Harvard Boys High School - Review Yearbook (Chicago, IL)
- Class of 1940
Page 1 of 72
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 72 of the 1940 volume:
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THE STAFF 1940 CRAIG BILLINGS LEMAN Editor-in'Chiei RICHARD STUCKEY WILLIAMS Business Mcmoqer PHILIP AUBREY COPENHAVER ARTHUR HORACE MANN IOHN OWEN REES Associote Editors HOWARD LANGSTAFF BONTZ WILLIAM MADLUNG DAEMICKE Sports Editors HARRY BASCH COHEN, IR. STUART IOHN POPP Advertising Mcmoqers 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 PAGE 5 IOHN I. SCHOBINGEB To the memory of Iohn I. Schobinger C1846-19271, for fifty years the head of the Harvard School,-inspir- ing teacher, tireless worker, kindly friend- To the memory of Iohn C. Grant fl8484l9l4l, for thirty- five years his loyal associate,-sound scholar, thor- ough teacher, upright man- To the memory of Charles D. Hamill H839-l905l, mem- ber of the first board of trustees, for twenty-five years advisor and friend- To his son, Charles H. Hamill, our present counsellor, a graduate of the school and for the last twenty-five years our Wise and steadfast advisor, President of the Harvard School Building Company- To the memory of the members of the first board of trustees, who in the early days of the city's develop- ment strengthened and supported the school: Edson Keith Marshall Field Iohn G. Shortall Alfred Cowles Wirt Dexter N. K. Fairbank George Armour Charles D. Hamill CHARLES H. HAMILL PAGE 6 To all succeeding Board members, Directors of the School, or of the Building Company, who in the past and up to the present have given us their confidence and help: Edward G. Mason C1882-l899l Iohn W. Doane H880-19011 William Gold Hibbard 11884-18871 Norman Williams C1887-18991 Byron L. Smith 11889-18941 Dr. Otto L. Schmidt C1907-19171 Dr. Lewis L. McArthur C1909-19171 Dr. Lester E. Frankenthal C1913-19171 I. Ogden Armour 11915-19171 Iames E. Greenebaum 11916-19231 William E. Bode 11917-19222 Hon. Iesse Holdom C1917-19311 Kellogg Fairbank C1917-l939l L. E. Block C1917-19315 Ioseph E. Otis C1908-l917l DEDICATIGN lohn R.Thompson H909-19173 A. W. Meyer 6191719317 Charles H. Hamill tl9l5- 1 Solomon Sturges tl9l7-19371 loseph L. Block U939- J Frederic Burnham H9354 J To the memory of these teachers of the school and many others, who have forever laid down their loooks, and whose faithful unremitting efforts in the past have formed the minds and spirits of their charges: lcseph French lohnscn Anna M. Titcomb Clara L. Heinrichs Cyrus M. Hill Eugene Von Klenze Samuel Leland E. A. Vollmer Paul Shorey Louis C. Monin Daniel W. Rogers Elias P. Lyon Carl Seligman Frank L. Rainey Warren C. Hawthorne Stanislaus Arsenau Hans Gronow Edward G. Howe To the following teachers and others who have with- drawn from work in our school to work in other fields, and whose memories these pages will kindle: C. L. Ricketts Andrew L, Winters Helen F. Page Elizabeth Faulkner Payson S. Wild Walter M. Schimmel C. C. Wood Dorothy Higgins Brown Isabel Travis McKnight 'Wendel S. Brooks Clara E. Peterson Angus M. Frew Robert G. Buzzard Mary McCann Iohnson Elizabeth E. Langley Harriet Rice Gertrude Brown M. Elizabeth Perley Ann Letsch Anderson To the present faculty which carries on the torch- To those men who at some time have gone through the doors of this school, and whose minds and char- acters may thereby have been enriched and strength- ened for their tasks in life, to our alumni, both the living and the dead- To all of these, the seventy-fifth class of the Harvard School for Boys gratefully and affectionately dedi- Cates this book. PAGE 7 EUR To us who work with Mr. Pence day by day, he is more than a teacher: we regard him as a sincere friend and a wise counselor. Mr. Pence is a firm believer in a classical educa' tion: no one should leave the Har' vard School without making a thor- ough study of Cicero, Caesar, Virgil, and the other Roman masters, under this gifted pedagog. Well-known to leading educators throughout the country, Mr. Pence has no trouble placing his boys in good colleges and universities. FACULTY lt is through Miss Schobinger's ef- forts that the daily life of the Harvard School is so pleasantly efficient. She takes charge of everyday problems, such as school assemblies and an- nouncements: she directs or sponf sors many activities, giving willingly in time and effort to the P. T. A., the Antenna, the Review, and the Honor Society. Her French classes are amcng the most enjoyable in the school. Life at Harvard would be infinitely less interesting and bene- ficial without the steadying influence of this gracious, charming woman. CHARLES EDGAR PENCE ELSIE SCHOBINGER P A G 5 9 MAURICE G. IVINS, Pupil of T. N. Ma-:Burn-ey, Voice Teacher and Choral Director MRS. SARA ROOM MOORE, University of Chicago, Lower Department MISS MARY K. KNIGHT, Beethoven Conservatory, A.M., Pupil of Theodore Leschetizlzy, Vienna, Music Instructor IOSEPH DEL PORTO, University of Pennsylvania AB., University of Chicago. M.A., English, Science lOl-IN S, BARNES, Northwestern University, University of Chicago, M.A., English LESLIE M. DOHR, Lake Forest College, AB., Physical Education Director 'A' MRS. OLIVE I-I. ERADEIELD, University of Chicago, Ph.B., Lower Department MISS HARRIET A. MQCUNE, DeKalb Normal College, Class I MRS. ALTA B. MOORE, University of Chicago, Ph.B., Lower Department MRS. ELIZABETH REPASS, Secretary MISS F. LENORE EURNEY, University of Chicago, Ph.B., Lower Department PAGE 10 MISS RUTH SECKER, Art Institute oi Ciiiccga, Ari MISS MARIORIE I. PAY, University ci Clti-tugs, Pimli., M.A., I.:,1'iLg MRS, ESTELLE HUGHES EELEER, Vfxriner if the Stilicz-15111 LI-31.11, Musi: Instructor MRS. PATRICIA E. GORE, Ohm Wesleyan University, Ohio State University, Oberlin Training School, Lower Department MISS DOROTHY G. CAHILL, University ci Chicago, FILE., Fran: i GEORGE F, VAUBEL, University oi Chicago, Physics and Chemistry MARVIN N. I. BECK, Muhlenberg Cclle-ge, AB., Gerrnizn and Histcry WILEUR H. FORD, Yale, A.B., Latin, Mathematics HARRY D, PYLE, University ot Chicago, Ph.E., Class II WILLIAM I. GUNKEL, University oi Indi-una, A.B., MA., Mcthemtutics PA GE1 41' .:s.H'H.f' 1 , .,l r l l Michigan at Iackson CBeiore the Firel Seoenlq eau WVHiCHHCAGQ AND THE HARVARD SCHOCL FOR BUYS 1865-l94O T was l8657 the Civil War was over. The city of Chicago, thirty years earlier a straggling village on the banks of a sluggish stream, now found itself an important center, the hub of the rapidly developing West. Ugly and untidy, but full of vitality and energy, it was the place of which Dickens Wrote: This is the first American city l have encountered. Having seen it once, I urgently desire never to see it again. lt is inhabited by savages. lts amazing growth, for already it had a population of one hundred seventy- nine thousand inhabitants, attracted young men from the East seeking wider opportunities. A large group, including young Marshall Field, came together from Vermont. The war had stimulated Chicago's industries, and it was too early to feel the inevitable backwash of war,-financial depression. The sprawling city of small frame houses spread far out to the West Side, then one of the fashionable sections, and stretched several miles north and south. lts imposing center of five and six story brick buildings clustered about what is now the Loop. Tree-lined Michigan Avenue, a wide and pleasant city PAGE 13 residence street, resounded to the hoof beats of smartly-groomed horses taking their masters to work in surreys and landausy and on the outskirts near Con- gress Street, quiet Wabash Avenue had its hospitable homes set far back from the street in well tended lawns. Wealth was rapidly piling up, and many of the business men who came from New England intended to send their children to Eastern colleges: but educational facilities were not yet fully developed in Chicago. These condi- tions led Mr. Edward S. Waters, a scholarly Harvard man, to open a pre- paratory school for young men. lt was situated in a house at Congress and Wabash Avenues, and named the Harvard School for Boys in honor of his alma mater. The school struggled along: financial conditions were not so rosyp then came the Chicago fire and the depression resulting from it and the war. The population of Chicago had, however, more than doubled in ten years, it was over 400,000 in l875. lt was then that lohn I. Schobinger, a young Swiss graduate of the University of Zurich, came to the school as a teacher of natural science and remained to guide its destinies for the next fifty years. ln l875 the school, then at No. 21 Sixteenth Street, had sixteen pupils, in l878, thirtyffivep in l880, seventy-five: in l882, one hundred fifteen. ln spite of this apparently rapid development, the school labored under great financial strain during these early years. One year when final accounts were cast up, Mr. Schobinger found that he had earned just one dollar per day. ln fact, when summer came he had exactly nothing to live on for three months of vacation, and only the timely invitation of one of his pupils, Walter Grey, to spend the summer with his family in the country saved the day. Their country home was far out in Hyde Park, accessible only by rail. lt may be interesting to read the program of the commencement exercises of l882, which started at nine o'clock in the morning and lasted until four or 7' Congress Avenue at Wabash tBefore the Fire? PAGE 14 five o'clock in the afternoon. A large part of the program consisted of public demonstrations of proficiency in various subjects, given before an audience of proud or apprehensive parents. if COMMENCEMENT EXERCISES FRIDAY, IUNE 16, 1882 PRIMARY CLASSES-A.M. HIGHER DEPARTMENT4P.lVI. 1:30 - 2:00 Algebra Cicero Arithmetic 2:00 2:30 Latin Greek Virgil French 2:30 3:00 Geography Reading Greek Prose 3:00 3:10 Recess 3:00 4:00 Declamations SPEAKERS Pierrepont Isham Samuel Dexter William B. lansen Walter Dore William Gold Hibbard Iames T. Hill Camillo von Klenze Iohn E. lV1cBean Iacob R. Wineman Morton Denison Hull Frank W. Wentworth 'A' In 1880 Iohn C, Grant came into the school as a teacher, became Mr. Scho- binger's partner the following year, and remained as co-principal until his death in 1913. Many old-timers will remember the tall, fine-looking man with his piercing blue eyes that struck terror into the hearts of any evil doers, and even of innocent bystanders. Mr. Grant was a man whose very presence and dignity inspired respect. In 1878 the school moved into a building it had purchased at 2101 Indiana Avenue, at the south-east corner of 21st Street. The facilities of this building were subsequently increased by the construction of a gymnasium and class rooms at the east end of the lot, with a tan-bark covered playground between. The school remained there until 1896, when a shift in population to the south made a move necessary. The city had grown by that time to more than one and a half millions. In 1905 the school was dealt almost a fatal PAGE 15 blow when the University of Chicago opened the University High School. At that time at least thirty or forty pupils went in a body to the new school. lt is of course always difficult for an unendowed school to compete in physical equipment with schools backed either by taxes or by tremendous financial resources. The fact that the Harvard School has been able to do so success- fully is significant. The year 1905 marked also the death of one of Hcfrvard's best friends, a member of its board of trustees,-William Rainey Harper, presi- dent of the University of Chicago. Since 1896 the school has been in the Kenwood district, from 1898 until 1906 in the Gossage house, set far back from Lake Park Avenue and 47th Street in a huge lot, with a large playground adjoining: then at the northeast corner of 47th Street and Drexel Boulevard, and finally in the new home built for it in 1917 by means of a loan raised by friends and alumni. The campaign for the necessary 55120000 loan was undertaken singlehanded by Mr. Scho- binger in his seventieth year. The first big boost for the fund was given by I. Ogden Armour, whose business was then in the flush of war expansion: he offered ten thousand dollars to start the ball rolling. lt was during this time that Mr. Schobinger felt his life work rewarded by the kindness and generous interest of his many old boys who wished to see the school in a permanent home. ln the course of years, the Harvard School absorbed several other prepara- tory schools in the neighborhood and became the preeminent boys' day school of the South Side. ln 1912 an able and enthusiastic young man became associated with the school as a teacher of the classics. Mr. Schobinger was so impressed with his ability that some years later he asked him to assume greater responsi- bilities, and in 1919 Mr. Pence became co-principal with him. ln 1925, due to the disabilities of age, Mr. Schobinger became principal emeritus, and Miss Schobinger assistant principal. Upon her father's death in 1927, she assumed the duties of full principal together with Mr. Pence, an arrangement that is still in force. The school has weathered many storms in the course of seventy-five years. lt has passed through depressionsgthat of 1873, the financial crisis of 1893, the panic of 1907, the war, 1914-1918, and this final long depression of 1929 to 1939. lt has passed through tragedies far worse than panic and depression, but has held up its head proudly, confident in the knowledge that its name and honor have remained unsmirched. We feel that the Harvard School for Boys would not have stood the test of time if it had not contributed something worth while to the city and its development: and so we bespeak the con- tinued support of the community, the alumni, and the school body. Now again the school building has become too small. During the past twenty years the importance of physical development has been more and more emphasized, and the growth of the school demands more elbow room. Our present gymnasium is too small to accommodate our many play teams, large and small. Once before, when the school was farther north, a gymna- sium was built on the east end of the lot. That is exactly what we plan to do now, with the help of friends and alumni, and thus fitly celebrate the seventy- fifth anniversary of Chicago's oldest private school. PAGE 16 ALUMNINOTES f FOREWORD The material for these Alumni Notes has been gathered over a period of eighteen months. During this tirne, innumerable personal letters, cards, blanks, and form letters have been sent out, hundreds of personal messages have been added to form letters, and many alumni and friends have been called upon for help. The response has been excellent. Not more than a dozen letters have been returned for want of a correct address: and the majority of blanks have been promptly returned, properly filled out, and frequently accompanied by additional information and pleasant personal messages. The latter have greatly added to the pleasure of the work. We could hardly get over our school-teacher habit of putting the old boys in their places. Those who did as they were asked were mentally marked satisfactory7 but if they added a friendly or interesting rnessage, they were given A or A+. The ones who didn't answer, and even kept the stamped and addressed envelope which had been provided, were flunked quite heartlessly. There are, however, few of these. Messrs. Charles H. Hamill, Arthur Meeker, Daniel I. Schuyler, Clarence Huling, Shirley High and Iohn I. Bryant were particu- larly helpful in locating lost boys of their respective times: and we are deeply indebted to Mrs. lohn Walsh, who proved a mine of useful information. By the time the work was concluded, we rnust admit that in regard to alumni We heartily echoed the sentiments of the little girl mentioned by Iune Provines, who after studying penguins at school, wrote in her report: I have learned rnore about penguins than I care to know. The records of the school were not kept accurately before 1880, which represents the first class graduating under Mr. Schobinger's regime, nor was a catalogue or student-roll kept. Therefore, although this is the seventy-fifth anniversary number of the Review, the notes will cover only the sixty years from l88O to l94O. What conclusions, if any, can be drawn from this survey of Harvard School boys over a period of sixty years, in relation to school, college, and private or business life? One striking fact is the ever increasing tendency of Harvard School boys to obtain the greater part of their preparatory education here, and to com- plete their high school work with us. In looking over the attendance records of the past twenty-five years, we find very many boys who have spent ten, eleven or twelve years in the school. ln a recent graduating class of fifteen, eight had had their entire education with us. A Ten Year Club would have a large membership. This was not the case in the early years, and up to about 1920, when many boys went East to Exeter, Andover, Hill, St. Mark's or St. Paul's for their junior and senior years. Now many boys come from other schools to spend their last two years at Harvard and, in very many cases, to take a postgraduate year before entering college. For the past fifteen years we have never been without one or two postgraduates. PAGE 17 Another striking fact is the wider spread of the school population, made possible by the development of good roads and automobile transportation. ln former days the school drew from a purely local field: now it draws not only frorn Kenwood and Hyde Park, but also from the South Shore district: and about thirty-five Beverly Hill Billies make the trip each day. For several years we had three boys from Palos Park, two from East Chicago, one from La Grange, and one from Evanston. One Beverly family has the travel record, for the two Hanney boys have together covered approximately 75,000 miles going back and forth to school, with 9,000 miles to go before they finish. In regard to choice of college and the shift away from the East several factors have been at work, chief among them the development of good mid- western schools like the University of Chicago and the state-owned univer- sities of Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois. ln the last ten years, of course, economic changes have been the predominant factor in the drop of registra- tion in Eastern colleges. ln compiling statistics we have compared the first twenty-five years from l880-l905 with the second twenty-five years from i905-1930, and have considered the third group, l930-40 separately. ln the first group twenty-two American colleges and universities are repre- sented, plus several European ones-the Beaux-Arts in Paris, the Universities of Munich, Leipzig and Oxford. Yale takes a preponderant first place, with an attendance of 3951 of our men: Harvard is second with l5Wy Chicago ranks third, with 9'Wp and Massachusetts lnstitute of Technology and Princeton tie for fourth, with 576. After them come Cornell, Dartmouth and Northwestern Clsawl. Seventeen per cent did not go to college. The second group includes thirty American colleges, with two European ones-the Beaux-Arts and the University of Grenoble. Yale still holds first place, but has slipped to 20752: Chicago has crept up to second place with l8'Z25 Harvard is third, with 872: Dartmouth, Michigan and illinois tie for fourth, with 6156765 then come Wis- consin, Pennsylvania CWharton Schooll, Alabama, Princeton and Cornell. Six per cent did not go to college. ln the depression group, registration for Eastern colleges stops with the suddenness of the crash itself, and Chicago jumps easily to first place with 40'W. Eleven per cent did not go to college, and the colleges represented show greater extension in geographical distri- bution as well as in number. Of the thirty-seven colleges, many appear for the first, or almost the first time, among them Beloit, Carleton, Lawrence, Hobart, Hamilton, Kenyon, Oberlin, N. Carolina, S. Dakota, Iowa and Car- negie. Of the Eastern colleges, Dartmouth, Massachusettes Institute, Harvard, Amherst, Cornell, Brown, and U. S. Naval Academy are still represented, but in small numbersp and Yale has disappeared. During the last fifteen years, Dartmouth has been the favorite eastern college. Of our 20 boys attend- ing Dartmouth during this time, five have won Phi Beta Kappa honors. Our most recent M. l. T. man last year ranked among the first five of the Freshman class. Of our two men now at Harvard, one has won scholastic honors and is on the football teamg both entered on honor scholarships. We find that our alumni live in twenty-eight states of the Union, plus Canada and Hawaii, and in four foreign countries,-France, England, ltaly and Egypt. Their occupations cover the whole field of business and professional life, and include, besides the more obvious ones, those of editor, publisher, interior decorator, industrial designer, oil geologist, brewmaster, chemist, tanner, trapper, rancher, artist and writer, with one bishop and one judge. In listing their occupations in order of frequency, we have lumped under finance bankers, brokers, auditors, estate managers, trustees, investment counsels and dealers in securities: under Fine Arts, architects, interior decorators, composers, artists, writers, and editors. Education includes teachers and PAGE 18 librarians: Engineering includes civil, aeronautical, naval and electrical en- gineering and geological and chemical research. 1880-1905 1905-1930 1. Finance Finance 2. Law Manufacture 3. Manufacture lnsurance 4. Merchandising Law 5. lnsurance Eine Arts 6. Engineering Engineering 7. Fine Arts Merchandising 8. Education Education 9. Medicine Medicine-Contracting Packing-Advertising The banking-investment field still holds first place in both, as the frequently recurring addresses-231 S. La Salle and 208 S. La Salle indicate. We be- came so familiar with one address especially,-175 W. Iackson, that we really considered working a little blackmail on its owner: for if we induced all Harvard School men to move elsewhere, the building would immediately go into bankruptcy. Lack of time prevented our carrying out this little plan. From these same groups, we have drawn other statistics which may be interesting. ln taking the first two hundred men of each group, we find that in the first group 117 are unmarried: of those who are married, 3'W are divorced, and there are two children per family. ln the second group 1599 are unmarried: of those who are married, QW are divorced, and there are 1.7 children per family. As many younger families are still incomplete, the difference is not great, and the .3 child will probably be picked up by the time another bulletin is issued. In the first group there are twenty families with four children, two with five, and one each with six and seven. The second group has seven families with four children, one with five and one with six, and has three families with twins. Although there are more larger families in the first group, there are also more childless couples than in the second. The question on the blank, Do you now have more sympathy than you used to for your parents for teachersl? was put in just for fun, to see what the boys would say. The comments were amusing. Some of the remarks are: Definitely! - 1 should say so. - And howl - With knowledge comes understanding, therefore sympathy. - l always did have sympathy with both. - Being both parent and teacher myself, I should say, 'Decidedly'. Others, having a chance to get even with teachers at last, frankly answered: No, or With parents, yes: teachers, no. And one man said: After paying all the bills, l think 1 need the sympathy. ln length of boy-year attendance, there are several interesting figures. The eight Mason boys spent 72 years in the school, the six Hamills, 47 years: the eight Burnhams, 27 years: the four Reams, 30 years: more recently, the five Barnards 21 years: and the grand total of the Kirchheimer families was PAGE 19 74 years for eight boys. Schobingers of two generations have been in the school 48 years as pupils, and 82 years as teachers. In a rapidly growing city like Chicago, shifts of population are constantly occurring, and there is little stability of domicile. Population necessarily be- comes less homogeneous. Many of our alumni who represented early Chi- cago have moved to the far northern suburbs. lt is obvious that, considering the shift in population and the low birth rate, we can not depend upon our alumni to replenish the school,-although there is a surprisingly large second generation list. We are proud of the part which our alumni have played in the development of Chicago, and of the traditions which they have estab- lished. But our school can not live on traditions alone. The one tradition upon which it can exist is the one which was established early in the history of the schoolethat of earnestness of purpose, simplicity of school life, and sound education founded upon sound principles. And so, with a school popu- lation representing less wealth than at some periods in the past, we have fewer evils resulting from too much money, fewer spoiled children, fewer spoiled parents, and a minimum of disciplinary problems. And now, before beginning the roll call of the classes, we wish to thank all those who have helped by advice or personal Work to issue this bulletin. We are grateful for all the kind Words you have written in your letters, for the memories you have aroused. You can not possibly know how much pleasure your letters gave, and we wish we could have answered them at once. For, in spite of the trials and tribulations of school work, in spite of examinations, and the whims and vagaries of teachers, we are sure that most of you remember school days as l1CIDDY days, and in this mellow mood we invite you to look into the past which has so rapidly become the present. PAGE 20 THE SECOND GENERATION, PAST AND PRESENT, AT HARVARD SCHOOL 'k lames Boyle, nephew ot Wellington and Calvin Leavitt Bryson Burnham, son of Raymond Burnham DeWitt Buchanan, son of DeWitt Buchanan Dorothy Cudney, daughter ot Harold Cudney Raymond E. Daniels, son of Raymond E. Daniels Gordon Ellis, Leonard Ellis, nephews ot Edward and Arthur Leonard Edward Ferguson, nephew ot Russell Tuttle Elwell Edward Goodkind, nephew of Henry Steele lack Grant, son ot lohn Grant Harold Gordon, nephew ot Herbert and Ernest Rycroft Bentley Harriman, son ot Seelye Page Harriman Robert Hastey, Stanley Hastey, nephews of William W. Renshaw Lawrence Heyworth, lr., son ot Lawrence Heyworth Walter lohnson, son ot Walter lohnson Charles Klinetop, son of Charles Klinetop Frederick Kretschmar, nephew of Norman, George, lohn and Howard LeVally. lacob Loeb, son of Hamilton Loeb Eaton Mallers, son ot E. B. Mallers Edward Mallers, nephew ot E. B. Mallers Samuel Maxwell, Edward Maxwell, sons of Augustus Maxwell lames McKillip, nephew ot George McKillip Stuart Otis, Raymond Otis, George Webster Otis, sons of loseph E. Otis Frederick Renshaw, son ot William W. Renshaw Iunior Ross, nephew ot Walter Friend Fuller Rothschild, son of Iesse Rothschild Eugene Schobinger, Charles Schobinger, sons of Eugene Schobinger William M. Schuyler, Daniel M. Schuyler, sons of Daniel I. Schuyler Louis Seaverns, George A. Seaverns, HI, sons of George A. Seaverns Frank Selz, nephew ot Abraham Selz Alfred W. Stern, nephew of Albert B. Kuppenheimer Frederic Straus, S. I. T. Straus, sons of Samuel Iones Tilden Straus Albert H. Veeder, son of Albert Veeder Sears Wait, nephew of Wallace D. Kimball Robert Warfield, Donald Warfield, nephews of lohn D. Warfield, Ir. Iack Warton, nephew of Monroe and lack Heath Ralph Weary, Rollin Weary, nephews ot Harold Cudney Iohn Wineman, son of lacob Wineman Max Wurzburg, Hart Wurzburg, grandnephews of Milton Hart Bennett B. Young, son ot Caryl Young NOTE-This list is no doubt incomplete: it may contain errors. We shall appreciate your help in completing and correcting any portion of The Alumni Section. PAGE 21 WHEN TARZAN WENT TO HARVARD . .. . . . by EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS Q Because I attended Harvard School sometime between the Pliocene and Pleistocene eras, Miss Schobinger has suggested that I write a little article for the School Annual and call it Before the Birth of Tarzan. I think Pre-Glacial Reminiscences would be an apter title. l888 must seem as far back in the dim and distant past to you boys as the last glacial period did to me when I was your age. It seems a long way back to me, toog and I am having a dickens of a time recalling much of anything about ity but, nevertheless, it was in 1888 that I entered the old Harvard School at 2lst Street and Indiana Avenue, where my brother, Coleman, had been a student for a year. I was never a student-I just went to H I school there. I lived over on the West Side where everybody made his Old money in those days and then moved to the South Side to Harvard School show off. I kept my pony in a livery stable on Madison Street west of Robey Street fthe name of which has since been changed, I understand, to that of some Polish politicianI: and in good weather I either drove or rode to school. In inclement weather, I took the Madison Street horsecars to Wabash, a cable-car to 18th Street, and another horse-car to school. Sometimes, returning from school, I used to run down Madison Street from State Street to Lincoln Street, a matter of some three miles, to see how many horse-cars I could beat in that direction. It tires me all out even to think of it now. I must have been long on energy, if a trifle short on brains. I cannot recall much about my classmates. Mancel Clark, Bennie Marshall, and I came over to Harvard together from Miss Coolie's Maplehurst School for Girls on the West Side-and were we glad to escape that blot on our escutcheons! There had been a diptheria epidemic in the public schools the previous year, and our fond parents had prevailed upon Miss Coolie to take us in. As I recall it, there was no other private school on the West Side at that time. If we were glad to get away from Miss Coolie's Maplehurst School for Girls, it was probably nothing to Miss Coolie's elation at being rid of us. I'll bet the old girl turned handsprings. She got rid of William Carpenter Camp at the same time, but I can't recall that he came to Harvard School. The Dads of some of you will remember Billy Camp. Bennie Marshall and I used to sneak down to the breakwater and smoke cubeb cigarettes and feel real devilish. I imagine we even chewed gum, too, He became a very famous Chicago architect. I can see him now sitting at his desk drawing pictures and chewing his tongue when he should have been studying. Mancel Clark and I went to Andover after we left Harvard School. We looked so much alike that when I was late reporting my return from Boston, Mancel used to go to the Registrar's office and report it for me: then everyone was hC1pDY, including the Registrar. At Harvard School I studied Greek and Latin because someone Ilvliss Schobinger says it was Mr. Grantl believed that they should be taught before English grammar was taken upy then I went to Andover and studied Greek and Latin all over again: so, having never studied English, I conceived the brilliant idea of taking up writing as my profession. Perhaps, had I studied English grammar, I would have known better: but then there would have been no Tarzan, and I might still be selling leadpencil sharpeners. There should be a moral to this. Perhaps it is that you should not smoke cubeb cigarettes. at 15th St. PAGE 22 I CHICAGO 1865-1885 May 1-May 2, 1865. Abraham Linco1n's body lay in state at the Court House while all Chicago passed by to do him honor . . . U. S. Grant nomin- ated . , . Colby and Co .... Carson Pirie . . . Pullman Car Co .... Armour and Co .... Michael Reese Hospital . . . Chicago White Stockings Baseball Club . . . La Salle Street Tunnel . . . Population 288,877 in 1870 . . . Chicago Fire with loss of S200,000,000 . . . Boston Store . . . Montgomery Ward . . . Apollo Club . . . Financial Panic . . . Chicago Woman's Club . . . Daily News with Victor F. Lawson . . . Bell-Edison Telephone Service . . . Union League Club . . . Standard Club . . . Swift CS Co .... Chicago Bicycle Club . . . Population 1880, 505,185 . . . Chicago Public Library started by donation of books from England . . . First electric lighting . . . Roller skating craze . . . Heaviest recorded rainfallf45.86 in. . . . Presbyterian Hospital organized, 1882 . . . Age of speed begins . . . Grip cars make Madison to 20th Street in 31 minutes. 1880 This class had only two graduates, and is still intact. Allison Armour tYa1e 18841, who has made many trips of exploration in Greece and Central America, has now retired to 840 Park Avenue, New York. The other half of the class is Robert Hamill tYale 18841, the first of the famous Hamill family to enter the school. He lives at Hinsdale and is president of the Lyon Com- pany, real estate, at 116 South Michigan Avenue. He has four children, all married. News of 1881 is lacking. 1882 Simeon B. Chapin, in school from 1878-1882, is a stockbroker at 111 Broad- way, New York. He lives at 444 Fifth Avenue, and has four children. William H. Cowles CYale 18871 publishes the Morning Spokesman Review in Spokane, Washington, and lives at 2602 West Second Avenue. Camillo von Klenze tHarvard 18861, was for several years past professor of American Literature and Cultural Relations at the University of Munich, but returned to the United States to live a few years ago. Mail will reach him cfo National City Bank, N. Y. George A. Seaverns, Ir., who attended the school from 1878-1881, has retired to Nokomis, Florida, for the winter, and lives at 370 Westminster Road, Lake Forest in the summer. His two sons attended the school. 1888 Arthur Meeker tYale '861 is actively engaged in business in Chicago at 233 W. lackson, as president of the Arcady Farms Milling Co. and chairman of the National Aluminate Company. His eyes have a twinkle that make his stories of Harvard pranks sound most natural and likely. We have no news of lohn E. Doane. 1884 The Yale Directory of 1940 gives the address of F rank W. Wentworth tYale 18871 at 1448 Lake Shore Drive. We have had no response from him. PAGE 23 r .L l I CLASS of 1886 Charles H. Hamill Alfred Schwab Oren E. Tait Benton Sturges Iohn W. Corwith Iohn Wesley Doane Max Baird George H. Webster Fred Bentley Eugene R, Pike Samuel Dexter Kellogg Fairhank Howard Van D. Shaw 1885-1890 City Hall built . . . Board of Trade . . . Monadnock Building . . . Newberry Library . . . University of Chicago granted charter . . . Haymarket riots . . . Hull House founded . . . Hyde Park annexed . . . 5000 telephones in Chicago . . . Western Edison Light Co .... You're not the only pebble on the beach . . . Clementine . . . Peek-a-boo. 1885 Oren E. Taft lYale 18891 has retired from banking and lives at Watch Hill, Rhode lsland. Caryl Young has retired also and lives at 936 Sheridan Road, Lake Forest. He has one son who once attended the school. 1886 Frederick Clay Bartlett lives at Whitehall, Beverly, Massachusetts. Eugene Rockwell Pike CYa1e 1890, Northwestern Law l892l lives at 2430 Lake View Avenue and manages the Pike estate in offices at 6 North Michigan Avenue. His winter home is at Boca Grande, Florida. Benton Sturges CMIT 18905 lives at Lake Geneva and commutes to Chicago for his real estate business at 105 West Monroe. Max Baird lives at Le Port, Sark, in the Channel Islands, England, Wallace Fairbank lives at Cold Springs Arbor, New York. Charles H. Hamill CYale 1890 LLB Northwestern 18931, one of the best friends the Harvard School ever had and well known in Chicago for his civic and musical interests, is actively carrying on his law practice at 105 West Monroe. PAGE 24 1887 Kenneth Brown and his wife Demetra Vaka live quietly and write busily at 40 East Huron Street, Chicago, in the winter, and motor East in spring. W'e hear that the golf game is improving. Murry Nelson tHaTvard 18911 is busy with his law practice and lives at 44 East Elm Street. He has a son and two daughters. loseph E. Otis tYale 18901 has retired from active work but keeps his office in the city at 80 West Monroe and lives at 1415 Astor Street. Charles E. Walker lives at Woodholm, Manchester, Massachusetts. Iohn B. Drake had the misfortune of breaking his leg this year in an auto- mobile accident, but has now recovered. He lives at 1235 Astor Street. Archi- bald Iohn Frederick MacBean tYale 18911 has retired from the practice of law, and after spending most of the past sixteen years in Switzerland, France, Belgium and Holland, has been living in Glengarry County, Ontario. His home address is Highland Park, lll. We have not heard from Clarence C. Chapman. George H. Webster lives at Colorado Springs. Ralph C. Otis tYale 18911 lives at 2350 Lincoln Park West and has retired from business. Lawrence Heyworth CYale 18901 has retired from his contracting and building business and lives at 7651 South Shore Drive. His son of the same name, honor graduate of the school in the class of 1938, is now at Annapolis. lra P. Younglove tYale 18911 lives at 10226 S. Hoyne Avenue. He has retired from business. 1888 Burton Holmes broke his leg on the Mannerheim line in Finland last sum' mer, but gave his lectures from a wheel chair with his usual verve. The pupils of the school were his guests at Orchestra Hall in March. Rudolph Wieser Holmes tHarvard 1892, Rush 18931, Emeritus Professor of Gynecology at Rush and on the staff of Passavant Hospital, has now retired to live at University, Virginia. Stephen Moore Wirts tEcole des Beaux Arts, Paris, 19001 received his diploma in architecture in France. He is now living at 899 Edison Avenue, Detroit, Where he is treasurer of the Aulsbrook Co., manufacturers of furniture. tNeWs has just come of Mr. Wirts' death in April as these notes went to press.1 Mitchell D. Follansbee tHarvard 18921 is a mine of information about Harvard University alumni. He carried on his law practice at 135 South LaSalle Street. His five children are married. 1889 Iohn lay Abbott, Vice President of the Continental lllinois Bank, lives in the old home at 3224 South Michigan Avenue. Herbert W. Hamlin tYale S 1892, Law 18941 is an attorney at law at Greenwich, Connecticut. His ad- dress is Stanwich Road, Greenwich. He has one son and one daughter. One brother, George, was a grand opera singer of note, and the other, Robert Austin Hamlin, studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts. Both attended the school many years ago. Frank S. Hibbard is chairman of the board of Hibbard Spencer Bartlett Co., at 211 East North Water Street. He lives at 1301 Astor Street. Clarence G. Huling has retired from active business and divides his time between his home at Hempstead, New York and that at 5000 Camino de la Costa, La lolla, California. He has three sons. Carl Horton Pierce tHar- vard 18931 has gone deep into metaphysics, and is president of the William Iames Society at 34 West 37th Street in New York. He lives at 133 West 95th Street and is president of the Remotrol Company. He has a son and a daughter. Robert Allerton tRoyal Academy of Munich1, one of the outstand- ing patrons of the Art lnstitute of Chicago, still gives his occupation as a farmer in Monticello, Illinois: but his home address at Lauai Kai Koloa Konai, T. H. sounds more alluring. Robert K. Warren, Treasurer of the Morton Salt PAGE 25 Company, is a neighbor at 10751 So. Hoyne Avenue in Morgan Park. His three children are married, and he has eight grandchildren. Charles Burrali Pike Q1-Iarvard 18931 is best known to Chicagoans for his civic interest and the fact that he is president of the Chicago Historical Society. 1t is due 1arge1y to his efforts that the society has its beautiiu1 new bui1ding in Linco1n Park. HARVARD SCHOOL BANIO CLUB. 1895 Roy S. Younglove Richard S. Churchill E. F. Churchill David Gilkison F. E, Warren C. M. Fair Iohn G. Ralston Thomas Peyton Murphy PAGE 26 CLASS of 1891 Gail Dray Iulian Nolan Harry W. Farnum Claude Atha Dickie Frederick Rawscn Geo. Palmeter Shirley T. High Charles E. Fargo Benjamin Allen Chcnles H. Chappell Unidentified 1890-1895 Population, 1,099,850 . . . Montgomery Ward permanent injunction against building on Lake Front . . . Murry Nelson President of first board of Sanitary District . . . Theodore Thomas Orchestra . . . Great Northern Hotel . . . Rockefeller gives University of Chicago Sl,000,000 . . . Public Library cornerstone laid . . . 1892, 1548 persons died of diptheria, 1489 of typhoid . . . Chicago death rate, 22 per thousand . . . Age of speed continues . . . trolley cars supplant horse cars . . . Democratic Convention nominates Cleveland . . . Corbett and Sulli- van prize fight . . . Marshall Field gives 31,000,000 for Field Museum in lackson Park . . . World's Columbian Exposition . . . Pullman car strike . . . financial panic . . . University of Chicago on Midway . . . Ta-rah-rah-rah boom-de-ay. 1890 Charles Cheney Hyde tYa1e 1895, Harvard 1898, LLD Northwestern 19241 lives at 1035 Park Avenue, New York, and is professor of lnternational Law at Kent Hall, Columbia University. He has one son and one daughter. Leon- ard I. Mandel CYale 18931 is actively engaged at Mandel Brothers, and lives at 5555 Sheridan Road. lohn Crosby Neely tPrinceton 18941 lives at the Prince- ton Club, 39 E. 39th St., New York. He is office manager of LaBranche QS Co. on the New York Stock Exchange. He is unmarried. Theodore A. Shaw, Ex. '90, lYale 18921 is a dry goods commission merchant at 323 South Frank- lin Street and lives at 1180 Lake Shore Drive. Bruce Clark tYale 18981 has retired from the New York Stock Exchange to live at Bay Point Park, Sarasota, Florida. PAGE 27 1891 Beniamin C. Allen CYale 18951 is a trustee of the Benjamin Allen Estate, and President of Benjamin Allen ci Co., wholesale jewelers. He lives at 1444 North State Parkway. Walter S. Brewster CYale 18951, known to us chiefly as a patron of art in Chicago, has retired from active business. lohn 1. Bryant CU. S. Naval Academy, 1896, Yale 18981 lives in Wheaton and is active as a stock broker in the Rookery. We owe the picture of the class of 1891 to Shirley T. High CYale 18951, who has been very ill for a year, but recovered sufficiently to take a trip to Mexico in the winter of 1940. He has retired from law practice to devote himself to fine photography, and has pictures in all big exhibitions. lulian S. Nolan lYale 18951 spends most of his time in Cali- fornia, though he still keeps an office at 175 West lackson. Harry Earnum has offices at 30 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, and lives in Connecticut. Charles H. Pajeau has recovered from a serious airplane accident of a year or more ago. He has been working hand in glove with Santa Claus for many years, making toys for the younger generation at the Toytinkers in Evan- ston. lohn A. Bloomingston, ex '91, lMichigan 18961 is an attorney at law at 160 North LaSalle Street. He has one daughter. His home address is at 1209 Astor Street. Harold E. McCormick, ex '91 CPrinceton 18951 was at the school in 1885-86. He is Chairman of the Board of the International Harvester Co., but spends most of his time at his home at 1000 North Crescent Drive, Beverly Hills, California. 1892 Any visitor to Sioux City, lowa, is struck by the beauty of the Badgerow building, and finds it belongs to Egbert Badgerow, who has a law degree but spends his time managing his extensive properties. One daughter is mar- ried in China, another studying music in Chicago. His winter home is at Daytona Beach. flust as this material went to press we heard of Mr. Badge- row's death.1 lohn A. Farwell CEX. 1892, Andover 1892, Yale 18951 has retired to the Los Angeles Country Club, Beverly Hills, California. Roy B. Harper CU. S. Military Academy1 is a Colonel of the U. S. Army retired, and now lives at 4730 Kimbark Avenue. Benny Marshall, who was the architect for the Edgewater Beach, the Drake, the Blackstone, and many other well known Chicago buildings, did his first architectural drawings on all the mar- gins of his school books. His home address is The Drake. Daniel 1. Schuyler lNorthwestern 18961 is actively carrying on his law practice, with which his son Daniel is associated, in the firm of Schuyler and Hennessey at 231 South LaSalle Street. He lives at 1500 Lake Shore Drive, and has in the last few years three times become a grandfather. His sons, William Cl9271 and Daniel CEX. 19301, both took Phi Beta Kappa honors at Dartmouth. Harry Lee Taft has retired to the bankers paradise, Santa Barbara. Norman Williams CYale 18961 lives at Woodstock, Vermont, having retired from his manufacturing business. Albert A. Sprague tHarvard 18981 lives at 1130 Lake Shore Drive, and has offices at 72 W. Adams, in the Commonwealth Edison building. His two sons are managing his wholesale grocery business, Sprague, Warner ci Co., which furnishes the school its groceries. The Colonel is probably better known to Chicagoans for his philanthropic and civic work. His three children are married. 1893 The two members of this class from whom we have heard are both physi- cians,-Dr. C. Franklin Leavitt CCar1eton 18971, who lives in Wilmette Gnd hqg offices at 58 East Washington Street: and Edward Clark Streeter 1Ya1e 18981, who has retired from his medical practice and teaching and lives at Stoning- PAGE 28 ton, Connecticut. Dr. Streeter has three sons and a daughter. lulian Mason, ex '93, lives at Glen Head, Long Island, New York, and is one of the editors of a New York newspaper. He has two children. l894 We heard of Wallace D. Kimball, who was lost, through his nephew, Sears Wait, a recent graduate. Mr. Kimball is first vice-president in charge of production at the Standard Knapp Corporation, Long Island, New York, and lives at 3439 87th Street, lackson Heights. He has one daughter and three granddaughters. His summer home is Tall Timber, at Orange, Virginia. Walter G. Zimmerman CMlT 18983 lives in Hinsdale and is the contracting manager ot the American Bridge Company, and a member ot the Chicago Engineers Club, American Society oi Civil Engineers, and the Western So- ciety ot Engineers. Walter Byron Smith lYale l899l is a director ot the Nor- thern Trust Co. Bank. He lives in Lake Forest. Boy McWilliams has tor many years been an American consul in the south of France, department of Basses Pyrenees. lohn W. Walsh, formerly in the railway business, now lives at Bloomington, Illinois. Francis E. Drake CYale l899l lives at Stalheim Farm, Bye Beach, New Hampshire. He has three children and has just celebrated his tortieth wedding anniversary. He spent nine of his early years in the school. De Witt Wheeler Buchanan, ex '94, CPurdue l898l is president of the Old Ben Coal Corporation, 23l South La Salle Street, Chicago. He lives in Lake Forest and has two daughters besides the son who once attended the Harvard School. CLASS oi 1897 Herbert P. Zimmerman Francis Baldwin E. D. Mandel Robert C. Hosmer E. F. Kirchberger M. R. Rothschild Elmer Schlesinger Frederick W. Renshaw Norman LeVally PAGE Z9 CLASS of 1898 las. A. Valentine Chas. L. Woodruff Ben H. Iudah Geo. Fernald Clifford G. Wells Philip B. Hosmer Irwin R. Green E. S. Sidley Homer L. Dixon R. S. Kirchberqer Hugh B. Marston Edward Burnham, Ir. Kenneth Locket! Frederic Burnham August Richard Frank Absent: Harry B. French 1895-1900 First motion picture studio organized, Essanay . . . Capt. Anson and play- ers fined 53.00 each for playing ball on Sunday . . . Diphtheria antitoxin . . . First L train around the Loop . . . Spanish War . . . Roosevelt Rough Riders . . . Mr. Dooley . . . The Rosary . . . Horseless carriage appears . . . Motor- cycle race Won at hair raising speed of 54 miles in 10 hrs. 23 minutes . . .P. D. Armour breaks Leiter's wheat corner by breaking through ice with 2,000,000 bushels of wheat. 1895 One of the old boys unearthed last summer via The Saturday Evening Post, was Edgar Rice Burroughs, the small boys' favorite. He is one of the few men in this country who has a post office of his own, Tarzana, California. He has been kind enough to write us the little article which appears in this bulletin. His home address, when not at his ranch, is 719 North Rexford Drive, Beverly Hills, California. The first of the three Lockett boys is Oswald CYale 18991, who lives at 66 Essex Road, Winnetka, has two sons, and has for thirty years been either owner or president of the Lockett Company and manufacturing representative of Grocery Products. One of our teaching alumni is Morton A. Mergentheim CChicago 1899, MA 1900, Northwestern, LL B 19031, who was a professor of Law first at lohn Marshall Law School and then at Northwestern until 1932. He carries on his law practice at 38 South Dearborn. He has one son and one daughter and lives at 411 Fullerton Parkway. Robert E. Stone CYale 18983, President and Treasurer of Robert E. Stone df Co., Insurance, 33 Broad Street, Boston, has three children, and lives at 21 Kilsyth Road, Brookline, Massachusetts. He is a major in the U.S. Marine Reserve. Leon A. Werthheimer sells wholesale seeds at 206 Cavin Street, Ligonier, Indiana. He has two PAGE 30 daughters, and lives at 610 South Main Street. Albert M. Barrell has retired from the investment business and lives at the Ambassador Hotel. We know Bruce Borland at school as the President of the Glenwood Manual Training School to which our boys contribute. He has his real estate offices at 105 South La Salle Street. Solomon A. Smith CYale 18997 follows in the footsteps of his father as president of the Northern Trust Company. He is also Treasurer of the United Charities. He lives in Lake Forest, and his four children are married. 1896 Ayres Boal fHarvard 19007, of Ayres Boal and Ayres Boal lr., real estate, lives at 701 Sheridan Road, Winnetka. He has three sons and a daughter. Lewis Lee Losey lChicago 1900, Lake Forest 19007 is a lawyer on West Monroe Street and lives at 5034 Blackstone Avenue. He was married in 1933. Edwin Rothschild is a stockbroker at 134 South La Salle Street and lives at 2142 North Lincoln Parkway. He has two sons. Laurence Hamill CChicago 19007, who spent ten years in the school, lives at 1787 Crawford Road, Cleveland, Ohio. Maurice Mason CYale 19017 is an investigator of patents: he lives at 7301 Sheridan Road. His brother Norman is on the Philadelphia Transcript, Philadelphia. Bruce D. Smith lives in the East, or in Coral Gables, Florida. Samuel N. Harper CChicago 19027, whom some old boys remember as Ule, has for many years occupied the chair of Russian at the University of Chicago. He is unmarried and lives at 5728 Woodlawn Avenue. William W. Dixon fHarvard 1900, LL B 19037 is a lawyer, at 105 South La Salle Street in the firm of Rawlins and Dixon. S. 1. T. Straus, Ex. 1896 is the head of the Straus Securities, 135 South La Salle. His son, Frederick lHarvard School 19227 is in business with him. Mr. Straus spent the winter in Florida. 1897 lf we ever turn up in Syracuse, New York, it will be to get a meal cooked by the gourmet and cookbook collector, Robert Collyer Hosmer CCornel1 19027. Besides indulging in this hobby, he makes furniture by hand, does photog- raphy, and has time to be president of the Excelsior Insurance Company. He has three sons, one still in college at Dartmouth. Eugene S. Mandel CDartmouth 19027, another of the Mandel Brothers, lives at 357 Moraine Road, Glencoe, and is in the investment business at 208 South La Salle Street. He has two sons. Russell Mott, Ex. 1897, CYale 1901, Harvard Law 19047 has retired from his law practice to live at Charlottesville, Virginia. He has three sons and one daughter. Frank H. Silverthorne, Ex. 1897, lives in New York and is the inventor of devices for sealing bottles. CDon't get excited-just ink bottles.7 Herbert Paul Zimmermann fChicago 19017 is vice president of R. R. Donnelley ci Sons on East 22nd Street, and lives at Geneva, lllinois. He has one son and two daughters. Francis E. Baldwin is a lawyer and lives in Evanston. Chauncey Blair Borland lYale 19017, lives on Lake View Avenue. His three daughters are married. He has offices in the Borland Building, 105 South La Salle Street with his brother and manages the Borland Estate. 1898 We have rather complete news of this class. Frederic Burnham lYa1e 19027, who lives in Winnetka and is well known in legal circles, is one of the directors of the School Building Company. Homer L. Dixon fYale 19017 is vice president and Secretary of the Dixon Transfer Company. He lives at 417 Barry Avenue and breaks Harvard alumni records by being the father of seven children, one boy and six girls. Kenneth Lockett CMIT 19027 is an engineer, has offices in The Merchandise Mart, is unmarried, and lives at 4440 Beacon Street. Theodore Peyton Murphy, Ex. 1898, lives at 7527 Stewart Avenue, and has retired from business. You may recognize him in the Banjo Club picture on PAGE 31 Page 26. He has three grown chil- dren. Edwin S. Rosenbaum, Ex. 1898, is a coal broker at 332 South La Salle Street, lives at the Am- bassador West, and has two sons and a daughter. Bradford Wells CYale 19011 is in the investment security business at 111 West Monroe. He is unmarried and lives at the Ambassador Hotel. He suggests an alumni banquet, and his dream may be a reality before these notes are published. lames Alden Valentine, who came to the Harvard School from Minne- sota, went to Yale, married a Ken- wood lnstitute girl, Mary Kendall, and moved to South Walpole, Massachusetts. He is secretary and Assistant Treasurer of the Kendall Textile Mills. His three children are married. He and his wife garden in their little 60 acre plot. C. Lewis Woodruff lChicago 19001 is an insurance broker at 123 Williams Street, New York. He HMM s:u1gescmd1oimG.sn0nq11 is still a bachelor. Philip Hosmer fYale 19011 is President of R. W. Hosmer 61 Co., lnsurance, at 175 West lackson Blvd. He has three children. Clarence K. Peck CYa1e 19011 is an insurance broker at 175 West Jackson, and lives at 40 West Schiller Street. 1899 lames C. Ames lPrinceton 19031 is president of Ames Emerich ci Co., at 105 South La Salle Street. He lives at 1500 Lake Shore Drive. E. 1. Cudahy CHarvard 19031 is a publisher of Law books on East Ohio Street: he has four children. Robert Llewellyn Henry lChicago AB ID1 is our only Rhodes Scholar. At Oxford he received an honorary degree given to few Americans-among them Roosevelt and Taft. For many years he has been judge of the mixed court at Alexandria, Egypt. His two sons had their schooling in this country. Iudge Henry taught Law at Oxford for four years, and a few years ago was visiting professor at Chicago. Emanuel Arnstein CUniversity of Leipzig 19001 has re- tired from business and lives at East Orange, New Iersey. He has two children. Uri B. Grannis lPrinceton 19031 is an investment counsel at 134 South La Salle Street, and lives at 550 Rosemary Road in Lake Forest. He has three sons. Alfred W. Stern, Ex. 1899, lives at 615 Crescent Court, Highland Park, has retired from active business, and now manages his estate in offices at 231 South La Salle Street. He has three children. George B. McKillip CChicago 19011 is the well known veterinarian of McKillip Veterinary College on North Clark Street, and lives at 5302 University Avenue. loseph M. Cudahy lives at a number very popular with Harvard School boys-1500 Lake Shore Drive. His business address is 208 W. Washington. Thomas H. Sidley is a lawyer and lives at 1501 Wesley Avenue, Evanston. PAGE 32 3135 .L:- fl s ,w . f - .- K : - - HARVARD SCHOOL at 4651 Drexel Boulevard 1900-1905 Population 1,698,575 . . . Sanitary canal opened . . . Iroquois Theater Fire . . . Stockyards strike . . . Autos reach 10 miles per hour . . . Free bathing beaches opened . . . State law for birth and death registration . . . Mrs. Warren's Profes- sion suppressed by police . . . McKinley assassinated . . . Roosevelt president . . . Orville and Wilbur Wright's first airplane . . . luvenile Protective League . . . Caruso . . . Texas oil boom . . . Carrie Nation. . . Cissy Loftus . . . Sothern and Marlowe . . . Lillian Russell . . . lohn Drew . . . Cadillac breaks speed record at 18 m.p.h .... Orchestra Hall dedicated . . . Theodore Thomas died . . : Marconi sent wireless message from Newfoundland to England . . . Rotary Club . . . Infant Welfare Society . . . There'll Be a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight. 1900 Raymond Burnham CYale l903l lives at 930 East 45th Street. He is an engineer, and has a daughter and two sons, one of whom attended the school a few years ago. Charles S. Dewey, Ex. 1900, CYale 19041 left the school in the eafrly grades. After being financial advisor to the government of Poland, he came back to continue his real estate business in Chicago at 231 South La Salle Street. He lives at 1507 North State Parkway, and has two sons and two daughters. Alfred E. Hamill, Ex. 1900, CYale 19057 lives in Lake Forest. He PAGE 33 r .L l I 1S a banker at 208 South La Salle Street, but is also known as a poet and connoisseur of art. He has three children and lives at 115 East Illinois Road, Lake Forest. lames G. Kellogg lCorne1l 19051 has retired from active work in the Kellogg Switchboard Company and lives at 80 Locust Road, Winnetka. He has two children. He still remembers the good old pre-vitamin age at 21st and Indiana, with Charley Dewey, Iimmy Ames and Walter Rosenbaum, when lunch was just bread butter and milk. Charles Forest LeLand CChicago 19041 is the president of the American Mutual Life Insurance Company at 1 Park Avenue, New York. He has two boys and one girl, and lives at 80 Parker Avenue, Maplewood, New Iersey. Many men will remember his father, Samuel Leland, who taught for so many years at Harvard School. Mr. Leland died late in 1939 in the East at the age of eighty-three. Paul H. Mayer, lPrinceton 1905, MIT 19091 lives in Albany, New York, and has charge of the state unemployment bureau. He has three children. Walter V. Peck, Ex. 1900, tYale 19041 has a chicken farm at Largo, Florida. Abraham K. Selz CYale 19031 lives at 20 Cedar Street and is a manufacturer. Unfortunately tfor Harvard Schoo11 his four children are all girls. Iesse A. Rothschild, EX. 1900, lAndover 19001 lives at 40 Cedar Street. He is a stockbroker at 141 West Iackson. His son, Fuller, spent eight years at the school, then went to Andover for his senior year. Robert C. Ream, Ex. 1900, CPrinceton 19041 is president of the American Re-Insurance Company. He lives at 770 Park Avenue, New York, and pleasantly remembers old Harvard days. He has two sons. Louis C. Dillman still manages the American Book Company in New York, and Henry E. Daniels lives at Shaker Heights, Ohio. Harold Keith, Ex. 1900, has retired to California. Harold E. Wiley, Ex. 1900 CYale 19031 is a broker on 105 West Adams Street and lives at 220 East Walton Place. We have no news of Alexander Hanson nor Walter M. Iohnson. Howard LeVal1y lives at 6400 Kenwood Avenue. 1901 Raymond E. Daniels CHarvard 19051 is a retail and wholesale coal dealer. He is very much tied up with Harvard School, as his son, Raymond E. Daniels, Ir., was a recent graduate, and his daughter, Helen, married a Harvard School boy, Walter Monroe. Edmund P. Cobb CI'Iarvard 19051 lives at 11131 South Bell Avenue, Chicago, and has four children. He is a salesman. George Carrington Mason is our only shipbuilder, in the Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co., Newport News, Virginia. He is an Apprentice Instructor in the shipyards, teaches drafting, is a lecturer on nature and Virginia historical subjects, is the forester at Mariners' Museum Park, and was a naval architect in the World War. He has three colleges to his credit, Yale, MIT, and North Carolina State College. Oscar McPherson, Ex. 1901 tPrinceton 19081, lives at Brook House at the Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville, New Iersey, where he is one of the outstanding secondary school librarians of the country. He heads a staff of four, and holds that well-equipped libraries are as important to schools as facilities for athletics. More power to him! Norman P. Ream CMich Mil. Acad. 18021, whose father, Norman B. Ream was for many years a trustee of the school, has retired from business and lives at Porchuck Road, Greenwich, Connecticut. He has one son and a daughter. His brother Edward, Ex. 1901, lives in Versailles, Kentucky. Milton B. Wilson tYale 19081 retired to Santa Barbara after being assistant treasurer of Wilson Brothers for many years. He has four children. Harold Zeiss CPrinceton 19071 is unmarried, and is a nurseryman at Deerfield, Illinois. Can anyone give us news of Oscar W. Iohnson, Charles B. Keeler, or Philip H. Shaffner? 1902 Hayden Harris CChicago 19071 has retired from banking to live in Leesburg, Virginia. He has three children. Charles W. Lobdell CYa1e 19051 has his office PAGE 34 in the Board of Trade and sells investment securities. He has one boy, and lives at 1183 Scott Avenue, Winnetka. Mason Phelps CYale 19061 is the presi- dent of the Pheoll Manufacturing Company at 5700 Roosevelt Road. He lives in Lake Forest and has one son and one daughter. limmy Ralston lives at 145 Roosevelt Avenue, Flushing, L.l. William Schobinger Client College of Law 19081 lives at 45 Circle Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. He is attorney for the London Guarantee and Accident Company, 55 Fifth Avenue. He has one fifteen-year old son. George Schobinger CChicago 1905, MIT 19081 is engineering manager of the Zimmermann Day Co., Philadelphia, and lives at 301 Swarthmore Avenue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania. His wife and four chil- dren returned from a year in Europe just after war broke out. His book. Business Methods in the Building Field tMcGraw Hill1 is just off the press. Lawrence Weaver CAndover 19041-fYale EX. 19081 lives at 415 Dempster Street, Evanston, is an investment counsel, and has one son. His only daughter died a few years ago. lohn Heath Wood CWisconsin 19061, president of the Standard Varnish Works at 2600 South Federal Street, says he was kicked out of Harvard School. We don't know about that, but hard feelings, if any, are forgotten since his daughter recently married an ardent Harvard fan, Peter Iordan of the class of 1936. Frederic Ullman is a lawyer at 135 South La Salle and lives in Winnetka. He is unmarried. George A. Paddock fVirginia 19061 is an investment banker at 120 South La Salle Street, and lives in Evanston. He has one son. Bruce D. Smith CYale 19061 lives in New York or in his winter home in Florida. He has three children. We have not heard from Henry Sibley Putnam tCornell 19071. Lucius C. Meacham, Ex. 1902 tSt. Paul, Andover 19021, fYale 19061, after being engaged for many years in public service corpora- tion work, has retired to Palo Alto, California. He tells how he entered Harvard School in the fall of 1892, just a few days after Marshall Field, lr., shot the big owl from the tall steeple of the second Presbyterian Church across from the school yard. Paul Moore CYale 1908, New York Law School 19111 left Chicago many years ago for New York. His business is finance at 48 Wall Street. He lives at Convent, New lersey, and has two sons and two daughters. His brother Edward Small Moore lives at 250 Park Avenue, N.Y. Louis Marshall Ream, Ex. 1903, fPrinceton 19081 has retired from business to live at 6 Olive Street, Providence, Rhode lsland. He was married in 1929 and has one son and one daughter. He has recently become a member of the Board of Trustees of Rhode lsland State College. His sister, Marian, who once also attended the school in Miss Heinrich's German class, and whom we shall therefore also consider as an alumna, is Mrs. Vonsiatsky, and lives at Rancho de la Osa, Sasabe, Arizona. Does anyone have news of Augustus Knight, or Howard Cassidy? We have had no response from Perry Keeney, who used to live at the Harvard Club, New York. 1903 Everyone who goes to Estes Park in the summer knows lulian Hayden CArmour 19071 who is a real estate agent, owns land and cottages, and takes remarkable motion pictures of animals, The family lives the year round at Estes Park, where his two children go to school. Clarence Burnham tYa1e 19061 is an engineer at 20 Wacker Drive, lives at 1017 East 45th Street, and has three children. Caleb Harlan Canby lives in Barrington, and has one son. He is a grain broker at 332 South La Salle Street. Carl Zeiss CPrinceton 19071 is a lawyer, has three children, and lives in Winnetka. The Rt. Rev. Frank Elmer Wilson CHobart 19071 is the Bishop of Eau Claire, Wisconsin. He has one child. He has written many books on religious subjects and Was a chaplain in the 86th division AEF. Clarence F. Wiley CCornell 19071 lives at 1320 North State Street, and is with the American Steel and Wire Company. The last we heard PAGE 35 about lrving Shaffner was that he was a marine engineer at Hoboken, New lersey. Does anyone have further news of him, or of Walter Dray, or George McAu1iff'? 1904 Newton Farr tCorne11 19091 deals in real estate at 140 South Dearborn, lives at 4737 Woodlawn Avenue, and is prominent in the affairs of the Kenwood Church. He is unmarried. George S. LeVa11y tYa1e and Chicago? is the one bachelor of the four LeVa11y brothers who attended the school. He is vice president of the Lincoln Engineering Company on South Michigan Avenue. Howard Linn, Ex. 1904, tYale 19081 deals in real estate at 549 W. Washington Street, and lives in Lake Bluff. William W. Renshaw travelled in Europe for three years instead of going to college. He lives at 1320 North State Parkway, and has recently retired from his furniture business. His son Fred Went to the Harvard School before he moved North and is now at the University of Chicago. Melville N. Rothschild, Ex. 1904, 1540 Lake Shore Drive, is president of the National Bond and Investment Company at 228 North La Salle Street. He has four children, two sons and two daughters. Clarence T. Seipp fCornel1 19083 is a graduate of Harvard School Kindergarten, and after the early grades went elsewhere. He is an investment counsel at 8 South Michigan Ave., and the father of two boys. Stanley M. Wiley lives near the school at 1136 E. 48th Street and his two daughters, before they married, used to be frequent guests at school dances. He is on the Board of Trade. Alvar R. Sutter lives at 827 Prospect Avenue, Winnetka, and is engaged in property management. He has two daughters. lrwin P. Zeisler tChicago 1907, Northwestern Medical 19121 is a physician and assistant professor of dermatology at Northwestern Medical School. He has three sons, including a pair of twins. One is now studying for the ministry. Philip F. W. Peck tYale 19081 is in the real estate business, has two sons, and lives at 190 North Sheridan Road. Walter O. Wilson lives in Connecticut. He has one son and one daughter. lssac Newton Perry, EX. 1904 tYale 19081 is a partner of Perry, Spencer 61 Co., investment banking, at 135 S. LaSalle Street. He lives at 9000 N. Michigan Avenue. Paul Lansing Veeder, Ex. 1904 tYa1e S 19071 has retired from his manufacturing business and divides his time between his home on Long lsland, N.Y. and his home at Pebble Beach, California. When at Yale he was a well-known football player, having perfected the forward pass. PAGE 36 A 1905-1910 Population l,941,880. Rotary Club formed . . . Municipal Court opened . . . Chicago Plan Commission . . . Sunday Evening Club . . . Tuberculosis lnstitute . . . Church Federation . . . Michelson received Nobel Prize . . . Republican Convention at Coliseum . . . Taft nominated . . . Women start smoking . . .Silk hosiery comes in . . . Wrights' airplane goes 24 miles in 38 minutes . . . Ford's first Model T appears . . . Panic of 1907 . . . Bleriot crosses English Channel in monoplane . . . White Sox world champions . . . Merry Widow Waltz . . . Three Weeks . . . Peter Pan . . . Oslerism . . . Ioe lefferson in Rip Van Winkle . . . Douglas Fairbanks . . . Marie Dressler. 1905 Paul Albert CDartmouth 19101 is the head of the well-known Albert Teachers Agency at 25 East Iackson. He has three children and lives at 209 Kenmore Avenue, Elmhurst. Harold C. Gifford, who lives at Highland Park, is an insur- ance broker at 175 West lackson. Harold Foreman CDartmouth 19091 has two sons. He lives in Glencoe. lames C. Hutchins lPrinceton 19091 is a partner in Mitchell Hutchins CS Co., stockbrokers, at 231 South La Salle Street. He lives at 1450 Astor Street and has one son and two daughters. Harold Lockett CMIT 19101 lives at 516 Orchard Street, Winnetka. He is a salesman for H. H. Robertson in the London Guarantee Building. We are very glad to say that Dr. Selim McArthur CYale 19081, CRush 19101 has entirely recovered from his illness last year. He lives at 50 Scott Street and has two daughters. His offices are at 122 South Michigan and he is following his father's brilliant work as surgeon at St. Luke's hospital. Frederic O. Mason, Ex. 1905 CYale 19091 is a partner of the law firm Miller Gorham Westcott :S Adams at 1 North La Salle Street, and lives at 857 Ash Street, Winnetka. He has two sons. Stanley Morrill CYale Law EX. 19101 has two children, a son and a daughter. He is a stock- broker with E. A. Pierce, 105 West Adams Street, and lives in Lake Forest. Norman Weiss CYa1e 19101 is unmarried. He lives in Barrington where he deals in real estate. Spalding Peck CWisconsin 19001, who lives at Russell's Point, Ohio, is president and general manager of the Lake Gas Company. He was married in 1933 and has one son. Stuart Logan, Ex. 1905 CYale 19081 has retired from business and lives at 209 Lake Shore Drive. Iohn R. LeVally lives at 1129 E. 45th St. 1906 Gerald Burnham lYale S 1909, PhD 19111, fifth of the eight brothers, manu- facturers cosmetics at the Burnham Company on South Parkway, and lives in Winnetka. He has four children. Eugene Cary CChicago 1910, Rush 19121 lives at 179 Lake Shore Drive and is a physician and surgeon at 30 North Michigan Avenue. Alan C. Dixon, Ex. 1906, lYale S 19091, lives at 1500 Lake Shore Drive. His real estate business is at 77 West Washington. Iohn Greene- baum CYale and Chicago1 is unmarried. He is an investment banker at 38 South Dearbom Street. Richard H. Mabbatt fYale 19101 lives in Lake Forest, and has just had the honor of being elected its mayor. His office is in the Board of Trade Building Where he is president of the R. H. Mabbatt Co., dealing in commercial paper. He has one son and one daughter. Iohn S. Miller CHarvard 1911, LLB 19141 has two daughters. He practices law at 134 South La Salle Street, in the firm of Taylor, Miller, Busch and Boyden. Glenn W. Traer manages the Greyhound Coporation at 141 West Iackson. He lives at 1500 Lake Shore Drive and has two children. Iohn Weiss CYale S 19191 has a lumber business in Augusta, Georgia, where he lives. He has two sons. Miner T. Ames CPrinceton PAGE 37 1910, lllinois 19141 is hard to catch as he travels much of the time. He is a life underwriter. Louis C. Seaverns 1Harvard 19101 is a stockbroker at 208 South La Salle Street, lives in Lake Forest, and has a fifteen-year old step-son at Taft School. 1907 Robert A. Gardner 1Yale 19121 is a stockbroker, at 231 South La Salle Street. He lives with his family of three children in Lake Forest. Stanley Harris CYale 19121 is a banker at the Harris Trust. He lives on Fisher Lane, Winnetka and has four children. Carl G. Ortmayer 1Yale S 19101 is a road builder and contractor in Milwaukee. He has three daughters. Eugene Hoyne de Bronkhart 1Wi1liams 19121 lives at Highland Road, Rye, New York. He is an investment banker with Nickerson 61 Co., 61 Broadway. Charles S. Traer 1Yale 19101 is vice president and manager of production of Acme Steel, and lives at the South Shore Club. Walter H. Hildebrand 1MlT EX. 19111 now has a son, Walter lr., a freshman at M1T, entering with honors from New Trier High School which the second son, Bobby attends. The family lives at Wilmette. Daniel D. Craft, Ex. 1907 1Dartmouth 19101, sells mortgage investments at 40 North Dearborn, and lives at 195 Ridge Avenue, Winnetka. He has two daughters. George A. Seaverns 111 has offices at 164 W. lackson. Laurence Otis Wilson lives at 700 E. Rosemary Road, Lake Forest, and has offices at 230 N. Michigan Avenue. He has two daughters. 1908 The class of 1908 was one of the smallest in a decade and we have very little information from its members. Cyrus G. Hill, Ex. 1908 1Ya1e 19121, whose father taught in the school many years ago, is a consulting engineer at 105 West Adams. He has three daughters and lives at 28 Scott Street. We were glad to find lohn R. Winterbotham, EX. 1908, CYale 19121 who is president of lohn H. Winterbotham dr Sons, manufacturers, with offices at 8 South Dear- born. He lives at 1238 North State, and has one son. We have no news of Lewis Foster Gifford, Henry W. Wright, Frank Baackes, or Lloyd Canby. 1909 ln our last alumni bulletin we reported that we had lost Morton Rocha Hunter, and so we are doubly glad to say he has been found in Milwaukee, as president of the Hunter Tractor and Machinery Company. He has two sons. He was of the class of 1913 at Michigan in the engineering school, and WHOIS Who in engineering will tell you more about him. Theodore Philip Swift 1Yale 19151 is a banker, lives in Lake Forest, and has three sons. Alfred K. Foreman 1Dartmouth 19131 sells insurance on La Salle Street, has a son and two daugh- ters, and lives in La Grange. Harold Burnham fYa1e 19131 is district sales manager of the Chicago Wilmington and Franklin Coal Company at 332 South Michigan, and lives in Flossmoor, lllinois. Albert B. Dewey, Ex. 1909 fYa1e 19121 lives at the Ritz in New York, is not in business, and has two children. PAGE 38 1910-1915 Population, 1910, 2,185,283 . . . Blackstone Hotel built by Tracy and lohn Drake . . . Grand Opera Company organized . . . Common drinking cup and roller towel prohibited . . . Chicago Council of Boy Scouts organized . . .North- western Station opened, cost 25 million . . . Women's suffrage approved . . . Lorimer Banks crashed . . . Boys' Brotherhood Republic organized . . . Morgan Park annexed . . . Ianuary 1914, lohn C. Grant died: co-principal since 1880 . . . Airplane Show on Lake Front, speed record 57 m.p.h .... World War breaks out . . . lt's a Long, Long Way to Tipperary. 1910 George W. Blossom tYale 19141 lives in Lake Forest, has two sons and two daughters, and is an insurance broker at 175 W. lackson. lvo Buddeke tChicago 19141 of lvo Buddeke ci Co., lnsurance, has four daughters, and two boys, one of whom is a recent graduate of Notre Dame, and the other a freshman at North- western. Donald B. Douglas tPrinceton 19141 manufactures Ouaker Oats. 1-le lives at 980 Green Bay Boad, Lake Forest, and has two children. Roderick Peattie, tChicago 1910, Harvard PhD 19141 is a professor at Ohio State Univer- sity, spent two years in the war in France, has numerous publications, and has taught or lectured at Williams, Northwestern, California, Clark, and Wisconsin, thus nobly upholding Peattie tradition. He has two sons and a daughter. Frank E. Selz tYale 19131 lives in Glencoe and has two children, a boy and a girl. He is in the General American Transportation Company at 135 S. La Salle Street. Ernest Wilfrid Puttkammer tPrinceton 1914, PhD Chicago 19171 is pro- fessor of Law at the University of Chicago and has taught many Harvard boys. He has one son and one daughter, both quite young. We have no news of Henry W. Barton or lohn Spry, although the Yale Directory of 1940 gives the 1atter's address at 70 Cedar Street. 1911 lulian Burnham CYale 19161, known to his friends as lulie, lives at Crystal Lake and is the business manager of E. Burnham, lnc. at 140 N. State Street. Eugene Schobinger tlllinois 19151 is a partner in the Lake States Engineering Company. His oldest son, Gene lr. is a freshman at DePauw, the second, Charles, a sophomore at Harvard School: and he has a younger daughter. Both boys are taller than their father, who used to be considered tally but times are changing. Arthur Leonard manufactures roofing paper at Wilmington, Illinois. He has one daughter. D. Harry Hammer maintains a discreet silence about his activities, which is more than he ever did at school. Bernard M. Douglas, Henry S. Churchill and Donovan Yeuell are lost -the first two somewhere in New York City. 1912 Arthur A. Burrows, Ex. 1912 tYale S 19151 lives in Lake Forest, is an insur- ance broker at the Insurance Exchange, and has two children. Henry Faurot, Ex. 1912, was at the Harvard School only in the early grades. He was gradu- ated from Lawrenceville in 1912 and is now vice president of the Western Felt Works, at 4115 Ogden Ave. He has two sons and a daughter. Monroe Heath tlllinois 19161, known as Monnie, is technical director of the Lilly Varnish Company in Indianapolis. He has two daughters, and lives at 5251 N. Delaware Ave., Indianapolis. Ernst Schmidt tWisconsin 19171 is unmarried, deals in real estate at 38 S. Dearborn, and is very active in the Lake Geneva Yacht PAGE 39 Club. He is also secretary of the lnland Yachting Association. We know nothing of loseph Rosenberg, who used to be a tennis star. 1913 Karl Baackes fWisconsin 19161 lives in the vicinity of the school at 4824 Dorchester Avenue, and has three daughters. He is a salesman. Francis R. Blossom Ex. 1913 CYale 19171 is an insurance broker, lives at 199 Lake Shore Drive, and has three children. Kenneth D. Clark tWisconsin 19171 returned to Chicago a few years ago after a long absence in the West, and manu- factures amusement devices at 222 E. Superior Street. He has one daughter, and two sons at school in the East. Harold Cudney CPennsylvania 19171 is President of Cudney 61 Co., packers. He lives at the Webster Hotel, and his four daughters keep him busy. Dorothy was at kindergarten and in the early grades at Harvard a few years ago. Prentiss French CWi1liams 19171, Harvard M.L.A. 19211, better known as Penny, lives all-year-round at Bay lsland, Sarasota, Fla., where, as a landscape architect, he improves on the beauties of nature, while his wife does fine residential architecture. That is what we call team-work. They have one small daughter. Frederic 1. Greene- baum tYale S 19161 is with the Roosevelt Coal Company at 1310 Altgeld Street, and lives in Highland Park. He has one son and one daughter. Irving Stanley Stone CYale S 19161 runs the Boston Store in Milwaukee. He has two boys. His cousin, Irving Stone, is also in the same business. Edward F. Swift CYale 19181 lives in Lake Forest and is executor of the Edward F. Swift estate. Morton Traer tChicago 19171 no longer has long blonde locks over his browg he is too highbrow. Morton is a salesman, has two daughters, and is now living in Chicago. lohn D. Warfield Ir. CPrinceton 19171 is in the Warfield Chocolate Company at 536 West 22nd Street, and lives in River Forest. He has two sons. His two nephews, Robert and Donald recently were graduated from Harvard. When we last heard of Harley Higbie fWis- consin 19171 he was in Detroit, married, and had two sons. Abraham S. Hart CMichigan 19171 is with Hart Schaffner G Marx in an executive position lper- haps president? He doesn't say1. He lives at 1718 S. Sheridan Road in Highland Park. His son Max is now learning the business from the bottom up. We know nothing of Harold Tearse tYale S 19161. Augustus Maxwell, Ex 1913, fWesleyan 19171 lives at Woodstock, lllinois, where he has a beau- tiful farm, Maxwellton. His two sons attend Todd School at Woodstock. He is the owner of the Maxwell Wallpaper Company at 1907 North Mendl Street. 1914 Roy Munger, Ex. 1914, CChicago 19181 lives in La Grange and has three sons. We are all familiar with his name as financial editor of the Daily News. lt was very good to hear from Howard Peabody, ex. 1914, Exeter 1916, who lives in Lake Forest, deals in real estate, and has two sons and two daugh- ters. Ierry Weber tYale 19171 is unmarried, and doesn't write letters, but we have tracked him down. He lives at the Sherwin Hotel, and is president of the H. L. and I. H. Weber Co., manufacturers of metal parts, at 565 West Washington. Charles Trego Prindeville tHarvard 19181 is in the cotton seed and soy bean mills of Swift 6: Co. He is a neighbor in Beverly Hills, and has one son and one daughter. Peter Iay Park Clllinois 19181 is very silent, as always, but we have discovered that he sells Fords in Rushville, lllinois, is married and has one child. Wellington Leavitt lives near the school, is unmarried. Albert Henry Veeder, Ex. 14 fYale 19181 has remained faithful to the South Side, at 4824 Woodlawn Avenue. He practices law in offices at 33 S. Clark Street. We expect his son Albert Ir. now in school, to make a mark for himself at school. PAGE 40 1915-1920 Eastland Disaster . . . Chicago Chapter of American Red Cross organized . . . Navy Pier Completed . . . Motor coaches started . . . Free lunches in saloons prohibited . . . America enters war . . . Pre-war per capita national debt, 511.96 . . . The Yanks Are Coming-'twill soon be over, over there . . . heat- less Mondays . . . Sugar 30c lb., butter 75c, eggs 95c dozen . . . lnfluenza epi- demic, 381 deaths in one day in Chicago . . . Prohibition . . . Harvard School boys sell S300,000 worth of Liberty bonds . . . Armistice . . . Post-war per capita national debt 5252.81 . . . Children's concerts started by Frederick Stock . . . Roosevelt Road widened . . . Harvard School boys support eighteen French orphans . . . First air mail arrives . . . Population 1915, 2,464,189 . . . First non- stop flight across Atlantic by Capt. Alcock . . . First dirigible, British R2, crossed Atlantic, 3130 miles in 108 hours 12 minutes . . . lt's a Long Long Trail A-Winding. 1915 No one that taught this class would ever have thought that it was going to produce four college professors, but one never can telll Arthur F. Abt CChicago 1918, Iohns Hopkins 19231 practices medicine with his father at 104 S. Michigan Avenue, teaches at medical school, lives at 4810 Kenwood Avenue, and has two children. Henry C. Bartholornay fHar- vard 19191 has two sons and lives at 620 Spruce Street, Winnetka. He sells insurance most of the time at 175 W. Iackson, but went to the South Sea lslands last summer. Richard Gudeman CHarvard 1919, Law 19211 is a lawyer, at 77 W. Washington St., is unmarried, and lives at 5401 Cornell Ave. Frank C. Hoyt CMlT 19191, who used to work at all hours in the old barn laboratory at Drexel Boulevard, and later won fellowships and scholar- ships for study abroad, is now associate professor of physics at the Univer- sity of Chicago. He has one son and one daughter, and lives at 1223 E. 57th Street. Lewis Linn McArthur CYale 19191 is vice president of the Northern Trust Company, unmarried, and lives at 230 E. Delaware. Beside banking, his major interest is music. Ronald B. Levinson CHarvard 19191 is professor of philosophy at the University of Maine, Orono, Maine. He has a son and two daughters. 1. Sanford Otis, Ex. 1915, lYale 19191 lives at Libertyville, and is an investment banker at the Central Republic Company at 209 S. LaSalle Street. He is not married. Richard F. Uhlmann CCornell 19191 has a son and two daughters, and lives in Highland Park. He deals in grain, elevator and export, at 141 W. lackson. Herbert Rycroft is on the Board of Trade and lives on the South Shore. William Penn Huleatt CCol. Sch. of Mines 19211, once an enfant terrible, has been for many years a professor of geology at the Colorado School of Mines, and carries on his field trips in the Rocky Mountains in the summer. We met him there unexpectedly a year ago. He is now engaged in mining and geological engineering, lives in Denver at 1905 Glencoe Street, and has two children. We have lost Hardin McLaughlin and Wallace Slaughter. Walter Mayer was badly gassed in the war. After a somewhat checkered career he has settled down to successful sheep ranch- ing. He is happily married and lives at 134 East de Vargas Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico. 1916 Robert Harvey Andrews, Ex. 1916 CWil1iams 19201 has retired to 645 S. Orange Grove Avenue, Pasadena. He has three sons. Frank T. Andrews, PAGE 41 EX. 1916, CWil1iams 19201 lives at The Chimneys, Winnetka, with his two daughters. He is a salesman for McO1ive and Andrews at 5 N. Wabash. Howard G. Andrews, Ex. 1916 fWes1eyan 19201 lives at 272 Poplar Street, Winnetka, has one son, and is in the lnsurance Exchange. Many will re- member his father, Dr. Frank T. Andrews, formerly school physician. Edwin G. Foreman CNorthwestern, Ex. 19201 lives in Glencoe and has two daughters. He is in the R.C.A. Manufacturing Co. at 445 Lake Shore Drive. Another insurance man is an old friend just re-discovered, Reginald Hammond CCor- nell 19201. He lives at 383 Park Avenue, Glencoe, and has a seventeen-year old son. Russell P. Kelley CYale 19201 is an investment banker with Kelley, Rich ci Co. at 135 S. LaSalle Street. He lives in Lake Forest, and has one son and one daughter. Charles H. Re Qua Ir., Ex. 1916 lWilliams 19201 has deserted art for metals in the American Smelting 6. Refining Co. at Whiting, lndiana, but he still has a place in Santa Fe. He lives at 210 E. Pearson Street and has two daughters. Emil D. Ries lChicago 19201 is a chemical engineer with Du Pont in Wilmington, Delaware, working as Assistant Direc- tor of Sales in the ammonia department. He has two daughters. He still bemoans the fact that he studied Greek. Bill Skinner will not answer letters, so we can't tell you about him. Charles 1. Greenebaum, EX. 1916 lYa1e S 1918, Law 19211 is Assistant Trust Officer at the Central Republic Trust Co., 134 S. LaSalle Street. He lives at 1027 Hyde Park Boulevard. 1917 Lester E. Frankenthal CYa1e 1920, Rush 19241 practices medicine as an obstetrician and gynecologist. He lives near the University at 5825 Black- stone Avenue and has two sons and a daughter. Thomas Maclay Hoyne lld, Ex. 1917, deserted us for University High but we like him anyway. He sells stocks and bonds, is married and has two sons and a daughter. He lives at 428 Elder Lane, in Winnetka. Otto Langbein CYale 19211 is Cm atttorney and lives at 7135 Euclid Avenue. Hamilton Loeb Clllinois 19211 has one son now at the school. He has another son and one daughter, lives at 4812 Kimbark, and sells insurance at 175 W. Iackson. Edward T. Walker CU. S. Naval Acad. 19211 lives at 584 Hill Avenue, Glen Ellyn, is Secretary and Treasurer of The Chicago Railway Equipment Co., and has four children. Donald Culross Peattie, Ex '17, CHarvard 19221 went to the Harvard School in his tender years, and we take no credit for his success in the literary world. Among his best known books is the beautiful story of Audubon, Singing in the Wilderness. His most recent book is Flowering Earth, part of which appeared in the Readers Digest. We discovered Mr. Peattie at Montecito, Santa Barbara, with a family of three sons. Harold P. Ullman, Percy of school days, lives at E503 N. Beverly Drive, Beverly Hills, California. Donald Burnham lives at 7857 South Shore Drive. 1918 Edward cle Coningh CPrinceton 1922, MIT 19251 lives at 23799 Stanford Road, Shaker Heights, Chio, and is chief engineer of the Mueller Electric Co., Cleveland. He has twins,-a girl and a boy, and another girl. Henry Fitch Baker lChicago 19221 is married, lives at Riverside, Connecticut, and is gen- eral sales manager for the Feroleum Products in New York. When we think of Eddie and Henry we also think of Locke Mackenzie CYale 1923, Columbia 19261,-now Dr. Locke, physician and gynecologist in New York City. He attends at French and St. Vincent's hospitals, is attending gynecologist to the department of Correction of the City of New York, and chairman of the Committee on Infant Mortality of the Medical Society of the County of New York. He has three sons, lohn, Colin, and Michael, lives at 47 E. 88th Street, and does deep sea fishing as a hobby. Sigmund Kunstadter tMichigan 19221 lives at 4919 Woodlawn Avenue, is a manufacturer at 508 S. Franklin Street, PAGE 42 and has two sons. Howard A. Moses CCornel1 19221 has recently left Chicago for California. lerome Nathan CMichigan 19221 lives at 613 N. Bexford Drive, Beverly Hills, California, is married, has one son six years old, and is in the fortunate position of being able to bask in the California sun without working. William Brown Pierce CDartmouth 19221 sells bonds at 135 S. LaSalle, is married, has two children, and lives at 1131 Linden Avenue, Highland Park. Robert E. Rosenthal, CChicago, Ex. 19221 is in the Pltofilm business, has one daughter, and raises prize-winning dogs on the side. limmy Weber CYale 19211 lives at 328 Sheridan Boad, Highland Park, is in the real estate business, and has two children, a girl and a boy. He says he no longer plays tennis- and is glad he isn't in the class of 1940. We have not heard from Chauncey Martyn, nor Allan C. Ashcraft. 1919 Iohn V. Frankenthal CYale 19261 is a general contractor at 160 N. LaSalle Street, is unmarried, and still lives in the old family home at 4825 Woodlawn. Lqwrence E. Abt CChicago 19241 is a broker at 9 S. LaSalle Street, lives in Highland Park, and has one son. He doesn't feel the slightest sympathy for teachers. tNever didl1 lohn B. Drake lr. tYale 19231, Assistant District Supervisor of the Pullman Co. for New York City, has offices in The Grand Central Terminal. He has two sons and a daughter. We have finally suc- ceeded in breaking the silence of Arthur Edwards CMIT 19231 who has the record of never having communicated with the school for 21 years. He lives at 46 Summit Boad, Wellesley, Massachusetts, is a mechanical engineer with lackson and Morland in Boston, was married in 1936, and has one very young son. lohn I. Heath Clllinois 19241, whom we know as lack, grows citrus fruit in De Land, Florida, and has one son, lohn lr. Leon Mandel fCornell 19231 is vice president and general manager of Mandel Brothers. He has one son and one daughter. Knox Munson, Ex. 1919, lives in Wilmette and is a grain broker on the Board of Trade. He is not married. Ernest Bycroft is also on the Board, Stuart H. Ctis CYale 19231 lives at Lake Forest, is mar- ried and has two children. He is in the investment business at 135 South La Salle Street. We have not heard from Daniel Fallow. BASKETBALL CHAMPIONS of 1935 Robert Starrett Iohn Goes William Desobry Iames Goldsmith Coach Fish Peter Iordan Milton McKay Wilbur Ierger Louis Miller Kenneth Becker PAGE 43 ir ' '1- 5.'1v' 11- 1 g-..,,z', 4 .l.. . ...A :Ju 't ' ,+s..9.-xsg!,e:'.-' , :.. - ' ', Q. ,- L - 1- 2VTkk.T'T?,g' - . , 'ggi .-ff? ne. .,.., ,.-.,.... 'ff .1g,:, ,..,K.,e- - . 1 affair flu. C ' . . Q .- .,.. - 1 -. ff .. ,-.4 ,-f- 1 -E -' ':.Av-uf . .... . , -,fr - ' -I ..--., ... .r . 'fbi x- A-2-f ' 3,431+ - ..,.f-h -,gf - . h .Lf '. 5 ,lv :gk r' v 'jV, gfw-. .' '7' nm . ,,. V fwx ..- N . a . ,.u . ...X v 4-5. ,x . ,Q I -,..':,.1, , -N, A vt 'Ll' 'f ' 'i: '1.QvF'f7 -. . . J 4 uf .. ..- -4 -.. wwf J aw, J.. 1 , , nl 01 TQELZ-E'3'.11fEf. :W -'11 . ... J, if i' 6 Y, . ...-- - -1... ,-3. . 21-1 . -1 , I 1.. ,A . J.: sit. . , u-'. .--v V ff -'nav . - 1 -:U .. . 4... ., , . if Y -. A Q 5 N , p V '- xai' L ,Qs ,,'- - X - r ff' --- 1 i-V ,vp--. ai si: ' Fir- '14 QL f -Q-L54.1?,? O-ft, Tf 'lf' A ....L. ., Nw.. .',.3. 2 V sus. -.. X.. .1. , -Y '-- F x ....:' 'Z' .. - ... -J4.1'ig'f1'.+'f 1 ':,.di?!6:...':'i ' 1' ' ' 1 .,:,w:.':. , ..1L,.a- .Ag ' pq, 'J . . 1 'lin ..,V. .,, 44... Juv- r, FY' X 1 ,kg ,.. .W '.--. - - ,. 1 , -E' - ,a:.H.- 4' 5 - 1 4-I Y .xr 1 H H VH R IJ ,RJ lCHUUl FUR B098 1355 . rt: r ' A - -N ,V un . J' ,igj ,Ig .Qi .-.G X fl - .g'l 1 QS-:kiln Q TT- 4-gk - .2-rut'-'-, 4' 7'4 V G , -, fi 'mf' SEV' ' ,, I.7 5+ ' f f- T-1-'f - 5' ' fx' i 1'v N A ' 5 uv, --4 , - V. 1 4! ,, Q ,, . , i. ,.1..L g ::'F!:4... -' N' - , - A ie ...Q .Lili Y -1- ,.-,f',x 'giihlb .f' 3' 'Qin ,,.v4fl-114 7' fl,- ' ' 2' .7 f::':'rg E' ,:. 1-1 .. 4 1 :ffm .ax asm:- .X if-wif ffm, f.-giaifii, -.lata ': 3f --f 2f'?7'- ' 3 -74-4-1, I7'?' i 'f'1':f .F5LI 'Lnfg a:.g.f'.TZi .. --rf' QQ' - .- -J.. ' L' ' L -,.g,4+-1-a2!:r:3 .t',,-. . -'iY,LMlW ,',,nF.LiE1,, l .-5, ,.,', gg- 'f,.gw,j X kj r- :g.p ig :rl -'L-.'..i.' ,4-' i N ,wma-., Mr. L '.'...:z ,, 'J -x.: K 'ASSE' ' 5 W - I QL, ff:-f ' 2-ll---A p-'1':f,:A':-.'.'f' -' ,H 1-' 1 .- -ZF? qv? , ,,,,3. ...Z 5.5. ' -:.r: rv' .f ..- 11, 'L :2'.',. . . .54 H --.-.- -A-. CLASS of 1920 Ctaken about 1917 or 19181 Frank Mandel Tracy L. Turner William Phillips Henry Felsenthal Ernest Robson Woodward Fellows Billings McArthur Spencer Crilly Gard Collins Arthur Lanski Sidney Trude Joseph L. Block Kimball Morsrnan Irving Stone Balduin Von Herft Iohn Grabfield 1920-1925 Population 2,701,705 . . . Harding and Coolidge nominated at Coliseum . . . Edith Rockefeller McCormick gave 105 acres west of Riverside for zoologi- cal park . . . Construction started on new Union Station costing 80 million . . . New State Constitution defeated . . . Mundelein created cardinal . . . Dawes Reparation Plan agreed upon . . . Harding dies . . . Coolidge president . . . WMAQ started broadcasting . . . lazz age . . . First stupendous movie, with Lillian Gish in Orphans of the Storm . . . Yes, We Have No Bananas . . . lt Ain't Gonna Rain No More. 1920 Some classes stand out for years in the memory of their teachers, and 1920 is one of these. And, when we wrote to them last summer, they all answered promptly and cordially. Almost all of you get A-l-, which is quite natural. fOr is it?l Ioseph L. Block CCornell 19221. as nice as ever, has brought us loe lr., half-pint size, but resembling his father in many respects. Big loe is Execu- tive Vice President of the lnland Steel Company in charge of sales, and Little loe is a freshman at Harvard School. Clarence L. Coleman CPrinceton 19241, as refreshing as ever tor are there too many syllables in the word?l lives at 828 Bluff Street, Glencoe, deals in real estate at 33 N. LaSalle, and has a son and two daughters. Gard M. Collins tChicago 19241 has been with General Outdoor Advertising at 555 N. Kedzie since he left college. He lives PAGE 44 at 247 Church Road, Winnetka and is married. Lathan A. Crandall CChicago 19251 was married in 1928, and has recently left Chicago to take the position of Professor and Head of Department of Physiology at the University of Ten- nessee College of Medicine. lohn G. Grabfield 1MlT 19241 lives in Cincinnati, was married in 1936, and manufactures photographic equipment. Too bad we have to flunk Henry Kohn CHarvard 19241. We never had a chance to do so in school. But we happen to know that Henry is married, lives at 5444 Eastview Park, and is a lawyer at 77 W. Washington St. Arthur Lanski CNorthwestern 19241 is a successful business man dealing in petroleum and real estate at 176 W. Adams. He is married and lives not far from the school at 5056 Woodlawn Avenue. Frank E. Mandel CDartmouth 19241 sells insurance at 175 W. Iackson, is married, and lives at 1300 North State Park- way. Eugene Kimball Morsman CAmherst 19241 liked Amherst so well that he stayed there as Curator of books at the Converse Memorial Library. He travels during his vacations and recently returned from South America. He is one of the eligible bachelors. Byron C. Munson is, we think, our only motion picture representative in Hollywood, although we don't know whether he makes them, is in them, or just sweeps out the lot. Frederic G. Pick CYale 19241 lives at 120 Hawthorn Avenue, Glencoe, and sells securities at 120 S. LaSalle Street. He has one son and one daughter. William Phillips CChicago 19241 is in the real estate business with Swan and Lorish, lives at 9857 S. Damen Avenue, and has three sons-including a lively pair of twins. Ernest Mack Robson CAmherst 19241 is a writer at 81 Horatio Street, New York City, and spends his winters trapping in the Catskills,-a regular Daniel Boone. tWe shall expect at least a coonskin cap.1 After a silence of many years, Robert W. Rogers CMIT 19261 has sent us news of himself. He has been in a Seattle shipyard, has built yachts, shipped to Alaska, serviced steam power plants, and is now an industrial sales engineer for Gulf Oil in Boston. He has two daughters, and lives at Nayatt Road, Barrington, Rhode Island. Many men remember with great affection his fine father, Daniel W. Rogers, who taught many years at the school. William Redfield CCornel1, Babson1 lives at the Ambassador when in Chicago. Bill is a hard-working man, spends half the year at Miami Beach, but has offices at 120 South La Salle Street. Henry B. Steele CDartmouth 19241 sells wholesale groceries with Steele Wedeles, lives at 417 Barry Avenue, and has one daughter. Morgan P. Underwood is en- gaged in estate management, lives at 1126 East 48th Street, and is a frequent visitor at school where young Morgan is making a name for himself. Horace Wetmore won't write, so we can't give you news of him. 1921 Charles Alexander Brassert, Ex. 1921, 1Northwestern 19251 was for many years with Inland Steel, but now is in business with his father, H. A. Brassert G Co., engineers and contractors at 310 S. Michigan Avenue. He has three boys and we hope he will soon move south as he threatens to. Leigh Block fChicago 19251 is vice president of the purchasing department of Inland Steel, is married, and lives at 3100 North Sheridan Road. William Eisendrath 1Harvard 19251 lives at 442 Wellington, is married, and has two daughters. He is a tanner. Henry Felsenthal CMichigan 19241 lnot so little now,-around1 came to root for Harvard at the Latin football game one cold day last fall. He has one son, lives at 5233 Greenwood Avenue, and imports linens. Gerald Magner is at 175 W. lackson, sells insurance, is not married, and lives at 5442 Hyde Park Boulevard. Billings McArthur, EX. 1921 1Yale 19251 is super- visor of the stock control division of the Commonwealth Edison Company. He was married in 1927, lives at 548 Oakdale Avenue, and has a son, Peter, and a daughter, Anne. Aubrey Dent Piggott Clllinois 19251 lives at 6759 PAGE 45 Oglesby Avenue and is the manager of the Life Department of the lnsurance Brokerage Company. We have not heard from Wallace Clark. Sidney Trude is a broker in food materials and is located in Benton Harbor, Michigan. He is not married. 1922 This is another outstanding class, and, as always, faithful in doing what was asked. We were glad to reach an old friend in Seward Covert lChicago 19261, who is in the advertising business at 2700 Terminal Tower, Cleveland, is married, lives at 2842 Lee Road, Shaker Heights, and has two sons. William MCC. Drake is a farmer at Elkhart, Logan City, lllinois. Henry Hartman lDartmouth 19261, after traveling all over the globe, settled down at 630 Warner Avenue, Los Angeles, was married in 1938, and has one very new child. Thomas Dodd Healy lChicago 1926, Law 19291 is a lawyer, lives at 6910 Oglesby Avenue, and has one daughter. M. Lewis Goodkind lWilliams 19261 is an advertiser,-Goodkind 6: Morgan, 919 N. Michigan Ave. He lives far out in the sticks at 12 Country Lane, Northbrook, and has two young children, Anne and Kenneth. Herbert Levy lWisconsin 19261 lives at 5311 Cornell Avenue, has one daughter, and is in the manufacturing business. Richard M. Loewenstein lYale 19261 deals in real estate at 160 N. LaSalle, has one son, and has a most interesting house in the modern manner far out in Highland Park, where the pheasants and partridges feed in his front yard. Richard Mandel CDartmouth 19261 is an industrial designer with Donald Deskey at 630 Fifth Avenue, New York. He designs glassware, furniture, auto bodies, fabrics, and does interior design and architecture. He has had much of his work at the New York World's Fair. His modernistic home is at West Kisco and he has two sons. Frederick Roe CYale 19261 is an investment coun- sel on LaSalle Street, and is not married. Edwin O. Robson lYale 19261 has just started a paint and varnish company at Waukegan. He lives at 1440 Tower Road, Winnetka, and has two sons, the spit and image of himself and Ernie lincluding the red hair and smile1. Gardner Stern lYale 19261 is one of the presiding genii of Stop and Shop: so sometimes when we shop, we stop to see him. His four boys are like an ascending staircase, and go to Latin School. He lives at 41 E. Burton Place. Robert E. Straus lWisconsin 19261, Big Bob, is the vice president of the American National Bank. He was married a few years ago, lives at 1209 Astor Street, and has recently become the father of a daughter. Frederick W. Straus lHarvard 19261 lives at 442 Wellington Avenue, is married and has three daughters. He sells securities at 135 S. LaSalle Street. lack L. Strauss CDartmouth 19261 lives at 150 S. Spalding Drive, Beverly Hills, California, sells real estate, and has one son. Tracy Lay Turner, Ex. 1922 lCornell 19261 is a stockbroker with S. B. Chapin CS Company. He has one son. We have completely lost Marshall Boyd CMichigan 19261. 1923 This is a class of which we have more or less lost trackp missing members please take notice: Edward Adler, Henry Denninger, Howard Hammond, Adolph Samuels, Wm. Cuthbertson, Paul Robinson. Edward Adler, we hear is in California. Courtenay Barber, Ex. 1923, lCor- nell l9281 is still a near neighbor at 4741 Kimbark Avenue. He is a life under- writer at 120 S. LaSalle Street, and is not married. Harold Baum lYale 19271 is not married. He is the advertising manager of the Silberman Fur Corpora- tion and lives at 5125 Drexel Boulevard. Waid B. Cressy, after graduating from Yale in 1928, attended lohn Marshall Law School and was admitted PAGE 46 to the bar in 1932. Since 1930, however, he has been manager of the Standard Oil Company in Aurora. He is married and has one small son. Edward Gudeman CHarvard 19271 is an executive in the merchandising department of Sears, Roebuck 61 Co. He is married, lives at 978 Euclid Avenue, Win- netka, and has two sons. William Hirsch tPrinceton 19271 has recently been married again and now lives in California. Ioseph Hasterlik is in the Best Brewing Co., Chicago, lives at 6834 Constance Avenue, and is not married. Louis Kohn CChicago 1927, Harvard Law1 is an attorney, unmarried, and lives with his parents at 5120 S. Kenwood. lohn E. Mansure, Ex. 1923, traveled in Europe instead of going to college, and since then has commuted between Philadelphia and Chicago for his business, E. L. Mansure 6. Co., 1601 S. Indiana Avenue CThe old Harvard School was just around the corner1. They say he has an interesting home in Philadelphia,-upside down, or something of the sort, called Krazy 1-louse. Stanton Meyer CMichigan 19271 is with the Meyer Both Agency and Commercial Art School. He is married and has two daughters. Gerald Morava has a young son, lay, now in the school and has just moved to Palos Park. Robert lay Wolff CEX. 19231 CYa1e 19271 is an artist, and has had paintings and sculpture in Art Institute exhibitions. Besides this he is an instructor in art at 53 Wacker Drive. 1924 Robert Bender CChicago 19281 manufacturersgreetingcardsat 1104 S. Wabash, is married, has one daughter, and lives on Galusha Road, Warrenville, lllinois. Walter S. Guthman CYale 1928 PhD Chicago 19321 is a chemist at 732 Federal Street, and lives with his parents at 5208 Ingleside Avenue. We shall never forget his mother's Christmas cookies. B. E. Bensinger CYale 19281 managed the Brunswick Balke Company at 623 S. Wabash, is married, and has two children. He lives at 1421 Astor Street. Robert Heinsimer CMichigan 19281 is a public accountant at 360 N. Michigan Ave. and unmarried. He lives at 1660 Hyde Park Boulevard. Our able class secretary, Stuart Hertz CChicago 19271 is a lawyer, lives at 926 Hyde Park Boulevard, and has recently become the father of a little girl. lohn Phelps Howland CHarvard 19281 is in the Commercial National Bank of New York, and by the time this goes to print, he will be a married man. Since the Howards moved to Buffalo, we have more or less lost track of them, so it was a pleasure to receive a long letter from Edward Douglas Howard CWilliams 19281 written in his own peculiar and familiar style of handwriting. We learned that he is an investment banker at 1105 Walbridge Building, and has two sons and a daughterp a picture shows that they have the same abundant locks as Doug. loseph S. Lederer CWharton 19281 is in the business of textile converting lwhatever that is1. He is not married and lives at the Commonwealth Hotel. lames 1. Loeb, after a brilliant career at Dartmouth 119281 with Phi Beta Kappa honors, took his doctor's degree at Northwestern, traveled in France and Spain, and teaches romance languages in New York. He is married and has one young child. Edward 1. Loewenthal CWisconsin 19281 is vice president of the Schwarz Paper Company, is married and has two daughters. He lives at 257 Moraine Road, Highland Park. Adolph Moses CWisconsin 19281 recently dropped in to see us. He is an attorney at law, has two children, a boy and a girl, and lives at 5000 Cornell Ave. He also devotes part of his time to running a boys' camp in northern Wisconsin. Seymour Oppenheimer llohns Hopkins 19271 is in the Casing Company of the same name. He lives at 2430 Lake View Avenue and has three children, a boy and two girls. Herbert Salzman CMichigan 1928, Chicago CLaw1 19311 is a lawyer at 120 S. La Salle Street. He was married in 1937 and lives at 5522 Cornell Avenue. Leo Schoenbrun CMIT 19281 is an architect and interior decorator. He is married, lives at 1755 E. 55th Street, and has two children, a girl and a boy. Edward M. Tourtelot lr. fCornell 1929, 19311 had a brilliant PAGE 47 career at college and returned to Chicago to he an architect. He has offices at lO4 So. Michigan Avenue, lives in Evanston, and has two children. Herman Kirchheimer iChicago l929J is in the Kirchheimer Paper Company like all the others ot the same name who were in the school. Charles W. Klinetop has a lively little Charles in sixth grade at the Harvard School. A GROUP AT 4651 DREXEL IN 1912 Standing on Porch and Seated on Hail: Richard Mayer, E. Booth. Zachary Davis, Karl Baackes, Robert Gasche, Harold Cudney, Morton Traer, Iohn D. Warfield, M. K, Mitchell, Frank Constans, i, Ierry Weber, Harley Hiqbie, Stanley Stone, Charles Carlisle, lack Lowitz, Charles Schwab. -7. Edwin Foreman. Center Group on Steps: limmy Weber, 'lreqo Prindeville, Richard Uhlmcmn. Harold Daube. Arthur Abt, Prentiss French. A. S. Hart, Richard Gudeman. Front Row: Teddy Goodkind, Charley Greenebaum, --2, Bill Huleatt, Lewis L. McArthur, Henry Bartholomay, I. I. Scholslnqer, Conrad de Coninqh, C. E. Pence, Junior Meagher, Ed. Weil, Doc Frew. P A G E 4 8 1925-1930 Population 3,096,409. Tribune Tower completed . . . Michigan Avenue Bridge opened . . . Soldier Field dedicated . . . Daylight saving . . . Wacker Drive opened . . . Illinois Central electrified . . . Buckingham Fountain . . . Merchandise Mart started . . . Lindbergh Transatlantic flight . . . October 23, 1927, Iohn I. Schobinger died, principal since 1875 . . . Municipal airport . . . Stevens Hotel . . . First talkie, A1 lolson in the Singing Fool . . . Shedd Aquarium . . . Adler Planetarium . . . New Civic Opera House opened with Aida . . . Century of Progress organized . . . Market crash . . . Cross word puzzle craze. 1925 Who would have thought that quiet Billy Chon would be on the staff of the New Yorker Magazine? But that is what they tell us, and they say he is a big shot on the editorial staff. The class secretary, Ioseph L. Eisendrath 1Chicago 19291 has supplied us with most of the information about the class of 1925. As for loe himself, he is married, has two boys, and manufactures coin banks and other specialties for bank advertising, in the Banthrico Com- pany at 560 W. Lake Street. lerome S. Freshman CDartmouth 19291 lives at the Ambassador Hotel, of which he is the manager. He is not married. We have had fine letters from Iohn Hertz Ir., from New York, but the trouble is he objects to dry facts and statistics about business, college, etc. He is not married, although we don't know how the girls have been able to resist him. Someone told us he is in the advertising business, but we are sure that is only a screen for a mysterious life-perhaps he really runs a night club. lack Hirsch CMichigan 19291 and Lee Kulp CWisconsin 19291 should really be in business together. lack could warm you up with the Automatic Burner Corporation, and Lee could cool you with the Empire Cooler Service. Lee is married, lives at 534 Stratford Place, and has one daughter. Richard Magner lives at 5345 Hyde Park Boulevard, sells insurance with Gerald at 175 W. Iackson, and is married. Richard A. Meyer CMichigan 19291 still lives at 5490 South Shore Drive, and manages chain stores for men's clothing. Alex Nast tMichigan 19291 belongs to our Los Angeles group and lives at 416 Comstock Ave. He manufactures electric wires, was married in 1936, and has one son. Fuller Rothschild 1Ya1e ex 19291 is a stockbroker at 105 W. Adams Street. Nat C. Vveinfeld lChicago 19291 is an insurance broker, was married the year he graduated, lives at 9255 Claremont Avenue, and has two daughters. Foster Turner CChicago 19291 manages the Southmoor Hotel. He has one daughter. We have no news of Louis Kohn. 1926 William D. Berger CMichigan 19301 is with the Oppenheimer Casing Com- pany and unmarried. Roy Farland Clientucky 19301 is an attorney at 134 S. LaSalle Street and William Foster tlllinois 19301 is with the Van Dyke lndus- tries. Iames Frey fPennsy1vania 19301 is with the General American Trans- port Company in East Chicago, lives at 504 Barry Avenue, is married, and has one son, William. 1. W. Gimbel lr. llpennsylvania 19301 was married in 1938, lives on 222 E. Chestnut, and has one very young son. He is secretary- treasurer of the Pacific and Atlantic Shippers Association at 222 W Adams. Ierome Hasterlik CChicago 19301 is with the Best Brewing Company and lives at 6834 S. Constance Avenue. Iohn Karger CAmherst and Harvard 19301 lives PAGE 49 at 1192 Park Avenue, New York and is a member of the New York Stock Exchange. His offices are at 11 Wall Street. Robert C. Levis CChicago, Ex. 19301 is with Morris and Company and lives at 1420 E. 85th Street. Fred Mandel has gained fame among Harvard's young fry by purchasing the Detroit Lions. Fred is a director of Mandel Brothers is married and has one son. He studied at the University of Grenoble France. Melvin Pfaelzer CChi- cago Ex. 19301 is in the Bowers Printing lnk Co. He was married in 1931, lives at 5009 Greenwood, and has two daughters. Lawrence Schnadig CPenn- sylvania l9301 is with the Pullman Couch Company at 3739 S. Ashland Ave. He was married in 1935, and, like Melvin, has two girls. These South Side boys should do better for Harvard. Arthur Spiegel fDartmouth 19311 is an executive of Walter Field CS Co. He was married in 1937 and he lives in Winnetka. Albert Stein tPennsylvania 19301 is with Lambert's on North Michi- gan Avenue. We have had many pleasant visits with our class secretary, William G. Swartchild fDartmouth 19331, who, after winning Phi Beta Kappa and other honors, returned to Chicago and entered the wholesale jewelry business at 29 East Madison. He lives at 442 Wellington, and has one lively little son who resembles his father. 1927 Henry Bosch lives in Springfield, Ohio, where he is with the International Steel Wool Corporation. ln a former almuni bulletin Henry scorned the idea of marriage, but he fell in 1931. He has one daughter. Donald Chilton Craig is in Community Motors lnc. and lives at 2373 E. 70th Street. We haven't seen him for a long time, so we don't know whether he still qualifies as the best dressed man of Harvard. He was married in 1938. Ward Hamilton tlllinois 19311, who has kindly acted as secretary for the class, is in the steel products manufacturing business, is married, lives at 7839 Colfax, and has one son. Lewis E. Howard Ir. fCornell 19311 is an aircraft engineer with the Bell Aircraft Corporation in Buffalo, where he lives at 675 Delaware Ave. His mind is so much on planes that he has had no time for the hazardous flights of marriage. Charles E. Kahlke, Ex. 1927 fArmour1 is our second aircraft engineer. He lives in Baltimore at 525 Wyanoke Avenue, and was married in 1934. Hamilton Moses CAmherst 19311 is a lawyer at 231 S. LaSalle Street. He was married in 1937. William L. O'Connel lr. CChicago Ex. 19311 still lives at 4418 Drexel, is not married, and works in the bond department of the state auditor's offices. William M. Schuyler CDartmouth 19311 won Phi Beta Kappa, studied in France, took his doctor's degree in Chicago in 1938, and is instructor in Romance languages at Notre Dame University. He has a three-year old son and a recent daughter. lohn S. Wineman lives at 310 Cary Avenue, Highland Park, is married and has two sons, and is a whiz at insurance, they tell us. Henry Phelps Howland CChicago 19311 is in a bank in New York. Luman E. Williams CAlabama 19311 is a Fidelity and Surety underwriter, lives at 4278 Hazel Avenue, and is married. We have no news of Thomas Skillman, Iohn Hardin, Francis C-itsham, nor Elmore Labarthe. Duane Cressy, ex '27 CWisconsin 19311 is married, has one son, and lives at 6531 Kimbark Avenue. 1928 After hiding for a long time in the wilds of Cleveland, Alan Graff fCornell 19321 revealed himself as an industrial chemical manufacturer at 2200 Scran- ton Road, Cleveland. He is not married. Calvin Leavitt fChicago 19321 is the next bachelor, engaged in packing at Swifts'. Our lone composer of popu- lar music is lohn lacob Loeb who left us in sixth grade. He has one son. PAGE 50 Melverne Maegerlein tNorthwestern 1929 and Alabama 19301 is a brewmaster at the Aurora Brewing Company. His little daughter is three years old. 1-le still follows fires, but hasn't had much luck lately. He gives us news of Bob Cone CAlabama 19321, who is now in Oil City, Pennsylvania, with Austin 6. Co., contractors, and married an Alabama girl a year ago. Clarence McCarthy CHarvard 19321 is with Marshall Field G Co., and lives at 210 Pearson Street. You should see Harold Kirchheimer, who once was a slender and delicate lad. Making paper agrees with him. Henry Stresenreuter tNorthwestern1 was married in 1932 and has one daughter. He is in the Labor Efficiency Department of Swifts', and lives at 9157 S. Leavitt Avenue. Iames H. Swartchild CDartmouth 19321 is in the wholesale jewelry business with Billy, Bobby, and the two Swartchild seniors. He was married in 1934 and has one daughter and one son. Robert Swartchild CAlabama 19321 is unmarried. Iulius Ereehling is an executive at the Boston Store. We have made vain efforts to elicit replies from Robert Vierling lChicago 19321 and Frank Warren tCornel1 19321. tSorry we have to flunk them1. Both are married and each had one daughter, according to the last news we had. Frank lives at 5318 Woodlawn Avenue, and Bob at 6720 S. Chappell. lack Wieland is married also and lives on the north side. loseph C. Meyer CYa1e 1932, Chicago 19351 is now Dr. Meyer, practicing at 104 S. Michigan Avenue. We have no news of Louis K. Brennan. Richard Eulghum CNorth Carolina 19321 specialized in engineering and chemistry and is now a chemist with Standard Oil in Whiting, lndiana. He lives at 8921 Kenwood Avenue. 1929 Walter Baer CMichigan 19331 was married soon after graduation and has one son. He lives at 5100 Ellis Avenue. He manufactures grinding wheels and also manages real estate. Our efficient secretary, Iohn E. Coleman CDartmouth1 has obtained news of almost everyone in the class. lohnnie himself is a broker on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange at 110 N. Franklin Street. He has three children, including a set of twins. William Cahn tPrinceton 19331 is with A. G. Becker, Investments, New York, lives on Lexington Avenue and has one son. David Davis llllinois 19301 dropped in at school not long ago on his way to his home at 1415 Bradbury Road, San Marino, California. He is married. Iohn G. Eaton is a banker in Holland, Michigan. His home address is Oakcroft at Waukazoo, Holland. Guy Ederheimer CYale 19331 lives at the Shoreland, is unmarried ancl sells electrical supplies. Stanley Goodfriend tlllinois 1933, Chicago Law 19351 is a lawyer at 10 S. La Salle Streetg and Edgar Goldsmith CChicago 19331 a Public Relations Counsellor at 7 S. Dearborn. Edgar was married in 1937. We last heard of William Gillies CDartmouth 19331 at the time of his marriage about a year ago. He is in the steel business in Youngs- town, Ohio. Walter A. Graff, EX. 1929, CVirginia1 now lives at 212 Valley View Drive, Medford, Oregon. He is in the timber business. He was married in 1937 and has one son. Arthur G. Levy tChicago 19331 is in the family real estate business at 110 S. Dearborn Street. He was married in 1935 and lives at 840 E. 51st Street. William P. McCarthy CA1abama 19331 is in the confectionery business, and married. He lives at 1724 E. 54th Street. Ioseph G. Morseman CYa1e 19341 lives in New York, has a young son, Ioseph G. Ir., and is an auditor for the National Lead Company at 111 Broadway. Sol de Lee CChicago 19341 is following in the footsteps of his illustrious uncle. He interned at Michael Reese in 1938, at Lying-ln in 1939, and is now a resident physician at the Chicago Maternity Center. Edward Sigman tChicago 19331 is a lawyer and lives at Highland Park. We have lost track of our two Canadians, George Pearson and Herbert G. P. Deans. August I. Kreuzkamp Ex. 1929, CMIT 19331 is at 148-45 87th Road, lamaica, L.l., New York. We have not heard from Howard loseph tCorne11 19331. PAGE 51 CLASS oi 1932 Wm. H. Weaver Byron L. Sykes, Ir. Thos. Wm. MacDougal Adam Schafi Louis C. Braudy, Ir. Lawrence Drumheller Howard G. Gottschalk Edward Loeb I. Richard Fulqhum Heaton H. Sykes Thomas H. Iordcm Ellis K. Brown Victor H. Herzog 1930-1935 Population 3,376,438. Board of Trade building completed . . . Lindbergh beacon . . . Old Field Museum restored as Bosenwald Museum . . . Twenty millionth Ford appears, Model A . . . Chicago Historical Society moved to new building in Lincoln Park . . . Cermak shot . . . Century of Progress opened . . . Airport leased . . . Stockyards fire . . . hottest day in Chicago, Iuly 24, 1933, 104.8 . . . Lightest annual rainfall, 22.7 in .... Railroads clipped 8 hours from time, Chicago-Los Angeles . . . Technicolor . . . Walt Disney . . . Three Little Pigs . . . New Post office . . . New Deal . . . Banks closed . . . Happy Days Are Here Again. FLEDGELlNGSfClasses of 1930-1935 These are just trying out their wings. We shall give them more space in our next alumni bulletin, when they have flown farther. These brief notes will serve as an address list, the last one given being the home address, if known. 1930 Rex Adcock CNorthwesternl Lawyer, 208 S. La Salle. Stewart Anderson CDartmouth 1934, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy M.A. 19391 studied abroad 35-36. Worked 36-37. Awaiting appointment in foreign diplomatic service. 6621 S. Harvard Avenue. Maurice Barrie CChicago l934, Law 1937? Lawyer: 5337 Hyde Park Blvd. Bruce Carson CU.S. Naval Academy 1935? has been an airplane pilot: now chief engineer, National Machine Works, 1559 N. Sheffield: 5415 Hyde Park Blvd. PAGE 52 Myron Eichengreen CMichigan-Northwestern1 lnland Steel: 1642 E. 56th Street. Herbert S. Freehling CMichigan 19341 Attorney: 6820 Crandon. Willard M. Freehling CMichigan 19341 Stockbroker: 5000 East End. Bertrand Goldberg CHarvard, Armour Tech: Bauhaus, Berlin1 Architect, 820 N. Michigan, 1755 E. 55th Street. Says modern architecture is tun, but lite is struggle-struggle-struggle. Irvin H. Hartman CDartmouth 19341 Retail furniture executive, 28 E. lackson: Windermere. Philip G. Hertz Clllinois 19341 Automatic Canteen Co. ot America: 1020 E. 49th St. Henry loseph tlllinois 19341 Printing: 1642 E. 56th St. Robert S. Karger CArizona1 Stockbroker, Rothschild 6: Co.: 179 Lake Shore Drive. Edwin S. Kirchheimer tAlabama1 Kirchheimer Paper Company: married 1938: The Blackwood, 5200 Blackstone Ave. Herbert Kirchheimer, Ex. 1930: married: Kirchheimer Paper Company. Leonard Klein CHarvard 19341 Merchant, L. Klein ci Co.: 5825 Blackstone. Henry F. Leopold: Real estate and disinfectants: married: one girl: 7356 S. Shore Drive. Frank Nahser CChicago 19341 Advertising: 919 N. Michigan: married: one girl. Richard Cox Northup CCarleton 19351 Oil geologist: 214 Avenida Cortez, La lolla, California. William W. McRoy tMichigan 19341 Youngstown Sheet Tube: married: one son: 8911 S. Harper. Robert S. Redfield CAlabarna 1934, Medical 19371 Lieutenant-Active duty U.S. Army, Commanding CCC Camp, Mt. Pleasant, Utah: married 1939. Daniel M. Schuyler CDartmouth 19341 Phi Beta Kappa CNorthwestern Law 19371 Lawyer: married: one son: 931 Michigan Avenue, Evanston. Charles H. Stephenson CHarvard 1930-31, Minnesota 19341 Field Representative North Central Association ot Electrical lndustries. Married in 1938: 1430 W. 32nd Street, Minneapolis. Aubrey L. Sykes CChicago 19351 Grain broker: 4823 Kenwood. Robert C. Turner: Channell Agencies: married: Santa Barbara. Harold Sessions has not been heard from. Warren Wildrick CU.S. Military Academy 19351 Lieutenant in the U.S. Army: now stationed at Fort Benning, Ga. David Weil, Ex. '30 1Harvard 1934, Law 19351 Cromwell Paper Co.: has a column in the lournal ot Commerce: the Shoreland. 1931 Arthur Baum CChicago 19351 Secretary ot the class: Advertising: Reliance Mtg. Co.: 5234 Dorchester Avenue. William Eichengreen, lnland Steel, Sales promotion: 1642 East 56th Street. Gustav H. Freund 10berlin Ex. 19351 Salesman, Visking Corporation: 5009 Ellis Avenue. Paul D. Gardner C Co11ege ot Hard Knocks, says Paul.1 Savannah, Georgia, Southern Home lrnprovement Co., rooting and siding. Fred N. Gundrum CChicago1 Treasurer, Stewart Mowry Co., 3218 S. Shields: married, one girl: 2373 E. 70th. Allan Kline CDartmouth 19351 Traveling Mgr., Kline Bros. tchain stores1: 132 W. 31st St., N.Y. Alexander Gillis Kehoe, Ex. 31 CChicago 19361 Broker: railroad ties and lumber: 1035 E. 49th. 1We hear Alec has just lett for the east.1 David Levin CChicago 19351 Printing Manufacture, 633 Plymouth Court: 4710 Ellis Avenue. Robert Macdonald CKenyon 19351 Lawyer, just married: 1434 N. Sedgwick. Arthur Reinhold Clllinois 19351 Marshall Rich CHobart 19351 Stockbroker, 1411 N. State. PAGE 53 Avril: vt--,V .4133-1' .25-i'2 f,g -,sv-f - A .2? '-few.-. T f ! K 'w :mem -1---rr rf' Q,-35:75 .1 :-3.f... . -- Zzr... .7 Y If FEL'-- --S-GEM wr-A g f-q.:-35'?9g2S1v'+.2i-5?? ... . Sli' .Ms tn i,.'.L2g.,4 T' .J.:, H --'TT'2fr.-.rr-'-'Fin - EQ'-w ' , - g:,5.ig+?zg:z: gm F .. 2:2 5?-T. - '-Q-.f--Q - ..-Y.-QQ-on . T12-f- Q2 -P 1 :fe Fl ' 35-' ming' 1 73 E1 'T'IT-L31 agp Qi 6 Miva-:, yiu A T1 fd-se ya - 1 ' ' Lf ,'1':1..'- 5:-v z r . xv: .A I .1 1: -11-1f's4 'wff M22- ,fg1ff,,f2'ug- 3 4 f135j+:-is-ef:ggs5i'gf., ac H- ., .2 :v.':.g:,'.'Z: -1 ' u-f11- T 1' ' in-4. -ET T: Fig: 5. .-..-.-XR., - -nz , .Q-I 5 ' .1 L- -xi: .ii 'fzff' - -. , .ui -..,. - A1-if? f. 5-1 ae: , fr: I,'lff1'5'-fiffffii ,N Ji. -l. -. . ..- -... ,-I Y V fp' fi.i5 r75 ri' if-.jzyff 5 1 ,xi . J X-vt--fl kv Q.. 5 -,Y..:,f-, . A -f ,,. .--T-:wa :- 1.,, -,.-' '. . r.. 1. .. .. - - Ylggwgl- 3, V-. - 4 -iz-.N axuac .. 452' 171.3 -Wild'-'f 171 3-T. fi:-37' 'Fri' -7 'ti 'T -, 'I YJ- V rf r.. 113 it -6-fr 5 -'T-:lr-4-3-fvgf ' -..V -Q-4..w f - --fgq,-'gL,',- gf, . . . . I' , .s1.' ' g,.-:-.-z-fgw.:::Q- wg ' .iT-f ji : . ...7' .6 if-Nr: T '. ' Q ' '?. f ' : F 1 . --..-.--. . .. ,-,A 1.3- . ,..Z' '7 : -. . . .V - ,sn , ,f -4, .-.,--,L 1, 1 1 -- . 1 w 'V g.g.- Q , 'L'-.zjf , , V414 , .11 'r-+F.eL4,f2e 1f -F :ww-:M-pw f -Q ,J I. hh: . r' 1 ,: 1' L. ,f f' .:. ,.,. . . ,. 5- ,gf .- . :ff z N ' '. .-ffizzfwf Vi : '. . .f T fic.. if - . - 2 - .- .gg-P-' 'J .: f,f1,, 157. 55,15 .4 ,JT '4..5.,,i...Y ' - 1 .'.--b. -'11 .:-' r' : . ' ' M T.. . 1 ' r: J ' A -fx Ar:--114-M' J -75 - -- -T- - .--, . KW, ' ' Zffl -,jf 1, .' .X f'!'-' ' ' f.- , .' .lf ,s 2- -f' 7' -N --- f. ,:, ' , .. .4 V' . 4 '-1 '-- -I-' -- ,,.' -z..'., - ','-g ss., ', ,,,,. ., .V :. '. ,L- -- 4Ya.f-.,,. '?:..AT' -f , ., igjf - 1 - k -QI 2 ' x.,0. K ' '. . .. 1:.,. -V-, ,+L -- Y tfiizg, . Y 7 'T , .If ,. :.'.. .L , 33.1 il.. -.,j3' ,ii f ...1 'xv ,-.!.:. ' .'. ... A -1-l 4-' ' ,- 0-A11 ff 1-: lf-Y 3 weij-1.21 Q-Laf. :Q . , -ff? f 2-If f 'iv ' , - ,,y. s5, Hi, . -i f .1 Vg: Q., -nfj ' 3 1 -- ,yr 'J TA,,?'L1E- 1, .704 ' I I f.'l',..' ' ' .Yff . 3, fi I ,- . i - ,, ' ,i -. ' QT- -- 1A , sv, :. I 43. ' ' A ' 27 .,,, 4x.-- gn.. , g.- 10.1 ....5 .' . .. 32. . .,g,,,, .,' 155, , ' , 'JV W. 'if ,f1:':i1f'E:?:' W Y 12 '-Q . .:.::.:. ' ..:j. .g.q., 4 , ,-IQ... I3 7-3 V1-1 '71 1.., Q' 51: '-'Ii Ln. 411.21 , ' 7-7'3Q,.vg--' -'iq ::' 'rn -H -- -A :gf V -1 , 13.1 Mr' - f,,,---l:.g-.- . C. .. '. '. TLZTAIS- -ptr ff, , - 2' 1.43:-. P 542' , , 1x,j...,x. f r...... I.. :..f . ,Y ' . 'f , :.i : ii Y , I .. ,TQ 1f?f'z:i',1f. 'f.r.j:.5'.'f3,. --. Q4 . .. ...,... M- ,--H132 -'Li .J -112-'.?'wv..,,'. .-Q.. .- ?. I'l. 'Q , . Egg, ,LA 71 . 4. --- , ., --..-4 .-'L-11.1.5 -.- - . I-.LI .,l. Q Robert Samuels CChicago 19311 1124 Hyde Park Blvd.: married. Max Friedman, Parkshore Hotel, 1765 E. 55th St., married. Dan W'1'1itehead tSyracuse 19361 Architect: Draftsman for A. F. Heino: 2146 W. 108th St. Warren Hall, not heard from. 1932 William S. Clark, Ex. 32 tBeloit 19361 Cost Engineer, Laundry and dry cleaning: 4535 Ellis. Louis Braudy tMichigan1 5454 S. Shore Drive. Lawrence Drumheller CNorthwestern1, working at Carnegie Steel Mills, Gary, lndiana: soon to be married: 10429 S. Vernon. Fichard Fulghum CNort1'1 Carolina1, engineering and chemistry: Standard Oil, Whiting, lndiana: 8129 S. Kenwood. Robert I. Freehling CMichigan 19361, Senior in Law School, Michigan: 5000 East End Avenue. Howard Gottschalk fChicago 1936, M.D. 19391 11256 S. Lothair Ave. Robert Countiss Howard, Student at University of Buffalo: 675 Delaware Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. Tom Iordan CS. Dakota 19361 ln business, married 1934, two sons: 72nd and Coles Avenue. Iohn Levinson fYale 19361 tChicago, Law1 4049 Lake Park Avenue. Richard Leviseworking: hasn't been around for some time. Edward Loeb tMichigan Ex. 19361 At Hillman's Food Shop? just married. William MacDougal tlienyon-Chicago 19361 Standard Varnish Co.: 4819 Kim- bark Avenue. William O'Neal, Ex. 1932 tStanford 19361 Studying medicine: 1940 Lombardy Road, Pasadena, Cal. Edward M. Sachs CLewis lnstitute1 Merchant tailor: married 1939: 1765 East 55th Street. Adam Schaaf CChicago 19361 Student: lnternational Law, Chicago: 5027 Drexel. Byron Sykes CCarleton 19391 Sykes Terminal Warehouse: 4823 Kenwood. Heaton H. Sykes Clllinois, Armour 19361 Sheet metal contractor: 4823 Kenwood. Mort H. Singer, Ex. 32, CU.C.L.A. 19361 Theater publicity: Los Angeles: married in 1936: 109842 Ashton Avenue, Los Angeles. William Weaver iChicago 19361 Acme Steel: first lieutenant, 497 Field Artil- lery, U. S. Army Reserve: 5000 East End. Not heard from: Ellis Brown tNortl'1western, Loyola1, Richard Levis, Clarence Lazerus. 1933 Robert Beaudway CPurdue 19371 General Electric, Schenectady. Edward Price Bell CChicago 19371 Utilities: 1415 S. Fifth St., New Brighton, Pa. Edward Bryant CChicago 19371 R. R. Donnelley Gr Co.: married: 7128 Bennett Avenue. lack Bittel CMIT 19371 graduate Student in Metallurgy, MIT, Metallurgist at Steel Mills: thinking seriously of marriage: 7343 S. Constance. Iames Callahan tChicago Ex. 19371 A. B. Dick ci Co.: Kenwood Hotel. William Collins CBeloit and Ames1 specialized in horticulture and vegetable crops: on the faculty at Ames: working in govemment experimental work. On the air Mondays at 7 and 10 A.M. over WOI. George Felsenthal tChicago 19371 Vice President Hartman Wholesale Co.: 5000 S. Woodlawn. Robert Kirchheimer: Kirchheimer Paper Co.: 6806 Constance. Dwight McKay CChicago 1937, Law 19391 Attorney at Law: 434 W. Marquette. PAGE 54 Walter Monroe CPurdue 19377 Chicago Steel Service: married Bud Daniel's sister Helen, 1938: 5805 Dorchester. G. Henry Mundt Ir. fAmherst 19337 Student at Yale University medical school: medical research: 8158 Oglesby. Albert Nowak CMorgan Park Ir. College, Ex. 19357 Lieutenant, Army Air Corps, Kelly Field, Texas. Robert Pulver CMichigan7 Chemical business: 3 Sheldon Lane, Highland Park. Kenneth Rich, Ex. 1933 CHobart 19377 Dwight Bros. Paper Co.: 1411 N. State. Edward Stern tChicago 19367 Law student: 1414 E. 59th Street. Charles Tyler CNorthwestern Night School7 Life lnsurance: Continental Assur- ance Company: 6237 Champlain. 1934 Norman Anderson CCornel1 19347 Youngstown Sheet ci Tube, Gary: 6621 S. Harvard. Arnold Brenner tNorthwestern 19387 834 Hinman Avenue, Evanston. DeWitt Wheeler Buchanan Ir. tPrinceton 19387 ln early grades at Harvard: married 1940: advertising. Bryson Burnham tChicago 19387 Law student: 930 E. 45th Street. G. F. Baer CMichigan 19387 Blackwood Hotel: married, 1939. Robert C. Collins Clllinois 19397 Sears, Roebuck, loliet: 333 3rd Avenue, Ioliet. lames Coleman tChicago 19387 Floor covering and furniture: 5100 Ellis. Henrv Cummins tChicago 19387 Northern States Light CS Power: White Bear, Minnesota. Robert Cooper tMichigan 19387 Restaurant business. Iust married: 5526 Cornell. Arthur A. Goes tChicago 19387 Lithographer: 4940 Kimbark. Edward Goodkind CDartmouth 19387 Advertising: 1201 Madison Park. lack Mclntosh CDartmouth 19387 Real Estate: 7146 Luella. lames Hamilton Moses tAmherst 19387 Advertising: 1430 Lake Shore Drive. Calhoun Norton, Ex. 1934 tRensellaer 19387 Areus Controls Co.: 4930 S. Wood- lawn Avenue. Frank Roder-Air Conditioning: 5230 S. Blackstone. Maurice Ross tChicago 19387 Advertising: 5454 S. Shore Drive Harry Schaaf tChicago7 Law student: 5027 Drexel. lohn Turner, Stockbroker: 232 E. Walton. Charles Burton Upson CLewis 19387 Theological student, Seminary, Alexandria, Virginia. Frank H. Wright Ir. fDartmouth 19387 Spiegel, lnc., Credit: Mar-Main Arms, South Bend, Indiana. Not heard from: Iames Kahnweiler CMichigan7, Ted Maynard, Everett War- shawsky. NESTLINGS-1935-40 Some have not yet left the safety of the sheltered nest . . . others are out trying to catch a few worms for themselves. 1935 Iames Bell tChicago 1940 Senior: Hitchcock Hall, U. of C. Ierome Ciral tPurdue 19407 Business Administration: 5017 Drexel. Gilbert Farmer tWheaton7 not heard from recently. Iames Goldsmith CChicago 19397 Pittsburgh: Dr. West's toothbrush products: 4542 Drexel Boulevard. Robert Gottschalk tCarleton 19397 Hollywood, California. George Hollingshead, Nash used car division, S. Michigan Avenue: 4753 Kimbark Avenue. PAGE 55 Wilbur lerger lChicago 19391 Studying Law and Philosophy: has a class at Harvard: 4839 Dorchester Avenue. Richard Kirchheimer lMichigan Ex. 19391 Kirchheimer Paper Company: 953 Hyde Park Boulevard. Ioseph Kirchheimer CCarleton Ex. 19391 Kirchheimer Paper Company: 1234 Madison Park. Chester McCullough lBe1oit 19397 Phi Beta Kappa: Chicago Title and Trust Company: 4440 Drexel Boulevard. Milton McKay CChicago 19391 Law Student: 434 W. Marquette Road. Robert Mack CPennsylvania1 Phi Beta Kappa: lnland Steel: 4802 Dorchester Ave. Louis Miller CChicago 19401 lnland Steel: 4809 Kenwood Avenue. Christopher Norton, Ex. '35 lBrown 19391 Acme Steel Company: 4930 Wood- lawn Avenue. Robert Starrett-just left tor California. Robert Warfield CChicago Ex. 19391 General Manager Sterling Glass Works, lndiana: 4831 Kenwood Avenue. Max Wurzburg lChicago 19391 Kirchheimer Paper Co.: 5142 Ellis. Not heard from: Leo Voss, lohn Magnus, Arthur Blake. Secretaries of the class: Wilbur Ierger, Louis Miller. 1936 Robert Black CCarleton1 350 N. Normal Parkway. Iohn Burns lChicago1 1022 East 45th Street. Raymond E. Daniels, lr. lChicago1 4828 Kimbark Avenue. Hawley Foot, working: Red Wing, Minnesota. Robert T. Gilchrist lCornel11 1840 East 50th Street. Iohn Goes lChicago1 4940 Kimbark Avenue. CLASS of 1938 Kenneth Becker Iohn Greenebaum Hawley Foot Iohn Burns Louis Porter Robert Black Iames Groendyke Charles MacLellcrn Robert Gilchrist Iohn Goes Peter Iordun John Rosenthal Raymond E. Daniels, Ir. Arthur Kirchheimer Louis Ioseph PAGE 56 lohn Greenebaum CNorth Caro1ina?. lames Groendyke, Ex. 36, 4336 Ellis Avenue. Peter lordan CEX. Chicago? married 1940: Standard Varnish Works: 6814 Oglesby Avenue. Louis loseph Carleton? 5040 Ellis Avenue. Arthur Kirchheimer Carleton? 6806 Constance Avenue. Charles MacLellan Chicago? 4847 Woodlawn Avenue. Louis Porter iWisconsin? 6819 leffery Avenue. Iohn Rosenthal CBrown? studying medicine. EX 1936 Benno Nell-cadet officer, McCormack Lines, N. Y.: 4836 Dorchester Avenue. Malcolm Anderson CEX. Kenyon? 4920 Greenwood. Powell Carson-arrnyp 5415 South Hyde Park Boulevard. Robert lernberg Chicago? 4900 Kimbark Avenue. 1937 Harrison Barnard Chicago? 7143 Princeton Avenue. William Boyd CNorthwestern? 6911 leffery Avenue. Kenneth Buchen, working: 5226 Ingleside Avenue. William Gunkel 1Purdue? 9987 Beverly Avenue. Robert lames 1Harvard? 7245 Euclid Avenue. Victor loseph tlllinois? 5040 Ellis Avenue. lulian Loewenstein Chicago?. Richard Maling, working: 1660 East Hyde Park Boulevard. I. Wallace Moore CGeorge Williams? working: 4710 Woodlawn Avenue. Ted Winter CMichigan? 140 Hazel Avenue, Glencoe. Richardson Spofford CHarvard? 535 S. East Avenue, Oak Park. Iohn Price, Ex. '37g workingg La Grange, 111. Not heard from: William Desobry, who left us for Honolulu. 1938 Richard Gieseleman, office boy to President of Arrnour'sg 8250 Blackstone Ave. 'William Gunkel iPurdue?: summer address: Tipton, lndiana. Lyle Harper, Ex. 38 Chicago? Sunset Ridge Road, Northfield, 111. Lawrence 1-leyworth, lr. QU. S. Naval Academy? 7651 South Shore Drive. William lohnson CM.1.T.? 7252 East End Avenue. Douglas Killarn fOberlin?. Fred Kretschmar Chicago? 4424 Ellis Avenue. Iohn Levinsohn Chicago? 4809 Dorchester Avenue. Robert Miller Chicago? 4809 Kenwood Avenue. Kenneth MacLellan Chicago? 4847 Woodlawn Avenue. Donald Warfield Chicago? 4831 Kenwood Avenue. Harry Porter CLawrence? 4737 Ingleside Avenue. Fred Wangelin Chicago? 4818 Dorchester Avenue. Hart Wurzburg, Ex. 38 Chicago? 5142 Ellis Avenue. William Brenner, Ex. 1938 tMorgan Park Iunior College 1934-1936?: First Na- tional Bankg 834 Hinrnan Avenue, Evanston. 1939 William Barnard Chicago? 7143 Princeton Avenue. Iames Boyle, working: 4942 Ellis Avenue. lohn Crosby Chicago? 6818 Constance Avenue. PAGE 57 Iohn A. Chichester, working: 4820 Dorchester Avenue. Carroll Huntress tHobart? 5123 University Avenue. Oliver Iohnson Clllinois? 2132 Howland Avenue. Thomas Marland CBeloit? 7314 Crandon Avenue. Edward Magnus tSt. lohn's Military School?. Frank McWhinney, Standard Varnish Works: 4722 Greenwood Avenue. Andrew Muldoon, Post graduate, Lake Forest Academy: 5004 Woodlawn Ave Richard Petersen CHamilton? 10201 South Seeley Avenue. Sears Wait, student ot aviation: 1122 E. 52nd Street. CLASS OF 1940 AND CHDLLEGES THEY HOPE TO ENTER Howard Bontz tLake Forest? Harry Cohen CCar1eton? Richard Crabtree CPost Graduate? Richard Eisenstaedt CNortl'1western? Robert Evans Cundecided? Craig Leman lChicago? Arthur Mann CMichigan? lack Monroe 1Northwestern? David Oakes CPurdue? Stuart Popp CWisconsin? Bill Rockwell CPost Graduate? Ouintin Sykes CAntioch? Robert Watson Cundecided? Marshall Barnard 1Chicago? Donald Burns Clowa? Philip Copenhaver CDartrnouth? William Daemicke CChicago? Mike Elliott Clialamazoo? Robert Gunkel CPurdue? Ralph Lepthien 1Carnegie? Herbert Muehlstein CNorthwestern? lohn Oakes CDenison? Richard O'Nea1 CCornell? Bud Rees CPost Graduate? Richard Shelby CM. 1. T.? lerome Waters CArmy? Richard Williams CPost Graduate? EX 1940 Arthur Bartholomay, working Iames Brook CChicago? PA GE 58 FACULTY NOTES C. L. Ricketts, Chicago's best known illuminator, has retired from his work at the Scriptorium, which is in charge of his son-in-law, Iasper King. Mr. Rick- etts lives in Winnetka, has two married daughters and several grandchildren. Andrew L. Winters is practicing law, and lives at l0745 South Seeley Avenue in Morgan Park. Helen F. Page was for many years librarian of the public library of Harvard, Mass., and now has retired to her home at Dedham, Mass. We all know Miss Elizabeth Faulkner who is actively and success- fully managing the eminent Faulkner School for Girls at 4809 Dorchester Avenue. Payson S. Wild, one of the leading lights of the Chicago Literary Club, spends much of his time at his summer home at Bridgman, Michigan. lsabel Travis McKnight, who will be affectionately remembered by many former first and second graders, lives in Bloomington, lllinois and has a married son. Wendell S. Brooks is assistant to the dean of North Park College, Chicago. l-le has Written a number of books dealing with young people. Clara E. Peterson retired from school work a few years ago and is keeping house for her sisters at 7700 Paxton Avenue. She is rejoicing in the birth of a grandnephew. Angus M. Frew comes in to see us occasionally when back from his work as director of physical education at Western Reserve Academy, Hudson, Ghio. Froc looks just the same. Robert G. Buzzard is president of the Western Illinois State Teachers College at McComb, Illinois. He has four sons. Mary McCann Iohnson's shining copper hair has turned a beautiful white, but she's as full of fire and pep as ever. Since retiring from school work she has been living at her home at 4728 Greenwood Avenue. Coach Wood, who married Iohn Eaton's sister, is in business at Holland, Michigan, where he lives with his family. Elizabeth E. Langley who so suc- cessfully taught manual training, has a progressive school of her own, the Edgewood School at Greenwich, Conn. Walter M. Schimmel, now Dr. Schim- mel, has exchanged mathematics for medicine at Arlington Heights, lll. His home address is ll2 S. State Street, and he has two children. Harriet Rice entered the Chicago Public School system some years ago and is busy teach- ing mathematics, commercial arithmetic, English and Gymnasium at Bowen branch high school. Dorothy Higgins Brown and Gertrude Brown, formerly in our primary department, are now teaching in the North Shore schools. W'hen We last heard of Elizabeth Perley she was living on the North Side and teaching private pupils. Miss Letsch as she was known to boys from 1924 on, has changed her name to Mrs. M. A. Anderson and lives in her new home at 10417 S. Maplewood Ave. PAGE 59 ALUMNI DECEASED l93O-l94O Edmund L. Andrews Walter Ayer Egbert Badgerow Henry D. Baker Arthur Barnhart Kenneth Becker Ioseph Belden George Birkhoft Herbert Bloomingston Wayne Bogue Edward Burnham William F. Burrows David Cochrane Perry Corneau Alfred Cowles Spencer Eddy Dexter Fairbank Kellogg Fairbank Wallace Fairbank Charles M. Fair Richard T. Fisher Alanson Follansbee Fred A. Forbes Leroy Fuller Paul E. Gardner Clifford P. Hall Philip Hamill Charles Hanford George F. Harding Albert Hayden Matson Hill Courtland Holdom Gill Hopkins Harold A. Howard Henry Huck Morton D. Hull I. C. leffry David Ioyce Edson Keith Leroy Kellogg W. R. Kelly William Kent Ioseph Kuhns Albert B. Kuppenheimer Iohn Lee Little Howard A. Logan George C. Lytton Lawrence Mason Roswell B. Mason Iames F. Meagher Richard H. Meagher George H. Merryweather George Barnett McBean Buell McKeever lohn W. Norton Raymond Otis Iohn G. Ralston Frederick Rawson Herbert Hugh Riddle Robert Roloson lohn L. Shortall Harold Smith Solomon Sturges S. I. T. Straus, Ir. Allen Thomas Alexander Warren Stuart Webster lesse Whitehead Stephen Moore Wirts POSTCHIPT ln closing the Alumni Section of the Review. we wish to express our thanks to all alumni and friends for their kindness in sending information and addresses. We 'hope you will feel that these results incomplete as they are, have justified the time and effort which your part in the work entailed There will no doubt be corrections and additions to make. We shall be glad to receive them at the school address, and shall plan to issue alumni bulletins more frequently. PAGE 60 ELSIE SCHOBINGEH, Alumni Editor 1 .-S1-ii.-l-ii . '?.2'.2F.'M-... :.:ff'1 f -+- f ff' fi ' 11. ... -- .- -..-1,g A '- - --'12 - f----.-. -L .fZ.4.f.,.fX . 13: ' 'f g, 'N 'V -. 5 3:52215-215' ' 'Q' ' 275 '4 L-if is! X x J. 4 5'1f 'f' fffr' :gan-:. 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