur11 the switch on, and Rex refused to go to the court house the story was five days late. John Allen, Ellen Schwendener, and Florence Boughner oper- ate the eat shop in the court house, Little profit is made, they say, but each is a living example of what good food will do. Ruth Fengel is teaching typing in Enterprise and also conducting a research as to what type of children are mentally superior. She has almost decided in favor of red-heads. Mary Fair also teaches there, that is, when she thinks about it enough to come. Francis Blaesi, M. D,, is the most prominent of the many physicians the town boasts of, and Ruth Howie is his most able aid. Nelva Pepper and Beulah Jones are in the -theatrical business but have many difficulties with their orchestras because Lucile Jordan is still snatching saxaphone play- ers-it matters not the age. Kermit Monroe was in charge of the electrical part but he became so absorbed in watching Harold Kelley flirting with the cello artist that he went the way of all good electricians-up in smoke. The main attraction though, is Piccolo Lester Schraderg he really packs them in. Now to Chicago-Cleason Phillips and Pretty Boy Paul Picking are the most feared gangsters now. Ward Robertson has his pipe-testing laboratory there alsog he insists that all pipes be tested by smoking them himself. Reynold Goffenberger is a Bolshevik now, for Virginia Schwendener turned him down, Flossie Beck and her school sweetheart have made a match of it and own the adjoining ranch. Incidentally, she has made a hobby of collecting diamonds. Pearl Bangerter is employed just to watch her great collection. Mary Forster is also out here searching ever for her tall boy friend that made a getaway, Poor Mary! And now there was someone else' in the class- Squirt Myers, but my memory-my memory--why can't I re- member? He was surely something important-or was he? By VIRGINIA EMIG A Class Will E, THE CLASS of Nineteen Hundred and Thirty- three, sound of mind but deplete of finance, do will, leave, bequeath, and give away the follow- i11g items to the various deserving individuals or group of individuals: To the Juniors we leave Endy's History Quizzes on ev- ery Friday. To the Sophomores we leave our good will and the right to shoot paper wads, To the Freshmen we leave our paddles and the right to use them next year during Hell Week. To the Janitors we leave our dusty foot prints to be wiped away and tons upon tons of gum wrappers to be burned. ' Bill William Green leaves his debating ability to Hazel Huston. Bill Gragg beqneatlis his polished voice to LeRoy An- derson. Noble Frey wills his skunk traps to Donald Duckwall, and hopes he w0n't abuse them. Herman Bath leaves his way with the women to .Don- ald Deiter. ' Virginia Emig, Thaine Engle, Donald Fink, Ethel Hens- ley, Georgia Medley. and John Snider can't leave any- thing but love to Allene Miller, LeRoy Franklin. Dwight Hopkins, Aulene Milham, Dean Issitt, and Joy McMillan. Lola Stark and Glenna Sexton leave their grape fruit diet to Isabelle Lippincott. ' Loren Guthals leaves his football strategy and Renee to Benedict Henderson. Richard Funk leaves his dainty proportions to Gilbert Buhrer. Virginia Schwendener, Opal Medley. and Alberta Brooks bequeath their ability on the high hurdles to Edith Mae Sutton and Jackie Machen. Arlene Cheney and Eileen Schwendener leave their vim and vitality to Bump Stevens, Alden Carney and Lillian Scely bequeath a bottle of peroxide and a bottle of raspberry coloring to Joan Hogan, Jane Keel bequeaths a wrecked piano to Dorothy Miller.

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