Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) - Class of 1933 Page 1 of 268
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Wi iMuM rtJ ' - - ' ■• 1 C - il l tWe i!lf --r c=b. iP , ::ti.. ir oZ M -t- W- 0 1 l ' T MIC Beacon I he l= unn GPS Poised and balanced ape the runners. ovvift as on appow W nen Ine opcIigp lets it llij I pom a well-uent bow. Long and lleetinq is Iheip stride As past us tbei) tlow, Oide bij side, rilled with the qlorious joq ot ettopt And the pride (Jt speed ! l-coi) L oleman © R. Tait McKcnzie. Ctniricsy l.ippincott i ' .u. I he JoL) of Lltort R. Tait McKcnzie, R. C. A. REACON ) Dedicated o SPORTS ALL TIMES AND J ALL CLIMES 3 3 1 ISSUED THE STUDENTS or CLEVELAND HIGH SCHOOL ST LOUIS MISSOURI FOREWORD X HE spirit of youth finds spontaneous expression m games and sports of many kinds. In tKe belief tKat these activities are wortny of rec- ognition and encouragement because of tbeir contribution to general well-being and to the joy of living, the theme of Sports has been chosen for this number of The Beacon. OOTEKfff Page Prose 11 Verse 55 School Life 63 Athletics 97 January 33 143 June 33 167 Hobbies 209 Advertisers 231 L-) H I ■I V fe V I i • P IK tl «ii E ) -a o o O IN THE GOOD OLD WINTERTIME HEN winter comes, it brings in its train a number of sports which assure it a welcome from many people who otherwise would be resentful of ice and snow. Much as the boys and girls may regret the passing of tennis and track, and much as the football players bewail the loss of the cool, crisp, autumnal days and the bounding pigskin, still they must admit that pastimes of winter have their fascinations. The rivers and lakes and streams, erstwhile the haunts of swimmers and boatmen, now are covered with glistening ice, over which is heard the click of speeding skates and the merry, lilting laughter of the skaters. Skis are brought forth from dusky closets so that their hardy owners can again defy the laws of gravity and shame the swooping eagle. And who that has ever experienced the thrill of tobogganing can forget it? The long, narrow, curving slide, the breath-taking speed, the roar of the wind and the white glitter of the snow — these are worth living for! Then, too. for the more timid soul, there is the sleigh-ride, with its jingles and creaks and jolly songs. And we must not forget the inevitable snowball fight, in which, what with the flying missiles, the shouts of the splattered warriors, the shrill cries of the fallen, and the brutal, merciless face-washings, all the thrills of combat are experienced. Those who love hiking are never sorry that winter has come. Then it is that all nature is transformed into a veritable fairyland. There is an un- earthly beauty about the woods in winter that is indescribable. The icicles fringing the stark branches, and the ice-bound, silent brook, the white, gleam- ing fields broken by dark, snow-burdened fences, the lowering gray of the winter sky and the uncanny stillness that pervades the land. — who would prefer the prettiness of summer to the sombre loveliness of scenes such as these? And so, when winter reluctantly leaves us, there are those who for these reasons do not begrudge it a parting sigh as they lay away their skates and skis and sleds and boots until it shall again greet us with its cloudy breath and challenge us with its frigid, frowning face. William Reiley. d im Page Thirteen CO o a; CO Si ICE SKATING d np] s Girls ' Tandem. Fairgrounds Park OSY-CHEEKED youths glide over the ice in ecstasy. The wind bellowing fiercely about them hurls snowflakes against their beaming faces. The stinging sensation of the snow is soon for- gotten amidst the laughter and good cheer of the merry crowd. The clicking of skates on the hard, firm ice can be heard above the din. Every now and then dashing figures clad in bright woolens dart in and out among the multitude. Others appear pathetically helpless as they try to stay upright and occasionally a panic-stricken skater, feeling the sensation of falling, grabs someone else and down both go together. A large bonfire blazing brightly against the dark, leaden sky attracts many skaters. Large logs are heaped upon the glowing embers, until soon the crackling and spitting partially drown out the talk. The air is filled with a delicious odor of pine and cedar. Distant hills form a faint horizon so that the radiant moon appears even more enchanting as it rises from behind the hills. Snow-laden clouds often obscure the entire surface of the moon, leaving the fire as the only source of light. Even the genial warmth of the fire cannot long entice the skaters from the joys of smooth, gliding motion over the crystal ice. and soon they are off again, singly or in pairs, to resume their skating. Grace Brigham. 1 1 Page Filtcen d Fighting for the Puck Canada Versus the United States in the Winter Olympics ICE HOCKEY I  I ' I ' HE origin of the game of hockey is obscure. The fighting M -■- Romans enjoyed a pecuhar game that was most hkely the pre- J j cursor of hockey. The old original Scotch shinty was played • .. — on hard sandy beaches with two to three hundred players on — _ each side. I ' heir equipment for the game consisted of heavy war-like clubs used as shinty sticks and a small rock served their purpose for a puck. The players would try to send the puck past a certain line or boundary. The side succeeding in doing so was winner of the game. You probably can imagine the number of casualties in a game of this kind with so many players on each side. The first developments of modern hockey probably were in Canada about 1880. To a few colleges in Canada the game of hockey owes its present state, on this side of the Atlantic. These colleges organized teams and played against each other. The game played then was very simple with very few rules. Equipment at this time was that which the players saw fit. Hockey was soon introduced in the United States. Colleges and schools throughout the country organized teams and schedules were made up for each year. Artificial rinks are now found in most of the large cities of this country. Teams are outfitted with complete uniforms according to regulations. The puck and hockey sticks are made to a certain standard. According to present rules each team has si.x players: center, left wing, right wing, left defense, right defense, and goal keeper. The rink is one hundred and twelve feet long by fifty-eight feet wide with a goal placed at each end. The goal posts are six feet apart and four feet high, covered with a net. The puck, a piece of solid rubber, is one inch thick and three inches in diameter. The game is played for three fifteen-minute periods with short intermissions. At the beginning of the game the puck is placed between the opposing centers. At the call to play! on the part of the referee, both teams endeavor to drive the puck down to the opponent ' s goal. The puck is passed from player to player of the team in control until either side succeeds in passing it between the goal posts. Each goal counts for one point. Hockey is a scientific game. The secret of a team ' s success is combination play, in other words co-operation and unselfishness. Hockey is known as the fastest game on earth. For real excitement and shrill, it is worth while to see a flashy hockey game. Louis Schmidt Page Sei ' enteen d PPl h s 1 1 o FOOTBALL AS I SEE IT OOTBALL to the uninitiated, presents the amazing spectacle of a multitude of capering lunatics cheering a free-for-all m the mud. This of course, is inaccurate. It may be only a trifle in- accurate, but it is inaccurate. The game of football is much . more complicated than that, or so they tell me. I can well believe it when I read articles in the papers about the changing and rechanging of rules that nobody knew anything about, an ' vay. Also football. I am told, is a very scientiflc sport. The science consists in introducing dark and devious maneuvers into the game, which are ' tended to DU le the opponents and the spectators so that in the confusion the ball can be taken across the goal hne. Sometimes the maneuvers succeed and sometimes they do not. but invariably the man with the ball gets the worst of it. There is a great deal of excitement attendant upon a college or high- school football game. The spectators all bring brightly colored thingama,igs and wave them franticallv whether their side is winning or losing. If their side is winning thev cheer triumphantly. If it is losing they cheer anyu-ay. Each side has several young men who are known as cheer-leaders. These young men have very powerful lungs, and are apparently double-,ointed. 1 hey are interesting to watch but quite painful to listen to. Before the game each side parades around the field to a musical accompaniment. I do not get the exact idea of this demonstration, but I presume that it is intended to frighten the other team and make it wish that it had gone to a movie instead. However. this theorv is not substantiated by the authorities. As seen from the stands the game itself appears very simple. The teams line up. one at each end of the field, and. at a giv-en signal rush fo rd the individual plavers proceed to do things to each other that would get them Irrested if it were an vhere else but on a football field. Occasionally new players will be sent in ' and the wounded carried out. not with lamentations but amid loud encouragement from the stands. I have tried to figure out why football is so popular. Tiddly vinks or sohtaire require so much less time and effort, but the majority of people prefer football. This is a great puzzle to me. and the only explanation that 1 can offer is that perhaps people Hke football better than tiddlywinks or sohtaire. William Reiley. ) Page Eighteen . AMERICAN INDIAN SPORTS HE American Indian, besides being a great fighter, was also a great sportsman. Perhaps you may think that this is absurd. However, the Indians were a very jolly people when they were not warring with anyone. The young braves played ball with a deerskin ball. The limb of an oak or hickory tree served as a bat. These games would sometimes last for whole days. The squaws and those men who were not able to play stood on the side lines and cheered for their favorites. The smaller children flew their kites, which they made out of fish blad- ders. They would also spin their teetotums in competition with one another to see which one could keep his spinning the longest. A teetotum is a toy which is used in games of chance. Games such as tag, hide and seek, and blindman ' s buff were played with great excitement. The girls enjoyed play- ing with their dolls in such leisure hours as they had. The boys and girls were equally fond of making mud pies, each one trying to make a bigger and better pie than the others. When the boys became old enough they were taught to shoot with the bow and arrow. Contests were held in which the braves attempted to split a willow wand in two from amazing distances. Contests were also held in which each brave tried to show his skill in throwing the tomahawk. Endur- ance races were held for the fighting braves to keep them fit. The Indians are universally known for their great endurance. The Indians played a game on the ice which is very similar to our modern hockey. They held canoeing races and practiced shooting with the bow and arrow from the moving canoe. They had contests in fire making and in the making of arrow heads. From all of this, we see that the Indians enjoyed many sports which were well adapted to the conditions under which they lived. William Thomsen. Page Nineteen « n I ?v- ■Where the Bright Trout Is Leaping in Search o His Prey ' FISHING T T ENRY VAN DYKE has said that fishing is the out-of-door sport - ■' most honored in literature. This is probably because it has so ic I many delightful accompaniments. The ripple and flow of s hin- __ ing waters, the songs of birds, the bright colors of wild flowers along the stream — all these sweet and joyous things enter the angler ' s experience, dwell in his memory and fill his heart with poetry whether he ever puts it into verse or not. One lucky cast into the stream of literature brings up this stanza from The Fisher ' s Call. written by William Andrew Chatto in Fisher ' s Garland, 1837: Oh. what can the joy of the angler e.xcel. As he follows the stream in its course through the dell! Where every wild flower is blooming in pride And the blackbird sings sweet, with his mate by his side. Then up. fishers, up! to the waters away! Where the bright trout is leaping in search of his prey. Deep-sea fishing for the fierce, fighting sailfish or the powerful tarpon, casting or trolling for bass or pike or muskellunge in inland lakes, or just plain fishing for perch or croppie or sunfish — all these have their attractions. But for pure delight, what can surpass the quest for trout in the cool, sparkling waters of a lively brook or friendly river? Perhaps you can imagine a silvery stream, lazy in some places, extremely ambitious in others. It makes its way now across the meadows, now between wooded hills, or through a deep and silent forest. The peace and tranquility of such surroundings, the pure, invigorating air, cleanse the mind and refresh the heart, and put us more in love with living, The lure of the stream enters your blood. As you look down its course, its winding curves seem to beckon you on and on. regardless of time. If the stream is new to you. it will provide many pleasant surprises as you explore the promising spots eagerly. Surely there must be a big trout in that deep hole or under that jam of logs and driftwood. What a thrill of satisfaction when a trout suddenly surges up to your lure and verifies your judgment! In a familiar stream, you recognize with renewed pleasure the old reliable spots where, on previous occasions, a whopper of a trout has risen to the fly, to be caught — or lost. There under that old sunken log. beneath the over- Page Tu ' cnty-onc V hanging cedar, there may be lurking the big one which escaped you on a former occasion. You approach carefully. You know just where to cast your fly to take advantage of the current, you make your cast, you t vitch the fly spasmodically in imitation of a struggling insect, and-a strike! He ' s a big one! Be careful now! The Hne is taut, the rod is curved as you reel in a bit. Now he makes a sudden run for refuge under the log. You bring him up cautiously. It will never do to hurry him with your light rod and tackle. Again-and again-with startling suddenness he makes a dash for liberty, but at last he is tiring and you bring him safely into the landing net. What a beauty! The bright red spots are brighter still as the sunlight falls upon his gHstening sides, bringing out the beautiful tints and markings. As you note the fierce, proud look in his eye. the perfect lines of his body, a secret feeling of sorrow for the vanquished fighter swells in your heart for a moment, but this feeling is soon quelled as you thrill again with the joy of suc- cess in capturing so fine a trophy. The added weight in your creel is a wel- come burden, as you pass on down the stream in happy mood. Now just around that next bend, you remember, there is an ideal place. . . . Ralph Cole. fc Ul 1 A Critical Moment Page Twenty-two RIFLE SHOOTING HO, upon hearing of rifles a few years ago. did not associate them with murder, robbery, and war? In recent years people have begun to think of them more kindly and are connecting them with sport rather than with death and horror. Rifle shooting as taught in modern high schools and colleges is absolutely non-militaristic and is directly opposed to crime. Although the rifleman need not be a perfect model of physical develop- ment, he must be able to co-ordinate eye, nerves, and muscles. And this co- ordination can only be obtained while in good health. Marksmanship is one of the finest sports in the world. Ever since David ' s encounter with Goliath it has appealed to young men. for many a boy has been thrilled by a tale of this youth who dared pit his marksmanship against a giant. Every country has a national sport and every climate a favorite pastime. but marksmanship is universal. The sport of shooting has been passed down to us through the ages. The protection of the weak against the wicked, or perhaps just the love of the hunt and a means of obtaining food, or the desire for mastery of a difficult art may have been sufficient incentives to make men and boys strive for expertness in the use of firearms. According to a tradition that goes back to Colonial days, we were once known as a nation of riflemen, because of our marksmanship with the rifle. This arm played a most important part in the history of our country. And it was the main dependence of the pioneers for food and for protection against Indians. But even in our early days the rifle was very much in evidence as a sporting weapon. The old Kentucky flintlock figured conspicuously in the community turkey shoots, and in many other competitions. At no time in our history have there been as many Americans engaged in the various forms of practice with the rifle as there are today. The game may be divided into three classes: large caliber shooting which is done at ranges from two hundred to one thousand yards: small-bore shooting, usually twenty- two caliber arms and ranges up to two hundred yards; and finally what is known as free-rifle shooting, in which the shooter is allowed to try his own hobbies and ideas of gun construction without restrictions. The alluring possibilities of target shooting are annually drawing to the sport more enthusiastic participants than the present range facilities v ' ill accom- modate. Many high schools and colleges are installing fully equipped indoor galleries in their basements and gymnasiums, and are encouraging the sport among their students. V, J, TiEFENBRUNN. Page Tivcnty-three s FENCING HREE hundred years have passed since D ' Artagnan, gallantly arrayed in his military armor, won fame and the hearts of his countrymen by the use of his sword. It was, however, during the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries that fencing was at its height. From then until the twentieth century it wit- nessed its decline. The modern school of fencing is based on the Spanish method of sword play. This method was introduced into Italy through the conquest of Sicily by the Spanish Bourbons, and into France by travelers from Spain. The Italians, who still use a long sword with a bellguard at the end, a form of the old Spanish rapier, have been considered as the strongest swords- men. The French, in accordance with their national character, have adopted a hghter and more supple sword. Their school is considered superior in respect to form and style. In these old countries the art of fencing has always been taught in the colleges and secondary schools on the same level as academic subjects. It is a common occurrence to hear a student of France speak of his course in escrime , as they term it. With the arrival of the present century fencing is slowly being revived in our country. Many fencing academies are being organized. It is an excellent sport because it develops poise and co-ordination of muscles as no other sport does. It is a very strenuous exercise; but when once learned, it can be practiced in the later years of life. It was not. as other combative sports, merely organized as a game, but was originally used as a means of self-defense. Hence, because of its lineage and because of its earnestness of purpose, fencing is a sport which still recalls the deeds of valor and high emprise of a more romantic era. Gertrude Bretscher. PJi Page Twenty-four A MOTORBOAT RACE With Motors Roaring and the White Spray Flying HE levee, at St. Louis, was lined with people. Everyone was alert, watching motorboats that were in the Mississippi River tuning up. The people were climbing light-posts, while some were on the roofs of near-by buildings. All eyes were turned on five boats coming down the river, practically abreast. As the boats passed the official ' s barge. the report of a shot was heard, only to be drowned out by a tremendous roar as the boats sprang to life. A driver at the wheel of each little craft glanced from side to side, trying to avoid the rough spots in the water which might upset him. Down the river the boats went, increasing their speed at every turn of their propellers. The water immediately behind them was thrown up in a spray about four feet high. This for a while obscured the boats. As the drivers made the far turn, the leader hit an unusually high wave and turned over. The other boats avoided the craft in the water and continued on their way. The turnover is one of the ever-present menaces in this type of sport. When everyone saw that the driver of the ill-fated craft was safe, the crowd again followed the four remaining racers, who. by this time, had made the near-turn and were coming down the river for the final two hundred yards. As the winner shot over the finish line, his motor was cut immediately to a slow speed. The rest of the drivers did the same thing as they finished. When the boats had been returned to the dock, the tense features of the drivers were turned into smiles, as though they were glad to be out of their tricky little crafts and have at least one foot on the ground. Fr.ank Rumping. Page Twenty-five b ■r I Wild Ducks, Winging Low DUCK HUNTING UCK-HUNTING! The very mention of this magic phrase sends tingling thrills through the true sportsman ' s being. He pic- tures the exhilarating tramp through the crackling frost- encrusted stubble and weeds down to the steaming expanse of the broad marshy lake, barely discernible in the steely gray of the early morning. In his mind ' s eye. he sees his companion and himself getting into the slim gray skiff tied in the shallows and gliding out into the damp of the marsh. The short paddle in and out among the hoary rushes and cat-tails, com- pletely surrounded by the lakes low-hanging steamy breath, is made just as streaks of silver begin to scar the heavens. Gliding into a quiet glade formed by the frost-coated cat-tails and hidden from the eyes of the game by the foggy vapors, the hunters anchor their craft, A vague throbbing silence falls over the lonely scene. Ears are straining for any betraying rustle in the growth around the borders of the marsh. Tense fingers grip the chill yet reassuring blue steel of the long gun-barrels. Silence — cold frosty silence — a silence even heightened by the monotonous slap-slap of the water lapping at the sides of the boat, A slight rearrangement of numb stiffened limbs and the chilly vigil continues. Suddenly there is a nervous rustling in the cat-tails — profound quiet — then a rapid flapping of wings and a number of wild ducks, winging low, flash past the concealed hunters, bringing a thrill indescribable in mere words. Three staccato shots crack upon the peaceful air, followed by a frantic whirr of hysterical wings. The flock is gone: but two of its members remain behind for the bag of the sportsmen, and before the reverberating echoes have melted into the distance the feathery victims are being secured. Once more the hunters retreat to their blind among the rushes to wait in chill solitude for a chance at other of the wild denizens to fatten their game bag. What is regarded as discomfort by most people is a real pleasure to the honest nature-loving sportsman. So at the mention of the phrase duck-hunting. he invariably dreams of past experiences and plans for new, Robert R.wvizz. , 5eL Page Twen ty-sei ' cn GOLF I i HE origin of golf seems to be wrapped in mystery, the Ifonor apparently lying between Scotland and the Netherlands. The game is very ancient and has an interesting history. The name itself has had a variety of spellings. It has been known variously as gauf and goufe, as gaoff and gaulf. as gowff and gowlf. The last is probably the genuine old pronunciation, which gives our modern name. The word is thought to be derived from the Dutch kolf. meaning a club. The first actual appearance of the game seems to have been in Holland, and there are many old Dutch pictures which show the game of golf being played. By the middle of the fifteenth century, the game had become very popular in Scotland. In 1457, an act of the Scotch Parliament decreed that ••futeball and gofT be utterly cryit doune and nocht usit, so that the nation ' s military standing might not be impaired through neglect of archery. This and other laws were made, but to no avail, for golf was not abandoned. In 1503. when firearms were introduced, the actions against golf-playing ceased. James the Fifth was very partial to the Ancient and Royal Game of Gofl. and his daughter, Mary Stuart, was an ardent golfer. James the Sixth and his son. Charles the First, declared it their pleasure to have their people play golf on Sunday after divine services. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the development of golf was marked. Many golf societies were formed at an early date in Scotland. In 1834 William the Fourth became the patron of St. Andrew ' s, which was at that time, as it is even now. the most famous seat of the game. It was not. however, until the middle of the eighties that golf became popular in the United States. The first golf club in this country was established at Yonkers, New York, in 1888. Interest in golfing has grown to such an extent that we now have inter- national competition, as well as competition between schools, clubs and states. The Walker Cup, given by George Walker, the former president of the United States Golf Association, is competed for by teams from Great Britain and the United States in alternate years. Bobby Jones. Francis Ouimet, George Voight, and Jess Sweetser. all have represented the United States in these matches. International play for women was first started in Sunning- ' - il ' rfb dale. England, in May. 1930. Miss G. Collett headed the Page Twenty-eight United States team. The match was won by the British team, led by Molly Gourlay. The great popularity of golf is largely due to the fact that it is a game in which old and young may join on equal footing. It can be enjoyed without strenuous periods of training, and does not require exceptional muscular development. It holds one s interest with the ever-recurring, and sometimes tantalizing, hope of self-improvement. Not the least of its attractions is the pleas- ant environment to be found on the golf course. A game which has endured through the centuries with an ever-increasing number of devotees must pos- sess inherent attractions which appeal strongly to the lover of outdoor sports. Clarice Brand and Neldarose Ott. s GOOD SPORTSMANSHIP I I loOD sportsmanship is largely a question of co-operative spirit A vj and decency in any contest or endeavor of our daily work and aii play- To compete fairly, play the game according to the rules. mB - and show good co-operation is the true spirit of sportsmanship. Hi;;;;;; ----. The element of courtesy and thoughtfulness of others is here truly expressed. Examples are found in every phase of amateur and professional sports. One of our most popular amateur sports, football, has such numerous techni- calities that the player must be ever on the alert to avoid breaking the rules of the game. A typical incident of good sportsmanship in a professional sport occurred in a championship golf match in which Walter Hagen was a par- ticipant. Removal of a twig from behind the ball caused it to oscillate. There was some doubt as to whether the ball had moved, but Hagen immediately called a stroke against himself although no official had seen the play. True sportsmanship trains the player of any game to shoot squarely in the greater game of life. Honesty, self-discipline, thoughtfulness and co- operation are all traits of character which may be developed by sports. The element of luck, which seems always present during the game of life, often produces signs of failure and discouragement, but persistent plugging and determination, the will to achieve, developed through good sportsmanship, help us to attain our ultimate goal. Paul Herriott. r Page Twenty-nine i. i THE ORIGIN OF FOOTBALL Football, one of the oldest forms of sports, is said to have been played more than seven hundred years before the Christian Era. In Isaiah, Chap- ter twenty-two, may be found this passage, He will turn and toss thee like a ball, which shows that some sort of ball game was played at that time. In the Odyssey of Homer this statement is made, Then having bathed and anointed well with oil, they took their mid- day meal upon the river banks and anon when satisfied they played the game of ball. The word Harpaston of the Greek language is defined as a game with a ball. Greek scholars say it was a game similar to modern Rugby. Harpaston was one of the favorite games of the Spartan youths. It was played on a rectangular field marked with side, goal, and center lines. The players were not limited in number but were equally divided. The object of the game was to pass, kick, or carry the ball to the opposite goal line. There were few rules, and the game seems to have been played with little order or method. The Romans had a game similar to football, called Follis. About 28 B. C, the Emperor Augustus selected an unknown philosopher to revise the rules of Follis. The code of rules submitted form the basis of modern football. The Greek name Harpaston disappeared after a while, and Calcio was used instead. Calcio was played on a square field marked by side, goal, and center hnes. The goals were marked by posts. There were twenty-seven men on each team. The game was played as a mimic battle, with Roman mihtary tactics. Each team had fifteen forwards, five defensive backs, four halfbacks, and three fullbacks. A score was made by carrying or kicking the ball over the goal line. Two fouls were equivalent to one goal. Because of winds, sides were changed after each goal. The football used at the time is beheved to have been made of skin cleverly sewed and filled with moss. In 1314, King Edward II of England for- bade the playing of football on the ground that it created a disturbance, and imprisonment was the penalty for playing it. But in spite of the King ' s law against the playing of this game, football became so popular in England that it threatened to submerge archery. In 1650, foot- ball was regarded as a national institution in Page Thirty Great Britain. The game was usually played between districts, cities, and towns, and lasted until one side had kicked the bail into the other town. The famous Wall Game ' at Eton was the first to use eleven men. On November 17. 1873, the Etonians played the famous Yale University. With the passing of the night. Yale chalked up her first victory over the Etonians. Football has come down in history from 750 B. C to the present day. Its development through the years has made it a faster, better organized, and safer game. Joe Neu. THE EVOLUTION OF LACROSSE HEN the French settled in Canada, they found the Iroquois tribes in that vicinity playing a game which they called baggataway. The Frenchmen became interested in it and soon developed a game from it which they called lacrosse. They gave it this name because the curved, netted stick used in playing resembled a bishop ' s crozier. Lacrosse is the oldest organized sport in America. It was played by the Six Nations, tribes of the Iroquois in the ter- ritory now known as upper New York state and lower Ontario, long before Columbus landed at San Salvador in 1492. The Indians played an extremely brutal game which was used as a preparation for war. Their games some- times lasted for days, and many players were injured, while some were even killed. Several hundred Indians usually participated in a game, the goals often being one or two miles apart. The French adopted this game in 1740. and the English in 1847. From the rudiments of the game as played by the Indians, Canada has developed a game which is now its national summer sport. Lacrosse is still played by some of the Indians on the Government Reser- vations in Canada and the United States. A modified form of the game is played in the British Isles and Australia. Lacrosse is as popular with the boys of Canada as baseball is with the American boys. Probably more than any other game, it combines the requisites of good sport — skill, activity, and steadiness. Dorothy Hacker. Page Thirty-one s u TENNIS IN THE MAKING HE tennis enthusiasts of today might find it difficuU to bdieve that tennis was once called Sphairistike, or that the early Greeks. Assyrians, Persians, Egyptians and Romans played a game with leather and wooden balls vaguely resembling the tennis of today. This game, strange to say, is an outgrowth of handball. It is said that some ingenious persons added posts with a connecting net to improve the original game of handball. Tennis was not always a game played by the masses; at first kings and nobles were the only ones who played it. The first and finest examples of enclosed courts were those of the French kings who reigned from the fourteenth to the eighteenth century. These kings had marvelous courts built for their pleasure and amusement. In the four- teenth century, the kings of France and Italy provided courts in the parks of their countries for the use of the people. Interesting stories have been handed down concerning the tennis activi- ties of the early kings. Charles V had a court built which was about twice as long as the court used today. He despotically ordered that no one should play tennis in his domain except the nobles who played on his courts. In this manner he hoped to make the game an exclusive one. Among the kings who did the most to increase the popularity of tennis were Charles VI and Charles IX of France. The greatest player among the kings was Henry II, who won many trophies playing his favorite game. The only pioneer woman tennis player of note, whose name has survived the lapse of centuries, is Demorsille Margot. She did much to increase the popularity of tennis among women, who up to that time had not taken up the game. At an early tournament in Paris. Mme. Margot introduced rubber balls and the wooden racquet with parchment covering. France was, and still is the real home of tennis. It was played there with ever-increasing popularity from the fifteenth century to the time of the French Revolution, when it suffered a temporary set-back. In recent years France has furnished some of the world ' s most brilliant players. The modern game of lawn tennis was first played in England in 1881. and was introduced into America in that same year by the famous Sears brothers. This game was originally called Sphairistike and the name was later changed to lawn tennis. Many believe that tennis will be the national game of the future, and their belief is well founded, for it is a game with enough action, speed, and power to satisfy even modern America, Bill Dahman. Page Thirty-two THE BIRTH OF BASEBALL HE people of the United States believe baseball to be an original American game. Englishmen, however, point out that baseball was derived from one of their games called rounders. The truth is that baseball originated from two English games, rounders and cricket. Early baseball resembled cricket more than it did rounders. Like cricket, the first baseball games were played with- out bases. The bats which were used were long clubs, flat at the end. The expression hands. which meant innings, was used as in cricket. There were no foul balls, and only the runs counted, not the hits. The pitchers threw underhand and were allowed to take a short run when delivering the ball. In 1838. Abner Doubleday of Cooperstown. New York, became the father of modern baseball. In the first games, there were two players on each side. a pitcher and a catcher. One base was used, which lay about fifty feet from the home plate. The side at bat was out when one of the players was hit with the ball while running from one base to the other. The game consisted of one hundred runs, each side taking equal turns at bat. Later, when more boys wished to play, Mr. Doubleday added another base, which became the third base of today. Besides the two original players, two more were added to guard the bases. Finally, the second base of today was placed between the other two and two more players were added, one being a rover. After a time, players called outfielders were used. At this stage, eight to twenty-five players made up a single team, but this number gradually settled down to nine players. The rover was given a definite position between second and third base, and called the shortstop. Up to this time the bases were placed anywhere from fifty to one hundred feet apart. It was Ale.xander J. Cartwright who first designed a baseball dia- mond. He fixed the bases ninety feet apart so that they formed a square. The pitcher s box was placed forty-five feet from home plate on a line with second base. In order to have stationary bases. Cartwright used stakes, but K t on account of injuries to the players, these stakes were replaced by bases. Due to countless rules and regulations which have been adopted, baseball has acquired a distinct individuality, and today it is far different from either cricket or rounders. J. MEs Robertson. d s ' 1 Page Thirty-three  _ d n t I a E t D CO n, 00 FINLAND AND HER SPORTS HE people of Finland have been greatly influenced by the natural configuration of their country which is made up of as much water as land. Added to this condition, its extreme northern climate would tend to make the Finns lead a dull and lonely life. How- ever, the monotony of the long and severe winters with their chilly and depressing winds is relieved by the many sports in which they participate. These sports of Finland are varied, but practically all of them require skill and many of them demand immense courage and daring. Skiing is probably the national sport of Finland. When the children are only three years old they are taught the fundamental principles of this sport. and many of them as they grow up become expert skiers. Whenever a winter contest is held in Finland, one may be certain that the ski jump will be one of the feature attractions. The people line up along the runway of the event. Flags are strung along the course. These flags are of varied colors and together with the vivid and bright sweaters of the spectators make a very lovely and picturesque sight. The signal is given and down the steep slope comes the skier. The spec- tators watch him. their amazement at its peak. They admire his courage and dexterity. Finally, with a last display of adroitness, the skier makes a jump far into space. A judge observes the efforts of the contestants and it is his duty to determine which skier makes the best jump. There are other winter sports, such as skating and tobogganing, in which the Finns take an active part. In the summer the many lakes offer ideal fishing sites, for they are amply supplied v.-ith many different kinds of fish. Swimming is also a prominent summer sport, despite the temperature of the region. Such a climate as that of Finland builds up endurance. This accounts for the fact that the Finns are great distance runners. In practically every Olym- pic competition the Finns win a first place in the 1,000 or 5,000 meter races. These facts and the variety of sports which exist in Finland show con- clusively that she has conquered her desolation. It shows that she has striven to eliminate the monotony of her geographical environment by providing a means of activity and amusement. Her success in this endeavor is apparent. Finland has given the world an example which clearly illustrates the value of sports. Oscar Fernandez. Page Thirty-five V I ) THE ENGLISH HUNT The Huntsmen and Their Baying Hounds Are Gathered ALLY HO! At the first crack of dawn the huntsmen and their baying hounds are gathered. Intense excitement, jolly salutations and good cheer mark the mood of these dashing sportsmen. The jolly company is all agog and anxious to start the chase. The excited hounds with noses on the ground try to catch the scent of the fox. No trace of him, and the hounds look discouraged, but the whipper-in commands them to get to cover, and again they try to find the scent. The hunters get impatient. With hats pushed down, and bridle reins gathered well in hand, they are ready to start. The huntsman reminds them that the hounds are drawing the cover well and that a rare fox lies within. Hark! A whimper is heard in the cover— like the voice of a dog that has been dreaming; ' tis one of the noted finders. The huntsman cheers him on. The next moment another hound exclaims his find— and another— and another. The fox breaks from the cover and dashes away across the field. • ' Tally Ho! cries the huntsman. He ' s off, followed in close pursuit by the rest of the company. There they go, all good fellows and jovial company. They dash over the rolling green and give not a thought to dangerous jumps. Whoops, look at that horse go over the stile and land on the other side of the pool. What a jump! Reynard is giving them a run for his fife. There they go. hound, horse and rider, through the prickly briar bush, over hedges, walls and ditches. The Hunting Song taken from The Masque describes to the utmost satisfaction the joys and hazards of the chase: Page Thirty-six HUNTING SONG. Hark! Hark! The joy-inspiring horn Sakites the rosy morn And echoes through the dale: With clamorous peals the hills resound. The hounds quick-scented scow ' r the ground. And snuff the fragrant gale. Nor gates nor hedges can impede The brisk, high mettl ' d. starting steed. The jovial pack pursue: Like lightning darting o ' er the plains. The distant hills with speed he gains, And sees the game in view. There they go over hill and vale. Faint glimpses are caught now and then but soon they will be out of our sight completely. Well, good luck to the hunters and good luck to Reynard! May the best win. One thing is certain: he will lead them a merry chase. Ruth May Sackmann. d ; POLO OLO is said to have been known in Persia over twelve hundred years ago. The Chinese declare that their ancestors played it as early as 2000 B. C. In Persia, a land noted for its beautiful and speedy horses, the men would mount their steeds and. with a long stick in hand, would try to knock a large stone as far as they could. In the nineteenth century polo was introduced into India. The natives often played it and soon the British soldiers who were stationed there took up the game. Each regiment had a team, and these teams engaged in spirited matches. The winners had a right to select any horse they desired from the mounts of the losers. In 1876 polo was introduced into America. The American game is much faster than the British, for there are fewer regulations and fewer penalties. There is nothing more stirring than a good polo match. The well-trained ponies catch the spirit of the game and share in the e.xcitement. To see the players on swift ponies going down the field, their mallets swinging, thrills the heart of every sportsman. Mary Sargent. 1 i 1 Page Thirty-seven A i I I f tXI ) d ' - 9 1 ' i t African Hunting Scenes Above — Fallen giants of the jungle and prized ivory trophies. Below A kongoni. a buffalo, and two groups of wild African natives, tribal retainers of a Wakamba chief. I Page Thirty-eight HUNTING BIG GAME IN AFRICA Africa still lures the sportsman who seeks big game. In order to bring to this number of The Beacon a glimpse of that land of many hunting adventures. one of our teachers obtained from his friend, Mr. Ira H. Morse, of Lowell, Massachusetts, a number of pictures from which those on the opposite page were selected for reproduction. In British East Africa. Mr. Morse and his son. Philip, found excellent sport in their encounters with lions, rhinoceroses, and many other kinds of wild animals. But the peak of their African experience was an elephant hunt near the great Lorrain Swamp, about three hundred and fifty miles east of Nairobi, the capital. On their safari into this region they had with them a white hunter- guide and more than a hundred natives, who acted as scouts, gun-bearers, servants and porters. As the guide had promised, they found that this was good territory for elephants, but it was difficult to get within proper shooting distance of the big bulls which they sought. They trailed only those whose tracks measured nine- teen inches or more in diameter. The oldest and largest male elephants do not travel in herds, but having been conquered by younger bulls, they leave the herd and wander about, each one accompanied usually by a younger male ele- phant, which the natives say is a son. On many occasions after long hours or even days of cautious stalking, just at a critical moment the snapping of a twig or the scent of the men would send the elephants rushing av. ' ay at a speed too great to follow. However, persistence finally brought its reward for each of the hunters. , The first picture recalls to Mr. Morse ' s memory a thrilling moment when a gray mass of fury was charging toward him, trunk curled up and big ears flapping. The first shot had glanced from the thick bony structure of the ele- phant ' s skull, but the second shot seriously wounded the big beast and in- creased his fury. The natives made a tremendous noise to turn the animal from Mr. Morse, and he lunged by. charging toward them. They scattered and he kept on going. Five hundred yards away he nearly collapsed against some trees, but the young elephant which was with him came to his rescue, pulled him to his feet and pushed him along. They quickly disappeared into the thick growth of the jungle, where it was difficult to follow them. The hunters kept persistently on the trail, however, until finally they found the big animal dead from his wounds, and secured the coveted trophies. The huge size of this elephant is more fully appreciated when we learn that his height was thirteen feet at the shoulder, his ears were seventy-two inches long, and his tusks, shown with Mr. Morse in the picture at the upper right, were over seven feet long and weighed a hundred pounds each. The African pigmy standing close beside the elephant s head in the first picture presents a striking contrast in stature. The elephant which fell to the rifle of Mr. Philip Morse is shown in the fourth picture, surrounded by a group of happy natives. This was also a fine Page Thirty-nine i specimen, as may be judged by the tusks shown in the picture to the left. These tusks weighed sixty-one pounds each. The group is standing beneath a baobab tree. When large elephants sleep standing, they often relieve themselves of the weight of their tusks by resting them on the limbs of trees like this. The size of the grooves worn in the hmbs by this practice often gives the hunter a clue as to the size of the elephants which frequent the place. In the fifth picture a kongoni is shown, and in the si.xth a buffalo. There was no difficulty in keeping the camp supphed with meat, for game animals were abundant. In the daytime, looking across the plains with field glasses, one could see herds of giraffes, zebras, gazelles, kongoni and many other species. The camp of the Morses was pitched near a large water hole. At night various animals came to this hole to drink. Lions roared and growled, hyenas laughed and screeched, rhinoceroses wallowed and grunted, leopards and jackals prowled about. One can understand that the big game hunter carries in his memory many vivid impressions not recorded by the camera. The two lower pictures of the group show tribal retainers of a Wakamba chief. To celebrate the success of the hunters, this chief arranged a native dance which lasted all day and all night. Hundreds of natives, men and women, took part, all elaborately decorated with long feathers of beautiful colors on their heads, colobus monkey tails and long streaming sisal fibers ornamenting their arms and bodies. Trophies of the African hunt and many interesting curios collected in all parts of the world may be seen in Mr. Morse ' s museum near his summer home in Warren. New Hampshire. SPORTS IN SWITZERLAND ] i HE native sports of Switzerland are few, the inhabitants being a serious, industrious race who concentrate all their endeavors upon work. However, at various times of the year organized groups of young men meet at tournaments in tests of strength and endur- ance. Stones of immense proportions are hfted and flung through Wrestling is also a leading feature in the competitive trials. It is c.w Ringen. Each opponent grasps the other by the waistband, a huge strap or belt, and tries to whirl the other over his head. These friendly con- tests are usually closed with a session of dancing. But what peculiar style they employ! It is merely a stamping of feet; heavy shoes tramp up and down. Mountain climbing and hunting are everyday duties of the Swiss. Pre- carious peaks are ascended, mountains of ice overcome, and numberless other the air called Page Forty difficulties defeated in hunting the chiunois. This is a mountain antelope much like a goat, weighing from fifty to seventy pounds. The animal ' s agility in climbing is remarkable. All no doubt have heard of the famed winter sports of St. Moritz and vicinity, but this does not involve the inhabitants as a rule. Skiing presents the only exception. Visitors flock to the resorts high up in the mountains where the sun is as hot as that of an American June day. Invalids can remain in the pure, invigorating air without suffering any effects of cold. The snow and ice remain firm for five months and the weather is usually ideal. The most is made of this and we have tobogganing, skiing and skating as everyday recreations. The famous Cresta run for e.xpert tobogganing at St. Moritz is a thou- sand yards long, one pure sheet of solid ice over which one can attain the tre- mendous speed of seventy miles per hour. The racers lie flat on the sleds, face downwards. The guiding of these speedy demons is accomplished by a com- bination of swing and main force on the racer ' s part as he swerves around the banked curves. Of course the return trip to the starting position is a climb of hours. But it is certainly worth the effort. Skiing is a national sport. Children soon become adept in the use of the slender, graceful skis. These blades are from seven to nine feet in length. Even the Swiss army is trained in this art. for it is the only way to pass safely over the thin coats of crusted snow on the hillsides. John Liesenfeld. •Irafc ' ' At Full Speed on a Bobsleigh Rim in Switzerland Page Forty-one i N I « HAWAIIAN SURF RIDING t 9 d r Riding the Surf at Waikiki MONG the many water sports of Waikiki Beach, Hawaii, surf- board riding reigns as king. The native children of Hawaii are practically brought up in the water. As soon as they learn to walk, they are taught to swim: and when they are old enough to hold a surfboard, they become adept at surf riding. Waikiki is one of the very few places in the world where surf riding can be successfully accomplished, because the contour of the floor of the ocean to- gether with the position of the coral reefs produces a desired steady wave crest which sometimes carries a board for two miles, A surfboard is usually made of redwood or the buoyant wood of the wiliwili tree and it weighs about fifty pounds. It is ten feet long, wide enough to lie on, and is shaped like an ironing board. Surfboard riding is the most thrilling of water sports after one learns how. It takes weeks of practice under the instruction of an expert to master the art. First, lying face downward, the rider paddles out from the beach to where the waves are breaking. In paddling, the rider uses his arms in a per- pendicular stroke. The feet can be used as rudders, but expert paddlers guide their boards merely by shifting the weight of their bodies. Now. a single wave which the rider expects to use should be selected. With the board headed toward the shore, he should paddle as hard as possible until the wave crest catches the board. At this time it is necessary to shift the body a little toward the rear of the board to keep its nose from diving. By this time, the board and its rider are skimming through the water on the crest of the wave. After a proper balance has been attained, one can ride Page Forty-two along in difterent positions, such as sitting, kneeling, or even standing. Many of the Hawaiian beach boys are skilled in the art of surf riding. They can balance themselves on their heads, carry passengers, and stunt in other ways. Much pleasure can be derived from watching an e.vperienced rider of the surf as, standing erect, he rides majestically, just ahead of a breaker, in toward the shore. His board seems to be rushing down the slope of the wave but never reaching the base. Surfboard riding is the Hawaiian sport of kings , and it is a fine example of man ' s conquest in the water. James Robertson. SPORTS IN CHINA LA NT eyes set in yellow faces. Long embroidered silk robes and tiny feet. Exotic perfume and tinkling music. This is China as we think of it. In no way. however, does our idea of China coincide with our idea of sport. The Chinese have their own conception of sports, and it is. as might he expected, entirely different from ours. There, school- boys play neither football, nor basketball, nor even baseball. They do play, however, a number of ancient, sometimes complicated, games. Often these are accompanied by long rhymes. Chinese maidens play lady-like games that could hardly be called sports. Many of their games, like those of the boys, are accompanied by lovely, age- old rhymes. The favorite, however, is the simple game of tag which even the married women play in their innermost courtyards. Many Chinese girls are able to swim, even some who still have bound feet. Battledore and shuttlecock, which is practically the same as modern bad- minton, was originally a man ' s game. The participants played, usually, with only the shuttlecock, a piece of cork, covered wdth fine snakeskin, with a para- chute arrangement of duck ' s feathers. They knocked it back and forth with their knees, thighs, heads, and even the bottoms of the feet. Later, when women started to play, battledores, made of racket-like frames covered with parchment, were used. Turtle races in China are occasions for heavy betting. Much more popu- lar, however, are cricket fights. Fighting crickets are highly cherished and fed on a prescribed diet on especially made, hand-painted porcelain dishes. Some of them have long pedigrees and are carefully mated. Kite-flying, chess and checkers, ping-pong — all are games known and loved by almost all Chinese. There is a regular holiday for kite-flying when all business is stopped. Most Chinese kites are gorgeous works of art. Chess, of course, is almost as old as China herself. Much of the play instinct of Chinese people, young and old. male and female, finds an outlet in the many, many holiday festivals, for China celebrates more than any other country, Eileen Chesler. Page Forty-three DO k 1 V THE INNER SIGNIFICANCE OF THE OLYMPICS As an exhibition of achievement, the 1932 Olympic Games have never been equaled. Time and time again, came the announcement: A new world and Olympic record. One had to be thrilled even if he did not witness the spectacle. However, there were some things which were still more thrilling. There were, for example, the sports- manship and brotherhood which were shown. The first day we find an ex- ample of this. Competing for the high jump championship there were about eighteen competitors. One by one they were cut down to four, then to two. One was Bob Von Osdal, of the United States, holder of the world record, and the favorite. The other was Dune Mc- Naughton of Canada. These two were students and close friends at the Uni- versity of Southern California, and, in fact. Bob had taught Dune much about high jumping. Every athlete wants to be an Olympic champion, yet every time that Dune jumped Bob was standing across the runway pulling for him. In breaking the tie Dune cleared the bar at the height that Bob just a moment later tried for and failed to reach. Picking himself up and without brushing off the sawdust particles. Bob rushed over and put his arm around the man who had taken an Olympic championship away from him. Here is another example. In the five thousand meter run. Ralph Hill was the only one who stuck close to Lauri Lehtinen, Finnish holder of the world record. Near the finish Hill was only a stride behind, and was preparing to pass, but was blocked by a swerve from Lehtinen as he swung in front of Hill. The swerve barred Hill and deprived him of the championship. Hill defended Lehtinen. Hill said, He runs wide with his head turned back as all Finns do. At the end Lauri was tired. If a man looks back he is bound to swerve. I don ' t beheve he intended to foul me. Today Hill is wearing Lehtinen ' s Finnish Olympic Team emblem along with his American one. Many other cases of similar significance could be mentioned. In almost every event there was some outstanding thing showing sportsmanship. Many say, The Tenth Olympiad will live long in athletic history. But still more will it be remembered for the development of such things, as these: the capacity to play fair, to overcome obstacles, and to rise above defeat. Ath- Lehtinen and Hill at the Finish of the 5.000 Meter Run. Page Forty-four letics hold victory for a few. only; but for those who sincerely follow its ideals it holds a sure promise of greater self-mastery. For of what value is victory without self -conquest? Eahl Bartareau. THE BIRTH OF THE OLYMPICS ROM the date of the first Olympic games. 776 B. C. all Greek history is computed. In that year, on the Olympian plain, be- neath Mount Kronos and beside the River Alpheus, the great games began. The place at which they were held was said to be sacred to Zeus, chief of the gods, and a temple and a huge statue to him were erected in Elis. near the stadium. Thus, the games were a religious festival, dedicated to Zeus, and occurring every four years. The Olympics were one of the things that tended to weld divided Greece into one state with a common language. Every four years Greeks from every province traveled to Elis. Athenians and Spartans, as widely different as the poles, met and mingled freely and peacefully, whereas upon other occa- sions they might have been at each other ' s throats. Any native-born Greek of pure blood, untainted by any nationality foreign to Hellas, was allowed to compete: but first it was necessary for him to be trained in the gymnasium at Elis. after which the contestants were chosen by a committee of officials of that city. These officials also awarded the prizes. In the first meeting in 776 B. C.. only one event took place, a foot-race. During the years that followed, down to the last Olympiad in 392 A. D.. numerous events were added: chariot-racing, long and short foot-races, wres- tling, boxing, leaping, quoit-throwing, racing in heavy armor, chariot-racing with mules, and throwing the discus. There were also competitions for poets. dramatists, philosophers, painters, and sculptors. The mid-summer sun often beat down cruelly upon the men. but the Greeks were trained for endurance. When the last event had been won. the prizes were awarded to the victors, who stood upon a dais of ivory and gold while the prize, a crown of wild olive leaves, was placed upon their heads. A crown of wild-olive leaves! Yet that garland was one of the most prized trophies in all Greece; for it brought honor not only to himself, but also to the winner ' s family, and even to his state and city. After the announcement of their names, their fathers ' names, and the name of their native state, the cham- pions were carried off to a banquet in their honor. The entire festival ended with a religious procession. Every four years this great meeting was held, but in 393 A. D. it ceased. The inroads of barbarians and Christian zealots gradually destroyed it. together with the temple of Zeus and that god ' s great statue. Robert Watkins. Page Forty-five d ; N 1 I V THE OLYMPIC GAMES OF 1932 Excitement and confusion reigned paramount as. amid cheers from thou- sands of throats, flashes of color from patriotic buntings of fifty-eight nations, stirring music, and overwhelming din. the Olympic Games of 1932 got under way in the Olympic Stadium at Los Angeles. At two-thirty sharp, accom- panied by martial music, the parade of the nations, led by Argentina and flanked by the United States ' contingent, began. The Olympic Flag, consisting of concentric circles of blue, black, red. green, and yellow, on a background of celestial white, was raised during the singing of the Olympic Hymn by a chorus of twelve hundred voices. This was followed by the releasing of two thousand pigeons as an indication of universal peace and goodwill. After the dedication and benediction, delivered by the President of the University of California, the Olympic oath was administered to the participants. So the tent h Olympiad of the world and the second to be held in the United States was begun on July 30. 1932. Approximately one hundred and thirty-five attractions were presented, runnning continuously for sixteen days and nights in nine stadiums and pa- vilions having a total seating capacity of four hundred thousand. The follow- ing sports were included in the program: Athletics Fencing Field Hockey Gymnastics Rowing Water Polo Boxing Equestrian Sports Shooting Wrestling Modern Pentathlon Swimming Weight-Lifting Yachting Fine Arts Association Football Road Cycling 1 s Start of the Olympic Marathon, 26 Miles. 385 Yards Page Forty-seven k Babe Didrickson took first place as world ' s champion woman record-breaker when she iron the SO-meter hurdles in 11.7 seconds. Out of these seventeen events the United States captured eight first places: Track and Field Track and Field (Women) Wrestling Swimming ( Women ) Rowing Boxing Equestrian Sports Yachting Record after record was broken at the international games. One of the biggest thrills of the meet was furnished by the Argentine newsboy. Zabala, who snapped the tape of the twenty-six-mile Marathon in the amazing time of two hours and thirty-one minutes. Although hampered by a leg injury, Nambu. Japan ' s gritty athlete, set a new world ' s record for the hop, step, and jump; while the Polish entry clicked off the ten thousand meters event in record time. To Italy go the honors in the fifteen-hundred-meter run. Baccali, the Italian entry, kept behind the pace-setters until the final stretch and then un- corked a sprint that left his competitors in the dust and set a new time for that event. Ireland carried off the laurels in the four-hundred-meter hurdle sprint, which is the most severe of all short distance runs, since it represents the maxi- mum distance at which breakneck speed can be maintained. But saving the best for the last. America swept the games in a manner which surpassed any victory attained in the last two decades and ended by pihng up a score nearly three times as large as her nearest rival. Italy. The United States ' contingent of athletes smashed records right and left, leaving its competitors in a daze. Until the next Olympics at Berlin, four years hence, athletes the world over will be debating the reasons for our sweeping victory at Los Angeles. Page Forty-eight Some of the athletes who contributed to the success of America are George SaiUng. the high hurdle specialist: Bill Carr, the greatest quarter-miler known to modern sports: Jim Bausch. worlds champion all-around athlete; and Eddie Tolan. the mainstay of America in the double sprints. In the women ' s field are found more good reasons for our conquest. Babe Didrickson, of Texas, was the sensation of the women ' s athletics, triumphing in the javelin throw, the eighty-meter hurdles, and capturing second place in the high jump. By winning two first places in swimming events and contributing to the relay team ' s victory. Helene Madison, of Seattle, carried off the honors for the United States in the water sports. The final unofficial point standings of the teams are as foil ows: United States 110 Japan 24 Poland 6 Italy 42 Hungary 21H Argentina 5 Germany 41 Finland 17 South Africa 5 France 29 ' , Holland mi Czecho-Slovakia 4 Sweden 29 Canada 10 Austria 3 Great Britain 243 India Australia 10 7 Denmark 2 This year ' s games were unique in that a specially constructed village was used by the contestants. It consisted of five hundred and fifty two-room cot- tages, each housing four athletes. The village occupied three hundred and thirty-one acres and boasted five miles of hard roads and eight miles of water mains. It was this accommodation in addition to the special transportation rates which led to the representation of fifty-eight nations at the games. As the village was situated only ten minutes ' drive from the Stadium and not far from the Rose Bowl, the Marine Stadium, and the Riviera Country Club, the athletes had easy access to their dwellings. 1 Warner passing the baton to Bill Carr. The American team set a new u-orldS record in winning the 400-metcr relay in 3 minutes. ll.S seconds. Page Forty-nine f Miss W. den Ouden o[ Holland set a new record in winning this 100-meter free style event. I ? Taken as a whole, the Olympic Games of 1932 furnished us sixteen days of glorious sports and, in the words of Dr. Meisel of Berlin, the games at Los Ange les will stand in our memory as an unbeatable new Olympic and world record. This mark cannot be outclassed through decades; it is the record of records. The spirit shown throughout the performance was one of sportsmanship of the highest quahty. To a greater extent than ever before, the ideals of Baron de Coubertin, leader of the movement to revive the Olympics in modern times, were realized. These ideals were expressed in the following inscription above the entrance to the Stadium: fl The important thing in the Olympic Gatnes is not winning, but taking part. The essential thing is not conquering, but fighting well. De Coubertin. Edgar Anderson and Robert Rawizza. Page Fifty The Olympic Oath Wc swear that we will take part in the Olympic Games in loyal competition, respecting the regulations which govern them, and desirous of participating in them in the true spirit o[ sportsmanship for the honor of our country and for the glory of sport. THE WORLD ' S GREATEST ATHLETE James Bausch. of the Kansas City Athletic Ckib, world ' s record holder for all time in the one-man ten-event athletic competition — the decathlon — is shown hurling the discus and pole-vaulting. At the close of 1932 the Sullivan Memorial Medal was awarded to Bausch as the amateur athlete who has done the most during the past year to advance the cause of sportsmanship. The tribunal which made the award, a group of si. hundred leaders in the world of sport in all parts of the country, took into consideration acts of sportsmanship, excellence of performance, strength of character, qualities of leadership, force of personahty and high ideals of amateurism. Page Fifty-one qp 1 :« s JS J _ J A SCULPTOR OF YOUTH The cult of the beautiful was one of the dominant characteristics of life in Ancient Greece, and her artists sought to express their conception of the beautiful in the magniBcent statues which we today still regard as masterpieces. The athletes in the Olympic Games provided the Greek sculptors with many fitting models for the exercise of their art. Since the time of the Greeks, the first sculptor to make the poses of the athlete the mam theme of his work is R. Tait McKenzie, and therein lies the importance of his art. It is noteworthy that McKenzie ' s first two attempts in the field of sculpture are both considered masterpieces. This initial excellence may find its expla- nation, in part at least, in his background and in his scientific method ot working. Of Scottish parentage. McKenzie has the Highlander ' s ingrained contempt for softness of mind or body. Born with a poor physique, he developed himself through sheer will power into an accomplished athlete. After obtaining his M D degree he was appointed Director of Physical Training at McGill Uni- versity In this capacity, and later during many years as Professor of Physical Education at the University of Pennsylvania, he had the opportunity o observ- ing and studying closely the athlete in action. He also kept careful records and data of the measurements of those most successful in sports of all sorts When he came to execute ' The Sprinter and -The Athlete his fijst and second works, he used not only his imagination, but he faithfully adhered to measurements which were taken as an average of four hundred athletes or more. Such a scientific approach is often used by artists, but McKenzie achieved thereby a perfection of proportion in his figures which has never been excelled. In his later work he ceased to depend upon metrical methods and relied entirely upon his own conception of beauty. Beauty for him is the human form m perfect health seen m graceful movement. And the poise, the supple- ness the harmony, the symmetry, the grace and beauty of the athlete in action are portrayed by McKenzie in his statues. The Plunger . ' ■The Icebird . The Pole Vaulter . The Boxer , The Discus Thrower , and in The Onslaught . which depicts a scrimmage in our own American game of football. In his sculpture of athletes and in a number of notable war memorials executed by him, we find a spirit of sympathy with young manhood m all its eagerness, its energy, its generous giving of strength, its will to achieve. In this field R. Tait McKenzie stands supreme as the sculptor of youth. June Murdoch. Page Filty-two s I © R. Tail McK -iizic. Courtesy Lippincotl C o, SHIELD OF THE ATHLETES Bj R. Tan McKenr ie, K. C. A. THE SCULPTOR OF YOUTH He caught the fleeting flame of Youth And prisoned it in deathless stone. To stand forever glorified More perfect than mere flesh and bone. And in the days that are to come Admiring multitudes will stand And marvel at his subtle skill — The magic in his cunning hand. Will Reiley. Page Fifty-three V- ' « e i I WWI d 1 i • VERSE = d Jffi t I Humbled The rolling, pounding thunder of the sea was in my ears. The same incessant booming of a hundred million years. And high above, the steady stars, since countless eons alight. Shone dimly down unmeasured distance of eternal night. I stood alone in space upon a tiny whirling ball. And felt that I was no one in particular, after all. Will Reiley. Triad Youth, poverty, pride. What chance is there For this strange mixture? Is pride the stepping-stone To Achievement, The stumbling-block of Experience? Or. is pride the talisman Of good fortune. Of doers of deeds. Of builders. Dreamers, Men? With youth, and poverty. And pride not added. What man would say: I canl Roy Coleman. Moon Madness Starshine fell upon a wild pair. We danced together there upon the hillside. In the blue-gray glare. We threw back our heads and laughed. Throaty laughs . . ■We danced and pounded swelling echoes In the night. Danced, with grotesque motions And distorted height. While writhing shadows fell In hazy flight About our glowing forms. We danced, in our madness. We threw back our heads and laughed. Throaty laughs . . . Roy Coleman. Page Fifty-si.x For the Unawakened What better nunjes can we earn, Than clamberini) vines o[ rainbow hue Which hold to humble stone And solid masonry, Seeminglij from the blue Of God s own happij haven? What greater fame than oaken doors. With stone-flagged walks. And beds of golden daffodils That swing like fairy things In cool and quiet rills? Roy Coleman After Waterloo We came to offer sympathy, regret. And such poor condolences we could. What good Were these? We. in our blind ignorance. Could scarcely comprehend The utter devastating ruin — the crash Of his high hope. It was the end; He knew it — and how bitter Was the knowledge! Yet he stood Silent, aloof, and heard our whining voices As from afar. At last he looked at us. His brooding frown grew blacker, yet Controlling with gigantic will his voice. In dead, dull lifeless tones — a world Of baffled aspiration in his eyes— he spoke. Scram! We scrammed. Will Reiley 1 Oh Heaven Alone I sat in the vaulted echoing church And thought of Heaven — an appalling thought. Why? Simply this— to live and live through all Eternity, To know you cannot die, to know An awful soul-destroying sameness. Never to gladly run the risk of life. To snap your fingers in the face of death. To see a level, bright, unending road Of years stretched out before you. And to realize That you must travel it forever. Without encountering the peace of Death. Alone I sat in the vaulted echoing church. And thought of Death— a comforting idea. Will Reiley. S Page Filty-sei ' en Boj Against the Sky High on the hillside Stood a boy. With the freedom of the day Rustling the grasses. While below him lay The temple and the town. Roy Coleman b Y nou ' ledge I see thee now. O Knowledge ' . Let me gaze into thy mirror And hold thy glowing lamp. Multiply my strength ten thousandfold. O Knowledge! Lift me from the cold chasms Of Doubt and Ignorance. O Knowledge, keystone of the Mind. Guide me. For L though I have eyes to see. Stumble, and am blind. Let me gaze into thy mirror. And hold thy glowing lamp. Roy Coleman. Bravery One man against a million motors. There he stood, and with a flutter Of his white-gloved hand he stopped them Stopped them in their reckless glory. Stopped the brawling of their bugles. Stopped the roaring of their engines. For a hundred blocks they halted. Checked, impatient, in their fleeting— Halted, fuming, in their madcap Race to nowhere: while their masters Uttered words beneath their whiskers. Rude and pointed words that crackled. Pungent phrases, low and lurid. Bringing down the curse of ages On the man who dared defy them. Dared to stay the March of Progress. Dared to stay it with a gesture. While a nursemaid crossed the highway Will Reiley. Page Filty-eight Cyrano de Bergerac Beloved lover. Genius nsks but simple souls For immortality. You, Cyrano, live In the hearts that beat with youth! Forsooth Romance, undying in the hearts of men. From your lips Is formed with flowing delicacy. Like a medley played upon the lute! The fruit Of all your labors has ripened And been feasted with These many years. . . . You are the flame of poetry. The stylus with which an epic Has been written into life! The fife And drums of the emotions! d s Roy Coleman. Whaf Price War? peace is love and war is hate: Is death to be our mournful fate. Or shall a brotherhood ' s true fire Lift us from a sinking mire? Capital ' s fat, persuasive hand. Has thrust us into battle; The wily Devil ' s murderous band Sounds the last death rattle. My hand is raised in stark salute: My mind gropes through the visions dim; My spirit, in awe, is tragic and mute; 1 dread Mars ' stormy visage grim. Alike the souls of friend and foe, March on as winds of Ages blow: Utopia mocks as fading goal: Menacing, the war drums roll. A pen I use for sabre keen: My doctrines are but what I feel; My slender sword but softly gleams. Yet bludgeons yield before my steel! i Emil Brock. Page Fifty-nine • ■■l The Yacht Skims Over the Sun-Swept Sea i Day-Dream A ha:y recollection of enchanted days of yore — A lilting silrer madrigal across a golden shore. A swarthy swaggering captain in a laced and gaudy coat. And pirates in white canvas breeches leaping from a boat. A glittering a:iire sea aroar against the la:i) land. A sultry sun ablating down upon the shimmering sand. Behind, the feathery waving fronds of graceful tropic trees. And o ' er it all. from out the blue, adrifting on the breeze, A lilting silver madrigal across the golden shore — A hazy recollection of enchanted days of yore. Will Reiley. The Game Lithe and supple, glistening brown. The diver describes his curved way down. A splash, a cascade of silvery foam . . . All a game. Speed of movement, giant ' s strides. A skiing youth the flurries rides And whizzes down his mountain home . . . It s a game. The poet ' s verse, the playwright ' s pen Strive to express the souls of men And tell us all of life that ' s known . . . It ' s a game. Life, like Proteus, wears a mask . . . We know not life until we ask: What name of all is yours alone? A game! ' Frederick Dunlap. The Yacht The yacht skims over the sunswept sea. The sails are seagull ' s wings: The cutting spray is an ecstasy. And the ropes are taut and the wind is free And wild is the song it sings. The water slips by. swift and still. And the waves are running high: And he who has known that glorious thrill Will never forget its lure until The tide of life runs dry. Will Reiley. 1 Page Sixty-one J9 b IP ] d d N 1 • SCIIOOT. f.lFE ■I I MR. JOHN J. MADDOX Principal s 1 MR. MILTON FRYE Assistant Principal i THE FACULTY, FALL TERM, 1932 Mr. John }. Maddox. Principal ART Miss Florence Knepper COMMERCIAL Mr. J. D. Bragg Mr. Waldo H. Drake Mr. H. B. Lehman ENGLISH Miss Constance Brown Miss Susan Coultas Mr. H. M. Doxsee Mr. Bert E. Fenenga Miss Helen McCalpin Miss Mary Mclntire Miss Harriet Rothman Miss Edith Waddock LANGUAGES Miss Edith Babbitt. French Miss Rosalie Kaufman. Latin Miss Grace E. MacMillan. Spanish Mr. E. H. Neller. French Mr. F. S. Spurr. Spanish Miss Hazel L. Tompkins. Latin Miss Paula Wilhelmi. German MATHEMATICS Miss Marjorie Becker Miss L. C. Conrad Mr. Guy C. Forsman Miss Louise H. Huff Miss B. J. Riefling Mr. E. M. Schueneman Mr. A. J. Schwartz Mr. Oral W. Seipp Mr. C. A. Smith MANUAL TRAINING Mr. A. W. Marx Mr. Matt J. Scherer MECHANICAL DRAWING Mr. W. C. McNutt Mr. R. K. Whitesitt MUSIC Mr. H. B. Maginn Miss Charlotte Pope NATURAL SCIENCES Mr. B. J. Chervenka. Chemistry Miss Marguerite Fleming. Biology Miss Esther Heinicke, Biology Miss Julia Lenzen, General Science Mr. F. W. Moody. Physiography Mr. Arthur J. Svoboda, Biology Miss Anna E. Tensfeld, Biology PHYSICAL EDUCATION Mr. Ralph Ballin Mr. C. D. Frankenberger Miss Lelia V. Gunther Miss L. M. Harrison Miss Mary I. Mann Miss Jane B. Williams SOCIAL SCIENCES Mr. F. K. Deming. History Mr. V. A. Dougan, Civics Mr. C. W. Hawkins. History Miss Hilda E. Hiemenz, History Mr. C. F. Kincaid, History Miss Dena Lange. Economics Miss Judith Levy, History Miss Gene Meenach, Geography Mr. Earl C. Parker. History Mr. Isaac Rabinowitz. Geography Miss Mamie Randolph. History Page Sixty-seven t THE FACULTY, FALL TERM, 1932 Mr. Milton Frye. Assistant Principal Miss Edna Fisse. Dean of Girls MECHANICAL DRAWING Mr. W. A. Ryan Mr. R. C. White MUSIC Miss Charlotte Mann NATURAL SCIENCES Mr. Mendel E. Branom, Physiography Miss Lucille Hanna. General Science Mr. Theodore D. Kelsey. Chemistry Miss Kathryn Kroenlein, General Science Mr. L. R. Mapes. Physics Mr. Karl L. Ware. Physics PHYSICAL EDUCATION Mr. John C. Noon Mr. Ray B. Singer Miss F. B. Stillwell SOCIAL SCIENCES Miss Mary }. Klem. History Miss Ethel Morrow, History Miss M. Luella Quinn, History Miss Cecelia Rowan, Geography Mr. H. R. Tucker, Sociology BOOKS AND SUPPLIES Mr. R. J. Davisson LIBRARIAN Miss Erma Meier OFFICE Miss Arline Batz Miss Mary Hartness Miss Marguerite Redd ART Miss R. E. Fitch Miss Mary M. Saams COMMERCIAL Mr. J. A. Benson Mr. E. E. Hutzel Mr. S. A. Lewis Mr. E. H. Myer Miss Clara E. Townsend Miss Minnie A. Vavra ENGLISH Miss Bessie Campbell Mr. H. E. Green Mr. Ray Heritage Miss Julia M. Jordan Miss L. E. Kilpatrick Miss Lucille Murphy Miss Mable O ' Brien Miss Julia Pryor Miss Julia Randall Mr. Samuel Rosenkranz Mrs. C. L. Wostenholm HOME ECONOMICS Miss Eleanor B. Foote Miss Virginia Richeson LANGUAGES Miss Carolyn Gayler. German Miss Elizabeth Toomey, Latin MATHEMATICS Mr. Mark Moody Mr. C. E. Tredinnick Miss Florence Waddock MANUAL TRAINING Mr. G. S. Garoian Mr. Harry L. King Mr. Ralph C. Wilson PHYSICIANS Dr. Mary A. McLoon Dr. L. R. Wentzel NURSE Miss Geneva McMurtrey Page Sixty-nine i THE STUDENT COUNCIL spring Term. 1932 Sponsor Miss Fisse OFFICERS n i President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms James Harrison Georgia Rolston Samina Kist Bill Seward Herbert Volk The Student Council in Cleveland High School is an assembly composed of representatives, one from each advisory group. The Council meets every Wednesday before school and considers problems confronting the school, offer- ing suggestions, and working out plans for the betterment of school govern- ment. To do this successfully, the representatives must co-operate and show the Cleveland Spirit. The first task accomphshed in the fall of 1932 was the Freshman Party, when over three hundred and fifty freshmen were met by the representatives and made to feel welcome in their new school home. Students entering Cleve- land can depend upon the Student Council Representatives to answer their questions, direct them to various classrooms, or in other words to be big brothers or sisters to them. The Council not only functioned during school hours, but assisted at the Parent-Teacher Association meetings. Dances were held for the students whose parents attended the meetings. Page Seventy THE STUDENT COUNCIL Fall Term. 1932 OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Henry Zimmerman Billie Linder William Lochmoeller Bill Ryan Edwin Jokisch As the Christmas Holidays approached, welfare work was undertaken and the seventy-two advisory groups provided food and clothing for seventy-five needy families in St. Louis. The Council bore the expense of having the school trophies polished as a farewell gift to their school. The Student Council of January-June ' 33 lost no time in promoting real welfare work in Cleveland. The executive committee, with Mr. Maddo.x and Miss Fisse. decided there should be a Freshmen Boys ' Club, and the club was instituted this term. The Council has also taken charge of the noon auditorium sessions, pro- viding the ushers and chairmen. They hope soon to be able to assist in arrang- ing programs under the direction of the Publicity Committee. The Freshmen Party was given on February twenty-fourth and its suc- cess was due to the untiring efforts of the committee and the co-operation of the freshmen and Student Council Representatives. Page Seventy-one 1 (T THE NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY Spring Term, 1932 Sponsor President Vice President Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Mr. Kelsey Norman Schneider Audrey Marsh Mary Muse Karl Holderle iji I Verona Blesse Wesley Brandt Valerie Bryant Robert Fiedler Vera Fisher Elvira Flachsbart Carol Fleming Earl Gummels Betty Hanneman Ruth Jones Elizabeth Justice Marie Kirtz Lucille Kurusz Frank Menniges Audrey Mullins Marion Paine Ruth Proske MEMBERS Georgia Rolston Sylvia Scheinkman Helen Schwanecke Elna Sehnert Ruth Splittgerber Everett Storey Olga Wismar Bessie Aydelott Charles Brueggeman Sonya Cramin Oliver Fischer Jack Hamman Ruth Johnson Eleanor Koch Rose Kueter Mary Turek Leonard Vogt Katherine Biehler Doris Brougher Dorothy Doerres Alma Hertel James Harrison Charles Koch Dorothy Lauterback Robert Mignerone June Murdoch Ernest Pallme Robert Rawizza Dorothy Reininga Rose Resetaritz Helen Schollmeyer Norma Thielker Vincent Tiefenbrunn Edward Weppler Elections to the National Honor Society are made from those in the upper fourth of each graduating class on the basis of their records as to character, scholarship, service and leadership. Ten per cent of the class may be elected in the seventh term and an additional five per cent in the eighth term. Page Seuenty-two THE NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY Fall Term. 1932 OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Robert Rawizza Dorothy Doerres June Murdoch Charles Koch MEMBERS Katherine Biehler James Harrison Alma Hertel Dorothy Lauterback Robert Mignerone Ernest Pallme Dorothy Reininga Rose Resetaritz Helen Schollmeyer Norman Thielker Vincent Tiefenbrunn Edward Weppler Ruth Brusselback Virginia Burlemann Florence Corell Raymond Dawdy Marion Demey Annette Ehrhardt Irma Franklin Berger Gra es Thelma Held Edwin Jokisch Fred Machmer Eleanor Boehm Gertrude Bretscher Fay Cinnater Bill Dahman Clara Duever Ann Edinger Robert Elder Oscar Fernandez Robert Goran Edmond Heinrichsmeyer Ruth Heinrichsmeyer Ruth Jacobs Nadine Jones Elsa Klock Edward Kounovsky Erlieta Lachnit Gail Lindahl Billie Linder William Lochmoeller Dorothy Mazanec Mildred MoellenhofF Doris Neunuebel Carl Ring James Robertson Margaret Sattig Wilma Scheller Margaret Seligman Jeannette Stark Berenice Tiefenbrunn Fred Wenzel 1 Page Seventy-three THE BEACON STAFF Mr. Theodore D. Kelsey Sponsors Mr. E. E. Hutzel THE ELECTED STAFF Editor Business Manager Associate Editor, January ' 33 Associate Editor, June ' 33 Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Vincent Tiefenbrunn Fred Wenzel June Murdoch Ruth Heinrichsmeyer James Harrison WilHam Lochmoeller In the production of The Beacon of 1933 the staff has sought to advance the traditional high standards of the publication. In the task of compiling this volume, the good work of previous staffs has been an inspiration for our efforts. The theme of Sports, featured throughout the book, was chosen as one which should appeal to the interest of high school students. Particular atten- tion has been paid to the development of the Prose. School Life and Athletic Sections, in keeping with this theme. We, the staff of 1933, submit this volume with the hope that our readers Page Seventy-four will find in it an abundance of interesting material and a stinuiiiis to pleasant memories of the school year. The Beacon Staff and the entire student body are indebted to our sponsors. Mr. Kelsey and Mr. Hutzel, under whose most capable guidance and super- vision an outstanding edition of The Beacon has been produced. Mr. Kelsey supervises the general content and make-up of the book and co-ordinates the work of the Editorial. Literary and Art Staffs. Mr. Hutzel has charge of the financing and all business affairs of The Beacon. THE ART STAFF We are especially grateful to Miss Saams. who directed the art work for this issue. In addition to the members of the Art Staff, whose names appear below in connection with their pictures, the following students assisted in the production of the art work, which contributes vitally to the attractiveness of The Beacon: Stella Wotka, Dorothy Reininga, Evelyn McArthur, Lorraine Yaeger. Melva Schneider. Jane Maginot, Betty Peters, Norma Thomsen, Lucille Simons, Ruth Kalde, Gail Lindahl. Audrey Flore. La Verne Altman. Grace Nicholas, Malcolm Timpe. Adelaide Whiteaker. Most of the snapshots in the Athletic and School Life Sections were made by Eddie Goldberger, staff photographer. Top row: Eddie Goldberger, Margaret Berr. Roland Rodegast. Vera Pfaff. Bottom row: Eleanora Ellenberger, Russell Johnson, Evelyn Stahl, Miss Saams. Page Seventy-five I d 2s 1 J Top row: Mr. Green. Alma Hertel. Nadine Jones, Raymond Dawdy. Bottom row: Robert Rawizza, William Reiley, Roy Coleman, James Robertson, Dorothy Hacker. THE LITERARY STAFF In connection with the literary work of this issue. The Beacon is indebted to Mr. Green and Miss Brown for their able assistance, to Miss McCalpin for her attention to the poetry, and to Miss Lange for her co-operation in fur- nishing an extensive list of library references in regard to various sports. The members of the Literary Staff assisted in selecting the most suitable contributions from the large number submitted by the students. In addition to this, most of them also furnished contributions to the literary sections, in some cases in response to requests for articles which were especially needed. l i APPRECIATION The Beacon Staff wishes to express its appreciation to the many teachers and pupils whose co-operation was essential in making this issue a success. Special thanks are due to Miss Knepper and her Boys ' Art Appreciation classes for the striking displays of sport pictures which they exhibited from week to week in the main corridor during the fall term as a means of publicity for The Beacon. The Beacon is indebted: To Dr. R. Tait McKenzie and the J. B. Lippincott Company, of Phila- delphia, for their courtesy in permitting reproduction of prints of two of Dr. McKenzie ' s works in the sculpture of athletes. Page Seventy-six To Mr. Ira H. Morse, of Lowell. Massachusetts, for pictures of African hunting scenes, and for an interesting fiooklet giving an account of his ele- phant-hunting e.xpedition. To the Orange and Blue for helpful publicity. To the St. Louis Globe-Democrat for pictures of skating and football. To the St. Louis Post-Dispatch for football pictures. To the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce for pictures of water sports. To the Educational Museum for permission to make enlargements from the motion picture film of Girls ' Play Day. To The Scrip, of Soldan High School, for the cut of the Yale Bowl. THE ATHLETICS, ADVERTISING AND TYPEWRITING STAFFS Most of the articles on interscholastic athletic competition were written by Charles Koch. Each member of the Advertising Staff earned his or her appointment by securing advertising to the amount of twenty-five dollars or more. William Ale.xander. Dorothy Doerres and Ferd Machmer qualified for this appointment. The typists. Katherine Biehler. Marian Demey. Elsie HofFmeister and Erlieta Lachnit. are to be commended for the quality and quantity of the service which they rendered, under Mr. Hutzels supervision, in preparing copy for the printer. Marian Demey compiled the calendar of school events, called Reminiscing. Top row: Ferd Machmer. Dorothy Doerres. Elsie HofFmeister Katherine hsiehler. Bottom row: Erlieta Lachnit. Charles Koch, Marian Demev William Ale.xander. 1 Page Seventy-seven THE ORANGE AND BLUE Mrs. Wostenhulm Sponsor Mr. Bragg Sponsor It has been the aim of the Orange and Blue Staff and reporters to produce an Orange and Blue that meets the exacting requirements set forth by its readers. We have striven for a paper that contains news of every activity in which Cleveland and her students participate. The Staff appreciates the efforts of all who assist in the production and distribution of the paper, and thanks the subscribers for their loyal support. May the Orange and Blue always serve as a representative of Cleveland spirit and Cleveland ideals. 2 ] d For the spring term. 1932: Ray Bradley, Editor. June Murdoch, Associate Editor. Fred Wenzel. Business Manager. For the fall term, 1932: Oscar Fernandez, Editor. Dorothy Doerres. Associate Editor. Edmond Heinrichsmeyer, Business Manager. For the spring term, 1933: Henry Zimmermann, Editor. Elsa Klock, Associate Editor. Robert Elder, Business Manager. Page Seventy-eight THE HIGH SCHOOL ORATORICAL CONTEST The Annual High School Oratoriciil Contest was held on April 22, 1932, in Graham Memorial Chapel at Washington University, The principals of the high schools, serving as judges, made the following awards: Boys ' Division 1 . Everett Storey, Cleveland 2. Howard Williams, Central 3. Edmund Kohlmeyer, Soldan Girls Division 1 . Rosemary Thorpe, Soldan 2. Letha Hughes, Central 3. Rose Kueter. Cleveland Whether war shall continue or whether there shall be enduring peace was the theme of The New Philosophy , the oration with which Everett Storey won first place for Cleveland. Rose Kueter spoke on A Problem of Social Equality . Our representatives were trained by Mr, Bert E, Fenenga, teacher of Public Speaking. The school is justly proud of the honors which they won by their excellent work in the contest. STATE HONORS FOR THE 1932 BEACON For 1932. in the class of annual publications from Missouri high schools with an enrollment of more than one thousand students. The Beacon, published by the students of Grover Cleveland High School, was awarded first place by the Missouri Interscholastic Press Association. The theme of Me.xico was featured in this issue. The art work, under the direction of Miss Fitch. was of a high order of excellence throughout the book. The late Mr. Priess and Mr. Hutzel were the sponsors and Karl Holderle was editor and business manager. HONORABLE MENTION In a recent poetry contest conducted by the Wednesday Club, in which nearly six hundred poems were submitted by residents of St. Louis and St. Louis County. Roy Coleman, a member of the Class of June. 1933. was one of four who won honorable mention. His poem is entitled The House on the Hill-Road . Roy Coleman ' s talent in poetry is well known to his fellow-students through his contributions to The Beacon. On behalf of the school, we congratulate him upon the recognition which he has won in this field. Page Seventy-nine ? I s GIRLS ' DEBATING FORUM w Sponsors Miss Randall Mr. Doxee Mr. Neller Mr. Hawkins OFFICERS President Secretary Orange and Blue Reporter Dorothy Lauterback Katherine Biehler Gertrude Bretscher MEMBERS Audy Anschuetz Audrey Asmussen Clara Duever Eva Gruendler Jane Long Irene Miniea Mary Sargent Anita Schroeder Vernell Schroeder Lorraine Tenner Margaret Werner Ruth Kornfeld The Girls ' Debating Forum has again joined the State League. The subject for debate this year is Resolved: That at least one-half of all st ate and local revenue should be derived from sources other than tangible prop- On December 9. 1932. Dorothy Lauterback and Katherine Biehler, affirm- ative for Cleveland, defeated the Maplewood High School team by a two-to- one decision, and on December 12, 1932, the same team lost to Hancock. Mary Sargent and Anita Schroeder, our representatives on the negative side of the question, lost to Normandy by a two-to-one decision on January 13, 1933. Page Eighty BOYS ' DEBATING FORUM By winning both of the interscholastic debates held on April I 1932 the Cleveland debaters obtained for Cleveland High School the permanent pos- session of the second Princeton Cup. The question debated was: Resolved 1 hat legislation be enacted providing for compulsory unemployment insurance! Cleveland ' s affirmative team emerged with a 2-1 decision over Soldan in a debate held at Cleveland and the negative squad vanquished Roosevelt obtaining a unanimous decision at Roosevelt. The double victory brought the second Princeton Cup to Cleveland where it may repose in the company of the hrst Princeton Cup won by Cleveland seven years ago. The speakers of the two victorious teams were awarded individual silver cups qifts of the Princeton Club of St. Louis. The Cleveland Teams were as follows: d AFFIRMATIVE First Simon Krapp Second Harol Wheatley Third Everett Storey Alternate Oscar Fernandez NEGATIVE First William Dahman Second Leonard Forgey Third Richard Deming Edward Kounovsky. Wesley Brandt. Albert Galvin, and Paul Hinchev also received debating letters. Much of the success is due to Mr. Mark Moodv. Mr. Deminq and Mr Kosenkranz. who so ably coached the team. ; 1 Page Eighty-one i REMINISCING 1932 February Second Besides the regulars. there were three hundred and fifty new Fresh- men in Cleveland ' s halls on Registration Day. February Fifth u i c u i The Cleveland Girls ' Debating Team defeated the Clayton High bchool Team by a two-to-one decision in a state league debate. 1 he losing side of their slate is clean, and the winning side shows seven marks. February Sixteenth to Twenty -sixth At the noon auditorium assembles, programs were presented in celebra- tion of the bicentennial of George Washington. The programs were given by pupils under the supervision of teachers in the Department of Social Sciences. February Nineteenth The Cleveland Girl Debaters lost to Assumption, the first defeat of this season. February Twenty-seventh The Cleveland Rifle Team added more glory to its name by taking sec- ond place in the State High School Match at Kemper Military Academy. Vincent Tiefenbrunn. noted rifleman, took first place in the high aggre- gate score for high school boys and received a silver cup to add to his trophies. The Girls ' Team took first place in the girls ' division. The silver cup awarded them was offered for the first dme. March Eighteenth Freshman! Of course you remember your big day! The Freshman Party was under the auspices of St. Patrick. You couldn ' t forget all your friends and classmates dressed up in green. April First Ahem! Because of a double victory, the Princeton Debating Cup comes to Cleveland as a permanent possession. None of the Seniors or New Seniors will ever forget the Senior-New Senior dance in the gym. April Sixth Aloys Bergmann and Emma Roechst were awarded first prize in a safety first poster and slogan contest. Good work! Page Bighty-two April Foiirtecntli Thiit was the evening we all went to the Granada, where the Parent- Tcachcr Association sponsored a picture show to raise money to aid children who otherwise would be unable to attend high school. April Twenty-second Congratulations! Everett Storey placed first in the boys ' division of the High School Oratorical Contest. Rose Kueter placed third in the girls ' division. April Twenty-eighth THE SENIOR PLAY Did you go Skidding? That was the name of the Senior Play given in the auditorium. The cast was as follows: Mrs. Hardy Margaret Taylor Marion Audrey Steinmeyer Aunt Millie Lucille Kurusz Wayne Edwin Duenow Estelle Ruth Johnson Myra Audrey Tallman Andy Clarence Downing The Judge Robert Flachsbart Grandpa Fischel Rosenthal May Sixth Three hundred and fifty girls participated in the annual girls ' field meet, Play Day. The program consisted of various athletic contests and games. May Fifteenth Champions in our midst! The Cleveland Rifle Team won the State Championship in a meet at Jefferson City. May Nineteenth Twenty-seven Seniors and New Seniors were rather proud that eve- ning, having just been initiated in the Cleveland Chapter of the National Honor Society. Under-classmen might set that as a goal to be reached only by a successful four-year period of work. V I The Cast in A Prince There Was Page Eighty-three « Celebrating the Bicentennial of Washington May Twenty-sixth Autograph my Beacon, please. That remark can be accounted tor when you remember that the Beacons were distributed. The book was dedicated to Mr. Priess. The Mexican theme contributed much to a pleasingly different book. May Twenty-seventh How could anyone ever Forget that day? Senior Class Day was a program of Memories. To make this A perfect day, school was dismissed in the afternoon in order to give everyone an opportunity to attend the Field Meet, in which Cleveland placed fourth. ]iine Third This was the date of the Senior excursion given on the bteamer it. Paul. The evening was perfect, the music sweet, and the lights were soft — all contributing to a memorable occasion. June Fifteenth May we offer our congratulations? Everett Storey was awarded a two- year scholarship in Chicago University and Wesley Brandt received a four-year Washington University scholarship in recognition of his four years of outstanding achievement at Cleveland. June Sixteenth Graduation! Two hundred and fifty-five Clevelandites received their diplomas. Good-bye. Seniors, and good luck! September Fifth A record enrollment! Three thousand and twelve students registered at Cleveland, October Seventh Hark, ye Freshmen! Of course, every Freshman remembers that party, where there was plenty of good entertainment, games, refreshments, and dancing. October Twenty-eighth There was dancing from three to five o ' clock at the Senior-New Senior party. Page Eighty-four THE ALUMNI PLAY Mystery! Comedy! Suspense! They were all in the Alumni Play. The Yellow Shadow, given in the Cleveland auditorium. The cast? Of course. I remember! The Murdered Man Nell Travis, housekeeper Gilbert Wright, attorney Alice Perkins Hazel Wayne Jed Travis Herbert Marvin Mildred Marvin Sheriff Macklin J. Steel. Coroner Wong Song October Twenty-ninth Well! The Missouri Interscholastic the 1932 Beacon was considered the schools having one thousand students Tom McBratney Bernice Gebhardt Herman Buergler Virginia Benson Audrey Steinmeyer Frank Ries Pat Dowd Mildred Cown Ralph Kornfeld Valerie Bryant Robert Gotsch Press Association announced that best annual of those Missouri high or more. A PRINCE THERE WAS November Eighteenth What a play! The Senior Class presented A Prince There Was ' with the following cast: Charles Martin Roy Lanser Horace Browder Bland Jack Carruthers Comfort Miss Vincent Gladys Prouty Mrs. Prouty Katherine Woods Mr. Short James Harrison Rose Resetaritz June Murdoch Thelma Held Irma Franklin Ruth Ann Dienstbach Earl Hobbs 1 George Washington ' s Last Birthday Parti, Page Eighty-five u « rT b Mr. Cricket Delia Messenger Eddie Edward Weppler Annette Ehrhardt Donald Wayne Robert Golterman November Nineteenth Cleveland took the High School League football championship, winning the fourth leg on the Yale Bowl. December Ninth The Seniors were entertained by the New Seniors at a dance. December Twentieth The Yale Bowl was presented to Cleveland by Mr. Shapleigh, president of the Yale Club of St. Louis. There were thirteen other members of the club present, including the Yale Quartet, v ho entertained during the program. 1933 January Thirteenth The Class of January ' 33 in their Class Day program featured a good old-fashioned barn dance. There were radio, screen, and stage stars, including the famous Baron Munchausen, the Four Marx Brothers, and many well-known dance and harmony teams. The hit of the day, how- ever, was the square dance, the favorite divertissement of the mighty Seniors. January Eighteenth Ten Seniors and thirty New Seniors were inducted into the Cleveland Chapter of the National Honor Society. January Twenty-fifth Dorothy Doerres was awarded the four-year Washington University scholarship. Congratulations, Dot! January Twenty-sixth Au Revoir! The Seniors graduated with all the pomp and ceremony characteristic of that occasion. Marian Demey. THE FACULTY SNAPSHOTS First row: 1. Miss Tensfeld. 2. Mr. and Mrs. Hawkins boating on Ver- milion Lake, Minnesota. 3. Miss Randall. Second row: 1. Miss Saams on a camping and touring trip in northern Wisconsin. 2. Mr. Hutzel and friends with a catch of brook trout. 3. Mr. Mark Moody enjoying Lake Michigan breezes at Long Beach, Wisconsin. Third row: 1. Mr. Hawkins finds the fishing good in Minnesota. 2. Miss Saams, Miss Knepper. Miss Vavra, Miss Jordan and Miss Kilpatrick. 3. Evi- dence that Mr. Chervenka knows where the big brook trout are to be found in the streams near Traverse City, Michigan. Fourth row: 1. Miss Fleming, Miss Hanna and Mr. Whitesitt. 2. Mr. Kelsey with an eighteen-pound great northern pike which he landed at Burt Lake, Michigan. 3. Mr. Tucker reads as he runs. 4. Miss Kaufman on a stroll along the esplanade at Nice. France. Page Eighty-six h iifa Faculty Snapshots Page Eight y-sei ' en u I d On the Field d V I r The Winning of the Bowl n b ■■i I ]ust or the Fun of It Page Ninety s 1 Dignified Seniors Page Ninety-one u 1 SENIOR SUPERLATIVES Class of January, 1933 t I Best Dressed Girl Best Dressed Boy Peppiest Girl Peppiest Boy Most Popular Girl (among girls) Most Popular Boy (among boys) Best Looking Girl Best Looking Boy Most Intelligent Girl Most Intelligent Boy Most Popular Girl (among boys) Most Popular Boy (among girls) Cutest Girl Most Attractive Boy Smallest Girl Tallest Boy Best Girl Athlete Best Boy Athlete Best Girl Orator Best Boy Orator Smallest Feet (girl) Largest Feet (boy) Curliest Hair (girl) Curliest Hair (boy) Prettiest Eyes (girl) Prettiest Eyes (boy) Wittiest Girl Wittiest Boy Best Girl Singer Best Boy Singer Best Girl Pianist Best Boy Pianist Ruth Brusselback Earl Hobbs Dorothy Gannon Robert Mignerone Helen Schollmeyer Jimmy Davis Susan Hammel Fred Vierling Dorothy Doerres Robert Rawizza Marian Demey Edward Vaughn Helen Weckermeyer Allan Wagner Alma Hertel Herbert Strele Grace Kleinpeter Gene Poteet Katherine Biehler Roy Lanser Florence Corell James Harrison Virginia Witte Sydney Scherstuhl Dorothy Schilli Edgar Wilke Loretta Novy Horace Browder Ruth Erb Howard Wade Dorothy Lauterback Harry Haas i Page Ninety-two dMmm ' 3S! ■19 ■ki 1 ' nn IT 1 m f 9 ; 1 Senior Superlatires NEW SENIOR SUPERLATIVES Class of June. 1933 Most Intelligent Girl Gertrude Bretscher Most Intelligent Boy- Oscar Fernandez Best Dressed Girl Frances Peil Best Dressed Boy William Stonecipher Best Looking Girl Elsie HofFmeister Best Looking Boy Herbert Volk Best All-Around Girl Esther Olda Best All-Around Boy Edmond Heinrichsmeyer Smallest Girl Ruth Boone Tallest Boy Willard Hans Best GirJ Athlete Ann Heinicke Best Boy Athlete John Gresowski Most Popular Girl (among girls) Margaret Seligman Most Popular Boy (among boys) Vincent Tiefenbrunn Cutest Girl Clarice Brand Most Attractive Boy Joe Sonnleitner Most Popular Girl (among boys) Billie Linder Most Popular Boy (among girls) Joe Kelly Best Orator (girl) Norma Schlagenhauf Best Orator (boy) William Dahman Smallest Feet (girl) Corrine Theiss Largest Feet (boy) Frank Heidel Curliest Hair (girl) Lucille Hammond Curliest Hair (boy) Matthew Buffa Prettiest Eyes (girl) Berenice Tiefenbrunn Prettiest Eyes (boy) James Dunphy Wittiest Girl Marjorie Owen Wittiest Boy William Seward Best Girl Singer Ruth DodenhofF Best Boy Singer Kenneth Yochum Best Girl Pianist Erlieta Lachnit Best Boy Pianist Ed Hicks Peppiest Girl Wilma Scheller Peppiest Boy Bob Elder Best Dancer (girl) Myrtle Huether Best Dancer (boy) Frank Miller Most Romantic Girl Helen Frisinger Most Romantic Boy Erving Meinberg Most Personality (girl) Mildred Oldeg Most Personality (boy) George Van Ronzelei. Page Ninety-four UD t 1 New Senior Superlatives Page Ninety-five 1_ T b i 1 • ATHLETICS d THE FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP  y, - .. -  .„ ywi iiy i; WJ ' .j .v p i |lt l l i |jliipPip P | jP i. r TliL CItumptons, 1932 From the first day of practice at Cleveland, all things turned toward a football championship. A large squad containing many promising players reported for practice on the first day of school. Coach Fenenga had quite a laborious time picking a first team because of the wealth of excellent material. Beger, Hans. Schwinke, and Pieper were the only lettermen from last year ' s team to return. But through a re- markable schooling system, with the able assistance of Coaches White, Mapes, Frankenberger and Noon, Coach Fenenga had built up a great number of prospective candidates. Amelung. Jokisch, Rapp, Koch, and Kracke were some of the backfield prospects. Among the linemen, Dunphy, Knorr, Wis- brock, Graves, and Wenzel were outstanding. Cleveland finished the prac- tice season with a record of one victory, two ties, and one defeat, losing to Cape Girardeau, 7 to 0. Cleveland opened the league campaign for the Yale Bowl with McKinley, Friday, October 21. Jack Beger, right tackle, was named captain of this year ' s team. Mgr. Fudemberg Knorr Capt. Beger Wenzel Page Ninety-eight Rapp JOKISCH Kracke Hans Cleveland vs. McKinley Cleveland defeated McKinley 20 to 2. The game was marred only by fumbling: the running and passing attack of Cleveland was too strong for McKinley. McKinley, however, showed up well at times on the defense. Cleveland vs. Roosevelt Roosevelt v.-as defeated 7 to in the stirring battle for the South-Side Championship. In the Hrst quarter. Kracke skirted left end for the only touch- down of the game. He also drop-kicked the extra point. In the latter part of the game. Cleveland displayed one of the greatest defenses ever seen at the Stadium. Cleveland vs. Central Cleveland, scoring in every quarter, defeated Central 52 to With the reserves playing the greater part of the game. Cleveland demonstrated its re- serve strength Cleveland ' s center. Wisbrock, also took part in the scoring tailing on the ball behind the goal line after a bad pass from Central ' s center had been fumbled by a Central backfield man. They ' re Over! First Touchdoivn. Cleveland vf. Central Page Ninety-nine E Cleveland vs. Soldan ■' i f Cleveland vs. Soldan Cleveland, in what proved to be the deciding game of the season, defeated Soldan 6 to 0. Both teams exhibited a very strong defense. Cleveland went back to the pet triple quarterback formation in an effort to gain a touch- down, but Soldan proved too strong. In the last quarter Soldan tried to score with a passing attack. Kracke intercepted one of these passes from Minkey on his ten-yard line, and behind remarkable blocking raced ninety yards for a touchdown. Soldan was unable to overcome the desperate defense displayed by Cleveland in the last minute of play. Cleveland vs. Beaumont Playing on an icy field, Cleveland was held to a scoreless tie by Beau- mont ' s stonewall defense. Cleveland showed a superior running game but when runs meant touchdowns. Beaumont held as only a team with fighting spirit can. The members of this year ' s team may well be praised for the wonderful co-operation they gave to one another. The blocking of Pieper, Dunphy, DUNPHY Heidel Amelung Graves Stelmach Page One Hundred Koch PlEPER Van Ronzelen Wisbrock SCHWINKE Schwinke. Knorr and Beger was one of the team ' s biggest assets in the battle for the championship and it will long be remembered. The spirit shown by the students in the songs and yells taught them by Mr. Schueneman was a steady reminder to the team of what they were fight- ing for. and the strong support of the students was a real factor in the sea- son ' s victory. With four legs now won. Cleveland has tied Soldan in the race for permanent possession of the Yale Bowl. The final standing: Won Lost Tied Cleveland 4 1 Soldan 4 1 Roosevelt 3 2 Beaumont ; 2 2 1 McKinley _ _ 4 1 Central 4 1 Albert Moellenhoff. Knorr and Bcgcr About to Stop Raines of Soldan I ► Page One Hundred One u THE LITTLE ROCK TRIP I ' The champion Cleveland High School football team was rewarded for its successful season with a post-season game and trip to Little Rock, Arkansas. The team accompanied by Mr. Maddox. Coaches Fenenga, White. Noon and Mapes, Mr. Ware, the faculty manager, and Dr. Wippo, arrived on Wednesday night, November 23rd, at Little Rock, where during the next two days they were to enjoy the finest kind of southern hospitality. The next morning a committee of girls came in automobiles to show the visitors the city and their famous school, which is one of the finest in the world. The members of the team were impressed with the complete and modern equip- ment of the school, and its excellent gymnasium, stage and athletic facilities. On November 24th they played and lost. 6-0. the hardest game of the season. The outstanding feature of the game was the fine sportsmanship displayed by both teams. The visitors were entertained most enjoyably that evening at a dance given in their honor by the school. The next day on a side trip to Hot Springs they enjoyed a sight-seeing tour as guests of the Chamber of Commerce. They returned on Saturday to St. Louis, disappointed over the defeat but appreciative of the finest trip a St. Louis team has ever taken. Fred Wenzel. Page One Hundred Two THE YALE BOWL In 1915 the Yale Alumni Association presented the Yale Bowl to the St. Louis Public High Schools for interscholastic competition in football. The Bowl will remain in the permanent possession of the school that wins it five times. The 1932 Championship gives Cleveland its fourth victory and places it in a tie with Soldan. The winners in previous years are as follows: McKinlev 1915 Cleveland 1924 Central 1916 Soldan 1925 McKinley Cleveland 1926 McKinlev 1917 Roosevelt 1927 Central 1918 Roosevelt 1928 Soldan 1919 Soldan Cleveland 1920 Soldan 1929 Soldan 1921 Roosevelt 1930 Central 1922 No Award 1931 No Award 1923 Cleveland 1932 Page One Hundred Three BASKETBALL Basketball Players. 1931-32 When Cleveland opened the 1931-32 basketball season against Beaumont, we had four regulars from the season before: Ray and Ralph Landry, for- wards; Al Mickley and Clarence Pohrer, guards. Russell Scherrer and John Gresowski fought it out for the center position, with Scherrer having a slight edge. But Beaumont was too strong for this quintet and Cleveland went down to defeat. 33-25. Cleveland again went down to defeat, this time before Soldan. 17-9, al- though in the second half of the season Cleveland turned the tables and walloped Soldan, 22-11. Against Central and Roosevelt, Cleveland came through with easy victories in every game. In the second game with Beaumont, Cleveland lost a tough one, 17-16. At the end of the regulation game the score was 16-16, In the second over- time period the Beaumont center sank a foul shot and the game ended in Beaumont ' s favor. Beaumont went on through to win the championship with Cleveland a close second. In the district tournament, Cleveland was defeated by Webster Groves in the first round, 25-24. Cleveland placed three men on the All-Star Quintet: Ray and Ralph Landry, forwards: and Al Mickley, guard. These three players also placed in the individual scoring. Ralph was first in the league with sixty-six points; Ray was second with forty-eight points; and Mickley was eighth with twenty- six points. Final Standings Won Lost Percentage Beaumont 8 1 .000 Cleveland 5 3 .625 Soldan 4 4 .500 Central 2 6 .250 ■Roosevelt 1 7 .125 Page One Hundred Four THE SEASON OF 1932-33 With only one letterman. Gresowski. returning, our school entered the basketball campaign this year with a team made up mainly of inexperienced players. Cleveland went through the first half of the season without a victory. losing to McKinley. Central. Roosevelt. Soldan and Beaumont in that order. Chances in the McKinley game were marred by poor handling of the ball, but in the other games the team was outclassed. The second half saw Cleveland decisively defeat McKinley. but again lose the other games. Then, due to the ineligibility of one of its players. Roosevelt forfeited all its games. Far better prospects are in sight for next season, with four lettermen returning. They are Schneider. Reiter. Vanderford and De GreefF. Final League Standing Won Beaumont 1 Soldan 8 Central 5 Cleveland 3 McKinley 3 Roosevelt 1 ost Percentage 1.000 2 .800 5 .500 7 .300 7 .300 9 .100 s Basketball Players. 1932-33 Gresowski Mgr. Fudemberg, Vanderford and Kracke Schneider The Team and Coach Fenenga ViRGA Reiter De Greeff Page One Hundred Five BASEBALL Baseball Players. 1932 The 1932 baseball team upheld Cleveland ' s tradition of placing a cham- pionship contender in the race. Opening the season. Cleveland walloped Soldan by the score of 10 to 2. Mickley. our star shortstop, hit a home run. while Perdue and Franke. our pitchers, yielded only six hits. Cleveland ' s second game was a 9 to 1 setback by Roosevelt. Suchanek, Roosevelt hurler. let the Cleveland sluggers off with only seven hits. Cleveland regained her stride at the expense of McKinley. the newcomer to the league. The score was 10 to 3. Del Schwinke. our star outfielder, went on a rampage and blasted out a triple, two doubles, and a single. Ondr held McKinley to one hit in six innings. Our second straight victory came with Central on the small end of the score. The final count was 4 to 3. Cleveland was set back for the second time in the season, this time by Beaumont. The score was 16 to 6: Cleveland used four hurlers, but Beau- mont couldn ' t be stopped. Our team started the second half of the season by swamping Soldan, 17 to 7. It was a free-hitting contest with Cleveland garnering seventeen hits. Earl Hahn led the hitters with a home run. a triple, and a double. The game was close until the eighth, when Cleveland scored nine runs to put the game on ice. Cleveland avenged their early season defeat by Roosevelt, by nipping the Rough Riders 1 1 to 9. A 9 to 9 tie was broken in the ninth by a two-run rally. Mickley succeeded in getting three hits, one of which was a tremendous home run over the right field fence of the stadium field. Roosevelt turned a triple play to nip a Cleveland rally in the eighth. The Orange and Blue ' s sixth victory was a runaway at the expense of the Beaumont nine. The final score was 25 to 2. Cleveland ' s sluggers bagged a total of twenty-one hits, four of which were made by Gene Poteet, our center- fielder. The Orange and Blue men made it two runaways in a row by beating Page One Hundred Six McKinley 26-2. Our sluggers pounded out twenty-two hits, among them being two triples, a double, and a single by Earl Hahn. Cleveland wound up the 1932 season with a 7 to 2 decision over Central. With this victory. Cleveland finished in sole possession of second place, runner-up to Roosevelt. Records of the Lcttermen AB Hits Runs Pet. Mickley, ss 43 23 20 .534 Schwinke, If 42 19 12 .452 Hahn, c 41 18 9 .439 Norath, 3b 35 14 10 .400 Murphy. 2b 25 9 5 .360 Poteet, cf 42 13 12 .309 Starkloff. lb 46 14 8 .304 Mutchler, p 14 5 3 .357 Perdue, p - 8 2 1 .250 Final Standings Won Roosevelt 9 Cleveland 8 Soldan _ ., 6 Beaumont 5 Cen tral 2 McKinley -OSt Pet. 1 .900 2 .800 4 .600 5 .500 8 .200 .000 Page One Hundred Seven d TRACK The Mile Ran Pesek Brockelmann SiSCHKA Heinrichsmeyer VlERLING Senior Track Men Cleveland qualified thirty-four men for the twenty-second annual running of the Public High School field meet. Seventeen of these thirty-four helped Cleveland to finish fourth. Roosevelt, Beaumont, and Soldan ranked first, second and third. The following Clevelandites received their letters: ■Name Sen Place Di Event Heinrichsmeyer Fourth 100- Yard Dash Heinrichsmeyer Second 220- Yard Dash Brockelmann Second 1 1 0- Yard High Hurdles Brockelmann Fourth 220- Yard Low Hurdles Pfabe Fourth 1 1 0-Yard High Hurdles Sischka Second Mile Wheatley Fourth 880-Yard Run Dreyer Fourth Broad Jump Vierling Second ( tied ) High Jump Brockelmann Fourth Relay Wheatley Fourth Relay Heinrichsmeyer Fourth Relay Gummels Fourth Relay Page One Hundred Eight iinior Dii Name Place Event Quint Third 50-Yard Dash Quint Fourth 1 00- Yard Dash Horton Fourth 440- Yard Dash Volk Second 880-Yard Dash Belz Fourth 880-Yard Dash Thompson Third Pole Vault Quint Fourth Relay Artman Fourth _ Relay Strattman Fourth Relay Kohlwes Fourth „ Relay Midget Dirision Fudemburg Fourth 50- Yard Dash Fudemburg Fourth 75- Yard Dash Strubhardt Fourth ( tied ) High Jump Gund Fourth ( tied ) High Jump BufFa Second 75- Yard Low Hurdles Nowotny Fourth 75- Yard Low Hurdles Buffa Second Relay Nowotny Second Relay Fudemburg _ Second Relay Strubhardt Second Relay Charles Koch. Juniors and Midgets BuFFA GuND Quint VoLK Fudemburg Page One Hundred Nine x TENNIS The Tennis Team 1 With only one letterman returning from last year ' s excellent team, Cleve- land ' s chances were anything but bright. ' When the call was issued by Coach Chervenka, about thirty-two would-be players turned out. From this squad a fairly strong team was selected. The singles players in first, second, and third positions were Bob Mignerone, the only letterman; Gietner Hibbeler, and Edwin Kuhn. Bill Dahman. Norbert Eggers, Herman Belz, and Edward Kounovsky played in the doubles. The Orange and Blue racqueteers opened the season with a crushing straight set victory over the McKinley Goldbugs. This victory was followed by four straight defeats by Beaumont, Soldan, Central, and Roosevelt, By winning six matches out of twenty played, Cleveland finished in fifth place with a percentage of .300. Soldan led the league for the second straight year, followed by Roosevelt, Beaumont, Central, Cleveland, and McKinley. Letters were awarded to Mignerone, Hibbeler, Kuhn, Dahman, and Eggers. When school opens in September, a school tournament is carried on which helps in determining the selection of a team to represent the school and the ranking of the singles players. In the fall there is only a short time for tennis practice before the League Tournament begins. Therefore it is advisable for those boys who hope to win a place on the tennis team to improve their play as much as possible during the summer months. This means frequent playing against the best competition they can find. Page One Hundred Ten SWIMMING TEAM About a year ago swimming was made a High School League sport, but due to the fact that the public high school swimming pools were closed last spring no official meet was held. Coach Singer and Assistant Coach Mapes undertook the task of building up a suitable team for interscholastic competition and found good material for this team in the Swimming Club. The Team at present consists of: Captains Kohlwes and Claridge; Dinga and Grebel. 40 yards free style: Sturm, 100 yards free style: Thuner and Bar- tosch, 220 yards: Shaw and Buchman. back stroke: Bergauer and Woolsey, breast stroke; Siebert. alternate. The results of various meets held to date are as follows: Y. M. H. A., 36; Cleveland, 50. Soldan, 31: Cleveland. 35. Western M. A., 35: Cleveland, 40. McKinley, 16; Cleveland, 59. Roosevelt, 19: Cle eland, 56. Principia. -11: Cleveland, 34. Beaumont, 29; Cleveland, 46. Soldan, 34; Cleveland, 41, The High School League Meet for this year will be held on March 25th at Washington University Pool. In the Tournament np Tennis Players in Action on the Courts I Page One Hundred Eleven s u to GOLF The Golf Team In the annual district golf meet held in June, Cleveland placed fourth. Our team finished ahead of all the other Public High School teams with a fine team total of 328. John Bazdarich had the best individual score of all the Public High golfers with an excellent 78. Other Cleveland scores were Dohm 82, Kumaus 82. and Mathias 86, In December, 1931, the Public High School Athletic Board decided to include golf as a major sport, and arranged for an interscholastic tournament to be held in the fall of 1932. In the first official competition on October first. 1932, the Cleveland Golf Team, consisting of Carl Dohm, John Bazdarich, Frank Hogan and Harry Parsonage, trimmed the McKinley team by the decisive margin of sixty-four strokes. On the same day. Roosevelt defeated Beaumont and Soldan defeated Central. Cleveland was scheduled to play Beaumont on October eighth, but due to the illness of one of the players, the match was forfeited. On the same day, Roosevelt defeated Central and Soldan defeated McKinley. On October fifteenth, Cleveland played the strong Roosevelt golf team and defeated them by a narrow margin. On the same day, Beaumont defeated Soldan and Central defeated McKinley. As a result, Cleveland was tied for the lead with Roosevelt, Beaumont, and Soldan, The Cleveland team consisted of Carl Dohm, Fred Matustik, John Bazdarich and Harry Parsonage. Cleveland continued its fine playing and ehminated Soldan from the race on October twenty-second. On the same day, Roosevelt defeated McKinley and Beaumont defeated Central. There was now a triple tie for the lead. Page One Hundred Twelve On October twenty-ninth in its last match. Cleveland trimmed the Central team. Roosevelt defeated Soldan and Beaumont defeated McKinley. As a result the tournament ended as a three-way tie and necessitated a play-ofF. On November fifth. Beaumont defeated Roosevelt in the first match of the play-ofF by a score of yil to 409. Cleveland played Roosevelt on the following Saturday and was defeated by a score of 377 to 433. It was a very cold day and ' ery unsuitable for golf. On November twenty-fifth the Cleveland team played the Beaumont team in the final match for the championship and was defeated by a very narrow margin. The score was a total of 378 for Beaumont and 382 for Cleveland. Those who earned their letters were John Bazdarich, Carl Dohm. Harry Parsonage, and Fred Matustik. Carl Dohm. ; In Action DOHM Flanagan Bazdarich Matustik Parsonage 1 r 1. Page One Hundred Thirteen THE RIFLE TEAM ) The Rifle Team, coached by Mr. R. C. Wilson, attends numerous Inter- scholastic Meets, the results of which are given below. The first of these meets to be held in the season is the Missouri State Indoor Shoot held at Kemper Military Academy. In the spring of 1932 the team, composed of Tiefenbrunn, Good, McNeill and Heinrichsmeyer, took sec- ond place in the High School Team Match, Tiefenbrunn had a very success- ful day and captured the Individual High Aggregate Match. The ne.xt important meet was the Midwest Interscholastic Meet at Evans- ton. Illinois, in which the Cleveland boys came in first in the High School divi- sion. The last match of the day, a Rapid Fire Match, proved to be very interesting, as Good, using a borrowed rifle, fired off two ties with boys from Culver and Evanston, and finally emerged in second place. Probably the biggest and most important meet of the season is the Mis- souri State Outdoor Shoot at Jefferson City. In the High School Team match the boys whose pictures appear above outclassed all other high school and military school teams and took the championship with a score that set a new record for the range. In the individual events. Herbert Wiegand. a sophomore, won the Junior Dewar Championship by setting a new record for the course. Tiefenbrunn, Cleveland ' s shooting ace, was also shooting well and at the close of the matches it was seen that he had taken the Open, Civilian, N. R. A. Members, and the Free Rifle Championships along with a tie for first place and two second places, and had set a new record for each of the first three. Be- Page One Hundred Fourteen sides these outstanding achievements numerous other places were gained by Cleveland boys. Following are the results of matches held within the past few months and in each case Cleveland was the visiting team: Wcntworth Military Academy. -i-i. Cleveland. 894. Mi.ssouri llni ersity Freshmen. 805; Cleveland. 905. Missouri Military Academy, 876: Cleveland. 902. Jefferson Barracks. B Company. 751: Cleveland. 885. Kemper Military Academy. 894: Cleveland, 905. The most recent victories of the Rifle Teams occurred on February 25, 1933. at the State Indoor Rifle Meet at Kemper Military Academy, when they walked away with the High School Team Match by taking first and second places among sixteen teams entered. The team composed of Lenney, Meyer. Heinrichsmeyer and Petelik were nine points ahead of the team composed of Tiefenbrunn. Good. Amelung and Wiegand. The high individual in the team match, of both high schools and military schools, was the Cleveland sophomore. James Lenney. In the Men ' s Indi- vidual Prone Match. Tiefenbrunn emerged in number one position by shooting a string of 39 consecutive bulls-eyes for a score of 399X400. Saenger took second place in the same match with a score of 199X200. In the Aggregate Match, a total of all the matches of the day. Good captured first place with a score of 370 and Tiefenbrunn took second with 368. Standing: Good and Tiefenbrunn Kneeling: Wiegand and Meyer Ready [or Action Sitting: Heinrichsme -er Page One Hundred Fifteen d J 1 s CROSS COUNTRY CLUB Sponsor Mr. Singer OFFICER Manager Joe Sischka MEMBERS Herbert Volk Russell Gund Leonard Forgey Phillip Marsh Carl Hahn Walter Goelkel Herbert Hoffmann Walter Wachter William Linter Ralph Kummer Alfred Rapp Wilson Hollander Gilbert Fischer Kenneth Bremer Waldimar Ruemmler Chester Virga Robert Arnold Forrest Bartels Herman Belz Marshall Leich Norman Horton Neil Fassel To provide a means for all-around physical development, to develop distance runners for track, and to promote sportsmanship and perseverance, are the purposes of this organization. Page One Hundred Sixteen BOYS ' SKATING Sponsor OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter MEMBERS Charles Earnhardt Russel Baumhoegger Horace Browder Clarence Chenot Roy Coleman Stanley Davis Wilbert Echert Neil Fassel William Ferguson Charles Finnegan Frank Hefner August Hummert Ewald Hunot Andrew Joly August Jones Walter Jungbluth William Klein Howard Kuehner Oscar Bay Elmer May Mr. Green Roy Pesek Herman Belz Earl Hobbs Ben Marcus Sam Lieberman Harold Luepker Harroll McElmurry Jack Osterholtz John Pape Martin Reker Fred Ruedlinger Lester Saenger Philip Seeger Walter Thomas Ed Wamser William Wither William Wyatt Harold Zimmerman William Gillen Bernard Flaschbart Kenneth Reyburn Kenneth Seibert Russell Gund For the purpose of encouraging ice-skating. Fancy skating and racing are practiced at the Winter Garden on Friday afternoons after school. Page One Hundred Seventeen s u H t I ■i GOLF CLUB Cc Mr, Hutzel OFFICERS President Secretary-Treasurer Stanley Kurka Fred Matustik MEMBERS William Sanborn Richard Cour William Lange Fred Klinge Stewart Flanagan William Drennan Edwin Wisely Adolph Hoffmann Carl Dohm John Bazdarich Russell Anton Harry Parsonage Louis Ray Chauncey Coffee Nerval Reyburn Kenneth Reyburn Page One Hundred Eighteen GYM CLUB Sponsor OFFICERS Captain Orange and Blue Reporter Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS Ray Lammlein James O ' Toole Leo Jaudes John Cooper John Welemier Hubert Steinmey er Roy Young Bill Witler Bill Gillen Bob Lewis George Dreyer Jim Shaw Mr. Singer Edgar Wilke Edward Schmidt Porter Woolsey Pete Landgraf John Reiley John Schulte Elmer Janca Ralph Kummer Harry Oberhaus Herbert Obemiller Robert Dietshek Hermit Hilgert Fred Klinge Roland Rodegast John Scheibe np ; The purpose of this club is to encourage physical development through the use of heavy apparatus, to promote sportsmanship and good fellowship. 1 Paac One Hundred Nineteen % u RIFLE CLUB Sponsors Mr. Wilson Mr. Chervenka Mr. Svoboda Mr. Mapes I d 2nd Term 1931-32 Vincent Tiefenbrunn Paul McNeill Edmond Heinrichsmeyer Charles Good Robert Carney Herbert Wiegand Norman Krizek Elmer Meyer August Jones Theodore Beug OFFICERS President Vice President Recording Secretary Match Secretary Treasurer Custodians Statistical Officers 1st Term 1932-33 Paul McNeill Edmond Heinrichsmeyer Robert Carney Charles Good Frank Petelik Herbert Wiegand Norman Krizek Elmer Meyer William Drennan Paul Herriott DISTINGUISHED RIFLEMEN Paul McNeill Vincent Tiefenbrunn Charles Good EXPERT RIFLEMEN Elmer Meyer Lester Saenger William Amelung Norman Krizek Herbert Wiegand Frank Petelik James Lenny John Ziervogel Edmond Heinrichsmeyer Page One Hundred Twenty SWIMMING CLUB Sponsor Mr. Singer OFFICERS Captain Orange and Blue Reporter Robert Claridge John Dinga MEMBERS Harry Queensen Herbert Buchman James Shaw Donald Wayne William Sanborn Kenneth Schlarman Fred Sweet Robert Tongay Harry Brewer Homer Rushkewitz Paul Thuner William Seibert Nick Bergauer Larry Horras Harrol McElmurry Hilgert Hermit Roy Pesek Russell Henniger Richard Skobel Lawrence Sorber Fred Dunlap William Whitlock Otto Geyer Phil Marsh The purpose of the Swimming Club is to promote a fine swimming team; and to educate the members in the use of all the strokes used in sv imming meets. Page One Hundred Twenty-one d ' d S BOXING AND WRESTLING Sponsor Mr. Ballin OFFICERS President Secretary-Treasurer Wrestling Leaders Boxing Leader Fred Wenzel Jerry Kaltenbronn Roland Damm William Brauer Jerry Kaltenbronn MEMBERS f Boxers Wrestlers Jack Angle. Don Hart, Glenn Witbracht, Ray DeGreefF, Erwin Noll, Art Striebel, Sam Swofford, Lester Reifeiss. Less Goodman, Rudy Litsch- wager. Dick Laws, Ray Havorka, Gus Wackerly. Oliver Schlittler. Frank Riley. Lloyd West, Jim Wertel, Herman Gunther. Charles Johnston. Fred Hoechst, Norval Reyburn. Larry Horras. Victor Zuzenek. Harry Kropf, Jim Grimaud, Oliver Strubhart. Albert Haack, Jack Kelly, John Shea, John Hammer, John Rape, Joe Lochstein, Harold Ber- geest. Joe Meeka. Oliver Benish, Robert Haas. Sam Liebermann, Ed Jokisch. This club promotes interest in amateur boxing and wrestling. Its mem- bers seek to acquire the benefits that the practice of these ancient sports pro- vides and also to promote worthy comradeship. COACHES AND SPONSORS OF SPORTS On the opposite page are shown pictures of the men who direct athletic sports at Cleveland High School. Their skill and enthusiasm are largely responsible for a high level of interest in these wholesome activities m our school. , , . , , Mr. Wilson is sponsor of the Rifle Club: Mr. Mapes assists in the coach- ing of football, baseball and swimming, and is one of the sponsors of the Rifle Club; Mr. White is assistant coach in football and track; Mr. Singer coaches the swimming team, assists in the coaching of track, has charge of first aid and training in football, and sponsors the Gym Club and the Cross Country Club; Mr. Hutzel is in charge of golf. Mr. Noon assists in coaching football and track; Mr. Green is sponsor of the Boys ' Skating Club; Mr. Svoboda is co-sponsor of the Sharpshooters; Mr. Frankenberger helps in the coaching of football and basketball. Mr. Tredinnick coaches track; Mr. Ballin is sponsor of the Boxing and Wrestling Club and assists with track; Mr. Chervenka coaches the tennis team and is one of the sponsors of the Rifle Club; Mr. Fenenga is coach of football, baseball and basketball. Page One Hundred Twenty-two Mr. Wilson Mr. Mapes Mr. Singer Mr. Hutzel Mr. Noon Mr. White Mr. Svoboda Mr. Frankenberger Mr. Tredinnick Mr. Mr. Green Ballin Mr. Chervenka Mr. Fenenga Page One Hundred Twenty-three d T J GIRLS ' PLAY DAY Here They Come. ' The Band and the Colors Up and Over! Babe Ruth at Bat Toxophilites Speed! Page One Hundred Twenty-lour GIRLS ' PLAY DAY Play Day. held on May 6. 1932, was started in Olympic style by a huge parade of all the participants. The procession was headed by the school band and the American and Cleveland colors. The center of the field was converted into baseball diamonds, with thrillers going on. Volley ball games were hotly contested along one side, while Toxophilite members were displaying their skill on the opposite side. The tennis courts were all in action. Many lively scenes and episodes of the day were recorded in motion pictures. More girls than ever before took part this year in the track and field events. The winners of these events were as follows: d Senior Dirision 50- Yard Dash — Time. 6.1 seconds 1 . Agetha Spanholtz 2. Ann Heinicke 3. Clara Kausler. Willard Hemmann, Florence Hardy Baseball Far Thow— 105 feet 1. Hertha Kilting. Helen Haarstick 2. Dorothy Doerres 3. Ann Heinicke Basketball Far Throw— 44 feet 1. Willard Hemmann 2. Gladys Edele 3. Mildred Henry High Jump — 52 inches 1 . Gladys Edele. Evelyn Stahl 2. Willard Hemmann. Lillian Kreinheder. Agetha Spanholtz 3. Alice Ellebrecht. Virginia Noles, Ruth Kramer Baseball Target Throw 1. Mildred Henry 2. Virginia Noles Hurdles 1. Zara Rudanowitch 2. Wilma Scheller 3. Marcella Webb 1 b Junior Division 50-Yard Dash 1. Lucille Rump. 6.5 seconds 2. May Brady 3. Billie Klemen Midget Dirision 50- Yard Dash 1. Florence Kardele. 7.1 seconds 2. Elizabeth Leistner 3. Marie Dietsch Page One Hundred Tucnty-fiue m i Junior Division Baseball Far Throw 1. Lucille Rump, 115 feet 2. Minnie Disbro 3. Ruth Erb Basketball Far Throw 1. Billie Klemen. 43 feet, 5 inches 2. Ruth Erb, Wilma Fischer 3. Dorothy Richter High Jump 1 . May Brady, 50 inches 2. Sylvia Sodamka, M. Disbro 3. Caroline Yaggi Baseball Target Throw 1 . Marie Nicholaisen Firmine Keller Midget Division Baseball Far Throw 1. June Koch, 101 feet 2. Marie Dietsch 3. Ruth Reichert Basketball Far Throw 1. June Koch, 38 feet 2. Helen Diehl 3. Bernice Gray High Jump 1 , Norma Vinyard, 45 inches 2, Eileen Kuenke, Amy Risch 3, Sophie Kilper, E. Leistner Baseball Target Throw 1. Ruth Reichert 2. Mabel Hughes 3. Grace Dienstbach Hurdles 1 . Frieda Ameiss 2. M, Bloss, D. Mack, I. Thielker 3. Carolyn Alexander Hurdles 1 . June Koch 2. Amy Risch 3. Norma Vinyard The winning Sophomore Relay Team consisted of the following: Agetha Spanholtz May Brady Lucille Rump Billie Klemen THE COACHES AND SPONSORS OF GIRLS ' ATHLETICS The reader who turns through the pages of this section of The Beacon will not fail to note the widespread interest in athletic sports which has been developed among the girls of Cleveland High School under the supervision of the women of the faculty whose pictures appear on the opposite page. The following list, arranged in the order in which the pictures appear, indicates the activities with which they are connected: M M M M M M M M M M ss Lenzen — Cleveland Sharpshooters. ss Heinicke— Baseball. ss Conrad — Volley Ball. ss Williams — Junior and Senior Swimming Teams. ss Gunther— Girls ' Athletic Association, Speedball, Bowling, Tennis. ss Kilpatrick — Toxophilite. ss Quinn — Basketball. ss Fleming — Hiking. ss Harrison — Baseball. Hockey, Volley Ball, Bowling, Tennis. ss Stillwell — Pipes o ' Pan, Skating, Tennis. Page One Hundred Twenty-six Miss Lenzen Miss Heinicke Miss Conrad liss Williams Miss Guntheh Miss Kilpatrick Miss Quinn Miss Fleming Miss Harrison Miss Stillwell Page One Hundred Twenty-seven o « GIRLS ' ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Miss Gunther Spring. 1932 Dorothy Doerres Roberta Beal Roberta Beal OFFICERS Fall, 1932 Celeste Maloney Norma Thielker President Secretary Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Esther Olda The Girls ' Athletic Association of Cleveland High School was organized in 1928 under the direction of Miss Gunther and Miss Harrison. The purpose of this organization is to afford opportunities for participating in a variety of activities suited to the best all-round development of the girls, stimulate interest, and develop habits by engaging in worth-while physical ( 1 1Vlt ' lP ' S All girls of Cleveland High School are members. Each gymnasium class and each athletic sport elects a representative, who with the gymnasium instructors, faculty sponsors of the various sports and the Dean of Girls com- pose the governing board. , , , i u The G A A is financed entirely by the girls themselves, each member being assessed ten cents per term. This provides money for the necessary expenses, such as paying for the Beacon pictures and athletic awards, and financing sports not otherwise provided for. ,, . „ . i ■The girls get points for gymnasium work as well as for all athletic sports. For the first award, an enamel pin with the Cleveland C, 750 points are necessary. The second award, an old English felt C, requires 1200 points. The third and highest award, a silver loving cup, requires 1800 points. The sports offered the Cleveland girls are as follows: Baseball Basketball Bowling Hiking Hockey Skating Pipes o ' Pan Tennis Volleyball Track Swimming (Junior Team) Swimming (Senior Team) Speedball Page One Hundred Twenty-eight GIRLS ' BASKET BALL Sponsor Miss Quinn OFFICERS President Orange and Blue Reporter Secretarv Vera Kalal Samina Kist Alice Heckel d pen s CAPTAINS Willard Hemmann Mildred Henrv Melba Storm Helen Buesse MEMBERS Roberta Beal June Bobe Florence Hardy Helen Haarstick Alice Heckel Willard Hemmann Mildred Henry Irma Franklin Elizabeth Justice Vera Kalal Samina Kist Grace Kleinpeter Erna Mathis Celestine Neumann Melba Storm Page One Hundred Twenty-nin is ) GIRLS ' BASEBALL Sponsors Miss Heinicke Miss Harrison Wednesday Wilma Scheller Catherine Hans Jane Foster Ann Heinicke Gladys Edele Caroline Kunkel Ruth Mack Helen Klemen Mary Jane Byron Monday Ann Heinicke Hilda Klock Jane Foster Agetha Spanholtz Elsa Klock Dorothy Reininga Flora Smith Ruth Foster Spring Athletic Counselor Secretary Orange and blue Reporter CAPTAINS Eleanor Boehm Charlotte MoHtor Hilda Klock Esther Olda Willard Henmann Helen Haarstick June Koch Fall Athletic Counselor Secretary Orange and Blue Reporter CAPTAINS Eleanor Boehm Wilma Scheller Dorothy Armstrong Caroline Kunkel Thursday Dorothy Armstrong Mary Appel Evelyn Stahl Alice Magee Agetha Spanholtz Joan Huebner Dorothy La Barge Caroline Yaggi Thursday Ruth Mack Minnie Disbro Dorothy Barby Gladys Edele Charlotte Molitor Edna Lampert Allene Johnson Virginia Spaethe The large membership of the Baseball Club necessitates that meetings be held twice a week both spring and fall. Girls in any term are eligible and girls in every term enjoy it. Page One Hundred Thirty BOWLING Sponsors Miss Gunther Miss Harrison OFFICERS Athletic Counselor Dorothy Doerres Wilma Scheller Secretary Eva Gruendler Laurine Pollard Orange and Blue Reporter Celeste Maloney Marion Paine d m The Bowling Club is growing in popularity. On account of the large number of girls who joined, the club has been divided into two groups. Any girl is eligible, whether she can bowl or not. Many girls have learned to bowl and others have greatly improved their game. I h Page One Hundred Thirty-one Sponsor Miss Fleming I OFFICERS Leader Captains Elsa Klock Dorothy Mazanec Lavita Maas Irma Thielker Virginia Maruska Orange and Blue Reporter Victoria Treppler All girls who enjoy short hikes after school, are invited to join the Hiking Club. Points are given towards Girls ' Athletic Awards. Page One Hundred Thirty-two HOCKEY Sponsor Miss Harrison OFFICERS Athletic Counselor Secretary Orange and Blue Reporter Captains Eleanor Boehm Minnie Disbro Nadine Jones Hilda Klock Melba Stahl Evelyn Stahl Helen Haarstick This G. A. A. club is open only to upper term girls. Hockey is quite a strenuous game, and as exciting as football. More girls are entering every term. The game is taught to the new girls and the older members act as leaders and improve their own playing as well. 1 Page One Hundred Thirty-three 4 fA V ) PIPES O- Pi . flrtt_ _ President Vice President Secretary and Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Harriet Kretschmar Georgette Rehm Doris Dickson Dolores Conrades t CAPTAINS Lucille Simmons Rosemary Burgdorf The Girls ' Dancing Club of Cleveland High School has grown to such large proportions that it has been found necessary to divide it into two sec- tions; one group meeting on Mondays and the other on Wednesdays. The girls are being offered a choice. Those most interested in esthetic, natural, ballet, toe and acrobatic dancing meet on Monday under the direction of Miss Gunther. and those interested in folk, clog and tap dances meet on Wednesday under the direction of Miss Stillwell. Both groups are now a part of the Girls ' Athletic Association, so that every girl in Cleveland has the opportunity of belonging to one of these popular dancing clubs. Page One Hundred Thirty-four CLEVELAND SHARPSHOOTERS Sponsors Mr. Svoboda Miss Lenzen OFFICERS ' President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Statistical Officer Ordnance Officer Helen Mcding Dorothy Kuhs Aileen Stevens Marie Perschbacker Bernice Tiefenbrunn Jeannette Stark MEMBERS Verna Brockrieten Marjory Craine Carolyn Doerres Dorothy Doerres Ruth Endres Ruth Fischer Adele Hall Dolly Knecht Roberta Knoblauch Lavita Maas Edith Wenze Eleanor May Emma Meding Hilda Meyer Annie Laurie O ' Brien Alma Petelik Bernice Schnellmann Valerie Smith Irma Thielker Lorraine Tiefenbrunn Victoria Treppler Page One Hundred Thirty-fire « GIRLS ' SKATING Sponsor Miss Stillwell OFFICERS President Secretary Treasurer Doris Neunuebel Eleanor Reichert Valerie Bryant i The Skating Club, one of Cleveland ' s most enjoyable girls ' sport clubs, is composed of fifty-five active members. The Skating Club meets every Friday under the sponsorship of Miss Stillwell. If the lakes are not frozen satisfac- torily, the girls attend the Winter Garden. Page One Hundred Thirty-six SPEEDBALL Sponsor Miss Gunther Violet Corcoran May Brady Dorothv Rose Gilcrest OFFICERS G. A. A. Representative Manager Orange and Blue Reporter Charlotte Molitor Marie Peterson Adele Heitert CAPTAINS Dorothy Armstrong Marie Dietsch Dorothy Hoffman Allene Johnston Billie Klemen Dorothy La Barge Olive Hogrebe Virginia Spaethe Agetha Spannholtz In the fall of 1931 a new game was introduced to Cleveland by Miss Gunther. called Speedball. Last year we had between fifty and sixty girls participating, but the pop- ularity of the club has increased so that now we have about one hundred and ten girls in the group. Page One Hundred Thirty-seven u GIRLS ' SWIMMING Sponsor Miss Williams OFFICERS Captain Senior Team Orange and Blue Reporter, Senior Captain Junior Team Orange and Blue Reporter, Junior Melba Stahl Janette Queensen Marie Peterson Marie Pitman I The Girls ' Swimming Club is divided into two groups, the Junior and Senior Clubs. Membership is determined by ability. The girls in the Junior Club practice on strokes and elementary diving. When they become members of the Senior Club they learn more advanced aquatic events and practice meth- ods of Red Cross Life Saving. Meetings are held under the leadership of Miss Williams every Tuesday and Thursday afternoons. Page One Hundred Thirty-eight TENNIS CLUB Sponsor Miss Gunther OFFICERS G. A. A. Representative Secretary Orange and Blue Reporter Caroline Kunkel Gladys Edele Dorothy Doerres The membership in the Girls ' Tennis Club last spring set a new record for that organization. There were, all told, about 275 enthusiastic members. The girls were allowed to play tennis once a week, on whichever day was most convenient for them. An e.xtremely satisfactory plan was devised, whereby the members of this club were given the use of all si.x of Cleveland ' s courts every day after school. This fall, therefore, the boys were permitted to use all the courts daily to practice for their tournaments. The teachers in charge and the days of the week on which they were present, respectively, are: Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Miss Stillwell Miss Conrad Miss Gunther Miss Lenzen Miss Brown Page One Hundred Thirty-nine d VOLLEY BALL t Sponsors Miss Conrad Miss Harrison Tuesday Roberta Beal Vera Kalal Mildred Henry OFFICERS Athletic Counselor Secretary Reporter Friday Dorothy Armstrong Gladys Hardison Mildred Whitlock The Girls ' Volley Ball Club is one of the most popular athletic organiza- tions for girls at Cleveland. The large number of feminine enthusiasts who enter each winter, make it necessary to devote two nights a week to this excit- ing sport. d Page One Hundred Fortij TOXOPHILITE Sponsor Miss Kilpatrick OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Orange and blue Reporter Scorekeeper Ruth Rosenhauer Inez Geier Lillian Pape Doris Walker Eileen Chesler Frances Peil MEMBERS Virginia Coats Virginia Marsh Helen Schollmeyer Bernice Stelk Helen Weckermeyer Elizabeth Wostenholm bow. ' The name Toxophilite comes from a Greek word meaning lover of the 1 Page One Hundred Forty-one u I b I in s 1 • .lAKIJARY ' 33 u J; CLASS OF JANUARY, 1933 Class Motto: Work Today Brings Reward Tomorrow. Class Colors: Blue and White. Sponsors Miss Murphv Mr. SCHUENEM.i N SEVENTH TERM OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Girls ' Treasurer Boys Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms James Harrison Marion Demey Susan Hammel William Seward Loretta Novy Roland Rodegast EIGHTH TERM OFFICERS S President Vice President Secretary Girls ' Treasurer Boys ' Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Robert Mignerone June Murdoch Dorothy Doerres Don Wayne Janet Wendt Paul McNeill Page One Hundred Forty-five Ul Robert Mignerone •Hdil to the President! Honor Society Presiilcnt Seniors President Thrift Council Academic C Athletic C . Tennis. ' 31. ' 32 June Murdoch ' £ ' in everything — su sag we all. Secretary Honor Society Vice President Seniors Associate P ditor Beacon, ' 33 Associate Editor O. and B.. ' 32 Assistant Adv. Mgr. Beacon. 32 Senior Play .Academic C Freshman Counselor President Philo. ' 31 Dorothy Doerres 7 if very pink of perfection. ice President Honor Society Secretary Seniors. ' 32 -Associate Editor O. and B.. ' 32 Beacon Staff. ' 32. ' 33 Freshman Councelor. ' 32 .Athletic Pin. Letter and Cup President Sharpshooters. 31 .Academic C Don Wayne .Senior Blues: ' Pay your dues! ' Ciirls ' Treasure r. Seniors Senior Play Swimming Emhlem. ' 31. 32 Civm and Swimming Cluh Student Council. 31 Janet Wendt .Adorable and sweet is she. Popular ' ? Why certainly. Bovs ' Treasurer. Seniors Thrift Representative, ' 32 Paul McNeill M.ic Beware, incorriyihies! Our Sarye is a marvelous rifle shot. Sergeant-at-.Arms. Seniors President Rifle Club. ' 32 Hifle Cluh. 311. 31. 32 Catherine Ambrone -Kay ' What s u n h e a m s are to flowers. Catherine ' s smiles are to us. President Cartooning Cluh ' ice President Courtesy Club. Soccer, ' 29 Edgar Anderson l ' e like his yuiet manner and his friendly ways. Page One Hundred Forty-si.x CLASS OF JAN LI . ' R ' . 1933 CLASS OF JANUARY. 1933 Eaki. Bartareau 1)1 i)i: ' I ' liini II lilllr s iiirl; iniij hurst II iiiiiililii fliiiui ' . Ihrill Uc|irrsiiil:ilivf. HI Helen Benning H(tl(HIK lli ' lfn ii ' illi her lunninij wans l.fiiiH ' s im sliiniliiuj in ii tliize. Virginia Bergmann ' ■(■.in it ihtii friiinns iiri- fiiin-r fur Thiiii sniili ' s nf utlirr iiiiiiili-iis iirr. Katherine Biehler Kail e.rceh in studies. And she debates well, tint; She ' s iilsi) I ' ery popular .Void iiihiil more could one do-. ' H()nf)r Society (Jills ' l)cl)atiim Korum, ' 31, ' 32 Dcbatini, ' - ' C , ' 32 Heacon Stall, ' 33 Florence Bigalte ' She does eiwrqlhinq inith ' E ' s ' . I.a I ' oftiquf. Al. ' 32 Thrift Hf|ii-c-si-ntativf. ' 32 Academic C William Brauer ( ' nluunis I ' lnds a U ' lii . ' Horace Brovvder lilithe and breezi]. Sahitatio. ' 31, 32 .Janitor Sahitatio, ' 32 Patroniis Sahitatio. ' 32 Senior Play Ruth Brusselback A loi ' elfi ijirl whose t olden hair Makes the hoi s she pusses stare. Honor .Society .Academic ■(; President Philo. ' 32 Freshman Counselor. ' 32 Page One Hundred Forty-scucn i o fc WOODROW BUESCHEL Woody ■A friend in all yuiir difficul- ties. Virginia Burlemann Ginny The best •recitationist ' in the class. Honor Society Thrift Representative, ' 32 Vice-President Freshman Girls ' Club. ' 29 Philo, ' 31. ' 32 Hiking, ' 29. ' 30 Vollcvball. ' 29, ' 30 Tennis. ' 30. ' 31 Track. ' 30 Athletic Pin Elwood Burton .4 friend received mith thiuniis upon the back. Bernice Busche Bee A tinii bit Of girl, with Uf. Esther Cawein Dolly •Watch out. boiis. for two soft, briiwn. velvet!) ei es. Charles Cerny A clear conscience is a sure card. ' Florence Corell F ' lossie .S7iP suits us from the ends of her musical fingers to the tip of her tiny toes. Honor Society Student Council Representative, ' 32 Goodfellowship. ' 30, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30 Cartooning (Uub. ' 30 Bowling. ' 31 Academic C James Davis Jimjiy Clark Gable has his troubles, too. Page One Hundred Forty-eight CLASS OF JANUARY, 1933 CLASS OF JANUARY-. 193 3 Raymond Dawdy 7 c (lorx I ' l ' iTiilbinii. inn iln ri ' rriilhiiui, mul irill du fi ' i-ru- lliliiji. Iloniir Society Afiidfniio Award IU-!niin Sla IT, •:!.■( I In ill lU ' pii ' scnIiilivf. ■iill. ' . ' U l.il)rai„v Assistant, Ml, ' 2 Marian Demey DeliciDiis is inhul thrii rail her. Hoiujr Society ' ice-I ' resi(leiil New Seniors, ' 32 licacon Stair, ' 32, ' 33 Academic C Fieslinian Counselor, ' 32 C. A. A. lUpresentativc, ' 31 Ruth Ann Dienstbach Queen ruse in tl e rosebud (jarilen of i irls. Erwin Diesbach I ' rineiiiles hiire (ihinnis been bis mark. George Dreyer Bake IVf still insist it uxis just a slap ' of Ibe razor. Track, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31 Gym Club, ' 30, ' 31 Swimming Club, ' 30 Ooss Country Club, ' 31 Gym Emblem Athletic C Evamae Duis Frienillii. brii bt. and clever; Kind and wiiling ever. Annette Ehrhardt .Suijar and .s h ' cc. And everylhinji nice. Honor Society Baseball, ' 29 Bowlini;. ' 31, ' 32 Athletic Pin Senior Plav Student Council, ' 32 Alice Ellebrecht She ' s a darling! She ' s a dear! .ill safi this of .Mice here. Thrift Representative, ' 3t, ' 32 Track, ' 30, ' 31. ' 32 Athletic Pin Pipes o ' Pan Pin Pagt One Hundred Forty-nine Ruth Erb Rudie ' Dn gentlemen prefer blundes? Xiit when Ruth is around. Athletic Pin Tracli. 30. ' 31. ' 32 Tennis. ' 31. ' 32 Baseball. ' 30. ' 31 Pipes o Pan. ' 31. ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin. ' 32 Girls ' Physiology Club. ' 32 John Fehlmann They who are pleased them- selves must always please. First . id Club Irma Franklin Irish In swimming — it ' s stroke. In personality — it ' s Irma. Honor Society Senior Play Math Club, ' 30. ' 32 Secretary Math Club. ' 32 Junior Red Cross. ' 32 Tennis, ' 29 Jt [UNIA FULSTONE To those who know her not. no words can paint. .And those who know her know all words are faint. Goodfellowship. ' 32 Dorothy Gannon Dot ' .4 little rule, a Utile sway. .4 sunbeam on a rainy day. Baseball. ' 29 Volleyball, ' 29 Pipes o ' Pan Pin Inez Geier Inez can handle a bow find arrow as easily as William Tell ener did. Vice President Toxophilite President Weoc, ' 32 Athletic Pin Baseball, Tennis, Tracts Harold Goeddel They are never alone that are accompanied by noble thoughts. Robert Goltermann Bob The best of men hare ever loved repose. Senior Play Student Council, ' 32 Page One Hundred Fi[ty CLASS OF JANUARY 9 3 3 CLASS OF JANUARY, 1933 Dorothea Haas Siiiiitliritii is eleijiinie. Sicrc ' tiirv Kifshman dills ' Chil). ' 2!l I ' liilo. •:((), •: . ' .vi SiiTi ' t.iry I ' liilo, ' 31 Stuilciil Cinmcil lUpreMiitativu. ' 111. ' 3 ' . ' Sciiiiu ' Swiniiiiirm ' Ifjim. ' HI Tomiis. ' L ' !!. .W. .W. ' Wi AoiiiliTiiic C Athlitic Pill Harry Haas Mii.k iiKiiulcr if (inijone else lutle.i Iff sliidfi. Susan Hammel liliick I ' l fs. ii ' ith ,1 iiirinilriiiis. wilrhimi chiirin: Swei ' l (lie. milh nn iispfrl tiay mill iimrni. Sucretary Ntw Seniors, ' 32 Treasurer Cle Ciiks, ' . 1 Philo. •. ' SO, ' 31, ' 32 President Philo, ' 30 Beacon .Stair, ' 31 Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Lois Hampe (ilOGLKs Her iiir. her nidiincrs. all mho stiw ndrnirfil. James Harrison -Red ' The iirexidiiKj ijenius of the Iildie. Honor Society, ' 32 President .New Seniors, ' 32 President Stinlent Council, ' 32 Student Council. ' 31. ' 32 .Assistant Business .Manajier Beacon. ' 32 Senior Play Adele Hauck She herself is « eolleetion of all Ihe best Ihinys. .Junior Bed Cross, ' 29 Skatini;, ' 30 Thelma Held And ivhen she smiles, in eaeh eheel; flashes a darling ilintfile. Honor Society Senior Play Academic Certificate Pipes o ' Pan Pin Alma Hertel .4,s- gentle as ze jhi rs bloating below the itiolet. Honor Society Alcthinae, ' 31, 32 Goodfellowship, ' 31, ' 32 .Academic C Beacon Stall, ' 32, ' 33 Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Page One Hundred Fifty-one L (T 1 Harold Hoehle Patience and yentlenesx is power. Georgia Huffington Lovely eyes are those thai show Beautiful thouybts por- trayed below. Goodfellowship, ' 32, 3:i Ann Jannes Blackie There was a soft and pensive grace, A cast of thought upon her face. Hiking, ' 29, -30, ' 31 Vollevball, Tennis, ' 30, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan Pin Leo Jaudes Junior My tongue within my lips I rein. For who talks much must talk in vain. Track, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Gym Team, ' 31, ' 32 President Webster Hayne, ' 32 Student Council, ' 32 Edwin Jokisch Joke Brainy. brilliant. and brawny. Honor Society Student Council Sergeant-at-Arms Student Council, ' 32 Boxing and Wrestling, ' 31, ' 32 Football C, ' 32 Academic C John Kauffmann Amidst his great variety uu are lost. William Kleine Bill ' Haling pretence, he did u}ilh cheerful will What others t ilked of while their hands stood still. Grace Kleinpeter Laughing, giggling all the day. Oh, how Grade loves to play! Baseball, ' 28. ' 29, ' 30, -31 Track, ' 30, ' 31 Athletic Pin Athletic C Basketball. ' 30, ' 31 Skating, ' 30, ' 31 Page One Hundred Fifty-two CLASS OF JANLIAR - 19 3 3 CLASS OF JANUARY 9 3 3 Roberta Knoblauch She needs no eiiliiiju: She s iedlis far herself. Sharpshooti ' is. ■;!!. A2 Athlitk- I ' in liasibiill. MiUiiiR. •2y, ' 30 Tinriis , M Charles Koch In other ivnrcls. the best fel- low in the too r hi. Trtasuicr llonoi- Siicittv. ' . ' i2 riirift lU ' prusfnlalivc. ■.id. .( l. .V Ai ' iulimic Aw.Tid Kifli- Cliil). ' 2!l. ■.•)(!. . . .VI iUtlc ' Club Kmhifm Fodtball (:. ' :t2 Ikacon .Stair. ' 33 William Kopp ••Hill. ' So true hi.t heart. So .smooth ix his speeeh. Elmer Kraeger Kraeg llonestii is the best ijolici . ' LlLLL. N KUNZMAN Lillian is pleasant, jolly, and sweet. .4 cjirl whom we always lil;e to meet. Gooilfi-Uowsliip. ' 31, ' 32 .Sucretary Goodfcllowship, ' 32 Athletic Pin 1 hrift Heprescntativc. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32 Dorothy Kypta Beneath the midnight of her hair Is a mind that ' s very rare. Bowling, ' 31 (loodfcllowship. ' 31. ' 32 Kntcrtainmcnt Chairman Cooilffllowship. ' 32. ' 33 Elmer Lam pert El He (iiDes us the very quintes- senee of perception. Stiiilcnt Council Ktprcscntativc, ' 30. ' 31 Roy Lanser He eould be a hidies ' man if he half tried. Thrift Heprcsentative, ' 30, ' 31 Senior Play Page One Hundred Fifty-three Dorothy Lauterback Iler talent reaches in eneri ilirerlion. Honor Society. ' 32 President Debating, ' 32 Debating, C Academic C Athletic Pin, Letter and Cup Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Mildred Leilich She has no faults, or I no faults can spy. She is all beauty, or all blindness I. La Musique, ' 31 Girls ' Physiology Club, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 31 Sam Lieberman Saiimy Hail. fellouK well met! Cross Country Club, ' 31 Thrift Representative, ' 31, ' 32 Skating Club. ' 32 Boxing and Wrestling Club, ' 32 John Luecken Like ••He ' s a handy fellow to hane around. Evelyn McArthur •A thin slip of a ijirl like the near moon. Helen McMahon ' The only way to have a friend is to be one. Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin, ' 31 Student Council Uepresentative, ' 32 Ferd Machmer ' Your word is as good as the bank, sir. Honor Society Stamp Club, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Track, ' 31, ' 32 Orchestra Ruth Mack Huthie • ' Red hair and a personality to match it. Goodfellowship. ' 30, ' 31 Athletic Pin Athletic C Baseball, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Athletic (xninselor, ' 32 Page One Hundred Fifty-four CLASS OF JANUARY. 1933 Marion Meisenbach (T ii ' iicil ii((,v siriliinti. rr- ststlt ' ss. ami iiriiiul. Ilfr iiKinnrrx iihtc iifiillr. (■(iiiiijliiiiiii. iiixl hliiiul. I he iirlisi ()ri-lu-str:i, ' 2!), MO. M Melba Mewes Sjiiiinv Mclhii isn ' t ihti lull. Hill shr has ii xiuilv fur nil. I ' i|n-s o ' I ' aii. ' DO llikiii.n. ' :!lt Tciuiis. ' . ' iO l.:i Mu.sique, il riirifl Hi| itMiitative, ' 32 James Miller .Iimmik •.liisl II mile Diilrh hoji. J OH kniiin. iisiiiillii ' in DiiUh. ' Hand, ' 2 ' .). .U . ' DI, ' 32 Orc ' lu-stia. ' 2!), M). ' 31, ' 32 HilU- Club, Jil. ' 31), ' 31 .Swiniinint, ' Cliih. ' 2!), ' 30 Caiiura Cliih. ' 31 Orclu ' slra C Custodian Hilk ' Club, ' 31 George Mills Flamimi bnir a I ' luiiiinii llnulli. Thfii fill nifll Iniiflher. David Mitter Oh Ibis Ifiirnini.i. I hi nil il is! ii ' hiil 11 Orclu-slra, ' 2!!, ■. ' iO, ' 31 Academic- Award Milton Moeser .-1 man of cheerful ieslerilinis and ronfidenl loniorroins. Aviation Club, 311, ' 31. ' 32 Clum Club, ' 32 Eleanor Mueller ' He iioiid. sweel maid, and lei inhii mill he elerer. Raymond Never Hay True knowledge is qiiiel. iin- demiinslratine. Math Club, ' 32 Bojs ' Glee Club, ' 32 r CLASS OF JANUARY, 9 3 3 Page One Hundred Fifty-five ■i I LORETTA NOVY .STic laiiyhs, and the morhl laiiiihs with her. For she ' s seldain. if eiter. alone. Bovs ' Treasurer New Seniors Beacon Staff, ' 32 Freshman Counselor, 32 President Philo, ' 31 Clc Cuks, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 G. A. A. Representative, ' 29 Neldarose Ott Nel Tho ' lost to sight, to memory dear Thou erer wilt remain. Lillian Pape Ln. In retjard to her faiills leanes us in doubt: .-it least, in four years, can ' t find them out. Toxophilite, ' 31, ' 32. Orange and Blue Reporter Toxophilite. Secretary Toxophilite. Athletic Bowling, Tennis, ' 29, ' 31, Track, ' 31, she ' 33 ' 32 ' 32 •C ' 30 ' 32 ' 32 Raymond Perdue One of God ' s i ifts to women. Bettie Peters Mike Xobodii was able to resist her eoa.ving manner: anil nobody had any business to try. Bowling, ' 30 Pipes o Pan. ' 30, ' 32 Marvine Pique If you want to be popular, sunny, and yay. ,Just copy Maroine: she ' s al- ways that way. Treasurer Freshman Ciirls ' Club, ' 29 Girls ' Glee Cluh, ' 29, ' 30 President La Musique, ' 30, ' 31 ' Worry die ' . ' ' William Punt kills people — why Track, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31 Student ( ouncil, ' 32 Athletic C Harry Queensen When a fellout ' s rin ath- lete and good lo(jking. too. What are the other boys go- ing to do? Swimming Team, ' 29. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Swimming Team Emblem Captain Swimming Team, ' 29 Gym Team, ' 30, ' 31 Gym Team Flmblcm Page One Hundred Fifty-six CLASS OF JANUARY. 1933 Chris Rakey A Ii}l siitit ' fZfil intit It sniiill xpitce. Robert Rawizza ••Hon Aittl still thfii !i(i:e(l. iiml si ill the wiimler tirt ' in That niif sntiill head shauld rarrii all Iw hnt ' iv. I ' iisi(li-nt HniKir Soi-ktv. •. ' i ' i Haiv;u(l liD.iU A«aiil. U Hi-acon Staff. ' .i . ' :V . .U Junior lU-il Cross, ' 32 Thrift Heprcsintativf, ' 31. ' 32 Oran i ' and H uc Hc-poitcr. ' 32 Acadiniic C Dorothy Reininga At ii ' hiise sifihl rill the stars Hide their diminished heads. Honor Society ' ii ' e I ' rt ' sident Anna H. Shaw, ' 31 Academic C AlhUtio C Rose Resetaritz There, little liosie. don ' t noil ir i. null he II hill i irl hi] and hill Honor Society Senior I ' la.v Student Council. ' 32 .Iiinior Red Cross, ' 31, ' 32 Irene Rettinger .4 kind and gentle heart she has. Tennis. ' 31. ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 29 (ioodl ' ellowshi]). 32 William Richter He must he (lood to know hoir to hide his iihilitii so well. Melvin Ringwald ••Dempsey Did nothinij in particular M . nd did it rerij well. Vivian Rockenbrodt Viv .is the dew to the hlossom. the huil to the bee. .As the seent to the rose, are your memories to me. Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32 Pipes o Pan Pin. ' 32 Hasehall. ' 32 VoIIevball. ' 32 Traolv. ' 3(1. ' 31 dirls Physiology Clul). ' 32 1 CLASS OF JANUARY I 9 J J Page One Hundred Fifty-sei ' en « T I d Roland Rodegast Houie ' ■Goodness. Roland! Don ' t tell me lion don ' t enen see nil those flirts ;7i iAiny eyes (it Sergeant-at-Ai-nis New Seniors Student Council. ' 31. ' 32 Beacon Staff, ' 33 Elmer Rohrbach WHITEV Of course, everybody likes and respects a self - made Dorothy Roth Dot Deep brown eyes runninii oner with ylee. Baseball, ' 29, ' 30 Basketball. ' 30 Speed Ball, ' 30 Tennis. ' 30 Volleyball, ' 29 Una Royle .She has a heart with room for ei ' cry joy- Tbrift Representative, ' 31 .Junior Red Cross Representative. ' 32 Donald Rudisill Sparks He radiates and radioes his personality. Radio Club, ' 30, ' 31 Secretary Radio Club. ' 30 Secretarv-Trea surer Radio Club, ' 31 Beulah Ruehl Mickey The artist and model com- bined. Musical Service Ci. .A. . . Representative, ' 31 Grant Schaumberg ' The ylory of a firm, capacious mind. William Schelhammer Bill He came. saw. and unercame. SkatinsjClub, ' 29, ' 30. ' 31 Aviation Club. ' 30. ' 31 Chemistry Club. ' 32 Page One Hundrc4 Fifty-eight CLASS OF JANUARY 19 3 3 CLASS OF JANUARY. 1933 Sydney Scherstuhl ••Svii ' 7 ni ' i ' fr tUtrr in hf 4.V fiuinii IIS I run. Stiidriit Couiuil. ' . ' i I hiilt Hc-|.ri-sc-nl;itivc, Ml. ICi Hillr Chil). -.W. •,■(1. ■.■)2 Siiriloiv Ciaft Cliili. ' 31 Cruft ciiii). -i ' .). ' :i(i. ■.•ii. ' ;t2 ()r;m.m- and Hluf Ki ' poi-tiT Craft Club. ;) 1 George Shillinger W ' oilh iniikes the man. Kenneth Schlasman ( ' .(in (I (htrl sit ' itn? TliiTf ' s l ennclli ask him. C.ym Club, ■2!). ' :iO Secret a ry-Tnasurtr (Ivm Club. :i(l Swimming Club. •2il. ' .■jO. •:)i.-32 Adolph Schmidt Whirl . ii)ili h i er(( rms all hi. s ( iimnastic feiil.i. Ei ' eri nne ' s heart misses two or three bents. (ivm Club, 32 (iym Club Emblem Cbcm Club 32 Edwin Schmidt ( ' blfuvs a mean horn. Helen Schollmeyer Hki. One reri) special reason whji ( ' .lei elantl i.s such a nice lilace. Honor Society . dvertisin!, ' .Manager Beacon, ' 32 Beacon StalT. ' 31 Fresbman Counselor. ' 32 Athletic C , ' 32 Athletic Pin. ' 30 CleCuUs. •31, ' 32 President Cle Cuks. ' 32 Toxoi)hilite, ' 32 Margaret Schroeder Mahuik Her heart mas in her mork. Baseball. ' 31 ' olleyball, 30. ' 31. 32 Orchestra Bernice Schuette Bkk .I.s merry as the day is long. Baseball. ' 30. ' 31 Volleyball. ' 31 Soccer, ' 30 Bed Cross Beprescntative. ' 31. ' 32 Page One Hundred Fifty-nine d V i Bernard Schwartz •And what he yreally Ihounht. he nobly dared. Helen Seng ■Golden hair and eyes of blue Haue a way of winniny you. Roy Shannahan never tmuble trouble Till tmuble troubles me. Arlene Shelton .4 neat, friendly, and sweet little lady. Basketball. ' 31 Baseball. ' 30 Bowling. ' 31 Hiking. ' 31 Dorothy Schilli Dot ■Those black-frinrjed violets, her eyes. Robert Siepman His lime is forever; every where his place. Helen Smiley Smiley Smiley, keep smilinij! Roy Som merer ' .ind, but himself, admits parallel. Treasurer Junior Red Cross, Orange and Blue Reporter Junior Red Cross, ' 31, Orchestra, ' 30. Skating Club. ' 31. Courtesy Club. Page One Hundred Sixty CLASS OF JANUARY ' , 1933 Georgia Soyster Oee Cheerfulness is an n fslidol of uootlness and wistloin. Assistant Thrift Hcprcscntative, ' 32 Herbert Strele It ' s a loitnder that Herbert ' s head isn ' t while with the perpetual snows. Howard Symsack A man of marl;. Helen Thenhaus Dainty and neat And pleasant to Fueet. ' Norma Thielker ' Golden hair, like sunlight streaming — Honor Society P ' reshman Counselor President Anna H. Shaw, ' 32 Athletic Pin. Athletic C Secretary Salutatio. ' 32 Secretary G. A. A. Council. 32 Agnes Thomson Quietli she went her way And learned her lessons day by day. Student Council, ' 32 Thrift Representative, ' 31, ' 32 Accompanist Pipes o ' Pan, ' 32 Mildred Trapp ' lVt ' 7 soon be s njing. l knew her when — . ' for she ' s going cham iiun in the to be a Olympics CLASS OF JANUARY. 1933 Orchestra ' C Athletic Pin Athletic C Alece Turner Rlue were her eyes like the fairy fla.v. Her rheeks like the dawn of day. Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan Pin Athletic Pin Page One Hundred Sixty-one i y t I Edward Vaughn In class he doesn ' t shine. But to girls he ' s niiyhty fine. Howard Wade ' When he sought knowledne, it appeared That girls and dances inter- fered. Allen Wagner ' Handsome is as handsome does. ' He ' s doimi fine. Golf Club, ' 31, 32 Assistant Thrift Representative. ' 31 George Walther Of every friendless name, the ' ' ' ■' ' ' ' • ' ChemClub, ' 31. ' 32 Edna Wecke Eddie ■.She IS pretty to walk with. .And witty to talk with. Fre shman Ccuinselor. ' 32 Student Council, ' 31, ' 32 G(JO(lfellu vship, ' 31, ' 32 Thrift Representative, ' 31 Bowling, ' 31 Skating. ' 29 Helen Weckermeyer .An exception to the rule — .4 preferred brunette. Chris Weissler Ml TZ To see a hoy who doesn ' t care . rap about his curly hair Is more than patient girls can bear. Edward Weppler One of the master minds. Honor Society Thrift Representative, ' 31, ' 32 Student Council. ' 32 President Radio Club, ' 32 Band C Motion Picture Operator, ' 31, ' 32 Senior Play Page One Hundred Si.xty-two CLASS OF JANUARY, 1933 Allan Wetzel ' Wiisii ' l niiiilfiin iilxo small? Lilir;irv Assislaul. ' . ' tfl. ' 31 Lewis White ••I.i-w c iinlfi is a mell-maile man mho has a u ' xxl (telermina- lion. Clu-m Club. ' 31. ' 32 Elizabeth Wickes ••I. II, t maid wlio mmleslln rnn- ceals her ht ' aiities. Edgar Wilke Most of our roeils mould give ani lhinn la hane Edfiar ' s eye- lashes. G.vm an l Swinimins; Chib. ' 30. 31 Captain (iyni Team, ' 32 President Chcm Club. ' 32 Gym C , ' 31, ' 32 Hallie Williams I ' hii moilestii ' s a cantlle to Ihii merit. Penmansliip Certificate Joaquin Wilson Jake Haste makes waste, and Joa- i uin ' s thrifti]. Wrestling Club, ' 32 CLASS OF JANUARY, 1933 Oliver Winney Deeds, not words. Cheni Club, 32 Vernon Wirtel F.ath mind has its own method, hut we banen ' t been able to Injure his out. Page One Hundred Sixty -three Virginia Witte CiINNA ' Sunny riniflets frame the face Thai s niles haue picked for llieir dinelting place. Stuclfnt Council lU ' presentative. 32 Anna H. Shaw. ' 32 Vice President Sharpshooters Secretary Goodfellowship, 32 Virginia Wolf Ginger Beauty cost her nothing; Her virtues mere so rare. Pipes o Pan, ' 29 Baseball, ' 32 Music Service, ' 30, ' 31 William Wyatt Bill •The mord impossible is not in his I ' ocabulary. Freshman Football. ' 29 RineClub, ' 29. ' 32 Skating Club. ' 29, ' 33 Evelyn Zimmerman She ' s anything nice you say she is. Goodfellowship, ' 32 Thrift Representative. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Dorothy Knackstedt Dot She moves a goddess, and she looks a queen. Junior Red Cross. ' 30, ' 31 Wcoc, ' 29, ' 30 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 29, ' 30 Sylvester Roellig No really great man ever thought himself so. Francis Ayer Formed on the good old plan, A true and doivnnght honest man. Treasurer Chem Club, ' 32 Edward Banholzer Utile I ask: my wants are few. Ralph Barnes He gave of his best. Page One Hundred Sixty-four James Beatty Shorty Far may we search before we find. A heart so manly and so kind. Walter Beckerle Honest and kind, A good friend to find. Edward Bergauer Patience is a necessary in- gredient of genius. Russell Bessinger ' He ' s always jolly and al- ways gay — IVc wonder how be gels that way. Joyce Bischoff .4 dash of color. .4 drawling voice. .4 pleasing manner, And that ' s .loyce. CLASS OF JANUARY. 1933 Eleanor Bollinger ■El t ' leiinor ' s so ijninl, I ' m Thai she ' s a ijirl Ihey neriT sinlil. Mary Brooks l.itlle .Wur; , blonti and smilinii You ' ll admil she ' s iiiile beiiiiilinii. Ed Brown BackiKiirtl. Iiini Ixn l;u inl, Tinif. Ill Ibij fliiiht, Alliiiii SDtiif iiiori ' slifp fur liisl Siiliinlaii niijhl. John Carter U7i(i should a man do hut he merrij ' Richard Cour ■■Dii:kik Here I are. tiirls! ' Coif Club, ' 32 Dan Cubbage Here are almost tipo yards of iioii ' erful atlilete Aubrey Dobbs All tongues speak of him. Clarence Fone Happy am I; from care I ' m free. Why aren ' t Ihey all con- tented like nif? Edward Friedewald •■s The rule of his life is to make his business a pleasure, and ideasure his business. Sanford Geuss Sandy Basketball is his forte. Berger Graves moke up one morniny and found myself famous. Honor Society Academic Cr ' Athletic C. Football Thrift Representative, ' 28 Boxing and Fencing Club. ' 29, ' 30 Norman Hartmann Quiet and sincere. Louis Hesse To I.ouis. the miyhliest yuard of them all. The biyyer they come, the harder they fall. Earl Hobbs Well, well! If it isn ' t ■What a .Man ' Ilobbs! Skating (;iub, ' 29. •.ill. •.n. ' .32 President Sliating Club. ' 31 Secretary-Treasurer, ' 32 Senior I ' lav Russell Johnson ••IS id Candor is the seal of a noble mind. Steve Jonas .4 puzzle you try In solve him. Ray Kratky (• sits hiyh in nil peo- ple ' s hearts. William Lang Let the world slide; let the world yo: -I (( for care and a I ' ly for woe. ' Wilmer Lee Ml ST Wii.i.ik Vi)«;i(; fellows will be yoiinii fellows. Ki ' lle Clul). ' 3(1. ' 31, ' 32 Junior Hed Cross Hepresentative, ' 31, ' 32 Assistant Thrift Hepresentative, 31, ' 32 Rudolph Litschwager Thinys around here start to hum When Rudolph pounds his biy bass drum. Walter Matheis IVise to resoliie anil pa- tient to perform. Joe Mayfield Sol bad at all. What do you say, yirls ' ? Skating (;iub. 29, ' 30, ' 31. ' 32 Stamp Club. ' 29, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Craft Club, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31 Secretary Craft Club, ' 30 Albert Mickley He ' s a shy sort of yuy iidien the yirls are close by. But with the sironyer se.v, he ' s a reyular yuy. John Nicol .Since silenie is yolden. ■lohn must be a million- aire. Ernest Pallme Ernie Great thouyhts, like yreat deeds, need no trumpet. Honor Society. ' 32 .Academic C , ' 31 Hadio Club. 32 Secretary Hadio Club. ' 32 Library Ass ' t, ' 30, ' 31. ' 32 Motion I ' icture Operator. ' 32 First Aid Club. ' 30 Vivian Parsons •Viv This little ifirl is yood as yold .4;i( always does the things she ' s told. Julius Pfaff Oil. niiiny jokes cmild .1 alius tell: ot only that, he told them well. Gene Poteet Dark and handsome, Very wise, (iraduating? Some surjirise. John Reiley Mack Home Work seldom is a bore : I never do it any more. (iym Club, ' 32 Cartooning Club, ' 29 Kenneth Schelp Dreaminy of worlds to conquer. Horace Schmans He never, ivilh imporlonl airs. In conversation o v e r- bears. Alletta Schroer We wish her all the joy thai she ion wish. Melvin Shaul Why bother myself with study anil care . ' If I don t watch out. I ' ll soon have yriiy hair. David Shreve Why lake life too seri- ously ' . ' I ' ll never yet out alive. Oscar Spitzer His yreat ambition is real- ized — he ' s yradiiatiny. John Trush Johnny ' Zealous, yet modest. Fred V ierling Viertiny with his wavy hair — 77! c answer to a maidens prayer. Aloys Wessling ' The reward of one duty is the power to fulfill another. Hana Wimer Hona ■H7ii ' ;i others dro i a task and quit, lie lend on her to Inish it. Hiking. ' 29, ' 30 Baseball, ' 30 John Winkelmaier .-1 harmless, flaminy me- teor is his hair. CLASS OF JANUARY 19 3 3 Page One Hundred Sixty-fiue u T I • .IMNE ' 3 3 u « 1 4 i CLASS OF JUNE, 1933 Motto: Sincerity — Integrity — Vision. Colors: Golden-brown and Peach. Sponsors IE Miss Knf.pper Mr. Tucker SEVENTH TERM OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Girls ' Treasurer Boys ' Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Edmond Heinrichsmeyer Ann Heinicke Gertrude Bretscher Robert Elder Billie Linder Frank Petelik EIGHTH TERM OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Girls ' Treasurer Boys ' Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Joseph Sischka Wilma Scheller Margaret Seligman Herbert Volk Virginia Weckler Frank Heidel Page One Hundred Sixty-nine f Edmond Heinrichsmeyer Most wortlui of all his honors. Honor Society Bus. Mgr. Orange and Blue, ;32 President New Seniors, iJ. Student Council, ii Academic C . Track C President Rifle Club, 33 Ann Heinicke Our All-American Girl. Vice President New Seniors Student Council, 32 Freshman Counselor, ' 32 thletic Pin, Letter and Cup Baseball, Hiking, Track, I ' ennis Swimming Team, 31, 32 Gertrude Bretscher Just naturalhi likeable. Honor Society Secretary New Seniors, |32 Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Academic C , Debating C Girls ' Debating Forum, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Robert Elder A leader of good cheer. Honor Society Academic C , Athletic C ' ' Track, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Girls ' Treasurer, New Seniors Cheer Leader, ' 32 Webster Haync, ' 31, ' 32 BlLLIE LiNDER .4 personalilii as bright as her sunny locks. Honor Society Academic C , ' 31 Vice Pres. Student Council, ' 32 Treasurer New Seniors, ' 32 Y ipcs o ' Pan Pin Treasurer Philo. ' 32 Frank Petelik He proved his truth bi his endeavor. Treasurer Uitle Club, 32 Craft Club, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 President Craft Club, ' 32 Orchestra, ' 31, ' 32 Laverne Altman Babe She perhaps a queen will be In the Land of Harmony. Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin, ' 32 Elmer Ameiss He has the attributes of a man; He always does the best he can. Junior Red Cross, ' 32 Nature Club, ' 32 Page One Hundred Seventy CLASS OF JUNE, 19 3 3 I Russell Anton ' U ' i(; iKiirrii? Tiiniorn, Ill ' s nnolher dan. Golf Club, ' ;i2 Bernice Arnitz Hinny Her eiics iire briiihl. Iut imii-e i.i ijiifi: Her nerii smile drinex ( loom aula I . '  lk .vhall, ' 30 I ' ipcs ) ' Pan, ' 30, ' 31 Audrey Asmussen Heiiiilii. ,1 II i n I i n e s s. an, I iiiodeslij. Athletic Pin liikinj;. Skatinj, ' , Tennis XDlleyball. Track Orange ami Ulue .Stall, ' 32 Treasurer I.a . lu.si(|ue, ' 31 Go()dfellowshi|). 31 Pipes o ' Pan. 31 Harold Baumhauer The mildest miinners with the branest mind. President Radio Club, ' 31 Radio Club, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Roberta Beal Laughter is never larkint , When liuhby ' is around. Athletic Pin. Letter and Cup Secretary-Treasurer G. .A. . .. ' 32 Hockey, Basketball, ' olIcyball Baseball, Tennis. .Soccer Student Council. ' 31 Ruth Beck .4 most agreeable cumpanion. Academic C Athletic Pin, Athletic C Hockey, Tennis, Track olleyball. Bowling. Hiking Pipes o ' Pan, ' 3 ), ' 31, ' 32 Chem Club, ' 32 John Beelman Mok Ue shall nut look upon his like ai ain. Rosemary Bedford She ' s true to her work, her word, and her friends. Student Council, ' 32 •lunior Bed Cross, ' 31, ' 32 .Junior Swimming, ' 3(1, ' ,31 La . lusic|ue, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 La .Musique Librarian, ' 31, ' 32 i CLASS O F JUNE, 19 3 3 Page One Hundred Seventy-one u I s John Biederman Enthusiasm attracts attention and interest. Dorothy Berne Dot Pleasant smiles, Gentle tunes. Cheerti ureetinys Make her known. Pipes o ' Pan, ' 32 LuciLE Bertram Lou ' Tall and slender. With all the graces blest. La Musiqiie, ' 31, ' 32 Dolores Betz ' Life ' s a pleasant institution; Let us take it as it comes. Athletic Pin Baseball, ' 32 Junior Swimming Team, ' 32 Bernice Bigalte .-In arbiter of fashion. La Poetique, ' 31, ' 32 Secretary Thrift Club, ' 31, ' 32 Mary Florence Billeg Billie .Adoring all things with the Muses ' charm. June Bobe Hair like threads of purest gold. . nd eyes like skies of blue. Athletic Pin, Letter and Cup Baseball, Basketball, Bowling Tennis, Volleyball, Soccer Anna Howard Shaw, ' 31, ' 32 Eleanor Boehm Kleanor is always in the game. Honor Society Academic Award, ' 32 Athletic Pin, Letter and Cup Baseball, Bowling, Hockey Skating, Tennis, ' olleyball Page One Hundred Seventy-two CLASS OF JUNE, 19 3 3 I CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 Mildred Bolanovich l.illlf. niimrless. remembered deeds of kinitness and of love. Ruth Boone Pkck A rule lilllr bundle of xtin- shine! Academic C Salutatio. ' 32 Hiking. ' 30 Paul Bragg Wilh rare and toil all Ihim s mail ronijitered be. Isabella Bratten Izzy would help others, out of a friendly feeling. Tennis. ' 30, ' 32 Playdav. 30. ' 32 Atlilctic Pin Lester Brinner ' Lester owns a one-wai; ticket to success. Stamp Club. 3ll Academic C Esther Brinkmann .STie IS gentle, she is shy. But there ' s mischief in her eye. Academic Award. ' 29. ' 30 Athletic Pin. Athletic C . nna Howard Shaw. ' 32 (ioodfellowship, ' 32 Thrift Representative, ' 32 Rhoda Brinkop I ' liinilar. loi ' ahle. and sweet is Rho.la. Athletic Pin Treasurer Anna H. Shaw. ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30. ' 32 (ioodfellowship. ' 32 Emil Brock Gladly would he learn and gladly teach. Salutatio, ' 32 At Central High School: . cronautical Club. ' 30 House of Delegates. ' 31 Ked and Black, ' 30. ' 31 Page One Hundred Seventy-three 1 Lawrence Bucher ' He has all those qualities which make for noble man- hood. Matthew Buffa Mat When I did well. I heard it nei ' er: When I did ill. I heard it Robert Carney Bob He came and went, accom- plishing his own business in all things. RiHe Club. ' 31. ' 32 Treasurer Rifle Club, 32 Recording Secretary Rifle Club. 32 Dorothy Burch .4 light heart lives long. ' Ada Carter Dark brown hair. Pleasant features. And comi le.iion fair. Skating. ' 29 G. A. A. Representative. ' 30 Eileen Chesler ' In Quietness and confidence Shall be thy strength. F. Y Cinnater ' Intelligence, daintiness, and a lonely personality. Honor Society . oademic C Freshman Counselor, ' 32 ice President Alethinae. ' 32 Anna Howard Shaw. ' 32 Student Council. ' 31 Helen Clark The two noble thirigs — Sweetness and light. .Academic C Salutatio, ' 32 Hiking, ' 30 Page One Hundred Seventy-four CLASS OF JUNE. 19 3 3 CLASS OF JUNE, 1933 Ruth Clenin ■I ' liix Thill siiiilc. lihe siiimluni ' . ihirls lii ii iniiiiii II siinle.is hi ' iirl. Wihstir llinh School: liaslull);ill. lloc-Ui ' V, Haseball S|);inish Club, MO. ' .■(1 Pep CImI), -.W. ' ;!1 HooM ' VcIt lliuh H;iscO):ill. .i 1 . ' .Ti Chancey Coffey t liiillifiil frirnil is Ihe me- llilllll nf life. Frank Coffman llix is II minninii iiersonalilij unit II nerti frientll j smile. Rosemary Conroy U7u7f memory lusts and Ijiilses beat. The thoiisiht uf Rosemary shall he sineel. Nimtiiis Siilulatio, ' 32 Salutatio, •.■(1. ' 32 ScT-iftary Math Club, ' 31 ■ice IVesident Math Club, ' 32 Math Club. ' 3(1. ' 31. ' 32 La Musiquc, ' 32 Florence Cooke (jookik A willinq helper does not uinit till asl;eil. Athletic Pin, ' 32 Track, olk-vball, ' 31, ' 32 Baseball. Tennis, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30, 31 Frances Craig Kran Friinres. our Utile blonde. Is lil;e Ihe sunshine rays. W ' hereuer sli. ' may chance to tjo She turns the niijhls to days. Baseball, Bowling, ollcyball G. A. A. Hcpresentativc, ' 30 Jessie Curtis Good sense and ijood nature are never separated. Sharpshooters. ' 31. ' 32 Cartoonini; Club. ' 30 Soccer Club. ' 29 Baseball. ' 2!t. ' 30 William Dahman .All jjreat men hane justi ied confidence in themselues. Honor Society lUhatin.i, ' Forum. Debating C Tennis Team, Tennis C Webster llaync. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Hille Club, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Page One Hundred Seventy-five i Roland Damm A kind of lad ihafs hard to find: Easy - iioiny. care - free, and kind. Orchestra. 29, ' 30, ' 31 Gvm Club, ' 29. ' 30, ' 31 Football. ' 31 Captain Wrestling Team Wrestlins Club. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32 Audrey Derringer Silence more music il than any soniy. ' Athletic Pin Skating. ' 31 Baseball. ' 32 Virginia Derringer Ifs the little thinys that count. Band. ' 29. ' 30. ' 31, ' 32 Modern Language Club, ' 31 Baseball Club, ' 32 Band C Ruth Dodenhof ' Very tiuiet and uery modest. Ruth seems like a shy little violet. Bowling, ' 30, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30 La Musiquc, ' 31. ' 32 Wilbert Eckert Oh. where did you yet those curls? . ,, ., They ' re the enmj of all ttie Skating Club. ' 29, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Student Council, 32 Clara Duever Clara is always liberal with lauyhter and humor. Honor Society Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Athletic Pin, Athletic C Girls ' Debating Forum, ' 32 Salutatio. La Musiquc Senior Swimming Team, ' 31, ' 32 Ann Edinger Diligence and skill must win. Honor Society Academic C , Athletic Pin Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Student Council, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin President Physiology Club, ' 32 Vice President Goodfellowship Helen Eggers Her merry lauyhter cheers us. Student Council, ' 31 Thrift Representative, ' 31 Bank Clerk, ' 30. ' 31, ' 32 .4nna Howard Shaw, Salutatio Chem Club, La Musique Page One Hundred Seventy-six CLASS OF JUNE, 19 3 3 Eleanora Ei.lenberger The hiiml I hut hiilh iiKule i oti iiir hdlh niiiitf i oii i itiHl. Uowlinf;, ' 32 Ikacon Staff, ' 33 Irene Erler ' Then ' is ni treasure that may he com iared to a faithful friend. La Poctiquc, ' 32 Sfigt.-at-Arnis Alethinae, ' 32 CLASS O F JUNE. 19 3 3 Edgar Evans ' lltipini: thiiuijh small, Has hiijh ideals. :hfm f:iub, ' 32 Neil Fassel AciV is a splendid example of ' What the uiell-dressed man mill wear. ' Camera Club, ' 30. ' 31 Cross Country Club, ' 31, ' 32 Skating Club, ' 29. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Track. ' 30, ' 31 Walter Feldmann U ' c praise his hiyh endeai or. Secretary .Junior Red Cross, ' 32 President .Junior Red Cross, ' 32 Webster Hayne, ' 32 First .Aid Oscar Fernandez Marked for high destiny. President Honor Society, ' 33 Editor Orange and Blue, ' 32 Colonial Dames History .Award, ' 32 Harvard Book Award. ' 32 Academic C , Debating C „ Student Council, ' 31 President Modern Language, ' 32 Wilbur Finke Kinky ' Heserite and diijnity — The qualities of a tfentleman. Track, ' 30, ' 31 Paul Finn Pilot jnd what he yreatly thoucjht He nobly dared. Page One Hundred Sevcnty-seuen o 5 fi Stewart Flanagan Sliidenis like him are hard to lind. Steady, noble, williny. and kind. DWIGHT FOULKS •Alwai s kin:l and ijenerous. ' Alice Marie Franey •■Al ■' eath lony black lashes, her brown ei es dance. Her c h a r m i n n unnis -our hearts entrance. Pipes o ' Pan. 30 John Fredericks ■7 e IS so loyal, so faithful, si, true. . Whatcuer yo ' -i ask hun. hell yladly do. SkatinsChib. 29 Helen Frisinger Her eyes are briyht. her voice is ' yay. ., , . , Her rery smile drtues yloom away. Ath k-tic Pin Baseball, Sliatini;, 29, ' 30. ' 32 Soccer, Volley Ball, 29 Harold Fudemberg We can say and say with truth Harold ' s a most astonishiny youth. ' Academic C , Athletic ■' (; Football Manager. 32 Track. ' 32 Student Council Gvni and Swimming Club, ' 31 Gertrude Gassman ' By diliyence she won her way. Otto Geyer Modest and retiriny as can be. And full of serious thouyhls is he. Page One Hundred Seventy-eight CLASS OF JUNE. 19 3 3 CLASS OF JUNE. 19 3 3 Genevieve Glover Mail one like her be eiier numbered iimiinij our friends. Skatinj; Club, ' .III. •;! I Harold Goldberg Patienee is the greatest of all nirlues. Boxing and F- ' encing Club, ' 31 Hand. ' 2!). ' 3(1. 31. ' 32 Hand C Robert Gor.; N To studii iind think is Robert ' s Willi. l istenimj to nil i on hni ' e to .so; . ' Honor .Sociuty Academic C icf President Stamp Club. ' 311 Quaestor .Salutatio. ' 32 James Grim.aud With st uarc set shoulders iind lenel heiid. The iMilh to ijreat stucess he ' ll trend. Student Council. ' 32 Boxing and Wrestling Club Cym Club. ' 30 Berdell Guenther Birdie Charms strike the siijht. inhile merit loins the soul. Junior Red Cross. ' 30 Alethinae. ' 31. ' 32 Secretary Alethinae, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30 Robert Guenther . ' iJay his gentleness with him remain, For gentle words are always gain. Margene Gundlach (iENk olhing is impossible to a willing heart. Hiliing. 29 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30 Robert Habig Doc He pressed on where others paused or failed. Page One Hundred Seventy-nine i is Lucille Hammond Lou ' The jolUest. happiest sort of a qirl. And a friend to eiteryone. Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30, ' 31 Volleyball, ' 30 G. A. A. Representative, ' 31 Catherine Hans Silence is the most perfect herald of joy. Student Council, ' 31 President Ciirls ' Physiology Club, ' 32 WiLLARD Hans Just pass him the ball In a football (jame. And he ' s sure to carry Oar school to fame. Football, ' 31, ' 32 Athletic - ' C . ' 31, ' 32 Boxing and Wrestling. ' 31, ' 32 Florence Hardy Fine art is that in which the hand, the head and the heart f o toyether. Athletic Pin. Athletic Letter Baseball, Basketball Hockev, Track. Volleyball Rosemary Hasen Rosie ' ■Blest with that charm. The certainty to please. Frank Heidel Kaiser A football champion is he. In that he spells efficiency. ' Sergeant-at-Arnis. Seniors, ' 33 Football. ' 32 Athletic C Ruth Heinrichsmeyer Her friends are leyion. Honor Society Associate Editor Beacon. ' 33 Academic C . Athletic Pin Thrift Representative. ' 30. ' 31 Secretary Chem Club. ' 32 Sergeant-at-Arms . nna Shaw (ioodfellowship, ' 32 Burton Hempelman A lion amony the ladies is a dreadful thiny. Athletic C Track. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Basketball, ' 30, ' 31 Rifle Club, ' 32 Page One Hundred Eighty CLASS OF ILINE, 19 3 3 I Isabel Hendricks it i)resi ' nce ri 1 1 7 iinil a iledxiiri ' . IliT 1(111 lilllr smilr 0 1, ivluil (I t rt ' tisitrr . ' Mildred Henry .4;; alhlele iiiiil d sliiilfiit, too. AtliU ' tic Pin, Letter and Cup HasehaM. HasUetball Track, i)lle.vl)all, llocliey IliUin.i;, Soccer, Tennis GlETNER HiBBELER In every field null litis liid progress. Athletic C , Tennis, ' ;i2 President .Stamp Club. M Webster Havne. A2 .Juniiir Hed Cross, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Emma Hoechst A frieiidhi liearl u ilh initnil friends. Athletic Pin. Atliletic Letter Baseball, Xolleyball, Track Junior Swimming Team, ' 30, ' 31 G, . . A. Representative, ' 31, ' 32 Pauline Hoffhaus Here is a maid whose chctrni and tirnee Is mirrored in her friendly fnee. Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30, ' 32 Elsie Hoffmeister Ciloioinii hair and lonely face, She has beauly as well as graee. Beacon Stall ' . ' 33 Sharpshooters. ' 31 Hed Ooss Bepresentative, ' 31 G. .A. A. Representative, ' 31 Virginia Horn The charm and beauly of a poet ' s song. ice President La Poctique, ' 32 Cle Cuks, ' 32 Alethinae. ' 31, ' 32 Skating. ' 29, ' 30 Lawrence Horras 4 Human .Adonis. Boxing and Wrestling. ' 31, ' 32 Thrift Bepresentative. ' 31 Student Council. 32 Swimming Chib, ' 32 Track. ' 31, ' 32 1 CLASS O F JUNE. 19 3 3 Page One Hundred Eighty-one « rT Albert Huckshold Al Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute. Oliver Huegerich ■■Oi.i.ie Olirer is a i allant soul. Who always strifes to make the yoal. Student Council, ' 32 Thrift Reprcbentative. ' 31. ' 32 Bovs Skating Club. ' 30. ' 31, ' 32 Track. ' 32 Band. 32 Myrtle Huether Myrt With rhi thmic yrace and per- fect poise Her tappinti feet made a rhythmic noise. Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin Marie Hummell The mildest manners .ind the yentlest heart. Baseljall, ' 29, ' 30 Vollevball, ' 29 Hiking. ' 32 Ruth Jacobs How sweet and yracious. Even in common speech. Honor Society Academic C Student Council, ' 32 Salutatio, ' 31, ' 32 Goodfellowship, ' 30, ' 31. ' 32 Thelma Jacobs Thelma is a wee bit of a (jirl. But her wit does tower (iboi ' e us all. Pipes o ' Pan. ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin, ' 32 Track, ' 30 Slaten Jenner ot a shirker. But a williny worker. Genevieve Janis Jenny ' Geneniene is a charming girl With a lonely disposition. Goodfellowship, ' 32 Page One Hundred Eighty-two CLASS OF JUNE, 19 3 3 CLASS O F JUNE, 19 3 3 Nadine Jones ' Vdrii ' lii ix Ihe xpirf if life. llomii- Sdikty Aciuli ' inic Award Athlitk- I ' in. AthUtic C Mearon StatT. ' .i. ' i I.a Miisiqm-. ■;)1. ' Ti Saliitati.i. •.•)!. ■;t2 Xolkvhall. Hiliiii);. ' ■il. ' ;t2 IracU. liasihall. tl, ' :i2 Dorothy Joslin Rdt Preltii thinns often ninie in small pnrkdnes. Chcm f:iiil). ' :i2 Oscar Jost The mrest irfasiin- nmrlnl times iiffurd 1.1 s xitless reiJiiliition. Virginia Jost Minmk In evenithinii she did excel. The i irl ii ' lin did her iimrk- so u ' elir Walter Jungbluth One so earnest in his ( iiest Will find what is denied the rest. Hitlc Club, ' , (1. -31. ' 32 Radio Club. ' 30, ' 31. ' 32 Skating Club. ' 3lt. ' 31. ' 32 Cross Country Club. ' 32 Track. ' 3(1. ' 32 Orchestra C All City H. S. Orchestra. ' 31. ' 32 Harold Kalbfleisch .Vo hurry, no worry, Just life as it comes. Aviation Club, ' 32 Marie Karcher Gixgkr Blessed with plain reason and soher sense. Hiking. ' 32 Tenni.s, ' 30 Courtesy Club. ' 32 Frances Kaslick She has a jileasant wai and sweet. .4 lonely character to meet. Pipes o ' Pan. ' 31. ' 32 Baseball. NOllcvball. ' 32 Track. ' 30. ' 31 Curls ' Physiology Club. ' 32 Page One Hundred Eighty-three S u (! JQP Florence Kauffmann Flo ' When tonyues speak sweetly They name her name. Baseball. ' 31 Track, ' 31 Volleyball, ' 31 Vada Keenright Bobbie She did with cheerful will what others talked of while their hands were still. Erle Keney ' .4 keen mind, a clever hand. .An easy friend to understand. Student Council Alternate Thrift Representative, ' 30 Elsa Klock ow here ' s a I ' ery busy la. s. And an asset to our class. Honor Society Associate Editor, Orantje and Blue, ' 33 Athletic Pin, ' 32 Baseball, Hiking, Volleyball Track, ' 311. ' 32 Anna Howard Shaw, ' 31, ' 32 Treasurer, Vice-President, 32 Hilda Klock ' In everything she had a part .ind did her best with all her heart. Athletic Pin, Athletic C Baseball, Hiking, Speedball Track, Volleyball, ' 31. ;32 -•Vnna Howard Shaw. ' 31. ' 32 Cleveland Courtesy Club, ' 32 La Musique, ' 31, ' 32 LORNA KnACKSTEDT Discretion of speech is more than eloquence. Orchestra, ' 29, ' 30 Elizabeth Knaus Little Bit Sweet and pretty, gentle and true. J ' Little Bit ' has a smile for you. Baseball, ' 30, ' 31 Math Club. ' 32 La Musique, ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 31 Erwin Knueppe Nip .l loyal scholar here was he, .4s each of us has tried to be. Academic Certificate, ' 31 Track. ' 31, ' 32 Page One Hundred Eighty-four CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 Frederick Koeppe Leisure is sioeel i s hnnen to mil heart. Edward Kounovsky •■c.i s Abone III! thiiuis. « master mind is his. Honor Society Academic C . Debating C Student Council. ' 32 Oicheslra. 2!). •,t(l. Ml. ' 32 Dehalc Koruni. ' 32 Clum Club. ' 32 Sliatinj, ' Club, ' 31, ' 32 Tennis Team, ' 32 Stella Kroepel ' Her heart is no less siinnij Than her golden hair. Baseball. ' 30 lMl)e.s o Pan. Mil. 31. 32 Robert Kuehnle Within his heart lies kindness true; His words and deeds bespeak it, too. Thrift He|iiesentafive. 32 Edwin Kuhn ' Ed plaijs tennis With grace and ease, .ind in his studies He works for ' E ' s. ' Academic C Athletic C . Tennis. ' 32 .Student Council. 31. ' 32 Dorothy Kuhs With a steady ei e and hand Dorothy hits the mark. icc President Sharpshooters. ' 32 Sharpshooters. ' 31. ' 32 Athletic Pin Baseball. Bowlini, ' . ' 29, ' 30, ' 31 Ralph Kummer .4 brilliant career in aviation is his goal. Cross Country Club. ' 32 Tr.ick. ' 31. ' 32 Thrift Cashier. ' 32 Aviation Club. 30, ' 31. ' 32 President Aviation Club. ' 31. ' 32 Stanley Kurka Stbamer Those who paint him truest Praise him most. Coif Club. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 President Golf Club, ' 32 Page One Hundred Eighty-five u ] Helen Kypta A ii ' ipil ' ' J ' ■' ' yateful For the inlerexl that ' s been shown In mdldng numij school days The nicest she l as known. Volleyball, ' 29 Bowling, ' 30 Lillian Lay Lii.- Quiet and reserned is she. .-I student of the first degree. Baseball, ' 30, ' 31 Bowling, ' 30 Hiking, 29 ' ice President Math Club, ' 32 Howard Lenharth Len Quiet, yet on learning bent; Earnestly on his quest he went. Oliver Lenz Ollie He was a gentleman on whom we built an absolute trust. Radio Club, ' 31, ' 32 Gail Lindahl A gentle mind is known by gentle deeds. Honor Society Academic Pin, ' 32 Secretary Physiology Club •Junior Red Cross, Cartooning Clyde Lindley Sot too serious, not too gay. But a real good fellow in every way. Student Council. ' 32 Thrift Representative, [32 Junior Red Cross, 31 Wrestling Club, ' 32, ' 33 William Lochmoeller The kind that Honor claims. Treasurer Honor Society, ' 33 Advertising Manager Beacon, ' 32 Secretary Student Council, ' 32 Academic C Thrift Representative, ' 311 Erlieta Lachnit A jorial. coa.ving way she had. Honor Society Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Beacon StatT, ' 32, ' 33 .Academic C President La Musique, ' 33 Accompanist La Musique Page One Hundred Eighty-six CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 Jean Langen Qi ' i ' l nnil uniissiiminu Yft liiixihle unit churminii. ' Ellen Claire Lambur Ellen is of sltilely mi ' c i, iri7 i iiueenly yrace, so sel- iliim seen. Clc Cuks, ' 31, ' 32 Secretary Cle Cuks, ' 32 President La Pocti(|ue. ' 32 Anna Howard Shaw, ' 30 Anna Howard Shaw Keeper of Hoscoe, ' 30 Horace Lyon The furce of his own merit niiili es its tiiiiy. KiOe Club. ' 29. ' 30 Freshman Kootball. ' 29 Lavita Maas ■' lTTS Sorry. hoys—her lime is completely luken. Athletic I ' in. Athletic C Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan Pin Sharpshooters. ' 31. ' 32 Baseball. Hiking. Hockey Tennis, Track. olleybaU Edward Malt by Eddie ' .Always happy, almays qaii. Ever (Irioint) ijloom away. Band Salutatio Ben Marcus Rest awhile nor lontjer waste Life w i t 7j inconsiiterahle haste. .Nature Club. ' 3(1 Cross ( ountrv, ' 31 Skating Club. ' 311. 31. ' 32 Swiinmins; (JUih. ' 32 Chem Club. ' 32 Gertrude Manke CiKKTIK .S7ie always does the riyht thintj In the riyht kind of way. Girls ' Physiologv Club. ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 31. ' 32 Ba.seball, ' 31. ' 32 Jeannine Margiotta .Ika.wk .4 linely yirl. brimful of fun. Page One Hundred Eighty-seven Mildred Martz ' Mildred ' s crownintj glory is her wav]] hair. Hiking, ' 30, ' 31 Junior Red Cross, ' 32 Clicm Club, ' 32 Marie Eloise Matlock Infinite riches in a little space. Sltating Club, ' 29, ' 30 Fred Matustik Before he starts to do a thinci. We know he ' ll do it rifiht. Secretary Golf Club, ' 31, ' 32 Elmer May May .4 mania lad with twinkling eye .ind smiling lips that never sigh. Student Council, ' 31, ' 32 Sitting Club, ' 31, ' 32 Golf Club, ' 31, ' 32 Dorothy Mazanec Maz ' A witty girl is a treasure, .4 witty beauty is a power. Secretary Honor Society, ' 33 Acadernic C , Athletic Pin Student Council, ' 32 Goodfellowship, ' 30, ' 31. 32 Baseball, Volleyball, ' 29, ' 32 Modern Language Club, ' 30 DUANE MacCoY ' Manly and quiet, accomplish- ing much. Helen McCoy ' The gods have niolded her into perfect loveliness. William McGoodwin Mack .4 things come to him who waits. Page One Hundred Eighty-eight CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 Anna Lee McHenry Dninlii as a flower. Joseph Meeka Cond niiluri- is the hemily of thf mind. Dorothy Meenen IVc iiJimder if Dorothy ii as the tH.-ipiration for ' Keep that schoolgirl contjjlexion. ' Academic C , ' 29 Salutatio, ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30. ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin, ' 31 Anna Howard Shaw, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Chem Club, ' 32 Irving Meinberg Don ' t plaqiie me with studies, I hai e mightier njatters on mil mind. Elmer Meyer ( ' .leueUind ' s gift to women. Thrift Representative, ' 31, ' 32 Rifle Club. ' 29. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Statistical Officer Rifle Club. ' 32 Rifle Club Emblem Band, ' 29. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32 Band - ' C Vernon Meyer ' ern Honor lies in honest toil: Mae Minnegerode ' Little talkers make big thinker.- . Baseball, ' 29 Track, ' 29 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 31 Irene Minies A nvisl worthy friend. Salutatio. ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32 Pipes o Pan Pin Athletic Pin Baseball. ' 30. 31, ' 32 Hiking, ' 31, ' 32 Orange and Blue SlafT, ' 32 Page One Hundred Eighty-nine 1 s d Albert Moellenhoff ' ' Twuuld be hard tu find his peer. For he ' s so earnest and sin- cere. Academic Award. ' 32 Student Council. ' 32 Track. ' 28. ' 32 Cross Country. ' 32 Mildred Moellenhoff She ' s one of the sweetest girls that Cleveland ei ' er had. Honor Society Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Student Council. ' 32 Thrift Rei)resentative. ' 29. ' 30 . cademic C Anna Shaw. Goodfellowship Alvin Moritz Ai. IVhe i it von es to musie ' .Al ' s ' all there: In daneiny. too. He does his share. Orchestra. ' 29. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32 Band. ' 31. ' 32 Orchestra C Boxing. Fencing Club, ' 29. ' 30 Bernice Morgan .4 bashful girl and verif sweet Is surely a pleasant one to meet. .Junior Red Cross, ' 32 Bernice Morrison ' .4 soft uoice turnelh away wrath. Baseball. ' 30 Volleyball. ' 30 Alvin Mueller His twinkliny eyes to you de- rlare. .4 merry heart is surely there. Frank Mueller Tennis, skatiny. yolf , Frank is there eavh season. Winniny honors in them all. Vo doubt there ' s a reason. Skatini Club. ' 29. ' 30. ' 31 Thrift Representative. ' 31. ' 32 Secy.-Treas. Golf Club Victoria Muhlke ' Beauty plus intelliyeme is indeed a rare gift. Skating. 29 Anna Howard Shaw. ' 32 G. A. A. Representative. ' 30 La Musiquc. ' 31 I Page One Hundred Ninety CLASS OF JUNE, 9 3 3 CLASS OF JUNE. 19 3 3 Joseph Nagle Jok .4 hiine the i ifl t)f s it ' crh hut feiu are possessed of wisdmn. Celestine Neumann .1 demure lillle t ' .lei ' elimdile. Sliidinl Council, ' .il. ' .i ' i . thUtic Pin Basiic-thall. ' .tl Hocluv. -lill. ' 31 Vi)lhvball. ' ;n ( .iris Phvsiolim ' v Club. ' .tO, ' 31 I ' ipos o Pan, ' 32 Doris Neunuebel U ' i( shall we sau of her? lieauliful. charminii. ii lininy poem . ' Honor .Society .Academic C ' ice Prisicicut W ' coc. ' 31 President Sl atin, ' . ' 32 Treasurer (}oodfello v.ship, 32 La Poetique, ' 32 Erwin Nickel Nick Always jollfi and (Acs- to play. Mischief his merry eyes por- tray. Louis Nicolay Loi ' ie ' Courteous and manly in all that he does. Math Club, ' 30 Stamp Club. ' 3(1. ' 31, ' 32 Cross Country, ' 31, ' 32 Elsie Norman El Fair of form and fair of face Full of charm anil full of yrace. Frances Obermeyer ' .Void Frances has lots of very fine lad — .4 rare little treasure thai some of us lad;. Pipes o ' Pan. ' 29 .Junior Swimming, ' 30 Senior Swimming, ' 31, ' 32 Esther Olda Cute, clever, and full of fun. Known and loved by every- one. . nna Howard Shaw. ' 31. ' 32 Nice President Anna II. Shaw . thletic Pin. Letter and Cup Baseball. Tennis. Track Bowling. Hiking, ollcyball Page One Hundred Ninety-one I Mildred Oldeg Millie Her sunny locks curl like a qohlen fleece about her face. Hiking, ' 30 Tennis, ' 31 Mildred Ostmeyer Milly A loi ' ely. charming brunette — As lovely as any we have met. Track, ' 29 Hiking, ' 29 VoUevball, ' 29 Marjorie Owen .•Is brimful of mischief, ivis- dom and alee. As ever any yirl could be. Athletic Pin Baseball, ' 30 Tennis, ' 30, ' 32 Track. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Modern Language, Anna Shaw George Pallme Speak clearlii if yuu speak at all. ■Carve every word before you let it fall. Student Council, ' 32 Lorraine Pattiz ' Vivacious, thouyhlful. full of fun, With a smile on her lips for everyone. Skating, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Helen Paul Sally ,4 smiliny face and a happy disposition. Student Council, ' 32 Academic C Cartooning Club, ' 30, ' 31 Vice President Cartooning Club Tennis, Bowling Charles Pecka ' 7 love tranquil solitude And society that is wise and good. Orchestra, ' 29, ' 30 Courtesy Club Frances Peil Her words, like so many nim- ble and airy servitors, Trip about her at command. Academic C , Academic Award Student Council, ' 32 Freshman Counselor, ' 32 G. A. A. Representative Vice President La Poetique, ' 31 Treasurer Cle Cuks, ' 32 Page One Hundred Ninety-two CLASS OF U N E. 19 3 3 Marie Persciibacher .1 iiiinsonir ilxirin lines in Iwr sniilr Ami iiljerliiin linils nrricc to hiT mini. SluirpsliDotcrs, M. ' 32 Titasuicr Sharpshooters. ' 32 Atlili ' tic I ' in Hasehall. Hiking, ' I ' rack XOUeyhall. Hocke.v, ' 32 Roy Pesek Eager for the i ame and en- dowed with the counnie to )d tij it. Track. ' ;!(), •31. ' ;!2 Skatin.!, ' f:Uih. ' .■til. ' 31, ' 32 Pri-si(iint .Skatin}! Cliil). ' 32 Vera Pfaff On the athletic ield. a jier- feet specimen of uduil on all- ' roiind othlele should be. Beacon Staff, ' 33 Athletic Pin. Athletic C Baseball. ' ollevl)all. 311. ' 31. ' 32 Speeit Ball. Bowlin.i;. 30. ' 31 Kathryn Pfautsch .A winniny may. a pleasant smile. A l indlii word for all, she hud. olle.vball. Track. Baseball Pipes o ' Pan. ' 31 Alvin Plate He from whose lips dirine Jiersuasion flows. Debating Forum. ' 32 Webster Haync. ' 32 Laurine Pollard ' ■Lar ' One of those sweet girls who help to make life worth while. Secretary Bowling, ' 31 Bowling. ' 31 Eugene Powers .4 little nonsense now und then Is relished by the best of men. Lee Purkey ••PlRK ' Lee is not so much on saying. But doing is to him like play- ing. CLASS O F JUNE. 1933 Page One Hundred Ninety-three 1 Algerd Rasimas Al Brevitii is the soul of wit. Chem Club, ' 32 Walter Rauth Wally Life ' s treasure lies in action. Cheer Leader, ' 31, ' 32 Orchestra C Orchestra, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31 Freshman Football, ' 29 Chem Club, ' 32 Catherine Reichert Kay ' Kau ' delights in charming us ' Track, ' 29 Baseball, ' 29 Dorothy Reifuss Pretty golden hair and a mis- chievous look in her eye. Leo Renz Leo is a musical lad. Syncopation is his fad. Carl Ring Quiet, courteous, and kind. Honor Society President Stamp Club, ' 32 Stamp Club, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Webster Hayne, ' 32 Chem Club, ' 32 Robert Ripley With a smile that just won ' t wear off. Harold Risch Bud We ' ll all remember ' Bud ' s ' music and personality. Band. ' 29, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Orchestra, ' 29. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 All State Orchestra, ' 31 All City Orchestra, ' 31, ' 32 Orchestra C Page One Hundred Ninety-four CLASS OF JUNE. 19 3 3 William Ritchie ••Hii.i. .1 .s;m7i ' is iih ' Icoiiil ' ei er i- inltiTf. Viola Roberts • ' vr She ' s It (larlinti Utile lass, We ' re ( lad In have her in our class. James Robertson . ( iroblem is too great for him to solve. Honor Society Academic C Beacon Literary Staff, ' 33 Appointed Staff Orange and Blue, ' 32 Student Council, ' 32 ice President Chem. Club, ' 33 Matli CIul), •.•)0. •:)!, ' 32 Cecil Rodriguez Roddy Ei ' er realty to join in a game ol Iiearts. Charlotte Rohlfing The perfection of courtesy and attractine ways. Anna Howard Shaw, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Sergeant-at-Arms Anna H. Shaw, ' 31 President Anna H. Shaw, ' 31 Leo Rolf He is oft the tvisesf man who is not wise at all. Ruth Rosenhauer Ruth has shot the arrow of affection and love through all our hearts. Athletic Pin Baseball. Bowling. ' 29, ' 30 Tennis. Track. ' 31. ' 32 Treasurer Toxophilite, ' 32 President Toxophilite, ' 32 Secretary Chem Club, ' 32 Homer Rushkewitz A man in the true sense of the word. Gym and Swimming Club, ' 30, ' 31 Swimming Club, ' 32 S CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 Page One Hundred Nincty-fiv u Reilly Ryan ' A man who has no enemies. ' Lester Saenger Music is thi ' iininersal lan- (juage of manl;ind. Orchestra. 30. ' 31. ' 32 Track. 32 Rifle Club. ' 31. ' 32 Thrift Representative. 32 Bovs Skating Club First Aid. ' 30 All City Orchestra William Sanborn He means well and acts ac- cordinnlij. Mary Sargent The Sarge Coni ' inciny words, persuasiue ways. Girls ' Debating Forum. ' 32 Debatin.g C Margaret Sattig She ever looks upon the sunny side of life. Honor Society Academic C Student Council Modern Language Club. ' 31, ' 32 Baseball, Track, Volleyball Beatrice Scheske .■1 lot of sweet Ihinys rolled into one. Student Council. ' 31 Thrift Representative. ' 32 Modern Language Club. ' 31 Tennis. Hiking. ' 32 Athletic Pin Kenneth Scheller Kenny ' Kenneth has invested heavily in bonds — of friendship. Wilma Scheller In sports she sets a pace that only few can follow. Honor Society ' ice President Seniors, ' 33 Freshman Counselor Student Council. ' 31, ' 32 Athletic Pin, Letter and Cup Modern Language Club, ' 30, ' 31 Alethinae, ' 32 Page One Hundred Ninety-six CLASS OF JUNE, 1933 AlLEEN Sc;iLLlGO TIw tfisli of Ihr pri ' sfnl Hr sure lit fiill ' ill: If irhsimif. nr iilciisfinl. lit- true In il slilir M:illi Chil). •:!•_ Dorothy Schilling I)(it ■•lliirolhii luis the xnflesl. sinet ' lt ' sl. must apinuilinii kiinl (if iioice. Huckt-v. •:!! li;is l):in. Ml Ciu ' in Cliil). Ifi Norma Schlagenhauf ' W ' c iiilniire her for Iter liilenis Antl loi ' e her for lier eharin. Pi-fsidcnt Fri ' sliman (iirls Club Kri ' shman Coiinsi ' Idr. ' T2 SharpshciDtcTS, ,i Statistical Ollict-r Sharpshoiitcrs. ' lil G()oflft ' ll ;) ' Nliir . ' iU, ' 12 President Anna Shaw. ' 32 Howard Schlosser WItiil fluent nonsenxe triekles friini his minilh. Skating Club, ' 29, ' 31 Louis SCHMITT ' lV(7 i his music iinil his wil Louis ulwnijs makes a hit. ( artoonini; (;iub. ' 3(1 Stamp Club. ' 31 Orchestra. ' 30. ' 31. 32 Orchestra C Webster Havnc. ' 31. ' 32 Student Council. ' 32 Mabel Schmitt Verii jireeise uul neiit in nil her uunjs. Hikini;. ' 32 Math Club. ' 32 Melva Schneider ' A ehfirminff tfirl utilh ehtirm- inij itiiiiis A ifirl who mids zesi to our hifih sehool fhii s. Baseball. ' 311 .Swimming. ' 30. ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30. ' 31 Hazel Schaefer Diz Meeting her is likinii her, Knowimi her is lovimi her. Sharpshooters. 30. ' 31 C.oodfellowship. 32 Anna Howard Shaw. ' 32 S CLASS O F JUNE 19 3 3 Page One Hundred Ninety-seven (£ Marcella Schoen ' Two valued gifts of forlune. Brilliance and alertness. Academic C Math Club, ' 32 Hiking, ' 31 Pipes o ' Pan, ' 32 Lucille Schaffnit Endowed with a Titian erown of ylory. G. A. A. Pin, ' 31 Baseball, Bowling. Hiking, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31 Track, Volleyball, ' 29, ' 30, ' 32 Lester Schopp Les Here ' s a lad who knows how to do his own thinking in Chemistry. Webster Havne, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Craft Club, ' 31, ' 32 Edmond Schumann One of the still, plain men who do the world ' s work. Aviation Club, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Orchestra, ' 29. ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 All City Orchestra, ' 32 Roland Seeker Here ' s a student, here ' s a friend. Ever readii a hand to lend. Margaret Seligman Beautg is rare and shoulit be ever prized. Vice President Honor Society, ' 33 Secretary Seniors, ' 33 Salutatio, ' 31, ' 32 Aedile of Salutatio, 32 Cle Cuks, ' 32 Student Council, ' 32 Freshman Counselor, ' 32 Thrift Secretary. ' 31 William Seward .4 silver tongue. A heart of gold. A debater he With friends untold. Treasurer New Seniors, ' 32 Treasurer Student Council, ' 32 Vice Pres. Webster Hayne, ' 32 Lucille Simons Good nature wins a host of friends. Pipes o ' Pan, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin, (). A. A. Pin Senior Swimmini; Team. ' 32 Bowling, ' 31. ' 32 Goodfellowship, ' 32 Page One Hundred Ninety-eight CLASS O F U N E, 19 3 3 CLASS O F U N E . 19 3 3 Joseph Sischka I ' lif niiinii miles this lad has run U ' crc ( for Clfiielanil luon. I ' lTsidint Seniors, ' 33 Athletic C ()upt:iin Tiack Team, ' 32 Ruth Jane Smyth ( r frientls, lliere are maniil Her foes, are there any? Athlotic Pill ' icL ' I ' ft ' sidcnt (itKKlffllowsIiip La Miisi(|iic ' , ' 31 Baseball, licwljim ' . -olk-vball (ioodl ' ellow.ship, ' 30. 31, ' 32 Genevieve Snell Heattii far work. lieaihi for fun. Athletic I ' in. Athletic C Junior Swimmin.i; ' I ' eam Nature (Hul). La Musique Sharpshooters. ' 311, ' 31 Baseball. Track. Volleyball Joseph Sonnleitner Dark-eiied .loe. with raiten hair, Had a talent for music, pass- iny fair. Orchestra, ' 29, ' 31, ' 32 Student Council, ' 32 LUCRETIA SpRICH Thii modest]] is a candle to thii merit. Academic C Athletic Pin Girls Physiology Club. ' 31, ' 32 SerECeant-at-. rnis (iirls ' Phvsiolo.gv Club, ' 32 Baseball . ' 29. ' 31. ' 32 Tennis. Track, ' 32 Thrift Representative. ' 32 John Spanogle Every man has his fault and honesty is his. Adrienne Sprotte The center of a lanje circle of friends. Athletic Pin Chem Club. ' 32 Salutatio. ' 32 Skatin.i;. Hockey, ' 31 Melba Stahl .4 jolly yirl, rather petite Hut even so. she ' s an athlete. Athletic Pin. Letter and Cup Athletic Counselor. ' 31 Senior Swimming Team Baseball, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31. ' 32 Page One Hundred Ninety-nine i Dorothy Staley Dot Dot is one of those quiet f ir s. But when you yet to know her. You find she is just oodles of fun. Edwin Stamm ' cunnol do ureal Ihiniis. I can do small thint s in a great way. Roland Stanley Much wisdom often goes uyith fewest words. Jeannette Stark . o better attribute to fame. Than these few words, ' She played the fjame. ' Honor Society Sharpshooters. 30, ' 31. ' 32 President Sharpshooters. ' 31 G. A. A. Representative. ' 31. ' 32 Athletic Pin Pipes o ' Pan. ' 30. ' 31 Baseball, Hiking. ' olleyball Eileen Stein Eileen has her ' own sweet way ' — ' Twill be of use to her some day. Bernice Stelk Happiness belongs to those U ' ho are contented. Tennis, ' 32 Hi fie Club. ' 31 Toxophilite. ' 32 Chem Club, ' 32 Amelda Stocker ' Where the power that charms us so. In thy soul or in thy eye? Thrift Representative, ' 32 Athletic Pin Tennis, Skating, Track William Stonecipher Bill ' .4 cheerful soul, who strives to please. But one who dearly tones to tease. Chem Club, ' 32 Page Two Hundred CLASS OF U N E. 19 3 3 Edna Stork Kddii: ' There ' s nirltnlii iil her ftiuier- lips. v u- CI 111). ' ;ii l.a Miisi(|iU ' . ' 31 Howling ' . •;i2 Music Seivico Edwin Straeter One lh(jl firdins mil weiirij iif well ttoiiifi. Ann Stroer ■■.S7ic IS IIS pure a.i n penrl. and ns perfect. VoUcvball. iil Baseball. ' 31 Fred Sweet 11(7 1 (I loiial heart He ilici his part. Boxins and Wrestlin.i!, ' 30 Swimmini; Club. 29. ' 31). ' 31. ' 32 (lyni Club. ' 3(1. ' 31 Gj m Emblem. ' 30 Thelma Sweetin Thel All nil ' round athlete, thoutih riot rerij tall: She ' s haiuiil and smiling and lil;e l hi] all. Baseball. ' 29. ' 30, ' 31 Soccer, Tennis, olleyball, ' 30 James Templeton In athlete anil a steadi) one, Who plaus the i nme until it ' s done. Track, ' 29. ' 30 Track C . ' 29 Football. ' 29, ' 30 Thrift Ileiircsentative, ' 31. ' 32 Corinne Theiss Beauti and personality — .-1 1 excellent combination. Pipes o ' Pan. 31 Norma Thomsen True happiness is to no jilacc confined. But still is found with a con- tented mind. Gooflfel!o«sbi|). ' 30. 31, 32 d s i CLASS OF JUNE, 19 3 3 Page Two Hundred One (£ r1 William Thompson Determination 1; n o w s no failure. Berenice Tiefenbrunn With great dark ei es and dark brown hair. Her smile would banish mani) a care. Honor Society President Sharpshooters, ' 30 Match Secretary Sharpshooters Freshman Girls ' Counselor, ' 32 President La Musique, ' 31 ' ice President La .Musique, ' 31 Thrift Representative, ' 30, ' 31 Athtlctic Pin Vincent Tiefenbrunn Vincent is Quite a marksman. And he will win ureal fame; Soon they ' ll be selling rifles That will bear his name. Editor Beacon Honor Society President Ritlc Club, ' 32 Vice President Rifle C:iub, ' 31 RlHe Team Captain, ' 32, ' 33 Vera Tinius Alwaiis modest. alwaus charminy. Cartoonini? Club. ' 30. ' 31 Bowling, ' 32 Alice Tweedle As merry as the day is long! G. A. A. Representative, ' 30, ' 32 Anna Howard Shaw, ' 31, ' 32 Student Council Representative Kenneth Urquhart Whose well-tauqht mind the present age surpassed. Rifle Club, ' 30, ' 31 Gvm and Swimmini; Club, ' 30, ' 31 First Aid, ' 30 Radio Club. ' 32 Student Council. ' 32 Gerald Vaclavik Jerry .it last my tasks at school are done And I ' ve made my record for having fun. George Van Ronzelen George has good under- standing. Football Athletic C Page Two Hundred Two CLASS OF JUNE. 1933 CLASS O F I LI N E , 19 3 3 Audrey Voepel Siiinll in slature, liifi in heart. Herbert Volk lieinij an alhlele of spirit and action Makes him a center of at- traction. Girls ' Treasurer Seniors. ' 3, ' i Track. ' 31. ' 32 Cross Country Club. 31. ' 32 Student Council. ' 31, ' 32 .Athletic C Dorothy Volz Dot Her (jenlle uiorils and smilinfi ei es Hare hriijhtened up the dark- est skies. . nna Howard Shaw. 32 La .Musitiue, ' 32 Thrift Representative, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan. ' 31, ' 32 Pipes o ' Pan Pin Bessie Walker Her words and waijs are u ' inninti. Junior Red Cross. ' 32 Doris Walker ' ir ic i all the others i oii ivoiild pass bii She ' s the one who would catch ijour ei e. . thletic Pin Thrift Representative. ' 32 Toxophilite. ' 31, ' 32 Treasurer Toxophilite. ' 32 ' ice President Toxophilite. ' 32 Senior Swimmins Team. ' 31 Alice Warren Truth is the highest thing that man maij keep. Baseball. •3(1, ' 31. ' 32 Thrift Representative. ' 31, ' 32 Dorothy Washer Sinuinti at her work .is if her sonfi could hai e no ending. Track, Bowling ollevbaIl. Baseball Goodfellowship. ' 30, 31 Virginia Weckler Weck a tiirl that ' s well ivith al- Reallii worti) while: Kind, and gentle mays a smile. Boys ' Treasurer Seniors, ' 33 Philo, ' 31. ' 32 Secretary Philo, ' 32 Page Tivo Hundred Three is i Tillman Wedemeier His f reatest asset is his smile. And ' tis ever with him. Craft Club. ' 31, ' 32 Gym Club, ' 32 Courtesy Club, ' 32 Fred Wenzel The best of all nood sports is he, Who lakes bis honors yrace- fMU- Honor Society Business Manager Beacon Bus. .Mgr. Orange and Blue. ,V1 Football. ' 29. ' 30, ' 31. ' 3? Athletic •;C President Boxing and Fencing Ann WiCKEY A maiden modest Yet self-possessed. Dorothy Wildfong Dot So baiii)ii, so kind, and so still. With her auiet wans and her yentle will. Marie Williams .4 lunely little nirl, Eoer ready for fun. Athletic Pin Bowling. Volleyball. ' 31 Track. Hiking. Tennis Goodfellowship. Pipes o Pan Gordon Wilson His motto is : If tioii hai ' e a kind word. sat] it. If i ou have a kindness, pay it. Chem Club, ' 32 Edwin Wisely ' Life for him is a Ihinij of joy. Ob. adial a liirkii, happy boy! Coif Club, ' 32 Elbert Witte E. .J. .Allhouqh he ' s shy as be can be, ' His virtues e.rreed his mod- esty. Page Two Hundred Four CLASS OF ILINE. 1933 Dorothy Wren Dot llnrnl liti ' s i rfire Anil Itii ' vhi fiirin Arc hiT itssfis And her chnrni. John Woerner Hud The rcii ' ani ii[ liil (}r. hnnesl (iiiil riiihl. Is morth a rroinn nf ineallh mill niijihl. Clarice Brand Is she nol more Ihiin iiiiinlinfi fan express. Or iioiilh ul jiiiels fitney when Iheii lone? Mildred Nickel .4 qniet, lonsrientious i irl is she, A treasureil friend she ' ll nl- waijs be. Jane Hunt .4s pretlii As she ' s luilty. (i. A. A. Representative, ' 29 Raymond Essma ' Siirress romes to the man mho tnds happiness in his ivnrk. Pauline Reardon ' .4 iofi 111 all u hi knew her. ' Kenneth Yochum Ilappii-yo-luckii. smilinii. free — There ' s nothinij yet that ' s bothered ine. d 1 r s CLASS OF JUNE, 19 3 3 Page Two Hundred Five d 1 Laura Beckman Lollie To make the world a friendly place, She shows to it a friendly face. Volleyball ' 29, ' 31 Walter Brockelman Brock His limbs were cast in manly mold For track events and con- tests bold. Track, ' 3n. ' 31. ' 32 Football, ' 32 Athletic C , Track, ' 31, ' 32 Leonard Brown Len The less there is learned, the less there is to for- get. Laurence Carter ' He is precisely what he seems to be, All that is good, strong and noble. Roy Coleman Poetry is Roy ' s staff of life. Beacon Staff, ' 33 Cartoonlni; Club, ' 29 Webster Hayne, ' 29 Debating Forum. ' 30 Orange and Blue Reporter. 31 Skating Club, ' 31, ' 32 Walter DeBrecht ' To the heights he ' ll surely climb. Though it take a little time. Roy Dietsch ' Better late than never. Gym Club, ' 32 Track, ' 31, ' 32 James Dunphy Popeye James is held in high esteem By all the fellows on the team. Gvm Club. ' 29. ' 30 Wrestlins; Club, ' 30, ' 31 Boxing Club, ' 30. ' 31 Football. ' 32 Athletic C. ' 32 Robert Erxleben ' True happiness is centered in virtue. George Exas X Gentle of speech, benefi- cent of mind. Charles Fehlig Quiet is he. but forceful are his thoughts when crpressed. Dean Ferry Study is the surest path to knowledge. Cheni Club, ' 32, ' 33 Herbert Frank .4 quiet, mysterious lad; When it comes to les- sons, not tialf bad. William Garcelon A friend worth all the hazards we can run. Helen Haarstick Parsnips .Athletically inclined. Born to lead and to suc- ceed. Athletic Pin, Letter and Cup Baseball. Volleyball. Track, ' 29, ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 Soccer, Hockey, Tennis, ' 30 ' 31 ' 32 Bowlin.g, Basketball, ' 30, ' 31 Raymond Hahn ' Far may we search be- fore we find .4 heart so manly and so kind. Carl Hoffman ' .4 modest, unassuming chap, We like him all the more for that. John Holway His lessons may have ' stumped ' him. But he smiled and tried again. Joe Kelly ow here ' s a line for good oV Joe, . dashing, lanky Romeo. Dorothy Krueger Dot With many friends, .And many merits, too. Bowling, ' 30 John Liesenfeld From break of day to setting sun. My life is one long round of fun. Russell Maier He comes with a cordial voice, That does one good to hear. Walter Mathus Though he ' s quiet, seem- ingly. He has lots of energy. Edward Moore Eddie We receive from the world what we give it. Ralph Mueller We ' ve leared to know in this school year. That Ralph can be a friend sincere. Page Two Hundred Six CLASS O F JUNE, 19 3 3 Francis Murphy ' •Mciii y It ' s nice to be naliinil ii ' hen you ' re nii un ;; nice. Ida Murphy ••Jo Ida is etistj-tjiiinij. Hill she nets there jiisl the same. June Otting Jitnie She speakelh not. and net there lies .4 conversation in her eges. La Musi(|ue, ,i .lunior Red Cross. ' :il, ' X2 Courtesy Cub, 32 Track, ' M Lester Pieper Doc He is a great obserner. and he loo k s quite throufih the deeds of men. Football. ' 31. ' . ' ri Basketball. ' 31, ' 32 Baseball, ' 31, ' 32 . lhletic C , ' 31, ' 32 Student Council. ' 31, ' 32 MilDRED PlNGLETON ■•Mii.i.ii; ■lull ill Iirr ivorl; most trtiiisfnrnis her. Marie Pitman Her I ' irliies are manu. Her faults are few; She ' s prettif and sweet, .inil charmint . loo. .Uhlctic C Thrift lUpresentalive ' 30, ' 31, ' 32 .Juiiioi .Swirnniin.ii Team, ' 3(1, ' 31, ' 32 Ba.seball, Track. ' 29, ' 31, ' 32 BowlinK, .Soccer, ' 30, ' 32 Mildred Ragan Mii.i.ik Aliiniiis iiiillinii to learn. Cartoonin,t; Club, ' 31, ' 32 Camera Club, ' 31 Student Council . ltcrnate, ' 32 Thrift Representative, ' 31, ' 32 James Ryan Cloaked in silent dignitii, He holds his place among us. Kenneth Saller Listens to much, speaks only what is timely. Margaret Sciiimmer March 1 most amiable and at- Iriiilii ' c student. Harvey Schneider So ere we know it, the day is done. Our tasks complete and our races won. Track, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29 Athletic C Frank Schulz speak not unless I have something worth while to say. Richard Teubner Dick Industry is ' Dick ' s ' mid- dle name. Boys ' Archerv Club, ' 30 President Chcm Club, ' 33 Marie Wilmesmeier Her kindness wins her friends. Tennis, ' 32 Thrift Secretary, ' 32 Junior Red Cross, ' 32 Alice Zakarian Al She is a girl who does her own thinking and needs little advice. Hiking, ' 32 Marie Zell Re Everyone likes a friendly girl — that ' s why we like Marie. CLASS O F JUNE, 19 3 3 Page Two Hundred Seven Jte t I I i • H O R  I E S d 1 s ALETHINAE I Sponsor Miss McCalpin b OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Margaret Rosener Fay Cinnater Berdell Guenther Wanda Struckmeyer lane Bicsterfeld MEMBERS Gertrude Bretscher Alma Hertel Rita Kuenkel Alita Mattick Margery Roth Wilma Scheller Luella Suchanek Ruth Sackman Vivian Kalhorn Ernestine Burgarin Ruth Foster Melberne Steeger June Koenig Aurelia Stein Charlote Rohlfing Catherine Decker Dorothy Hacker Ethel Williams Ruth Miller Marcella Bryne Alethinae was organized to acquaint the girls of Cleveland with the literary world. Page Two Hundred Ten ANNA HOWARD SHAW Sponsor OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms Orange and Blue Reporter Keeper of Roscoe MEMBERS Marlys Baumann June Bobe Esther Brinkmann Fay Cinnater Mildred Diederichsen Helen Eggers Alice Marie Franey Eva Gruendler Dorothea Haas Ruth Heinrichsmeyer Ruth Jacobs Hilda Klock Charlotte Kloeris Miss Gayler Norma Schlagenhauf Elsa Klock Mathilda Brueschke Rhoda Brinkop Esther Olda Gertrude Bretscher Norma Thielker Rita Kuenkel Dorothy Meenen Mildred Moellenhoff Katherine Muecke Victoria Muehlke Ruth Muenstermann Marjorie Owen Dorothy Reininga Charlotte Rohlfing Hazel Schaefer Alice Tweddle Dorothy Volz Virginia Witte i d s 1 Page Two Hundred Eleven Jffi AVIATION CLUB Sponsor Mr. Scherer President Vice President Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Russell Yungbluth Russell Gund Ralph Kuramef Milton Moeser MEMBERS ' l Walter Goelkel Robert Prokes Dudley Ruopp Bob Sturm Edmond Schumann Arthur Obermeyer Norman Horton Henry Lebbing Leland Schubert Harold Kalbfleisch Raymond Berger The purpose of the Aviation Club is to increase the members ' knowledge of aeronautics by building and flying model airplanes and by studying flight principles. Page Tiro Hundred Tirch ' e THE CHEM CLUB Sponsor Mr. Kelsey OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Librarian Edgar Wilke Richard Teubner Ruth Heinrichsmeyer Francis Ayer Joseph Meeka MEMBERS Ruth Beck John Cooper Roy Cornish Bill Dahman Helen Eggers Edgar Evans Dean Ferry Harold Hoehle Leo Jaudes August Jones Dorothy Joslin Edward Kounovsky Eleanor Laird Ben Marcus Mildred Martz Dorothy Meenen Ray Mesenbrinck Rosalind Milster Milton Moeser Albert Moellenhoff Roy Pesek Algerd Rasimas Georgette Rehm James Robertson Ruth Rosenhauer Albert Ruehmann Grant Schaumburg William Schellhammer Dorothy Schilling Adolph Schmidt John Spanogle Adrienne Sprotte Bernice Stelk William Stonecipher Norma Thielker William Thomsen George Walther Stanley Werngren Lewis White Oliver Winney Edwin Wisely John Woerner Robert Zopfe The purpose of the Chem Club is to promote interest in the progress and achievements of modern chemistry. Page Two Hundred Thirteen CLE CUKS Sponsor Miss Richeson OFFICERS President Secretary Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Ruth Harrison Ellen Lambur Helen Weckermeyer Frances Peil MEMBERS Clarice Brand Susan Hammel Catherine Harris Virginia Horn Helen McCoy Helen Mersh Loretta Novy Eugenia Obermiller Audrey Schollmeyer Helen Schollmeyer Margaret Seligman Henrietta Wunsch Cle Cuks, otherwise known as Cleveland Cooks, was organized to give its members a more complete idea of the art of cooking. The club meets every odd Thursday of the month in Room 10 under the leadership of Miss Richeson. our sponsor. The most important event of Cle Cuks ' Calendar is the preparation of a dinner for the football squad and the coaching staff. If you are wondering about the skill of the cooks, suppose you ask one of the team. Page Two Hundred Fourteen CRAFT CLUB Sponsor OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant -at- Arms Lester Schopp Nerval Ash Ollie Oppliger George Jones Clifford Liest Ralph Lavoo Fred Wiethuchter Luther Lvon Mr. Marx Frank Petelik Charles Ellenberger George Parr Ervin Petzold William Mueller MEMBERS Roy Stegmann Bill Hering Oscar Roelke Alfred McKinley Charles Finnegan George Dyer Ulysses SalKvasser Edward Moore In the machine age now existing, a great change has come to living and home life. The activities and purpose of the club have been greatly magnified. Its members aim to acquire knowledge which enlarges the scope of activities for one ' s profitable use of leisure, to develop interest in the economic and social problems of industry, and to promote friendships and honor which shall remain a real part in the life of the members of the club. Page Two Hundred Fifteen d I S (£ GIRLS ' PHYSIOLOGY CLUB ■nijffii |g H - i - K ' I Nr fl r s r 1 pffl o 3l lBi k . H ■l - jM Sponsor OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary- Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Sergeant-at-Arms Miss Tensfeld Catherine Hans Ruth Foster Elva Hassendeubel Ann Edinger Jane Foster Marguerite Totnbridge MEMBERS Dorothy Braun Bernice Eichorst Ruth Hagedorn Thelma Held Gertrude Knackstedt Marcella Koerber Edna Lange Gertrude Manke Marion Markel Vivian Rockenbrodt Anita Schroeder Lucretia Spricht Lorraine Tenner Evelyn Thomas The purpose of the Girls ' Physiology Club is to promote interest in health and hygiene. In addition to the care of the body, hygiene in the home, and the like, the members this term have decided to learn something about the psychology of the emotions: fear, hatred, and envy and their ill effects on the constitution. Some time will also be given to social customs of cultured people, including table manners, poise, and self-control — in short, those details that mean so much in making a girl feel at ease in the presence of others. It is needless to say that the girls are not too busy to have occasional parties. Although the membership is limited, we shall have a few vacancies due to graduation. The requisites for membership are the completion of the first year ' s work in high school and an interest in physiology or biology. Meetings are held every Thursday in Room 16 at 2:45. Page Tiro Hundred Sixteen BOYS ' GLEE CLUB Sponsor OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Librarian Accompanist Orange and Blue Reporter MEMBERS Leonard Bieser Walter Bill Kenneth Bremer James Broderick Raymond Eddins Earl Fisher Alvin Fluetsch Clifford Henerfouth Paul Hensel Paul Herriott Kenneth Jaeckel Russell Jost John Mangold Miss Pope Edward Haverman Emil Wachter Vernon Keck Edgar Goodbrake Charles Fugger Louava Sitze George Sinko William Miller Raymond Neyer Charles Nollau William O ' Brien Henry Peper Louis Ray Robert Schaefer Russell Schubert Vernon Schuth Joseph Schwaab Kenneth Siebert Harry Thener William Smith d N 1 Page Two Hundred Seventeen JS GOODFELLOWSHIP CLUB Sponsor Miss Becker OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Entertainment Chairman Norma Schlagenhauf Ruth Jane Smyth Virginia Witte Alma Hertel Annette Ehrhardt Lillian Kunzman MEMBERS Bernice Barth Violet Beckman Gertrude Bretscher Esther Brinkman Rhoda Brinkop Florence Cooke Ann Edinger Junia Fulstone Ruth Heinrichsmeyer Georgia Huffington Ruth Jacobs Genevieve Janis Lillian Kunzman Dorothy Kypta Anita Lange Edna Lange Mildred MoellenhofF Doris Neunuebel Irene Rettinger Bernice Richorst Hazel Schaefer Lucille Simmons Flora Smyth Norma Thielker Mildred Thomsen Edna Wecke Mildred Whitlock Evelyn Zimmerman Erlieta Lachnit Page Two Hundred Eighteen LA MUSIQUE Sponsor President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Librarian Accompanist OFFICERS Miss Mann Vernell Schroeder Georgiana Steinhauser Elsa Klock Mildred Diederichsen Lorraine Tiefenbrunn Erlieta Lachnit MEMBERS Audrey Astnussen Ruth bodenhof Lucille Bertram Rosemary Bedford Kay Browder Virginia Coates Edna Daniel Rose Gross Neva H alley Margaret Mangrum Alita Mattick Marian Morris Mar ine Pique Hilda Reiter Virginia Spaethe Mary Trudt Margaret Werner Dorothy Hasenpflug Ruth Hewitte Mildred Joslin Nadine Jones Marcella Koeber Rita Kuenkel Hilda Klock Virginia Leeman Flora Mitter Vivian Mitchell Marjorie Neu Virginia Rodenmeyer Bernice Schliebe Dorothy Volz Verna Voitlein d ; 1 r Page Two Hundred Nineteen « fl MATH CLUB fl Sponsor Mr. Smith OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Orange and Blue Reporter Carl Westermann Rosemary Conroy Irma Franklin James Robertson MEMBERS Jane Foster Kathryn Frymire Paul Fudemberg Sebastian Hertling Alice Jones Winnie Lamping Lillian Lay Virginia Manning Raymond Neyer Russel Neyer Lavern Sandberg Aileen Schligo Milton Schlette Mabel Schmitt Marcella Schoen Mary Smith Page Two Hundred Twenty MODERN LANGUAGE CLUB Sponsor Mr. Neller OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Vernell Schroeder Milton Schlette Carl Westerman Dorothy Hasenpflug Bernice Vollmar MEMBERS Geneice Ehrmann Frank Hefner Gail Lindahl Elizabeth Morganstern Margaret Sallig Bernice Schliebe Dorothy Sindelar Mary Telowicz Marie Williams This club consists of members who have completed one term of a modern language, and corresponds with Germany. France, Spain and all Latin-Ameri- ican countries. Page Two Hundred Tirenty-one PHILO Spons or Miss O ' Brien OFFICERS President Vice President Orange and Blue Reporter Secretary- Treasurer Dolores Bolz Virginia LaBarge Virginia LaBarge Hortense Becker Billie Linder MEMBERS Virginia Burleman Loretta Novy Susan Hammel Dorothy Wartig Virginia Rodenmeyer Ruth Brusselbach June Murdoch Amanda Harrison Dorothea Haas Virginia Weckler Mary Appel Dorothy Barby Nellie Remington Ruth Kolde Faith Watkins Philo offers to its members opportunity for self expression in readings and participation in short plays. Programs are arranged so that a group takes charge of each meeting. During the second semester of this school year, the club expects to make a special study of One Act Plays. Page Tiro Hundred Twenty-two LA POETIQUE Sponsor OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter MEMBERS Bernice Bigalte Florence Bigalte Clarice Brand Eunice Bremel Irene Erler Miss Kilpatrick Ellen Lambur Virginia Horn Jean Obermilier Billie Linder Ardella Wahlig Virginia Hummel Doris Neunuebel Marjorie Roth Dorothy Sonnleitner Jane Weismantle La Poetique is vitally interested in that outstanding phase of literature known to all as poetry. La Poetique strives to appreciate the varied and contrasted pleasures derived from the study of it. Poetry is capable of express- ing the poet ' s emotion, whether it be joy. pathos, or contempt. It is that some- thing which will live in the hearts and minds of its readers forever. La Poetique ' s ideal is beautifully expressed by the following phrase: To have great poets there must be great audiences, too. — Walt Whit- man. Doris Neunuebel. Page Two Hundred Tircntij-three d FTI s 1 J9 NATURE CLUB Sponsor Miss Hanna MOTTO To him who. in the love of nature, holds communion with her visible forms, she speaks a various language. — W. C. Bryant. OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Dorothy Schweir John Cooper Vivian Kalhorn Bert Tschambers Ruth May Sackmann f MEMBERS William Ahrens Elmer Ameiss Charles Berkes Conrad Bishof Dorothy Baumunk Herbert Bussen Grace Brigham Phyllis Yeigh Norvil Ash Joll Dauten Edward Furstenwerth Esther Meir Vernon Schmidt Floyd Simpson Robert Shurig Vernon Wiles Page Two Hundred Twenty-four RADIO CLUB Sponsor Mr. F. W. Moody OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Orange and Blue Reporter Edward Weppler Wayne Bennetsen Ernest Pallme Henry Zimmermann S MEMBERS Walter Jungbluth Kenneth Dickman Henry Hartmann Donald Rudisill Phillip Seeger Frank Mlcuch Kenneth Urquhart Harold Baumhauer Wilbert Darr Oliver Lenz John Woerner The purpose of the Radio Club is to further the interest in amateur radio in Cleveland High School. In its efforts to do so the club has obtained a licensed station. W9IVQ, of which good use is being made. 1 Page Tiro Hundred Twenty-five Jffi SALUTATIO Sponsor Miss Tompkins OFFICERS Patronus Aedilis Secretarius Quaestor Nuntius Janitor MEMBERS Marlys Baumann Katheryn Browder Ruth Boone Grace Brigham Emil Brock Rose Butler Helen Clark Delores Conrades Rosemary Conroy Eileen Chesler Dorothy Doerres Bill Dahman Mildred Diederichsen Louis Dauten Helen Eggers Ray Essma Gilbert Fischer Otto Hamsik Lillian Hohnbaum Horace Browder Margaret Seligman Norma Thielker Robert Goran Clara Duever Leonard Forgey Ruth Jacobs Nadine Jones Vivian Kalhorn Robert Koenig Dorothy Meenen Irene Miniea Virginia Marsh June Murdoch Margaret Mangrum Alita Mattich Edward Maltby Frances Peil John Peil Frederick Pfeiffer Owen Rudert Adriane Sprotte Alfred Spery Fae Woodruff Page Two Hundred Twenty-six WEBSTER-HAYNE DEBATING SOCIETY Sponsor Mr. Heritage OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at- Arras Orange and Blue Reporter Leo Jaudes William Seward William Kennel Leonard Forgey James Harrison Oscar Fernandez S MEMBERS Otto Behrens William Dahman Louis Dauten John Davis Kenneth Dickman Frederick Dunlap Jack Edelstein Walter Feldmann Bernard Flachsbart Alfred Gessel Paul Herriott Carl Ring Owen Rudert George Schaller Paul Schelp Louis Schmitt Lester Schopp Charles Schuermeyer Alfred Spiry August Weidner I a v Page Two Hundred Twenty-sei ' en WEOC Sponsor Miss Rothman OFFICERS President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Orange and Blue Reporter Sergeant-at-Arms Inez Geier Virginia Marsh Isabel Evans Lillian Pape Ruth Rosenhauer Hazel Wisbrock MEMBERS S Dorothy Divine Mary Louise Evers Dorothy Hacker Verla Herrold Elizabeth Krauska Mary Skiilman Marjorie Kramer Margaret Kueene Dorothy Lauterback Doris Neunuebel Rose Resetaritz Elizabeth Wostenholm Weoc is a club which is organized for the purpose of doing something for others. For the past few years it has spent its time in preparing gifts for Memorial Home and in planning programs to be given at Christmas time and in the spring. When the gifts are presented at Christmas, the club has a regular jolly, old-fashioned party with a Santa Claus and everything that goes with it. In the spring, armed with strawberries and home-made cakes, the club joins the old tolks for a happy spring festival. The only regret Weoc has after the parties is that there must be a wait of another whole year before another one like it can be given. The officers for the spring term. 1933. are as follows: President. Ruth Rosenhauer: Vice President. Elizabeth Krauska: Secretary. Virginia Marsh: Treasurer, Mary Skiilman; Orange and Blue Reporter. Virginia Marsh. Page Tivo Hundred Twenty-eight Sponsors OFFICERS President Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS William Alexander Clifford Brown Louis Nagle Herbert Volz Mr. Hutzel Mr. Myer Arthur Stafford Beverly Harris Clarence Harris Robert Baum Oscar Fernandez Edward Pier Clifton White Chess is one of the oldest of games, and its origin is lost in obscurity. Almost a score of ancient Asiatic and European countries claim its invention, but the evidence favors Hindustan, whence it is said to have been carried to Persia. Arabia, and finally Europe. Some of the terms and many of the names of the pieces are derived from the Persian language. The words chess and check come from the word Shah. meaning king. It was originally played by four contestants with the same type of board which is in use today. Chess is without question the most cosmopolitan of games. Like music. it speaks a universal language, and the traveler will find it possible to get a game in almost any part of the world. The honor of introducing it into America falls to Benjamin Franklin. He was not only an enthusiastic player but wrote on the game as well. It was introduced at Cleveland High School by the late Mr. Priess and Mr. Hutzel in 1922. Since that time tournaments have been held with other high schools of the city, and several e.x- cellent players have been developed. The purpose of the club is to give instruction in the game and to provide entertainment for its members through play. The club meets every Tuesday afternoon in Room 210. and it is open to both boys and girls. Robert B.aum. Page Tiro Hundred Twenty-nine i (Z • ADVEHTI! tEltS d I lU « E Our Advertisers IT IS human nature to discount things we get for nothing or for httle effort, and we wish to take this opportunity to remind our read- ers of a debt we owe to the firms which have purchased space in the following pages. Their support has made it possible for you to secure a better Beacon at a considerably reduced price. And we must also remind you that they have given us this support in the fourth year of the depression. When you spend the money they have saved for you, do not forget them. Leaf through with care the pages which follow, and when you have an opportunity to recipro- cate, do so. Let us make it possible for each and every one of them to say, It pays to adver- tise in The Beacon. Our Solicitors The students whose names appear below have played a most important part in the production of this book. Their efforts have made it possible for us to add many very fine features which without their support we would have been compelled to omit. We take this opportunity to express to them our appreciation of their work. Lochmocller. William... Wenzel. Fred Alexander, William .. Machmer. Fcrd _. Doerres, Dorothy Lauterbach. Dorothy .. Tiefcnbrunn. Vincent.. Neu. Joe Stcines. Norma Fisher. Ear! Rosenhaucr. Ruth Bolanovich, Mildred... BIoss. Melva ..._ Young. Ruth Foth. E elyn -_ $160.50 53.00 52.00 42.25 34.25 27.50 24.00 22.50 . 16.00 15.25 ! 5.00 13.25 11.50 10.00 9.50 9.50 8.25 8.25 8.25 8.25 _ 8.25 -._ 7.50 7.25 5.00 5.00 5.00 Kuhs, Dorothy 5.00 Levy. Judith _ _ 5.00 Lindahl. Gail 5.00 Rheins, Irma _ _.- 5.00 Ryan, Bill 5.00 Ehrhardt. Annette _ 4.50 Sparwasser, Milton. Altman, LaVerne Edinger. Ann Foulk. Violet Pinckert. Hildegarde.. Whitlock. Marie.- Coats. Virginia Wendt, Janet Brooks. Arline Foster, Jane. Gessel. Alfred Hoff moister, Richard . Luft. Audrey Beck. Harold Beck, Ruth Bergmann, Virginia Bichlcr. Katherine Browder. Kathryn Brusselbach, Ruth Dcditus. Vermillion Devine. Dorothy Fifield. Robt Kalhorn, Vivian Krauska. Elizabeth . Marsh. Virginia May. Elmer McMahon, Helen Meding, Emma Morgan, Bernice Polasek, Frances Ragan. Helen Ruedlingcr. Fred Rumer, Estelle Schollmeyer, Audrey . Sexton, Cecilia Spiry, Alfred Stocker, Amelda Westerman. Carl , Moehl, Lonetta Clenin. Ruth Elson. Wilma , May. Jack _.. 4.50 4.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2,50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.25 2.00 2.00 2.00 no s N 1 S ' - ' .Ji y-t ■e— yi cUa- kJU -tC P - ' - i L Autograph. Our Advisory Groups The following list shows the distribution of our solicitors according to advisory groups. A count shows that 39 of the 73 groups are represented. We take this opportunity of expressing to these Advisors and their Group Representatives our appreciation of their support. Group Ad ' isor No. Amt. Miss Heinicke 12 $215.50 Mr. Heritage 121 58.25 Mr. Ryan 306 53.00 Mr. Svoboda 6 3-1.25 Mr. Neller 124 27.50 Miss Tompkins 223 25.00 Mr. Garoian 27 24.00 Mr. Doxsee 302 21.00 Miss Wilhelmi 113 20.00 Mr. Spurr 4 17.00 Miss Becker 220 16.50 Miss Fitch 305 15.50 Mr. Forsman 9 15.25 Miss Campbell 221 15.25 Miss Levy _.- Portable 4 14.50 Miss O ' Brien Portable 3 12.50 Miss Gayler _ 107 9.50 Mr. Ware , 211 9.50 Miss Tensfeld 16 8.25 Miss Mann, Mary 1 205 8.25 Group Advisor No. Miss Lange 200 Miss Saams 1 1 13 110 1 1 1 . 204 209 Miss Knepper Mr. Myer Miss Kilpatrick Mr. Parker Mr. Chervenka Miss Randolph Portable 7 Miss Richeson 10 Miss Pryor 219 Miss Randall Portables Miss Waddock, F 2 Miss Kroenlein 5 Miss Brown 109 Miss McCalpin 1 1 5 Miss Waddock. E 117 Mr. Smith Portable I Miss Mclntire Portable 5 Mr. Rosenkranz -- 120 Amt. 7.50 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 5.00 4.50 4.50 4.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.50 2.25 Autograph. s when Yoii Train for Biis iicss- ATTEND RUBICAM BUSINESS SCHOOL Hundreds of Cleveland-Rubicatn Graduates are holding respon- sible positions today because of their thorough Business Training at Rubicam. Day and Evening Classes throughout the year Write or telephone for catalog Before you Invest— INVESTIGATE RUBICAM BUSINESS SCHOOL (40 Years Under the Same Business Management) 3469 S. Grand Blvd. 4933 Delmar Blvd. LAclede 0-4-JO FOrest 3900 AMERICAN- LOWE CAMPBELL EXCHANGE Athletic Goods NATIONAL Company BANK Kingshighway 915 PINE STREET at Gravois Phone, CHestnut 5790 St. Louis, Missouri WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THE Ml Page One I Awnings — FOR THE BEST in Canopies — Tents — Canvas Goods Le Roy Tent Awning Company 343 8 South Grand Blvd. LAclede 9999 ] GILLICK Realty Improvement Co. Real Estate, Loans and Insurance Riverside 0978 319 W. Stein St. Phone, Riverside 6990 Cardinal Fountain and Grill 6340 S. Grand Blvd. Our Special Dinners, 35c We Deliver The Prescription Shop Hesselberg Drug Store Phone, LAclede 4500 Grand at Hartford Motor Delivery 7 A. M. to 1 P- M. JOE WEISSLER Grocery and Meat Market Phone orders promptly attended to INSPECTED MEATS Phone, PRospect 9545 2727 Osage St. From an Admirer of Everyone in Portable Four Also Neck and Ears Jimmie. said the teacher, what is your greatest ambition? Jimmie considered thoughtfully. I think, he said, it is to wash my mother ' s face. — Ex. Order to Your Measure Lady: I want to buy sotne oysters. Dealer: Large or small ones, lady? Lady; Well, they ' re for a man with a size fifteen collar. — Ex. The David Ranken, Jr. School of Mechanical Trades Finny, Newstead and Cook Aves. Day and Evening Classes in Building and Machinery Trades Send for Catalog St. Louis WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADV Page Ttvo ERTISERS— PATRONIZE THEM! Riverside 9350 5409 S. Grand Blvd. The Holly Beauty Shop (The Little Shop With the Big Reputation) y Shampoo and Finger Wave, 35c Saturday, 50c Permanent Waves, 2.50 to 7.50 We Handle only Theo. Benders Cosmetics CASSEL ' S TAILOR SHOP 35 31 S. Grand Gents ' and Ladies ' Clothing Rclined, Remodeled and Cleaned LAclcde 93 34 KOHNE and HAUPT ' S MARKET 6000 Virginia at Wilmington We Deliver Riverside 5250 Grocery and Meat Quality Merchandise at Lowest Possible Prices Plus Service Money Back Guarantee Vogelsang ' s Service Station Mobile Gas and Mobile Products Tires, Tubes, Batteries Specialized Greasing Minnesota Ave. and Potomac St. BOEHM ' S I. G. A. GROCERY and MARKET 2601 Marcus Ave., FOrest 3124 5500 S. Kingshighway, FLanders 2675 WE DELIVER With Best Wishes Flowers tor All Occasions — FERBER FLORAL SHOP Service Our Motto 5524 Virginia Ave. St. Louis, Mo. • , Off for Cash on All Funeral Work FROM A FRIEND Dumb Student: How do they count the number of people in a Swiss village? Ditto: I guess they count the number of echoes and divide by the number of mountains. — Ex. RIvers.de 9609 Riverside 9556 100% Food ' Value for Those Who Are Fussy in Choosing Their Bakery FRANK TOMISER ' S BAKERY Birthday and Wedding Cakes Baked to Order Main Store at 5431 Virginia Ave. 543 1 Virginia Ave. 505 3 Gravois Ave. Teacher: Mickey, what ' s the difference between a cat and a comnia? Mickey: A cat has claws at the end of his paws, while the comma has its pause at the end of a clause. — Ex. The p. D. George Company Manufacturers of PEDIGREE PRODUCTS Paints - Varnishes - Lacquers 4153 Binghatn Riverside 5080 WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS— PATRONIZE THEM! Paqc Three d DPI ' ?« 1 Follow your nose to the SILVER ROSE 4501 S. Kingshighway Jane: Why did you leave the ' o ' out of the word stove? June: Well, to let the smoke out. — Ex. Fresh Goods Twice Daily Riverside 0984 S. GAAL - BAKERY Specializing in High Grade Bakery Goods 5019 Gravois Avenue George: What is the difference between capital and labor? Al: Well, capital is when you loan money to someone, and labor is when you try to get it back. ' — Ex. ] EVERYTHING MUSICAL Ludwig is headquarters for orchesfra and band instru- menfs, accessories and expert repairing. Our 54 years experience in equipping leading artists and students will prove a valuable aid in selecting any instrument whether for the finished musician or beginner. You will find a large complete line combined with low prices to meet every re- quirement. Terms if desired. III PHONE: CENTRAL 4120 «  709 PINE ST. II LANSDOWNE CONFECTIONERY 5401 Lansdowne Ave. Candy — Cigars — Soda — Ice Cream We Deliver FLanders 9744 Prop.. G. M. Rumer Annual Greetings From a Friend of Portable 4 Winkelmann Sons Drug Co. Prescription Druggists 3300 Meramec St. Riverside 2165 We Deliver Hats Cleaned and Blocked We Reline c LASSIC LEANERS LEAN LOTHES LEANER PRospcct 9298 We Repair 3153 CHIPPEWA ST. WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS— PATRONIZE THEM! Page Four A. J. KUHS CO., Inc. S. W. Cor. Clayton . McCauslniid Avcs. Real Estate Loans - Insurance First Deeds of Trust for Sale REALTORS STerlinR i:20 DEICHMANN ' S 3 316 Meramec St. The Big White Front Market South Side of Meramec, Just West of Virginia MEATS, GROCER IBS. VEGETABLES HUEBSCHEN ' S 2826 Magnolia Ave. 2627 Cherokee St. PRospect 9119 PRosprct 953 Gravois and Loughborough Ave. FUnders 3817 3 Quality Food Stores UUNLETIJ llrAusic co.il .m. Jl. 514-516 LOCUST ST. .M. M. MOST COt-lPLETE MU5!C HOU3E IN 3T UOUIS WOLFS BAKERY 5639 S. Kingshighway (At Milentz .■ve.) We Assure You the Best Quality Obtainable Phone, FLanders 4398 Group 109 LOY-LANG BOX CO. 223 RUSSELL AVE. Manufacturers of Corrtigatcd, Solid Fibre and Wood Boxes Victor 4712-4713 R- F. Kriegshauser, President G. W. Kriegshauser. Vice-President H. Kriegshauser, Treasurer L. Kriegshauser, Associate Kriegshauser Mortuaries Free Parking Space 4228 S. Kingshighway Blvd FLanders 2244 4104 Manchester Ave. FRanklin 5922 Herman Gerke Meats, Groceries and Vegetables 5601 Colorado Ave. Phones, Riverside 1137-1138 Prante Grocery Meat Co. 5614-16 S. Grand Blvd. Hudson 2500 Hudson 2501 Father: Son, can you tell me how a stovepipe is made? Bright Student (?): Well, first you take a big, long hole and then wrap some tin around it. — Ex. Hostess (gushingly): You know, I ' ve heard a great deal about you. Prominent Politician (absently): Pos- sibly, but you can ' t prove it! — Ex. Group 115 DELOR MARKET Wm. C. Binder. Prop. Choice Meats — Fancy Groceries A. G. Store — We Deliver Brannon and Delor FLanders 3985 WE RECOMMEND BEACON A D V E R T I S H R S — P A T R O N I Z E THEM! Page Five d 1 S ft. t I PXi V d STRENGTH SECURITY STABILITY TOWER GROVE BANK TRUST CO. Grand Boulevard at Hartford Street Members I I Federal Reserve System I St. Louis Clearing House Assn. IJ . S . Government Depository WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Six NATIONAL CANDY COMPANY CONSOLIDATED FACTORIES 42 3 GRAVOIS AVE. Southern Commercial and Savings Bank 7201 South Broadway Member Federal Reserve System MOSER PAPER BOX COMPANY 200-14 Elm St., St. Louis Manufacturers of Set-up Paper Boxes CEntral 4115. 4116, 4117 Small boy: Grandmother, when are you going to start playing football? Grandmother: Why, sonny, I can ' t play football. Why? Small boy: Well, papa says he is going to buy a new car as soon as you kick off. — Ex. Charles Muelle r Clothing Co. 3804-06 S. Broadway (Broadway at Chippewa) Everything Wearable for Dad and the Boys We Give Eai Ie Stamps At church last Sunday morning, says a newspaper in Vermont, the choir tenor sang, I May Not Pass This Way Again, ' to the delight of the congregation. — Ex. WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Seven M The Place to Stop. The Emily Candy Shop. From a Friend WM. APPEL - REALTOR Real Estate, Loans, Insurance of All Kinds 3625 Gravois Ave. {Near Grand Blvd.) St, Louis, Mo. M. J. ROEMER Hardware - Cutlery - Tools - Paints House Furnishings of All Kinds Chippewa and Minnesota PRospecc 9658 Call Us for Better Laundr Service WHITE LINE LAUNDRY 4150-58 Chippewa St. LAclede 7780 St. Louis, Mo. WILMINGTON (Scientific) CLEANERS 6023 Virginia Ave. Riverside 9452 A Loyal Group 113 Genuine Nestle Oil Permanents Evelyn ' s Beauty Sboppe 5021 Virginia Ave, Riverside 6036 Finger Waving a Specialty FRICK BROS. 5c, 10c to $1.00 Store Everything for the Household 5531-5533 South Grand Blvd. St. Louis, Mo. Home Deliveries JEfferson 4260 A Healthy Mind Dwells in a Healthy Body Drink Mountain Valley Water From Hot Springs, Ark. CLOVER FARM STORE No. 60 Con. Brinker Groceries, Meats and Vegetables AH of Our Poultry and Eggs Direct From the Farm Phone. FLanders 3210 4425 MACKLIND AVE. GEO. AUFMUTH - BAKERY 4652 Nebraska Riverside 0635-M Orders taken for Party, Wedding and Birthday Cakes PACK 41 - CUBS Sponsored by Advent Ev. Luth. Church Chartered June, 1932 Emil D. Wildermuth Cubmaster Mrs. M. Sparwasser Den Mother Mrs. A. Hagedorn- -Den Mother OH! Teacher: Percy, if I take a potato and cut it in halves, then in quarters, then in eighths, what will I have? Percy: Potato chips, teacher. — Ex. Marge: What stirring speech did Paul Revere make when he finished his famous ride? Molfy: Whoa! — Ex. Teacher: What is a circle? Billy: That ' s easy, a round line. — Ex. WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Eight Compliments of BABY LABEL BREAD BAKERY Leadership Demands Select Preparation NAUTILUS STUDIO BETTENDORF ' S Foods 2738 Chippewa of Self-Expression and Culture 1732 South 9th Street 3610 Bates St. Riverside 8257 2701 Lafayette , MRS. L. A. BRADBURY 2812 Sutton Voice Development Bodily Expression Diction Speech Correction Self-expression JEANETTE WHITEHILL Right shoes spell success in sport or in Tap. Toe. Ballet. Classical and Interpretive Dancing Special Classes in Ballroom Dancing business C. W. WOOD Dramatics. Stagecraft, Make-up Play Production To play the game and win You need our kind of shoes HORTENSE LEVY Class and Private Lessons in French Windier and Niemann MARGARET HINDLE Class and Private Lessons in Voice 3314 MERAMEC ST. Perfect Gift Books Perfect Gift Cards MILLER ' S DRUG STORE THE PERFECT GIFT PUBLICATIONS 14 North Central Ave. Clayton, Missouri 4019 S. Grand Blvd. Prescriptions called for and delivered Riverside 2621 Phillips 66 Products Riverside 2731 GRAND-MONTANA SERVICE STATION George Essma, Mgr. Tire and Specialized Battery Service Lubrication Professor: Robert Burns wrote to a Field Mouse. Voice from rear of room: Did he get an answer? — Ex. WE RECOMMEND BEACON A D V E R T I S E R S — P A T R O N I Z E THEM! Page Nine d PPl h ; 1 t fl PHILIP DEWOSKIN STUDIOS CREED It is my creed that every photograph I make may bring the light of happiness to someone ' s eyes; that every likeness shall indeed be true and live eternal in the coming years; that I may know the privilege that comes with this bright lens, this box I call a camera through which the light rays pass, of imaging for- ever the face and form before me that its memory may not be lost to those to whom it means so much. A duty, too, and yet a pleasure mine, to keep the shadow though the substance fade, and thus allay a little of the grief of those who stay. It is my creed that I may never say, That ' s good enough, when better could have been; that every time I press the bulb I shall have caught that fleeting vision which we call the soul. Do not let me forget that every sitter once was born and some day too must pass away; that even an ugly face is held by some- one dear and that the shabbiest exterior may at my hand reveal an inward light. It is my creed when cheapness tempts me, to bear in mind that with each photograph which leaves my studio goes at least some small shred of my own reputation, to be bandied about or sullied should I abate my vigilance or to be enhanced and returned to me in the form of good fortune if I know my craft and practice it well. It is my creed to remember the profession I have chosen is the peer of any man ' s, but that the fair name and worth of that pro- fession lie at my mercy in addition to mine own, and that unless I keep with my customers the covenant of a fair and honest return for every dollar I am paid, I break faith not only with myself, but with photography, my source of livelihood. 4271 Olive Street Phone FRanklin 0980 WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS- Page Ten PATRONIZE THEM! For Dependable Fuel, Call SCHROETER COAL CO. 2300 MIAMI STREET LAcIede 4400 I C E FUEL Try Our HOME COMFORT HIGH GRADE COAL For Furnace Use, or BY-PRODUCT FURNACE SIZE COKE The Cleanest Fuel for Household Use Yards in all parts of the City Prompt Delivery Everywhere LANGE and MISPLAY Quality Market 6100 S. Grand Riverside 3240 E. C. VINCENT Quality Food Store 2222 Chippewa St. Riverside 9430 Hemstitching and Stamping MARIE DRY GOODS STORE 3125 NEOSHO Dry Goods, Ready-to- Wear for Men, Women and Children, Curtains and Furnishings, Simplicity Patterns 15c M and I. Naumann H ARSTICK CLEANERS Serving South St. Louis G. A. CORDES Prescription Druggist The Rexall Store St. Louis 4601 Louisiana Ave. Cor. Neosho Riverside 6821 LOUISIANA BEAUTY PARLOR 5003 Louisiana Ave. Beauty Culture in All Branches Loui.se T. Rannev. Prop St. Louis. Mo. The Low-Down on ' Em Music-store ad: Classical and operatic phonograph records by world-famous ar- tists, all t vo-faced. — Ex. Try This When YOU ' RE Late Young man (in a trolly car): Sit down, won ' t you? Absent-Minded Old Lady: No, thank you: I ' m in a hurry. — Ex. WE RECOMMEND BEACON A D ERTISERS — P. TRONIZE THEM! Page Eleven d s i h « HAUG ' S MARKET Qualit ' Meats and Groceries 4073 S. Grand Phone, Riverside 9333 We Deliver We Deliver AL. HILDEBRANDT Clover Farm Store 4997 Quincy FLanders 9803 WAGNER ' S MARKET 4471 S. Spring Ave. Riverside 4922 We Deliver Finger Waving with Nu-Mode Lotion, 35c We are Equipped to Serve You at All Times CAHILL BEAUTY SALON 4616 Macklind Ave. Permanent Waving, ?2.00 Up FLanders 3085 HAMMER DRY PLATE COMPANY Ohio and Miami FRanklin 7711 Grand : Pine Motor : Cycle Co. John Kalhom. Prop. Harley-Davidson Motorcycles Parts, Accessories and Repairs Grand and Pine Blvds. St. Louis, Mo. John: Who was Homer? James: You ' re wrong, Homer isn ' t a who, it ' s the ' what ' that made Babe Ruth famous. — Ex. H ARSTICK CLEANERS Serving South Side VICTOR CREAMERY Groceries, Meats and Vegetables 5001 LINDENWOOD BLACK RIVER LODGE Lesterville, Mo. The Ideal Place to Spend Your Vacation Tennis, Horseback: Riding, Swimming, Fishing, Dancing, Etc. WM. ORTH, Proprietor HIGHWAY 61-21 MORRIS DUNN Prescription Druggist Kingshighway and Chippewa Riverside 2620 St. Louis rree LJelivery Tilt Busiest ARKETS IN PP. ST. LOUIS, Always Better Quality Lower Prices Always WE HAVE THE GOODS CEntral 0419 CEntral 1542 CEntral 1543 DEICHMANN Provision Co., Inc. Southeast Corner 21st and Chestnut 3 STORES No. 21 NORTH GORE. WEBSTER GROVES REpubHc 2777 3316 MERAMEC ST.. Riverside 9300 We Deliver the Goods Wholesale -Retail Geometry Teacher: What is the logical way of reaching a conclusion? Smart Pupil (?): Take a train, of thought. — Ex. WE RECOMMEND BEACON A D V E R T I S E R S — P A T R O N I Z E THEM! Page Twelve Wm. M. Edinger Aug. C. Wetzel FELDMANN DRY GOODS CO. Ladies ' and Men ' s Furnishings 1806-08-10 South Broadway Phone, CEntral 4909 REX MARKET 6229 Gravois Ave. Delicious Meats Riverside 4046 We Deliver GRAVOIS CREAMERY 6231 Gravois Ave. High Class Creamery and Grocery Products Riverside 5037 We Deliver WILHELMS MARKET Eiler and Idaho 26 Years in the Meat Business Phone. Riverside 9741 We Deliver Foiling the Finger I ' m sorry to have to do this, said Bob- bie as he spread the jam on baby ' s face, but I can ' t have suspicion pointing its finger at me. — Ex. FRanklin 9621 FRANK ' S SPEED O METER SERVICE 2943 Washington St. Louis. Mo. Walter Krueger Meat Co. 3632-34 Meramec St. Riverside 1228 Riverside 9507 Established 1872 FURNITURE COAL STORAGE C. R. WATKINS FURNITURE AND FUEL CO. -:08.7224 SOUTH BROADWAY We furnish the home complete and keep it warm for you Riverside 02 Riverside 0278 We Deliver GROSSE ' S DRUG STORE Grand and Meramec Riverside 3880 BRYANT ' S PHARMACIES 6955 GRAVOIS -AVE. FLanders 7186 2807 MERAMEC ST. Riverside 6470 110 LEMAY FERRY ROAD Riverside 1234 Careful Prescriplionists Free Delivery Service EDW. A. HERR ' S MARKET Groceries, Meats, Fruits and Vegetables Home Dressed Poultry 5218 Holly Hills FLanders 1900-1901-1902 WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Thirteen (T 1 T. E. RUFFING - DRUGGIST 1000 Bates St. (Cor. Louisiana) Phone, Riverside 9274 We Deliver KAUFMANN ' S BAKERY 5514 S. Kingshighway FLanders 9842 We Specialize in Birthday and Wedding Cakes ECONOMY BUICK Buick, Chevrolet, Plymouth Specialists PRospect 9307 3460 Cherokee St. Riverside 9401 Auto Service S. O. SWOFFORD Cash and Carry 3628 Bates St. St. Louis, Mo. LARGE SIZE DRESSES AT POPULAR PRICES Victor 4607-J SINGER ' S Ladies , Misses ' and Children ' s Ready-to- Wear and Hosiery — 2 Stores — 2102 S. Broadway 3318 Meramec Tabby Julian GRENDA ; SONS . . . Barbers . . . 4657 Michigan Ave. Group 1 3 The Lucky Group Riverside 2144 The Dorothy Ann Beauty Shoppe All Lines of Beauty Culture Finger Marcel and Permanent Waving a Specialty Katherine Brennan 1120 BATES ST. Wm. J. Hartig. Jr. Milton R, Hartig THE FLOWER BOX Plants and Cut Flowers for All Occasions 5541 S. GRAND BLVD. Riverside 4084 St, Louis. Mo. Res., LAcledc 1507 Riverside 9561 DELPHIE WHELCHEL Beauty Salon 3630 BATES ST. Specialty in Permanent Waving and Finger Waving Riverside 2718 Sundays by Appointment only DR. GORDON P. EICHELBERGER Radionic Diagnostician Hours: 9-10 a. m.; 2. 4:30 p. m.; 5:30-8 p. m. 121 Eiler St. St. Louis, Mo. Bright (?) Edith: How would you describe a waffle? Ellen: Say it ' s a pancake with a non- skid tread. Physics Teacher: Which travels faster — heat or cold? Bright Student: Heat — because you can easily catch cold. — W, H. W. The difference between results and con- sequences is that results are what you ex- pect and consequences are what you get. — E. C. L. B. B. CLEANERS South St. Louis ' Most Progressive Cleaner Plant. 2623 GRAVOIS Branch. 3707 S. KINGSHIGHWAY Satisfaction Guaranteed Try us on your next order THANK YOU ALABAMA BAKERY Birthday and ' Wedding Cakes Our Specialty 701 Bates St. Riverside 1593 WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADV Page Fourteen E R T I S E R S — P A T R O N I Z E THEM! CLEVELAND PARENT-TEACHERS ' ASSOCIATION Community meetings are held at Cleveland High School the second Friday each month. Study group for parents and teachers, 7:15 P. M. Program, including en tertainment, 8:00 P. M. Reception and dancing at each meeting, 9:30 P. M. Visitors are welcome at all meetings. The object of the association shall be to obtain broader knowledge of educa- tional subjects; to advance the interests of education; to promote the welfare of the students, and to bring into close touch the parents and the teaching staff of school. All parents and those interested in the school are urged to join. Officers Cleveland Parent-Teachers ' Association: Harry H. Dickson. President 4956 Neosho St., FLanders 0572 Mrs. Rae Heritage. First Vice-President 4236 Grace Ave., Riverside 2127-R Carl E. Zerwcck. Second ice-Prcsident 5444 Itaska St.. FLanders 3827 Mrs. C. H. Sitnons, Recording Secretary 4014 Oregon Ave.. Riverside 5777-J John P. Sehnert. Treasurer 4964 Delor St.. FLanders 2642 Mrs. Wm. J. Kennel, Corresponding Secretary 5344 Devonshire Ave., FLanders 6013 CHAIRMEN Legislative M. E. Lauterbach, 5622 Milentz St., FLanders 0200 Auditing — E. C. Shurig. 5217 Lansdowne Ave., FLanders 6628 Publicity Oliver L. Marcks. 4952 Delor St.. FLanders 5241 Literature — Mrs. S. Eccardt. 5616 Milentz. FLanders 1487 Hospitality — Mrs. W. M. Bautn, 3628 O ' Meara. Riverside 5632 Recreation — H. F. Beiner, 5029 Lansdowne Ave.. FLanders 2895 WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS- PATRONIZE THEM! Page Fi[tcen vith gl; Clean Walls Can ' t Last . . . unless radiators are shielded. Shapco Radi- ator Shields or Enclos- ures are a necessity in the modern home, giving you soot-free walls and draperies, and beautifying your rooms. Unequaled in style, quality and performance. Trans- form unsightly radiators into artistic consoles and seats. V Made in many styles and sizes, ass, marble or metal tops. SODEI L4N!V HEAT POWER CO. 2300-2306 Morgan Street ' ' St. Louis, Mo. No Doubt To what do you attribute your longe- vity? inquired the young man. To the fact, replied the old man, con- clusively, that I never died. — Balance Sheet. J. H. DE BUHR - CASH GROCER 3401 Keokuk St. Member of The Associated (Wholesale) Grocers PRospect 9782 Established 1898 From a Friend ADVANCED REFRIGERATION COMPANY Refrigeration Sales Service By Homer Creley We Buy, Sell, Overhaul and Service All Types of Commercial and Domestic Refrigerators 505 Market St. Riverside 0021 GArfield 3713 Phone, PRospecr 8732 H. J. Hohn. Pn BUNGALOW SERVICE STATION Tires, Tubes and Accessories BATTERY SERVICE Standard Oil Products 3700 Michigan Ave. St. Louis, Mo. J. GHYSELINCK Nation- Wide Service Grocery 4371 OSCEOLA Riverside 6468 We have a new and clumsy girl. Having lost our careful Dinah, The new one we nicknamed ' Jap ' , ' Cause she ' s so hard on China. — Ex. C. HOFFMEISTER Undertaking Livery Co. Established 1858 Main Office 7814 South Broadway Branch 5624 South Compton Ave. PRIVATE AMBULANCE WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS— PATRONIZE THEM; Page Sixteen The Successful New Things ac Pleasing Prices EUGENE R. GANZ lncorpor.itcd DRESSES ■COATS - MILLINERY Grand Blvd. at Arsenal St. FLanders 9954 M. BOLANOVICH Groceries - Meats Fruits - Vegetables 7264 Gravois Ave. rCC rUCNlTLCE HESS-DICKMAN Chippewa and California American Commission Co. PAPER JOBBERS 908-9-10 Telephone Bldg. Wrapping Paper Gum Tape Corrugated Boxes Warehouse, 205 S. 10th CEntral 4936-4937 N3AOHi339 S. BXIVN From a Friend Choose Jewelry Like Friends No finer expression of regard can be given than that conveyed by Jewelry. It partakes of the spirit of fine friendship, ap- preciatively, enduringly. cJe yelj7 Company Ninth and Olive Walter and John L. Ziegenhein, Jr., Cleveland Graduates, Now With John L. Ziegenhein Sons 7027 Gravois FLanders 2600 WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — P. A TRONIZE THEM! Page Seventeen d 1 s Riverside 0089 7821 Ivory Avenue ALTMAN Manufacturers of Hot-Air Register Covers Radiator Shields Enclosures Auto- Windshield Screens LINDENWOOD COLLEGE For Young Women Founded 1827 ST. CHARLES, MO. Now more than ever it is imperative that young women continue their edu- cation. It is hardly possible to think of anything more constructive. Lindenwood has Vocational courses, Fine Arts and Liberal Arts, leading to both Senior and Junior College de- grees. We are very much pleased to have visitors. Write for catalog and book of views to JOHN L. ROEMER, President, Box No. Ch-33, St. Charles, Mo. GROUP 10 Emil Wacker, Pres. Frank Kunda, Secy. C. Wacker, Vice-Pres. Emil Wacker, Jr., Treas. Wacker-Helderle Undertaking and Livery Co. CHAPEL CHAPEL 3634 Gravois Ave. 2331-2337 S. Broadway LAclede 7575-3634 Victor 2116-2117 AMBULANCE AUTOMOBILES Strictly Union HAHN ' S MARKET 2905 Osage St. We Deliver PRospect 8763 Now in our New Location — IRENE SHOPPE Coats — Dresses — Millinery 3611 S. Grand Blvd. WREN STAMP CO. 4728 Primm St. St. Louis, Mo. Dealers in high-grade foreign approvals U. S- Mint Plate Blox our specialty Exclusive distributors of superior quality hinges Riverside 7370-W Wm- S. Alexander, Rep. Service to the Home REX COFFEE TEA CO. 3726 GRAVOIS AVE. WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Eighteen A Distinctive Business and Secretarial School FOR HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES ONLY 67TH YEAR « « Gregg Shorthand Stcnotypy T ypeuTtting Accounting English Business Law Secretarial Office Machines « « Day and Evening Classes The best opportunities come through specialized train- ing for specific vocations. You can quickly prepare for a good business position through a concentrated business course of Collegiate Grade at BROWN ' S SCHOOL. Prepare for business in a business environment. Visit the school, write or telephone for information. BROWN ' S SCHOOL Paul Brown Building 8 1 8 Olive Street central 2293 Riverside 5070 Established 1867 AL SMITH M. HAMMEL Prop. REAL ESTATE CO. Margaret Ann Smith Shoppe Real Estate, Loans and Insurance The Place to Meet and Eat Building Loans a Specialty We Cater to Private and Rents Collected Bridge Parties 6721 S. Broadway St. Louis, Mo. Grand and Meramec Riverside 9220 CARONDELET NEWS WERNER ' S MARKET The Only Newspaper Groceries. Meats, Fruits and Vegetables in South St. Louis 4009 S. Grand Tel.. Riverside 2646 How come Jasper didn ' t get de contract KARL E. HOLDERLE fo ' fixin ' de rafters in de church? One ob de deacons foun out he was an Jeweler and Optometrist eavesdropper. — Ex. 2812 CHIPPEWA STREET WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Nineteen I a n To the Students of Cleveland High School class of June, 1933 ■i I Some of you uill enter college- Seme of yon II ill take up a business career- Sotne will find their happiness in home-life- To one and all — Whatever the choice- We wish a bright and happy future and Best of Liick. FIOS STUDIO WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Twenty CONGRATULATIONS   to the Staff of « « The Beacon PREPARATION and production of your 1933 BEACON con- stitutes a notable achievement of which you may well be proud. Becktold Company is sratified at having designed and fabricated the cover for such a fineyearbook. d Dpi We are also proud of the fact that so many schools turn to Becktold for the yearbook covers, again and again. We regard this as evident appreciation of the beauty and durability of our product, as well as our success in embodying the shool spirit and yearbook theme, in cover design. 1 BECKTOLD COMPANY Edition Book Binders and Cover Manufacturers 200-212 Pine Street St. Louis, Mo. WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Twenty-one J; I lo establish a printing organization of such capacity and with such resources as to guarantee to the St. Louis Terri- tory the service to which it is entitled yet to maintain a high standard of quality the ideals of the founders of this institution have been fully realized ! VON HOFFMANN PRESS Walnut at Ninth St. Louis Publications — Catalogs — Annuals All Kinds of Commercial Printing WE RECOMMEND BEACON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEMl Page Twenty-two HE C CHOOL OF (i OMMERCE Finance ST. LOUIS UNIVERSITY All departments of instruction in this school are directed toward a single educational purpose: to provide a university training broad enough to give young men a thorough educational founda- tion for life and professional enough to prepare them for successful careers in business. Three important aims contribute to this central purpose. First, the development of personality and character. Second, the stimula- tion and training of the mind. Third, the cultivation of adequate technical ability to meet the ad- vanced professional needs of mod- ern business. DAY COURSES — Five complete four-year university courses in commerce, leading to tbe Bache- lor ' s Degree. EVENING COURSES— Complete and special courses in all impor- tant fields of business. GRADUATE COURSES — Ad- vanced courses for professional graduate degrees. NEW BUILDING St. Louis University ' s new Com- merce Building compares with the finest in the United States. It provides the most modern quarters for the instruction of young men who seek leadership and accom- plishment in the business world of tomorrow. For information and catalog, write the Secretary: 3674 LINDELL BLVD. ? 1 r WE RECOMMEND BE. ' CON ADVERTISERS — PATRONIZE THEM! Page Twenty -three s u The St. Louis College of Pharmacy PARKVIEW and EUCLID AVENUE A school for the professional education of the pharmacist A four years ' course, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science Prerequisite, graduation from an accredited high school Open to Men and Women The 1933 session begins Monday, September 25, 1933 For catalog and other information address DR. CHARLES E. CASPARI, Dean b Index to Advertisers I Page Advanced Refrigeration 1 6 Alabama Bakery ..._ 14 Altman, F., Jr 18 Am. Commission Co _ 17 Am. Ex. Nat ' I Bank _ 1 Appel, Wm 8 Aufmuth Bakery, Geo 8 B 6 B Cleaners H Baby Label Bread Co 9 Bechtold Book Binders _ 21 Bettendorf s Foods _ _ 9 Black River Lodge 12 Boehm ' s L G. A. Store _ _ 3 Bolanovich. M 17 Brinker, Con 8 Brown ' s Business School _ 19 Bryant ' s Pharmacies 1 3 Bungalow Service Stat 16 Cahill Beauty Shop 12 Cardinal Fountain 2 Carondelet News _ 19 Cassel ' s Tailor Shop _ 3 Classic Cleaners Cleveland P. T. A.. Cordes, G. A DeBuhr, J. H Page 4 15 11 16 Deichmann Pro ision Co 5 and 12 Delor Market... _ 5 De ' Woskin Studio 1 Dorothy Ann Beauty Shop. 14 Dunn. Morris 1 2 Economy Buick _ 14 Eichelberger, Dr. G. P , Emily Candy Shop Evelyn ' s Beauty Shop Feldman Dry Goods Co.. Ferber Floral Shop Fios Studio...... Flower Box Frank ' s Speedometer Serv.... Frick Bros _ Friend of Portable 4 Gaal Bakery, S. Ganz Dress Shop _ 14 13 3 20 14 3 8 4 4 17 Page Twenty-lour Index to Advertisers — Continued George Co.. P. D Gcrke. Herman Ghysclinck, J Gillick Realty Co 2 Page .-. 3 .... 5 ... 16 Grand Montana Scrv. Stat. Grand 6 Pine Motor Co Gravois Creamery Grenda f Sons. Barbers...... Grosses Drug Store Hahns Market Hammel Real Estate Co 9 _..„ 12 . 13 14 13 18 19 Hammer Dry Plate Co 12 Harstick Cleaners _ 11 and 12 Haug s Market _ _ 1 2 Herrs Market 13 Hess Culbertson _ 17 Hess Dickmann Furn. Co 17 Hessclberg Drug Store 2 12 16 19 3 5 - 5 18 _.... 14 Kohne 6 Haupt ' s Market 3 Kreuger Meat Co. 1 3 Kriegshauser Mortuaries 5 Kuhs Co., A. J 5 Lange 6 Misplay Market .. 11 Lansdowne Confectionery _ 4 Lindenwood College 18 Louisiana Beauty Parlor 1 1 Hildebrandt. A! Hoffracister Und. Co Holderle Jewelry Co Holly Beauty Shop Huebschen s Food Stores Hunleth Music Co Irene Shop Kaufmann ' s Bakery LeRoy Tent 6 Awning Co.. Lowe f Campbell 2 ....._ 1 Loy-Lange Box Co.- _ - 5 Ludwig Music House _ 4 Marie Dry Goods Store 11 Margaret Ann Smith Shoppe 19 Matter ' s Beethoven Market 17 Miller ' s Drug Store 9 Moser Paper Box Co 7 Page Mountain ' Valley Water _ 8 Mueller Clothing Co 7 National Candy Co 7 Nautilus Studio 9 Pack 41 Cubs 8 Perfect Gift Publications 9 Prante Grocery Meat Co 5 Ranken School of Mech. Tr 2 Rex Coffee fi Tea Co 18 Rex Market 13 Roemer, M. J _ 8 Rubicam Business School 1 Ruffing, T. E 14 St. Louis College of Pharmacy 24 St. Louis U. of Com. 6 Fin 23 Schenberg ' s Market 12 Schroetcr Coal Co 11 Silver Rose Shop 4 Singer ' s Dress Shop 14 Sodemann Heat Power Co 16 Southern Com. Sav. Bank 7 Swofford Cleaners 14 Tomiser Bakery _ _ 3 Tower Grove Bank 6 Victor Creamery 1 2 Vincent ' s Food Store II Vogelsang ' s Service Station 3 Von Hoffmann Press 22 Wacker-Hclderle Und. Co _ 18 ' Wagner ' s Market 1 2 Watkins Furniture Co. 13 Weissler Gro. 6 Meat Mkt 12 ' Welchel Beauty Salon  14 ■Werner ' s Market ;. 19 - _ 8 13 White Line Laundry... Wilhelm ' s Market Wilmington Cleaners . Windier 6 Niemann- Winkelmann-Sons Drug Co.. Wolf ' s Bakery _. Wren Stamp Co Ziegenhein Sons, J. L 9 4 5 18 17 1 I Page Twcnty-pi ' c s ! I gflRIjlSIWIHIEE ' ■' .
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