Jefferson High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Lafayette, IN)
- Class of 1930
Page 1 of 196
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 196 of the 1930 volume:
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Yak .--...... ,.A.---.-.---..----- k 1 Mu' I 'ff'-'-?f ba--Q-mNh 'N LAifu........,..,. isYK:ff.., w M so J . . .. ..--Wg, FL-l:Q.,,,,,....--Q-- 1 4 , ., t X ff Y ol A ti '3 Q x 1 4 5 Q is x 'N 5 1 ix' lg' M M- if-J. 'f r a1ifff!Y:N3 S.-1 W. Q. ' L. ,TX-wx: Z 1 4 M-M , . f gm l Q . . : unfit- ., .- ' g -, ni f giii 3 .f,3Z fg: 'fi' .. 'Ph ,i-5 f ' ,, 1 Q. ' 79 'Fj 64 1. .1 - ,iq ltiftt. 1. ,I - , EQ-k5 H'wQ 155,13 .' 'Img ','i Ll. ' V -I W, ' ' ri lff :5?! QQ . .,. , .L 4,1,'.J.n A, if. A 71,55 LA' ix:-, I' In 31.5271 ii. J 'a 'x SK. 1 QU wx 1 .l'1 , a.if.i3... -1. Coach Botkin CU.lCll XVCbb Coaches Mr. Alva O. Botkin, experienced his initial year as head coach of the Jefferson Ath- letic teams, and has proved himself remarkably eiiicient in both the coaching depart- ment and in his excellent management of the gym classes. Coach Botkin made himself popular with both the teams and fans when assistant coach under Mr. Grogan, and is doubly so now. Mr. Webb is the quiet mannered man who has just passed his first year .is assistant coach at Jeff. He had full charge of the football and basketball second teams, and the track team, and certainly developed .1 lively bunch of hard-hitting gridders and fast working hardwood men. Welcome, Mr. Webb! ATHLETIC BOARD The Athletic Board of Jefferson is to be commended on the principles upon which they stand, and on the way in which they support these principles. Never before has jeff had a finer group of members or sponsors, or an assembly better qualified for an Athletic Board. The Board consists of Max McLean, president, Reed Keller, vice-president, Charles Martin, secretary, and Harold Beeler and Pat Coomey, members at large, and is spon- sored by the following members of the faculty: Messrs. McCarty, Webb, Botkin, and Peebles, and Miss Rothrock. It has been the aim of the Jeff Board, this year as in other past years, to create and maintain throughout the school and community, a high standard of sportsmanship. They have accomplished this by giving their extended efforts toward creating a keener sense of fairness on the part of the rooters at the games, and by instructing the players in good, clean playing. Besides extending throughout the school and community this Hner sense of sports- manship, the Board has also accomplished other feats. They have advertised the games all over town, and stimulated the interest of all the students of jeff and all the loyal residents of Lafayette. Furthermore, it was mainly through their efforts and coopera- tion that the season books of the games were printed, and sold to students and other rooters at nominal costs. The Athletic Association has also seen to the purchase of splendid athletic equipment for the boys on our teams, and with the fine spirit and cooperation that they have shown, how could Jeff be other than well represented in the high schools of the State? Page Ninety-stweza il 'l 1 E 'W , r- W fx x 2. ' ,V+ .fa , xl ., , N, . . g-gg. . .,... Q. ' . xv Q ag.. I K--1' 1. f. -fr ' . .d f x Q. p ' ' -v. x .'-z:-:.5:f-'- 'E '-11-' Y S - . -i 55 , ' ' 3,-4 1 1. . V fx:-.:. , , Q 9.5! Q , - K' 1 'frm-'af :gzfgi L , L. X gin K ' E in Aiax X K 5 'U , . Q, 2. ,- P ,rv f'k?3w.sLl15f.g , -J X Q .ij 1, . -4. Y' 5 Q' .- W . N 'Q YW'N -+V 2 - . . L K f , N 5 Mfg A -, S N 4 xg ,QQ fb ., 4 ... V . is 5 V A's:'gi11.5 Y f . ' . - - b .- f' . 5 813. '2 - 'YV . 5, 3' , ' I . f 'N , ' E ' 31 xx 5 x q . ' .. . N I -5 , .V A . , V' X agrw 1 . .-, V Q .,.. -yrA:fIf::. - - , H . 359.23 f k x..,..Q,... 5 km---g...-.1 i H , , - .Q h- I. ,.: I'N,.-..,q,,.:,-. . . W , .. - .Q xv .. ' S.--x..ft'9Q 1 ,wife-1+ ,gfzfxtggw-:aw.3 ,. :-:' :rl : W-g--.gf Q. b . mv... WH-. -wr' ' ,X--av-.w -rr' ..'-LQ.. b' ' . - , W. , N. v -- :fff W V -M3 xv Mm' sh.-am ,--. 3:14.-.5-x,.:f2o '.sr'..45g Iwi'-' V 1 1 X vw- , -3, , t I. 1- 1 f' --vw, yg..'-Sgfgu:-.-1:ff?-ff :iw -X , .. ,- - sr i-::' x A' I. 1Sf-:Yz?- . 1, ' X No No No. No. 1930 FOOTBALL -Fiddler, quarterback -Orrh, guard -Goodman, end -Keller, hnlfback my ' ' PQ i , RQ!-it -. Page Ninty-eigyllt s I I u A wr , I-gm -'nm Q., l930 FOOTBALL -Bcelcr. fullback -Barnaby, guard -Crowe, lulfback Shiglcy, center fu .f Iv U' A. ' fin' Xml QM? S , 5 A X x,- No No. No No 193 0 FOOTBALL 1-McLean, halfback 2-Swick, end 5-Simison, end 4-Kahl, guard Page One Hundred 14, 1 'air Blbdffd ill ' K, ,Nr Vs. ., 'K' . I fr-'rum Q 1 uk No No No. No. YF' 1930 FOOTBALL . 1-Eberle, and . 2-Martin, tackle 3-Dykhuizen, lmlfback 4-Gullion. guard 1 Page One Hz111cZrC1l01zr3 Football Tributes Harold Bevlfr, full-back, is a line-smashing broncho who will go down on record as among the best. Iimnziv Fiddler, quarterback, is one of the flashiest ball-carriers Jeff has ever known. He is a brainy man and never fails to perform mighty fine work. Iflbllllj' Kubl, -guard. May it be said that when Kahl says stop, they stop. He is hard as nails, and a great grid-man. Max NIPLMIJ, halfback, is one of the fastest men known to high school football. MaXie's brain and legs functioned together many a time for touchdowns for Jeff. Leo Crou'i', halfback, might be known as old reliable. Mose plays a real game, and has earned many scores for his alma mater. Elma' Szrivfc, end, has the reputation of being one of the fastest, hardest hitting gridmen Jeff has ever turned out. You should watch his smoke! Fl'l'tfGO0t1lII:1Il, end, lets very few men get by him. His motto is the bigger they come, the harder they fall. Bill Sliiglfjy, center, holds down the pivot position in a really astounding fashion. Here's to more players like Bill. Milf D-ylelwzziirrz, halfback, was as consistent a player as we had, and his hard fighting has pulled Jeff out of many a tight hole. Clmrlz Martin, tackle, is a great, big. brute, who is very capable of shaking off his opponent. Chuck will be one of the mainstays next year. Tom Gllillillll, tackle, always played a stalwart game of football. He was a hard fighter and always made it hard for the other fellow. i E . . 2 Front Row, Left-Bell, Barnaby, Fisher, Swick, Crowe, Fiddler, McLean, Donohue, Goodman, Diamond- stone, Jarka. Second Row-Reitemeier, McCauley, Vaughan, Eberlc, Murphy, Rutehfield, Keller, Wfallace, Halsema, Dykhui7en, Plumb, W'ein. Third Row-Botkin, Swezy, Scott, Conney, Davis, Neal, Deer, Shiglcy, Kahl, Gullion, Martin, Myers. Top Row-Moore, Goldsberry, Simison, Orrh, Hudson, Comstra, Bauer, Sample, Memmer, Goldsberry, Hicks, La Plant, Webb. Pugn' Une Hlmrlred T100 Norm Simfiun, tackle, did a lot of splendid work on the grid this fall. Swede is a big fellow, and hard to stack up against. uyclyllt' Bmmlfvy, guard, is no slouch as a grid star. Bucket knows the art of ear- ing for himself and his opponent at the same time. Don Effrrlr, end, is to be commended on his line game, and his ability to be right there with the stun that makes .1 winning team. RNJ Ka'1fr'r, halfbaek. Is he fast? He's the kind you read about, but very seldom see. Here's for more like him. lurk Rf'ili'1m'ii'r, tackle, was a big help to Coach Botkin's grid team. jeff will miss this splendid football man next year, as -lack graduates this june. THE GUARD XVho takes the knocks on every play? XY'hose lighting spirit is nevcr sprung? XVho works the hardest every day? The Guards, praises go on unsung. On defense, he has to hold that line, And spill the men who tight, To break a hole from time to time, And hasten their onward plight. -HAROLD BLELER, '30. INTRANIURAL FOOTBALL Front Row, Left tu Right-Frasch, R. Golf. Ade, D. Goff. Chastein, C'Haver Rear-Mr. Muller, Greenbnrg. Douglas, Cox, Cassd, Shaw. Andrews. l'11q+' Inu' Ilzmflrml Th ru Football Home Games SEPTEMBER 21, 1929 JEFFERSON, 6-WEST LAFAYETTE, O Our mighty Bronchomen started the season well by defeating the Red Devils at the Ross-Ade bowl. A 30-yard pass, Crowe to Goodman, brought the game out of a scoreless tie in the third quarter of the fray, and won the game for the Jeff squad. The boys on the other side of the creek were on the defensive almost all of the game. Their only chance of scoring was in the third quarter just after Jeff scored her 6 points. It was a brilliant game and showed a remarkable season ahead for the Jeff boys. SEPTEMBER 28, 1929 JEFFERSON, 45-KENTLAND, 6 In a lopsided game of football played at the Jeff Held on this particular day the Red and Black gridders annexed their second victory of the season when they trounced the Kentland aggregation by the decisive score of 45-6. The Bronchos had the game in their hands practically the whole time and the Newton county lads were outclassed by the locals in every department. OCTOBER 18, 1929 JEFF, 6-GREENCASTLE, 12 In an exciting battle that taxed the energy of both players and rooters of either school, Jeff suffered defeat at the hands of the well-coached Greencastle tribe. Coach Botkin's men outclassed the Greencastle outfit two to one, but the boys from the Home of Depauw University' took advantage of a number of breaks,,' and the result of the game turned out in their favor, though the Jeff boys played the better game. NOVEMBER 2, 1929 JEFFERSON, 20-ATTICA, 6 Atta-boy, Jeff! And did we trounce 'em? Here's for more games like it. Both grid teams played straight football, with an occasional pass. At no time during the game did the boys from our home school have occasion to worry about the outcome. Never did the team function more perfectly, nor take a game more easily. NOVEMBER 11, 1929 JEFFERSON, 7-WEST LAFAYETTE, 6 For the second time this season the Bronchos beat their traditional rivals in a hard-fought tilt at the Jefferson field. West Lafayette made a strong start by scoring early in the first frame, but could not stand up under the strain of our hard-hitting, line-smashing gridders, who obtained 7 points in the second quarter and kept their opponents from scoring during the re- mainder of the game. Pau? One Hundred Four Basketball Season 1930 Every basketball team, in its initial play on the hardwood, resolves to break the record of the previous years. The team for the season 1929-30 led by Captain Leo Crowe, was no exception to the rule and the Bronchos did raise their standard of at- tainment during the season. The schedule included some games with teams of a higher rating than Jefferson had held. Never daunted, the Bronchos ploughed through the heavy schedule and the scores indicated that we were worthy competitors with these superior teams. Coach Botkins and his players, backed by the Howling Hundred, have established a record which will serve to inspire the future teams of Jefferson High School. The quintet, composed of Max McLean, Reed Keller, Chuck LaPlante, Pat Coomey, and Captain Leo Crowe served regularly in the games this year. The team work ex- hibited when these flashy players assembled was always admired by the host of rooters. Well known Leo, or Mouse, has lived up to the record set by his brothers and too great a tribute can not be paid to Leo in his successful efforts. Maxie. with his keen basket eye, is also graduating and the rooters will miss the exhibition of team- work between Maxie and Leo. Reed Keller, with his lightning flashes, has surprised his opponents on repeated occasions and has been a very valuable addition to the team. Pat Coomey, guard, does just what his position on the hardwood implies. Pat plays a superb game and Jeff will miss him next year. Chuck LaPlante, our tall boy, is always ready for the tip-off and we hope that jeff will have more net men like him. Other boys who have contributed to the success of the team are Kenneth Holt- man, who graduates this yearg Clark Morin, George Anderson, Jack Reitemeir, John McNary and Don Casad. All these boys are striving to do better than their best in order to bring honor to the team next year. TOURNAMENT Nineteen-thirty featured the beginning of an annual tournament contest between four Indiana college-town high schools, Jefferson, Bloomington, Crawfordsville, and Greencastle. Jefferson easily won this tourney, defeating Greencastle, 18-23, and Crawfordsville, 29-26. TOURNEY Jefferson won the sectional tourney here, in good form, and made a good show- ing in the regional, tho' defeated by Frankfort, traditional rivals, in the final game. The first game of the sectional, with West Lafayette, was won by a close score, 16-15. Romney was the next competitor, and Jefferson trounced them 39-6. With these two teams out of the way, Jefferson had an easy time taking Wea into camp, 31-10. The Hnal game, Jefferson and Dayton, was played to a score of 18-18, when the lights unfortunately were extinguished. Electricians located the trouble, and after a two-hour delay, the game was continued, Jefferson winning by a score of 23-18. In the regional tourney, JeHferson's Hrst game was won by the score of 22-18. It was a good game, and shows the Jefferson squad to be on the job. In the final game, Jefferson suffered defeat at the hands of Frankfort, by the score of 24-14, in a de- cidedly rough game. Nevertheless, the Jefferson boys showed up well, and with any kind of luck, she should capture the crown next year. Page One Hundred Five Q g..Q gym. ' 5 In get t Q 'V A , ' x wg g f. S- t .U .1 g lv , 9 -. x, A f 5 1929-30 BASKETBALL 5 Ag' 117 Nlax McLean, forward: Q25 John McN.1ry, forward: C56 '- Charles l.aPlante. center: HJ Charles Rcitemiur. guard: QU ,i George Anderson. forward. 5 i f RECORDS . -fi fr' TSS . T 111' Um' Hum .IW First win over Crawfurdsvillc in three years. First win over Delphi in three years. First over Frankfort in four years. ini? V:- 3 3.19 . I - I 11. , QL . .MS if 'SW 5.5! ,, A W X Q if,-. gm , ar l Y ill Par Cuumcy, guardg 121 Kc-nnvstlw Hultnmn, cv.-murg Hb Q Lua C1-wwe, furwnrd: 1-H Clark Murzn. furxxardi KVI Rccll 9 Keller. hurw.1rd. Q cond win uf xcctimml in five years. LH wa, liwtcd in Il'lLllJl1.l'S Big Tun fur tl1rcu weeks, lwlding 5,5 4 9- iifrh and ciglutll pl.1Ccc, X 2 l S x - ig XX a XD A r-1, wl. Y' ll,l qv' Inu' I111ff1lrc'1lNf 1929-30 Basketball Season - Lou of ginger! Lori of pep! - Ent 'ern up, Lafayette! SCORES OF FIRST TEAM Greencastle, 26-Jeff, 22 Xlanual. Zllgletl ZR Reiisxelaer. 19- jefl, JS Roehewter. 20-jeff, 37 XY'est Lafayette. 21-1IeH, 20 Emerson lfiaryl, Zifjeff, ZS Logansport, 12-Jeff, 24 Frankfort, 33-jeff, 41 Cdouble overtimel Conneriville, 43-Jeff, 33 XY'.1b.nl1. 16-jeff, 24 Nlarrinaville, 37-jeff, 27 l7i',1i1kfort, 34-jeff, 31 Cdouble overtime? Crawfordsville, 29-Jeff, 26 Huntington, 29-Jeff, ZS Loganipurt, 33-JCE, 27 7 Peru, 33-Jeff, -1 XVe5t Side, 23'xlClT. 16 Qjeff Reservcij Lebanon. -Wfjeff, SS Burt Mullins Delphi, 5-l-Jeff 36 FIRST TEAM First Row-Coach Botkin, Morin, Coomey, LaPlante, Crowe, Keller, McLean. McCarty Second Row-Martin, Bauer, Ortli, Reitemier. Anderson, Holtman, MeN.1ry, Casad, Vyverburg Page 0110 II1n1iIrCi'IEiffl1t I L 1929-3 0 Basketball Season Gu lied! Cm Pmlnclx! Gu klctll Sci 'cm luck! SCORES U15 QICOND TLXX1 Buck Cruuli. ZS-ilutl, IS licmwlacr. 9-Llt-tl. BY XX'u.1N. li-hlutl, 2' Xvcwl Qmlc. l51Llcll', Ill limwull, Iifklctll, IR XY'.1yl1cmw11. 20-glctll, 17 C'ruwf--rdwnllc. Wfilctl, IS lkranlxfurr, lvflutl, IS XY'c5t Nude, 24-bluff, IN limwell. I-6-hlutf, 22 Swckwull, 20-lull, -47 Buck Crculx, Ilifrlcll, 1, I,t-lmnrm, 'P-jc , Uclpln, 24-Jcil, If Duck lflwrsllnxil Sl FUND 'I'I'.-XM First Row-XVallace, YVcise, Dkmmndstrmnc, McCann, Simison, Elliott, Orth, Donahue. Second Row-Goodman, trainer: Huey. Moore. Higlwlcy. Ycatcr, Kamstrn. Goldsbcrry, Coach XY ebb. Puffy unc Ilufzflrctl Nina From the fields there comes cz breath of new mown bay Page Tm The J Letter Men The purpose of the men is to stimulate interest in athletics and to promote good-fellowship among the teammates and students. The following poem expresses the sentiments of this relationship: To the Basketball Team Oh. players on the lldrdwood, So husky, fine, .ind tall, We love to sit .ind w.iteh you: When you play b.isketb,1ll. So to the weekly gnines, XYe hurry one .ind .ill To witch you fairly win or low, Xvhen you play b.1slxetb.1ll. In you our hopes .ire built: For you our hearts enthizill, You liven our school spirit, XVhen you play baslxezbnll. As the game comes to .1 close, And you begin to stall, We hopefully await the gun, XY'hen you play basketbdll. All we can do is yell for you, Cnr part. it seenix so snmll, Yet, we .ire always back of you: XY'hen you play lusketlmill. Nl.XKl..Xlll I SIRXDLIYG, WZ. First Row-Arnold. Reitemeier, Fiddler, Keller, Martin Second Row-Beeler, Casad, Gulhon, Swezey, Featherstone Third Row--McLean. Shaw, Swiek, Fisher, Clayton P11110 UNL' l1llHlII'L't1 Twill Ill the mrnmus spurrx, UI'g.1I'li!L'd for the purpose of giving tlmw who .wc unable I SENIOR CAPTAINS Nurtll, XYccJu11, .Xrn4vld, lux. K,nunr.x. Xllllur INTRAMURAL ATHLETICS Avidu from thc rcgulm' tcams l'CPl'C5CI1Iil1g jeff, thcrc .llsn mists inLr.1mur.1l tc.1 un llmc XY.lI'Nilf' .1 clmncc tu cngagc in thnx' P.1l'KiCLll,lI' spurt. NIV. Nlillcl' is the coach dn iI1fI'.!INlII'.1l tulmx. JUNIOR CAPTAINS rum Row-l,lcnx1, Yul1Suggur11. liryxlm, Brnwdslu, Flctcmuycr, Nlmwc, Sl1.1n1lw.1L1g.gl1. Nlnllur. ccnnd Row--XY'1l1ski. C Arts, Rav. liuwcr. Rc1fL'nr.xtl1. lmffr inn llmzflnfll-,'lf1uz ll pl IX il t. N H+ Wit. 1 I I f' X ,,-,.q-4-warn-..,, , , Intramural Athletics Girls' Athletics Girls' athletics has held a prominent place in the school activities for 1929-'30. Miss Emily Jane Aldridge, the girls' physical education instructor, has been a coach, teach- er, chaperon and friend, all wrapped in one. The school year opened with gym classes and a new project in the school, a Jeff Tumbling Team. This consisted of girls chosen by Miss Aldridge for their gym- nastic ability. They met and practiced faithfully each Monday night at 8:30. Miss Aldridge contributed her knowledge, helpfulness, and service to this without com- plaint of her evenings, listened to- the wrangles, disputes and friendly quarrels of the tumblers, and answered perhaps a dozen questions from every girl. She is to be commended for her interest in the girls and their hobbies and every girl belonging to this team has a Warm regard for their friend and supervisor. The members of the team are: Peg Dietrich, Margaret Crowe, Ebby Gray, Vivian Miller, Jean Hall, Virginia Castor, Eddie Brown, Betty Bellinger, Bunny McQuisten, Alice Eisenbach, Maxine Morrison, Edna Reifers, Kathleen Bowers, Marjorie Jane Fa- gan, Marjorie Retterath, Dorothy and Gertrude Hudgens, Ruth Kantz, Huldah Lewellen, Edna Hannah, Emma Everett and Eloise Grey. The team presented two public per- formances at the circus held at the Washington school and at the St. Paul church social. The team has a rumbling act in the spring demonstration. Miss Aldridge THE BOYS' GYMNASIUM CLASS Page One H-undrefl Twelve f V 2:-,iitffj ji! L -.api - - no 1 'ff .- .Q ur--- - T ,ii ,Sv 'x Y YL, , ,.., -..-....-. ., R If -----f ' '---vw . ., .,-' ' .-.. -- ,..,,... Girls' basketball has also held all eyes for the season. The teams go by colors and at the beginning of the season all girls interested in this project and faithful in their practice drew lots for teams. Prominent players during this season were: Marjorie Connell, Irene North, Peg Dietrich, Vivian Miller, Mary Pultz, Lillian Zovad, Martha Griiifm, and Margaret Crowe. The winning team, the 'Yellowsf' was composed of Peg Dietrich, Doreen Wfeingardner, Agnes Ruth Teal, Alice Stair, Mary McCormich, and Francis Torrenga. In the class tournaments the junior team was quite strong. Margaret Crowe, Vivian Miller, Mary Pultz, Martha Grifhn, Irene North and Ebby Gray. The sophomores also had a leading team with Peg Dietrich as the scoring player. A team which is progressing toward recognition in athletics is the J Rifle Teamf' This sport takes keen eyesight, steady nerves, and patience. The members of this team are: Peg Crowe, Anita Goshkin, Mary Pultz, Dorothy Pultz, Daisy Cundiff, Char- lene Gahagan, Kitty and Ebby Gray. Two medals have been won in this sport by girls on the Jeff team. These were both marksmen medals rewards for the two brightest averages, Ebby Gray and Peg Crowe, respectively. Mr. Keeny matched the Jeff and West Side teams with the Purdue co-ed team. The result was Purdue, 468-Jeff. 449, with a dihierence of 18 points. The winners then treated the other girls to a lunch in the Chestnut room at the Union Building. After the luncheon Ebby and Kitty Gray gave a tap dance, Sunny Side Up. THE GIRLS, PHYSICAL CULTURE CLASS Page One Hundred Thirteen l ,f ,,y:Yi3lB:'Zf . .x,s,,e.+-.- as it I -f- J I?X3'f.,Qo4vT-We-fo ----.-,,MI I 1- 'r .its , I -.,,, , Q v . 155' ' x Chuck Two of u KIHJ XX Oh Harold D Ac if Q,-' V Smales Sdlboleon JT. ' Ne I P10 IIIIFI Travelogue The Nautilus, being a record of high school events, will serve as a memory book as the years go by. With this purpose in mind the editors of the Travelogue section have tried to record those events which will remind the readers of the incidents con- nected with that particular event and perhaps bring up many others not listed in this section. The graduates of Jefferson date back to the year 1869 and number in the five thousands. It would be impossible to pay individual tribute to the many who deserve mention here. For that reason the alumni section has been devoted to the more re- cent graduates of Jefferson and only a few can even then be mentioned. Page One Ilzmrlrcd lfljtffzi 1' Q' ,deff -Mun ter. L. XIV. No. 15 JEFFERSON HIGH SCHOOL Lafayette, Ind., February 21, 1930 xx Lieutenant Alfred F. Kalberer, Jeff '26, Has Position as Transport Pilot Lieutenant Alfred F. Kalberer, who graduated from Jefferson High School in 1926, has been making quite a name for himself in the field of aviation. He has piloted many types of airplanes in the United States Army air corps. while training to become one of the pilots of the Sky Fleeti' of the General Tire and Rubber Company. During his extensive travels he has had a number of varied flying experiences. He had seen a few of his cadet friends killed at Kelly Field, near San Antonio, Texas, and also his flying partner was killed at 10,000 feet in a collision. From there he was sent to Selfridge Field, Michigan, as a pur- Pflge 0110 Ilimrlreil Sifrfcn suit pilot and duty as Second Lieutenant with the First Pursuit Group. The first week he was there, Lieutenant Bradshaw was killed and Lieutenant Kalberer took his body to his home in Connecticut. Last summer Lieutenant Kalberer with seven other pilots who were in the em- ployment of the General Tire Company, made a 40,000-mile cruise of the United States. The cruise extended north as far as Portland, Maine, and as far south as Miami, Florida. The pilots were not able to visit the West Coast because necessary equipment was lacking for crossing the Rocky Mountains. Cuba was omitted, also, because of a hurricane at the time, JEFF BOOSTER and they were unable to visit Mexico City because of the unrest there. In relating a few of the incidents of this marvelous trip Lieutenant Kalberer tells of one time when they were in Mi- ami during a hurricane. They were de- tained there for several days. One time they had to change hotels because of the wind and water. Several boats were wrecked and washed up on the street. At another time they left New Or- leans to go to Baton Rouge. All the way there a huge swamp lay directly below. After following the railroad tracks to Baton Rouge they turned from there and started for the Gulf Coast along which a big pavement ran all the way to Mobile. This was the best route to follow because in case of any trouble they could land on the pavement, where otherwise they would be forced to land in the swamp. By this time it was dark. but the pilots stayed with their task, which was a hard thing to do, because they were all unfa- miliar with the country. Finally they came to Mobile. The Held there was not lighted, so several mechanics below poured some gasoline on the held and lit it. This enabled several of the pilots to land by aid of the light. The rest landed in the dark by checking the outline of the hangars against the sky line. All the planes landed safely. This was I1Ot the only place where they landed in the dark. Other places were Atlanta, Georgia, Omaha, Nebraska, Kansas City, and New Jersey. In answer to the question, Do you think aviation will ever be the mode of transportationf, he saidg The airplane will never take the place or become as popular as the automobile. Price doesn't count, but it takes too much training and practice and the public doesn't have time for that. Airplanes will take care of fast transportation and long distance trips because it has been proven to be the second safest method of travel. In closing he said that aviation is a good profession for a young man because it makes him think clearly and quicklyg it also gives him much valuable training. If you get in the game and really like it, you will succeed. THREE JEFF ALUMNI AP- POINTED OFFICERS IN O. C. Thurman Brown. Robert Smith and Kenneth Dykhuizen, '28, graduates of Jeff. were appointed Officers in the R. O. T. C. unit of Indiana University. Thur- man and Robert are corporals and Ken- neth, former band master here, a ser- geant. Colonel O. P. Robinson, com- mandant, selected them. Ignatius Dienhart, a former Jeff stu- dent, has been chosen as a charter mem- ber of the Growlers' Club, at Butler University, The purpose of the club is to stimulate pep and spirit at all univer- sity gatherings and get the school spirit on the upward trend. John Beck, Jeff '28, was the only La- fayette boy to make the Purdue Varsity football team this year. Page One IILllHIl'PfISCl'f'I1If.'CH JEFF BOOSTER JEFF ALUMNUS WINS AIR RACES Dick Arnett, Purdue University soph- omore and youngest transport pilot in In- diana, added more laurels to his crown by winning two speedy races at the second aeronautical exposition at Marion, Indi- ana. After winning the 29-mile race, he demonstrated his skill in handling a plane by winning the balloon bursting contest. Arnett was accompanied by E. I. Frank- enHeld, another student. FRATERNITIES jeff alumni have been well represented in the fraternity pledge lists of various universities. They are as follows: Sigma Chi-Jim Fowler, Delta Tau Delta- Charles Mastersong Lamba Chi Alpha- Kenneth Goodnightg Delta Upsilon- Herbert Schaaf, Norman Brooksg Phi Gamma Delta-Dick Arnett, James Has- sett, Kappa Sigma-Albert Martin, Zeta Beta Tau fOhioj-Julius Urwitzg Delta Tau Delta QWabashj-Harold Weaver. SORORITIES AN- NOUNCE PLEDGES The following Jeff girls being repre- sented: Kappa Alpha Theta, Josephine Shelby, Mary Killian, Alpha Xi Delta, Margaret Dodson, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Nancy Bogan, Anne Mavity, Elizabeth Bartee, Louise Wagner, Betty Graham, Alpha Chi Omega, Maurine Geisler, Flor- ence Diamondstone, Dorothy Mae Evans, Helen Kessenerg Chi Omega, Rosemary Lodde, Zeta Tau Alpha, Evelyn Ehrhart, Katherine Lynch, Alpha Chi fButlerj, Burdena McDill. Page One Iiundred Eighteen ALUMNI FROM CLASS OF '29 ATTENDING PURDUE The '29 class of Jefferson High School is well represented at Purdue. This year forty-five students enrolled. Purdue is getting a larger majority each year from the graduating seniors. The students en- rolled are: Josephine Shelby, Kenneth Goodnight, Elizabeth Mackay, Herbert Shaaf, Babe Bartee, Norman Brooks, Betty Graham, Charles Masterson, Rose- mary Lodde, Albert Martin, Anne Mavi- ty, William Crockett, Florence Diamond- stone, Francis Sullivan, Maurine Geisler, James Hassett, Margaret Dodson, Ralph Tully, Evelyn Ehrhart, Don McConnell, Mary Killian, Bennie Hinkle, Nancy Bo- gan, Leonard McCormick, Helen Kesse- ner, Barnard Felix. Dorothy Mae Evans, Leo McDowell, Louise Wagner, William Hession, Amelia Weiler, George Ebler, Dorothy Babbs, Williard Allman, Paul Moser, Herman Snyder, Clark Ritten- house, Frances King, Arthur Armantrout, Harold Pedley, Dicken Connor, John Weast, William Foster. Former Jefferson Athlete Stars For Irish Norbert Crowe, former local net star and captain of the hardwood Crew for two years, is playing great basketball at Notre Dame University. Norb has seen action in every game played so far this year and won the game for Notre Dame with Indiana last Tuesday night. Norbert is the fo-urth of the Crowe fam- ily to make the Notre Dame net team. JEFF BOOSTER Students Enrolled in Other Schools and Colleges George Comee, Michigang Eddie Rose. Wisconsin: Helena Jewell, Illinois: Julius Urwitz, Ohio Stateg Pat Casey, Wfabashg Jessie Cunditf, Indiana, Bob Smith, In- dianag Mary Van Natta, Mt. Vernon Seminary: Marguerite Gahagan, Detroit University: Bill Shrader, Notre Dame: Bill Ellis, Danville Normal: Paul Dun- can, '28, Indiana Law School, Indianap- olisg Berdena McDill, Butler: Christine Marxson, Art School in Chicagog XVini- fred Weaver, Indianapolis Nurses' School. Francis Crowe, Former jefferson Star, Makes Marriage Vows St. Lawrence Catholic Church was the scene of a beautiful wedding Saturday morning at 9 o'clock, when Miss Opal Florence Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grover E. Smith, was united in marri- age to Francis Anthony Crowe, son of Mr. and Mrs. james Crowe, of Shadeland, Indiana. The bride was charmingly attired in a princess gown of white satin. Her em- broidered tulle veil was held in place by a band of orange blossoms. Her only ornament was a diamond pendant, a gift of her father. The bridesmaids were the Misses Beryl Owens, of this city, and Maxine Owens, of Salein, Indiana, cousins of the bride. Following the wedding ceremony .1 three-course wedding breakfast was served at the home of the bride. Immediately following the breakfast, the newly married couple left for a brief wedding trip to Chicago, from where they will go to Sigourney, Iowa, where they will make their home. Mr. Crowe is employed as athletic coach in the high school of that city. The bride is a graduate of Jefferson High School, class of 1927. She also at- tended Purdue University. Mr. Crowe graduated with the 1927 class of Jefferson High School and at Notre Dame with the class of 1929. Dur- ing his college career he won numerous honors in athletics, especially in the Held of basketball and football. Mr. Crowe was a three-letter man at Jeff, and was the high scorer of the Notre Dame quin- tet in 1928. Hamilton-Rae Miss Mildred Hamilton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hamilton, 1603 La- Rue Street, became the bride of Robert Rae, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Rae. of this city, Saturday evening, at 8:45 o'clock. The single ring ceremony was read by the Rey. XV. A. Graham, of Cen- tral Presbyterian Church, in the pres- ence of thirty-five relatives and friends. The bride was a member of the Senior Class of '29, at jefferson High School. Sam Curtis and Bill Wilson, class of '28, spent the summer working on a passenger ship and seeing different parts of the world. Harry Kemmer, Jeff '24, is an assist- ant instructor of civil engineering at Purdue University. Page Une Ilimrlrml Nineteen Pdgfc Elurcrz if y. sf 9 i. JEFF BOOSTER Two jeff Alumni .Speak at Convocation Mr. Wfilliam Dewenter and Mr. Rob- ert Mohlman, both graduates of Jeffer- son in the class of 1923, spoke on the subject of Lafayette Serves the XVorld in convocation. They are both members of the Greater Lafayette Chamber of Commerce. These two young men have made quite a success of themselves in the business world and should be congratu- lated. Former jeff Student to Travel 2,000 Miles in Canoe, Via Rivers Fred Marxson, Jeff '26, and his friend, Tom Craig, are planning to paddle a canoe to New Orleans. They intend to leave Lafayette about 9 o'clock Saturday morning. They will travel down the Wfabash River to the Ohio River, and thence till they come to the Mississippi and from there to New Orleans. XVhen they reach New Orleans they will endeavor to get work in either a factory or a store. After remaining in New Orleans for about a year they will start working their way back home. jeff Alumni on Exponent Staff LleiT's alumni is well represented on the co-ed staff of the PIIHIIIL' E.Yl70l1f'IIf. Nancy Borgan, former editor of the Boo.ih'1', was among those chosen. Anne Mavity, who contributed several essays to the 1929 Nautilus, was also selected. Others were Mary Killian, associate edi- tor of last year's Boosterg Elizabeth Bar- tee, Rosemary Lodde and Joe Shelby. Pain, 11ni'I11m1Irf::lTzrvnty Former Jeff Girl Wins G. A. C. Prize Elizabeth Mackay, '29, was declared winner of the prize of ten dollars, awarded to the most outstanding girl in Jefferson High. This prize was made pos- sible by the Girls' Advisory Council, which every year selects an all around girl, both in scholarship and activities. In order to win the ten dollars a girl must have an excellent school record, par- ticipate in school organizations, activi- ties and scholarships. Elizabeth met all these requirements and it is indeed an honor to be known as the outstanding girl of the graduating class of 1929. In all her four years she made the honor roll every time and had more than her thirty-two required credits to gradu- ate. She was popular with the student body and was a talented musician. Eliz- abeth is now attending Purdue Univer- sity. Jeff Alumni Wins First Place in Purdue Oratorical Contest Charles R. Masterson, ,29, who is a freshman at Purdue University, was the winner of first place in the Freshman Public Speaking Contest on Tuesday eve- ning at Eliza Fowler Hall. All freshmen are eligible for this contest and they had a choice of two subjects. In his winning oration, Mr. Masterson discussed Exten- sive Advertising ls a Detriment to Pub- lic Societyf' Mr. Masterson was pre- sented with two beautiful silver loving cups. One large one for the Delta Tau Delta Fraternity, to which he is pledged, and a smaller one for himself, 6 Q- 'H ll 3 ,, -J.. A. l V . Q- 1 I .,x.. Jeff's Almanac EXPLANATORY The students of Jefferson who read the calendar for 1930 will recognize many events which play a very important part in their high school days. If the date for some event, particularly treasured, is not found in the previous sections of this book, turn to the almanac. Surely all things are recorded there. If this avails nothing search the Forecasts Perhaps the event is yet to come. If this profits nothing read the editor's Afterword. That explains everything which is recorded or not recorded within this book. CALCULATIONS The calculations are given in local or jeff Sun Time. To accommodate those who indulge in late Sunday evening dates the Moon Phases are given in Standard Time. It should be understood that Standard Time is four minutes later than the town clock, when not otherwise expressed. THE SEASONS, 1929-1930 1. Aurumnal Vacation-Autumn begins September 9. 2. Winter Vacation-Vlfinter begins December 20. 3. Vernal Vacation-Spring begins April 17. 4. Summer Vacation-Summer begins june 6. EMBER DAYS-1929-1930 Sept-Ember 21, 1929-Jeff, West Side Football. Nov-Ember 28, 1929-Thanksgiving Day. Dec-Ember 24. 1929-Christmas Day. ECLIPSES, 1929-1930 Eclipses, 1929-1930-Standard Time In the year 1929-30 there were four eclipses. two of the Sun and two of the Moon. September 28-A total eclipse of the Sun. Visible to Kentland and Jefferson. Sun enters shadow for Kentland at 3:30 p. m. Kentland time. 6 points, and Jefferson, 45. October 12-A central eclipse of the Sun. Visible as far south as Crawfordsville and at Jefferson. Time, 0-0. january 26-A partial eclipse of the Moon. Invisible to Frankfort. Visible only to Jefferson. February 28-A total eclipse of the Moon. The duration of this eclipse totaled one hour and 55 minutes, beginning at 8:53 and ending at 10:48 p. m. Rendered the jefferson gym invisible for the Dayton and Lafayette games. The shadow passed over jefferson completely at 11:15. qmomangy DRAMATIC STARS, 1929-1930 Dorothy Dykhuizen , December 4-5 Christopher Junior Joe Vaughn . December 4-5 f fEveningj MUSICAL STARS, 1929-1930 Constance Conlin .. March 28-29 Belle of Bagdad Glenn Greenwood March 28-29 Page One Hundred Tit-enty-one if V- K. 3.7 First Month. SEPTEMBER, 1929 30 Days Ivfs Wfmzlbvr Forenlslx-9th to 12th-Hot and sultry. 13th-How dry we areg 14th-Fountains dry. 15th-Tanks, paper cups and showers. 16th to 28th-Icebergs and boiled water threaten the lower and upper halls. 29th-Relief is predicted. sorb- Atmosphere cleared and the return of the fountains show that the drouth is over. FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES Eleven hundred and forty-three enroll in Jefferson High School. Soon we'll need stop and go signs in the halls to relieve the traffic. Miss Marlin orders microscopes to enable her to see the preps. Ouch! My toe! Excuse. Is this seat taken? No, sit anywhere. The Preps make the annual rush for the elevator tickets. Clubs organize and elect oflicers for the year. Is this seat 2, Row K, left wing, balcony? No! That's what I Four hundred subscriptions for the Booster. Boost the Booster! Annual preparations to eclipse West Side. All signs of the zodiac were favorable to Jefferson when the West Side planet was set in motion Saturday. Richard Ebershoff and Bert Mullins supported by the band and student body, gave the boys a real pep session this afternoon previous Days of Month Week 9 Mon. 10 Tues. 1 1 Wed. That's right! First Convo! 13 Fri. 17 Tues. 18 Wed. bought! Booster Drive. 19 Thurs. 20 Fri. 23 Mon. 27 Fri. to the entland tilt. 30 Mon. The signs did not change. MOON PHASES, 1929- 1 930 jane Byler-April. Glenn Margie-January. Tom Mary H.-December. Dick Jane-November Kate Bud-September. Bob Peggy-February. Owen Della-March Hugh Mary-May. Earl Mary-October. Clark Mary W.-June Harold Mary-July. Bob Ruth-August. SHOOTING STARS, 192 9- 1 93 0 Vivian K.: Don't get so close to me with that red hair. I might catch on fire Frank S.: Don't be silly! Greenstuff doesn't burn that easilyf' I'm her sweetheart, She's my doveg She's my chosen, Fm her loveg Tra la la- On sings Bob. How about it, Peggy? Page One Hundred Twenty-two Second Month. OCTOBER, 1929 31 Days Iejfs Weafber Foreeaxf-lst to 9th-A hot wave surrounds Dorothy Haun and Helen Grey, which may become permanent. 10th-Sun shines. 11th to 16th-Fair. 17th to 21st-Clear. School is dismissed. 22d to 25th-A storm is brewing. 25th to 30th-A hail storm of black cats, switches, bats and witches. Days of Days of Month Week FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES 2 Wed. There are more shieks in the high schools of America than in all of Arabia, quoth George Elias. 3 Thurs. The Sunshine Society holds initiation services for the new girls of jefferson. 7 Mon. The Sun shown on Rensselaer all Saturday afternoon. 9 XVed. The Red and Black Toe Ticklers know how to play. Eh? 10 Thurs. Think It-Tell It-Live lt-Lafayette! ll Fri. Fire Prevention Week. 15 Tues. Robert Orr elected president of the class of 1930. 16 Wed. It's the little things in life which count, Captain Upton. 17 Thurs. All work and no play makes jake a dull boy! State Teachers, Convention-Vacation. 21 Mon. Auto accidents are becoming too prevalent among jeff students. Bunny McQuisten is in the hospital as the re- sult of a week-end crash. 23 Wed. Glenn Greenwood and his dummies presented a stunt in behalf of the Nautilus. The acting was very clever be- cause it was so Natural 24 Thurs. Jane Shearer was elected secretary of the Indiana Press Association at the convention held at Franklin last Sat- urday. 25 Fri. 1 beleive in being loyal to the colors -sighs one Soph as he gazed at three red D's and one black C. 29 Wed. The All-State chorus, directed by Miss White, sang for convocation. PLANETS BRIGHTEST, 1929- 1 93 0 Firsf Semesler-Firsf Six Wfeefzs SA+-Dorothy Dykhuizen, Jean Harvey, Junior Steele. sA+ sA+ Seeoml Six WL'c'ks -Dorothy Dykuizen, Jean Harvey, Junior Steele. Third Six Wea'ks -Jean Harvey, Katherine Mitchell, Junior Steele. Seeona' Semesler-First Six W4'eks 4A-1--Lois jane Byrant, Charles Plank, Albert Highley. Page One Ilunzlreil Tzrenry three Third Month. NOVEMBER, 1929 30 Days left Weczffaei' Forecnsf-1st to 7th-All is calm on the Wfabash. sth to 15th- 9th-Dark clouds threaten the West Side. 10th-Big storm scheduled for tomorrow. 11th-The storm hit West Side. 12th to 20th-Clear and cold. 21st to 28th-Va- cation approaches. Days of Days of FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES Month Week 4 Mon. Hold everything! Attica, 0-Jeff, 13. 11 Mon. School starts at 7:30g but what's that when we're going to defeat the people across the river. 12 Tues. West Side, 6-Jeff, 7. 13 Wed. The artist, Mr. Arkin, presented some of his copies of master pieces at convo. The Studio Club members and art classes were introduced and secured autographs. 20 Wed. The cat's out of the bag! Who's the biggest liar? Helen XVinters, they say. 28 Thurs. We're thankful for Thanksgiving. Fourth Month. DECEMBER, 1929 31 Days jejfs IVerzffJ0r Forffasf-lst to 7th-All is calm on the Wabash. 8th to 15th- From indications we'll have a green Christmas. 16th-Wise people change their minds. We changed ours. 17th-A cold wave is brewing. 18th-Blizzard and snow engulf Lafayette. Professor Replo-gle stays in the school building. 19th-Jefferson is snow- bound at 8:00 A. M. Vacation bound at 2:00 P. M. Days of Month 3 4 9 10 12 13 20 Days of FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES Week Tues. For this six weeks we recommend boarded seats. Wed. George, Glenn, Walter and Oscar gave us a wonderful program. We wish to thank them. Mon. Greencastle, 26-Jefferson, 22. Cheer up! This is only the first. Tues. Carl Martin wants a Zeppelin for Christmas. Some more air ideas floating around. Thurs. We,ve heard of being spell-bound but we still can,t un- derstand the power Sara Schaaf had over Leonard Ade in that play! Do you suppose he ever found his tongue? Fri. Friday and blue Friday, too. How could you help but see the seniors' sweaters? Oh, those Wabash Blues. Fri. Now all doubts and fears are passing by. Santa Claus is reported to be overhauling the sleds and shoeing the rein- deer. , SHOOTING STARS-Colifirmvrl Jean H.: In art you are supposed to make ugly things look pretty. Carl M.: All right, get up and pose for us. Page One Hundred Twentyafour Fifth Month. JANUARY, 1930 31 Days Iefs Weather' Forecaxfs-6th to Sth-The Jeff world is back on schedule again. Atmosphere will be rather glum until all get adjusted to work. 9th--The world is crystal in ice and frost. 10th and 17th-A calm has settled over jeff, a calm such as is usually succeeded by a storm. 18th-The finals are on. 23rd-The storm broke tonight and the cyclonic speed of the Seniors flattened the faculty team by an un- precedented score of 23 to 49. 26th to 30th-If there weren't so much snow we'd think it was spring-judging from the amount of green in the halls and subways. 31st- The second semester has begun. Days of Days of FIXED AND MCVABLE DATES Month Week 6 Mon. We're wondering if Carl Martin got his Zeppelin for Christ- mas. Don't cry, Carl. Santa will come next year. 7 Tues. New Year's Eve was another eclipse, but it was just one point, West Side. 8 Wfed. Dr. Chenoweth says colds are not in style. 9 Thurs. Miss Whiteis numbers were wonderful. Come again, please. 15 Wfed. Professor Elmer Marshall read from Abbie's Irish Rose. 27 Mon. Wfhoopeel We won our game with Hot Dogs . 29 Wed. Rev. W'illiams addressed the students at convo. Sixth Month. Icjf's Forvnzxfs rt FEBRUARY, 1930 ZS Days ilu' Ground Hog-lst to 28th-There will be two more month of winter. Days of Days of FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES Month XVeek 3 Mon. The Zimmer Harp Trio. Most everyone expects to hear the golden harps later-hence the small house. -1- Tues. Frankfort, 345 Jefferson, 31. Double overtime. S Wed. The boy orators of three nations were the speakers of convo. Remember the Mexican. 11 Tues. Look! Look! Connie and our editor have the leads in the coming musical comedy, The Belle of Bagdadf' 12 Wed. Dean Scipio tells us how to get to Constantinople. 19 Wed. jeff has some real musical talent. Oliver Wl1.irton and Clarence Hillard entertained last convo. and Mary Counts, Eddie Brown, Harold Beeler and George Weast played today. 20 Thurs. jefferson goes to the state in the debating contest. Luck to Schnaible, Hale, Memmering and Gery. 25 Fri. The clue of The Green Diamond is becoming dense. 28 Mon. There is one Prep who really got an elevator ticket. For information see the Senior who carried George Schall down the stairs today. Page One Hundred Twenty hue Q4 R - I ,. Q5 A Seventh Month. MARCH, 1930 31 Days IVMIIJM' Forerusf-lst to 12th-The musical comedy cast will practice at 3:30 to- day. Chorus No. 2 in the auditorium at 12:30 today. Chorus Nos. 1, 3, 4, practice in the gym at 3:30 today. 12th to 26th-Tap, tap, tap. 24th-A second blizzard and deep snow will engulf Lafayette and Northern Indiana soon. 27th-The morning bulletin announces the W. C. T. U. contest once more. Days of Days of FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES Month Week 3 Mon. Jefferson wins in the sectional-which we all knew would happen. 5 Wed. Mr. S. E. Fleming gives the address in convocation on Second Milersf, We all will have something to think about if we remember his address. Miss White sang two numbers, entitled. March Wind. and Snow-Ball Bush. 7 Fri. On to the Regional! 11 Tues. joke's on the Hot Dogs. They did not get to use their candles. Ha! I-Ia! 12 Wed. Mr. Oosterbaan. one of America's greatest athletes. gives an address in convocation. I-Ie told of some of his thrilling experiences and how we should back our teams. Three cheers for Benny. 17 Mon. So the Hot Dogs were defeated-we might hnd several reasons why. Perhaps it was lack of apple-sauce, or lack of illumination or over-confidence or-well-we're glad for Washington won State, anyway. 19 Wed. The Council's banquet for the athletic teams was a grand success. Congratulations to the letter men! 26 Wed. All things come to him who-taps! Grand dress rehearsal tonight-everybody be there. 27 Thurs. The Belle of Bagdad over once. It's a real show. Con- gratulations to all! 28 Fri. Ditto! 31 Mon. Watch your step. Tomorrow's All-Fools, Day! Eighth Month. APRIL, 1930 30 Days Ivjfs Wenllavr Foretasf-1st--Father Time fooled everyone at noon today. But the study hall teacher fnow who was it?j was the most fooled. 2nd-K. V. skips but insists that he didnyt take a dame to the show. Complete silence reigns over 12A Art class-who was absent? 4th-We've heard of being up to the minute but we've never heard of celebrating the 4th in April. Sth-R. Thompson has adopted muiflers for his shoe soles. 7th-11th-Spring is here. And 14th-17th-Spring Vacation is coming! 22nd-Spring showers will become torrents when the grade cards are received. 23rd- Zith-Flocds caused by Tuesday showers are still undulating the office today. 28th- 30th-Hot days are here! REMARKS- This is a real forecast from now on. Why? Wait until you have this job. Page One Hzuzrlrerl Twenty-sir Ninth Month MAY, 1930 31 Days Iefs Wf'afbz'r Forvrasf-lst to 3rd-Changeable and how! 4th to 7th--Showers and showers of music. 7th to 14th-Cool but hot with this Senior play coming off. 14th to 29th-Torrents of tears are flooding the school since the end is drawing near. Believe it or not. Days of Days of Month Week 2 Fri. 3 Sat. 7 Wed. 9 Fri. 14 Wed. 21 Wed. 22 Thurs. 28 Wed. FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES Whoopee! The Senior Play is tonight. Luck to all! C. I. H. S. track at Stuart Field today. Music, Music, in the air. Oh. Oh! such a night, the senior dance. XVell, well, we are to have a play by Mr. Laney's class. The honors will be given at convo. today. Annual all-school exhibit. Final convocation in old Jeff this year. JUNE Wfeafbvr Furvfusi-2nd to 3rd-Clear, but miserable when these examinations gin. 3rd to 4th-The Days of Days of Month Week 2 Mon. 3 Tues. 4 Wed. 6 Fri. parting of ways has come. Farewell to Seniors. FIXED AND MOVABLE DATES Final examinations begin. Senior breakfast 9:00 A. M. junior-Senior Picnic, 3:00 P. M. The day has come to bid all our Senior classmates good-bye. The commencement. Bromley Oxnam will be the speaker. Yea! Yea! Last day of school. SHOOTING STARS-Conlimml be- Mr. McCarty: If there are any dumb-bells in this class please stand up. QA pause, finally john Kahl stood up.j What! Do you consider yourself a dumb- bell? John: Well, not exactly that, Mr. McCarty. but I hate to see you standing all alone. Miss Cook: Are you sure you have shown me all the principal parts of this car? Salesman: Yes, madam, all the important ones. Miss Cook: Well, then, where is the depreciation? My father told me that was the most important thing of a car. Employer: I-Iave you any experience as a chauffeur? Mr. Lane: Well, I can show you the receipts for the fines I have paid. Faye One Ilundrcd Tzrerzty-Seve Af terword fAnd Then They Carried Him Out On a Stretcheinj It is well understood that to be the Editor of your school paper or annual is to have one of the highest honors the school can offer. It means work, and lots of it. In the first place, the editor has to explain the duties of each staff members to them. There comes the subscription drive. As soon as that is over, in comes a flood of letters from printers, engravers, phoographers, and every other aid to the annual, as well as send two dollars and fifty cents to us and with our most completely equipped ques- tion department, we will help you put out an annual never before equalled. When the Hrst major details are taken care of, the work starts. Three to five members of the staff are in the staff room every day, writing their stuff.', It seems as if the editor is a bureau of information. Oh, Glennf' someone will call, while I am at my desk opening my all-important correspondence, Come here a minute, will you? All right, what is it? and I proceed over to the questioner, Now, I am going to make a new department out of this old one, put something new into it, so it will go over big. That's a fine idea. Go to it. Well, just a minute, do you have any ideas? Let me see- I think deeply for a moment, you might try-' ,, Glenn, where'd those proofs go I was looking at a minute ago? How should I know? I wasnit looking at them. Look around a bit. Whiit, oh, yes, your new department. No-w if I were you I'd get- Glenn!,' Yes. How many pages do I have to Hl1?', Get the dummy and find out. I haven't that thing memorized. Now, Gle-yen don't get sarcastic. Don't talk so much. Letis see-I-Io, yes, your department. I'd get a lot of material from- Again I am interrupted. Not by Glenn this time. It is a splash and a ripple, that is characteristic of paper falling on the floor, a nice sound, followed by a half- uttered shriek. I know what it is without turning around. Of all the confounded- I begin. l'Oh, Glenn, Iim so sorry, really I am. That old stool was in my way and I just- comes tearfully from the victim. Yes, yes, my dear, run along, I'll pick it up. Start on something elsef' I stand and gaze down on that little mountain of white paper with pencil marks all over it which is so much Greek to everyone but me. I sighed deeply, for in that one little pile was an hour's work rearranging it as it should be. 'QHey, where's the twenty-five Nautilus? Look in shelf number threef' I answered wearily, still gazing at the fallen dummy. It isn't there. Page One Hundred Twenty-eight Look in the bottom drawer of my desk, still gazing at the fallen glory. Can't find it! Ye Gods, ask someone else, maybe someone has it, I answered rather impatiently. How about my department? comes from the table. Oh, es, our de artmentf' I answered musin I . Let me see-oh, ies, I'd advise Y Y P 8 Y you do- Say, Glenn, do you have your window cards up yet for this show? Gee whiz, I forgot all about those. I'll have to see about them right away. No one here has that twenty-five Nautilus. I ean't find it any place. Oh, for heaven's sake, go down to the othce and get one. Tell 'em we have to have another one. Got a pencil? And I give up my only pencil. How about my de-- And the Hnnl question is interrupted by the ringing of the bell, thank the gods of fortune. It's all right and it's nice and a lot of fun to be an editor, but oh, my. I can get more work done in the five minutes following the bell than during the Whole regular period. Oh, for the life of an editor. It's a great one-if you don't weaken, but who wants to be strong? -GLLNN GRI-.kNxvoou, '30, l'1ljll'fllI1'1LlH7llIl'l'IlTlVI,'7lf!f-llflll 1 , Qi , il EJ li ,Pl f ' - . 4 .4 N 1 Y, Tbro' fb? symnzoafes fbe crzurllc Iigbf is gl6'tllI7il7g Pfzfm Tu-ahve 4 4: L Page f,lIIL'Hll1l1lI'L'll Thirty 10503 HI-Y ,fvw--x ,KT . ' o gh Hom bv-es Y fJur.som L V 'iiifff IQA, J fflfa' ' R wail-21 at it 1. CWM . 17011 ' Ill,'11HlIf1l'L'lI Tlx 1 rty A.ga.pf-A-fja wsbi :Sim Iofe P11510 H1113 llumlfwjrl Thirfy-t1L'u 2 Oy! - 5.7-'-V-auf' n- ..- ', o ,. -- ,'TX ,,, 5 . Q' X P u C wwf' M1 14. Q 0 gr 4 N X as , as x . , X gi. -.vxix an ,Q - . ' z . 715, Spring 'Fever We Maxx Ck 145 O , In J xx It 'il F - .. -. ., , .. . .ii Midge T522 MSKGTQQU Lg-gnie N snwvi. i wvmm '1 1 -'f -fa' Q 'NNWNV-bw, ' N . 4 hum xxxxxxgi 53 N :vi k - I' lqhld 5 Q0 Y w-R-Q.: X x 'L 'J 'W z' ' ' .. - 1 g -. Haig., K - : '. QU' : 'Q .. .. . ,224 ., Lv. If A',- Qi 1 .12- Oye XJ' - l,Il1f1'UH I. is F! 3-4 Who 1lHf11I1'1'1I T71 iffy Bmim Teaierfs vi .- 41 .XY ffulrwl 7'h1rl1!Afu1r1 .,f- X59 .f ,921-. , 1 ' TYF' e 4 4 3 FFS' x - 'X A: X X I X . X K Oh Baby, Am. ' 1 QLWTN. wb? -, M... ., X -, 'Red' W: T15 Tbunfain of Youih .-,1 . ..4 ' . 'a1+f,., 1, :'l' eQ , - '.,fl.'rrv- Qifw , ....-1 Q , ,f-',,: M- . . i - wi., l 1-1 '- t Xt' , 7 QT, 3- : 'Y . X ' , A' ' ' -5 X '5 , 1 '-s',x.l 1 . fe , L W , V .- 5- -L- P .. fi' aj 1 f Whoa! bf Y V' 1 Ami. This One Air Minded A '., g , A2323 AY, -' g , ' -C.: p.,-cv a: 1 'E,Qif'1-- '3j5x' ,. 12 WdlKln' Home l'1r!ff'Um' Illlmlrvwl Tl1iI'flll'flI im J . .i Y 1 .A V .ii IIVW-'S Hi, .3253 To the Professional Directory Blue Lantern Cafe Pfrommer Brothers, Frigidaire Mulhaupt 81 Son The Shook Agency Glenn Electric Service W'alter Scholer, Architect Wallace Steel 8L Supply Company Ross Machine Company Peerless Wire Goods Company Moore BL Kemple Hardware Company Lafayette Business College Dryfus Packing 85 Provision Company The Schurman Grocery Brassie-Bowers Electric Company Krabbe Coal Company Thacker-Redinbo Motor Company Duncan Electric Company john Sperb American Laundry Bt Cleaning Company Lafayette Firestone Tire Stores Motor Finance Corporation Loeb 81 Hene Company Quillar T. Smith Beauty Shop R. C. Eisenbach The Red Bt Black Goodnight Pharmacies Lafayette Lumber Company Young Men's Christian Association Hartman's Furniture Company Kienly Drug Company Schnaible Drug Company Pigglv Wigslv J. C. Penney Company Decker Brothers Henry Poor Lumber Company Crown Laundry -I. M. Clark Coal Company Graves Bakery F. Dorner Bl Sons Company Allen's Geisler Clothes Shop Lafayette Street Railway, Inc. The Murphey Book Store George R, Durgan The Lafayette Insurance Company Jordan Coal Company Payne Motor Company Coney Island Lunch Indianapolis Engraving Company Montgomery, XVard St Company Page Une Uzuzrlretl Thirty-si.r 1' Advertisers The Warren Studios Lafayette Printing Company J. H. Young, Grocer Lahr Hotel The Varsity Boot Shop Drs. G. A. and T. S. Thomas A. E. Kemmer Indiana Service Corporation Lafayette Typesetting Company Northern Indiana Public Service Corporation Peter Anderson Company Farmers St Traders State Bank XVolever Electric Company Ruger's Bakery The Rapp Company Roth Florist, Inc. Held Brothers Hotel Fowler Lafayette Ice and Coal Company Vellinger Pharmacy First-Merchants National Bank National Fowler Bank Gerry Mohlman Bt Brothers Herff jones Company Shambaugl'i's Garage S. H. Bylsma Matt Schnaible Coal Company Lincoln Lodge Korty Coal Company E. A. Shriner Ross Gear George A. Schillin, Candy White Palace Shoe ReBuilders Foster Shops XVells-Yeager-Be't Company Tippecanoe Loan and Trust Company Haywood's Fourth Avenue Amusement Company -l. H. Evans Coal Company Reifers' Furniture Company Clatz Confectionery Jeff Booster Arthur Lahr Plumbing Company Orth Plumbing Company -I. P. Perkins Lumber Company Gingrich Lafayette Calendar 81 Novelty Company McCormich Dairy Chamberlin's Ice Cream Superior Ice Cream Company lit-l P :fi Q -.. 'V ani 0 QIQQYQ Q 17 Qdmy H I7 U' if L7 I V I J df! 0 AUVI ISIXC 7. i wi Pa v L, I. 1 ' ' 'x '1,! .A u m ' ' 1 v X X D , X , .,..,1g :gf nz Wi :Ji h Q, W 'e,. xi' , HK' if .,,, , 1-: w H: , L ' N .T W 4 qv. b ,i Q v ,X '75 Mo 1 fs: wwf X ' 5 In av: Dr. H. G. Martin 305 Schultz Bldg. Risk Dental Clinic Dr. Paul A. Risk Dr. Luther A. Risk Dr. Harold AI. Risk Schultz: Bldg. Dr. E. Van Reed Othce 613 Lafayette Life Bldg. Residence Phone 408 Office Phone 1283 Hours-Afternoon, 1:30 to 4:30 Ofhce Hours' 10-12-1-4 Eyenings: Mon., Wed., Sat., 7-8 O. U. Chenoweth, M. D. Lafayette Life Building S22-S24 Phones: Oihce, 48544 Residence, 6716 Dr. O. E. Griest 719 Lafayette Life Bldg. Dr. -Adah McMahan Office 831 Columbia St. Residence Phone 6343 Office Phone S055 Hours Afternoon 1:00 to 4:00 The Arnett Crockett-Clinic Lafayette, Indiana Dr. George E. Bell Dr. R. D. Lingle R18-20 Lafayette Life Bldg. Lafayette Dr. A. Bauer 918-20 Lafayette Life Bldg. Physician and Surgeon Office Hours 2-4 P. M. Daily Except Sundays Evening 7 to 8 P. M. Wed. and Sat. Osteopathy and Eletronic Methods Dr. Vyverberg 906-9 Lafayette Life Bldg. Pfmf'1lu1'lIl11ul1'r'1l Tllilffl-. Page ThiVtf'fn X I onslanll earchin '!,f.,, -c If F lr 1 ' X X X X- i WI I fl fi' UNI' Illmzlzwl Tlfirlu rifllzl -13 E.rtabfi.rlmZ IX9f -- ev 3 W2 5 ill' .lx Fon centuries astronomers have looked into the skies searching for new worlds, constellations and stars. Aside from their interesting research work they have learned much that 15 of practical scientific value. Similarly, in the field of student: publications, the Indianapolis En- graving Company searches con- stantly for new ideas, plans and methods that will assist year-bool: staffs to publish successfully books characteristic of their school and community. The results of these efforts are gratifying. The Annual Planning and Design- ing Department welcomes your inquiries for further information, INDIANAPQLIS ENGRAVING COMPANY Department of Annual Planning and Designing INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA i i E it 1' x 1 J .,: - , n - or if n HI 4 . . A 0. , ,, . .I J.. YGDF'-AAL T-'IRST TO THE EYE OE YOUR READER TO TIIE SUPPORT OIT YOUR IIJEAIS May XVe Be En-Qt to S .1tiSfy Your I'Iungry XV.1ntsf Iljw 351112 EEIIIIPIZII Qlnfv Mon lxCCOIUIUOd.IIIl'lg S28 MAIN STREET joe Vllllghfllil I T1C.ll' that you have .1 new Ich. ' h I'm 1 m1nicu1'ist in .1 b.llxCl'Y. I-I. Von Seggern: Yea , . . Ioe: M.1nicurist in LI b.lTiCl'y? TI.1rry: Yes, I have charge ot the lady I1 - Hngers. XVI1 1t's BISSOA' Mr. Troutm.1n: . .. G. XV.1ll.1ce: It's on the tip ot my tongue, but I C.Il'l'I get it OLII. Mr. Trout m.1n: You'd better. Ifs poson. Mgmv .1 nobody who ifn't R11 1 incwn by everybody. and everyhg1tIy t and they knew he would he st: 11eI11.Iy ly .lnyhoiy becomes .1 some body and is 1 I 11 X1 hen he wax nobody Ii him I'1LI' ine ' ' ' . fo11'e eI.1y. If,Z.1.-D.'.I,L. Autun1.1t1c RL'fl'IgfUl'Jl. 1 IQ Serving the Needs in II,IfFI-RNON HIGH SCIIOOI, CJXIITIAIIRIA Pfrommcr Bros. I..1f.1yette. II1dI.ll1.l 650 Main St. Phone 6253 I','XI5IOC'K'S, Iil-Yi ANI! IOCR RI I'.'XIRINLQ liltyclex, Rt-p.11r1l1g and Accessories Y.'l1'g:1 You Tlilulxs of Rexx ,1n,I I.-Jw, Tfr.-nk uf .Ilnlfnllljvlx E. Jos. Mulhaupt 81 Son Everything In REAL ESTATE Ll 11 Li INSURANCE The Shook Agency 221 North Eourth Street 209 North Fifth Street Glenn Electric Service If Your Car XXfo11't Start Phone 3878 I0-12 North Second Street l'f1.p l,ffrII1mrl1'fwITlrififl ru NWALTER SCI-IOLER A. I. A. ARCHITECT v 1 210 Wallace Building Lafayette, Indiana I'm so glad to be on vice versa again, said Miss Kennedy as rhe ship reached the harbor. My dear, you don't mean vice versa, you mean terra cotta, corrected Miss Hanna. l'm sorry. XVe've run out of gasf' All rightf, was her instant reply. I'll show you I'm game. And she had the tooth extracted without the gas. An actress from Providence married .1 man from Paradise, Ky.. recently. WALLACE STEEL 86 SUPPLY COMPANY Structural Steel Building Fabricating Specialties Telephone 6825 318-330 South Third SI. Lafayette, Indiana A fnllur'lll1fuI1'1'41I m'l1f ROSS MACHINE COMPANY Mfwumcruiaeizs or Spur Gears and Screw Machine Products Everything comes to him who eats hash! Chink Callisonz NVh.1t do you slick your hair down with? Bud Clayton: Crisco. Chink: XVhy? Bud: Because I don't have to get .my haircuts Chink: XVhy? Bud: My mother told me than was shortenm Frances Horner: How will I stir my coffee? W.1iter: XVanta spoon? Frances: Say. what CIIYJ think I am! THE PEERLESS WIRE GOODS COMPANY Sanitary Metal Products Lafayette, Indiana I1rlIIlI'll Moore and Kemple Hardware Company :xi Radios Gas Stoves Hardware Paint 530 Main St. Telephone 2577 AN APRIL FOOL EPITAH There was a grocer by the name of March. Cnc day the butcher came around and said: March, the first of April the priee of meat's going upf' The next day the jobber's salesman came along: March, the first of April the p1'iee of sugar is going up. A few days later the landlord canfe around and said: March, the first of April the rent is going upf, The grocer thought awhile, and tlten put up this sign: The first of April will be the end of March. Boss: XVhy did you spell pneumatic newmatic?,, Dumb Stenographer: The ku on my typewriter is not working. Mr. Peck-XVhy the rope around the finger? Mr. Laney-My wife put it there so I'd remember to mail a letter. Mr. Peck-Did you mail it? Mr. Laney-No. She forgot to give it to me. Miss Fleming-W'hat is Franeis Scott Key's greatest distinction? D. Courtner-He knew all four verses of the Star Spangled Bannerf' J. Hall in Art 12A-Your work bears the closest inspection. Wligit in- finite pains you must take! K. Vyverburg-Perhaps, but, do you knew, I enjoy the pains. J. Hall-Then. you too, pursue art for art's ache. FOR A BUSINESS CAREER This school gives an unusual training .mtl employment service right here at home as well as in nine other cities of Indiana. School the year 'rouni Iinter any time. Lafayette Business College Painters and Decorators Bldg. North Sixth Street git'1l1n'llnfnI1'z'1IIfortjf-Iiro lil H1 i M.. ' W-xr, . --- ,....f, . .3 A. CONGRATULATIONS To THE CLASS OF 1930 Dryfus Packing 81 Provision Company Yes, said the eminent oculist. james Ind gi curious affliction. Every- thing he looked at he saw cloublef, I-lcw sgidl I suppose the poor fel- low found it hard to obtain work? Str.ingely, nc, said the oculisi The local gas ccinpany snapped h'm up as scon ns they heard of him. Hc's now reading gas makers. Wfilmer Vess-This ClLl.11'ICl'iS no goodg it won't ring. Glenn W'right-XVnddy.1 want for two bits-chimes. Little pictures leave me coldg it's the big c.1nv.1sses I .1pyreci.1te. You're an art critic? No-ii frame inakerf' Theres one word in the English language th.1t is .ilwsys pronounced wrong. XVh.it is thu? XVhy, wrong. of course. Mr. Minier-Noises in my head keep me awake. Mr. Miller-Th.1t's impossible. Mr. Minier-How's that? Mr. Miller-You canit tixinsmit sound through gi vacuum. Senior Dance-Nautilus Benefit He Ca poor dancerjz It wis kind of you to give me this dance. She Ca good d.1I1CCfJZTl1iS is .1 charity ball, isn't it? A cop is always J good friend to have in a pinch. Compliments of The Shurman Grocery X XKQQEIS7 A ' ' 'K' Puyf' Uni' llzmdrvfl b'Ul'lvIl'Ull'Cl , - :QQ ' gl'l,,l1-7l,. fl, cp vw, . 1 is i. 1 IQ' X? THE ELECTRIC SHOP Brassie-Bowers Electric Co. Electrical Contractors and Engineers 1022-1024 Main St. R. C. A. Radiolas A. B. C. Wilsliers MAZDA LAMPS Leonard Ade, the actor, was recently found breaking the traffic rules. Wfhen a policeman approached dragging his notebook and pencil from his pocket, Ad: smiled. Well, my man, he said, pleasantly, 1 make it a rule never to sign autograph albums, but in your case I'll make it an exception. Caught red-handed in the act of sprinkling bread crumbs on the Purdue campus, Frosh Schaaf said he was doing it just for a lark. Dependable Coal KRABBE COAL CO. Office and Yards: 1629 Union St. Phone 1440 Thacker-Redinbo Motor Co. General Garage Service Distrbutors of Quaker State Motor Oil Goodyear and Dayton Tires Phone 7450 308-14 N. Third St. l I fc one I1in141ra'flI Ortj1'fu1lr DUNCAN Wattliour Meters ACCURATE ECONOMICAL DEPENDABLE DUNCAN ELECTRIC MFG. CQ. Lafayette, Indiana Dick G.-Father, I wish I were like .1 riui Mr. Gery-I-Iow, son? Dick-It follows its course without leaving its bed. Miss Ratcliffe-Didn't I tell you to notice when the milk boiled ovei M. Lambuth-I did. It was h.1lf-past ten. Miss Seever-Did your father help you with this sum Prep-N05 I got it wrong myself. JOHN SPERB I-IARDXVARE, PAINT AND GLASS A Complete Line of Devoe Artist Materials 822 and 824 Main St. Phone 202 lhlgr1l1if'll11ll1lI'1'il 1 0l'f,ll Fl THE AMERICAN LAUNDRY CLEANING CO- Laundry-Dry Cleaning-Pressing Hats Cleaned and Blocked Shoe Repairing We also do Dyeing, Plearing and Button Making Phones 3085-3086 641 Main Strevt F. J. CAsoN F. XV. OLIVER Mr. Hinshaw: I found them clutching one another, wrestling and fighting each other all over the hall. Soph: It isn't true. Mr. Marshall, we were'nt fighting at all when he grabbed us-we were just trying to separate each other. Mr. Botkins: Have you Ll book in stock called Man the Master? ' Clerk: Fiction department is on the other side of the shop, sir. C0mP1imfUfS Motor Finance Corp. of the Automobile Financing Lafayette Office Phone 4877 Firestone Tire Stores, Inc. Garage 3404 1 1 1 Cllilliflrfrll u1'l'y-Sig' Step by Step YOU ADVANCE IN LIFE From the first day of school, you have acl present day-always alert and on the outlook to vanced with eager steps to the learn and profit by experience. Onward you will go into another phrase of life eager to know what the next period may bring. Step by Step WE ADVANCE IN BUSINESS So have we in our business advanced step by step until we have reached the present stage, yet even with the success achieved we are always advancing another step to keep up with the advance of time. Loeb 86 I-Iene Co. Dependable Merchandise Cook: I-Iere's a lot of peas, potatoes and meat left over. stew again tonight. I.et's give 'em Chef: I wouldnt the boys are getting tired of mergers. I've heard that Mary li. Berger is a chronic kicker. Absolutely, she's the left end on Conder's chorus team. Quillar T. Smith Beauty Shop FRANCES OSWALT, Prop. 662 Main Street Dial 7727 For Appointment R. C. Eisenbach Up-to-date jewelry At Reasonable Prices 509 Main St. 15151: nm' IlnmI1'v'4I I m'fil-s 1 On fbe banks of fbe W7almsb, far away M737-,,-:A Y 4, , . , I .......gf-E Q .. -. 1. , , ....5 1-1 :g-M, ff, , x su - ' -' s +V' ,FTQ -1 ' w. ' ' ' - Page Fourteen Text The Red and Black Jeff's Supply Store Books and Supplies for I-Ligh School Gym Shoes, Suits and Supplies for Girls, and Boys, Gymnasium Work Used Text Books-Bought and Sold Soda fountain and luncheonette service in an inviting grilleg clean, Wholesome foods md drinks. candies QLowney's 86 Morse's box candiesj, cigare, tobaccos, films ind silted nuts. The Red 516 North Ninth St. and Black Book Store and Grille EARL E. GOCDNIGHT, Prop W HAT IF XVE CALLE THEIR MIDDLE NAMES? Edwin Xvilson Royce Friberg Evalyn Rush Edwin Xvilliams Charles Campbell Everett Martin Barton Alvord Robert Memmerin Gertrude Reynolds Leigh Arnold Sylvester Keller Marilyn Collins Merle Horner Mildred XVinski Curtis Casad u C3 D THEM BY Hester Shambaugh Louise Thompson Marie Pensinger Margaret Shearer Wilson Malsbary LaVerne McLean Phyllis Haag Miss Fletemyer-Give for one year the number of tons shipped out of the United States. E. Featherstone-14923 none. Peg Crowe-Here are two good ones: Loveable Eyes and Hot Lips. Dave Ziffrin-It just occurred to me why they call them feature songs. Frederick Vyverberg Ann Eisenbach Raymond Clayton Ben Diamondstone Marie Cripe Culver Sample Louise Glenn R. Gery-I had a terrible dream last night. J. Shearer-Tell me about it. R. Gery-I dreamed that I was eat- ing shredded wheat and woke up and found half the mattress gone. Goodnight Pharmacies Phone 3725 716 North Ninth St. Eastman Films, Lowe Phone 6000 1530 E. Main St Dependable Merchandise Courteous Service Side Lines: Bros. Paints, Radios, School Books, Fishing Tackle, Candy, Cigars, Soda Fountain P 1 l11m41ri'rIl urtyi'iylI1i' Superior Mill Wfork-Good Lumber Reynolds' Shingles Lafayette Lumber Co. 410 North Third St. Phone 23 5 O Make the Y. W. C. A. Headquarters for Your Leisure Hours Compliments of I-larlmans 310 Main Street K. M.1lsb.1ry-Did the Doctor know what you had? M. Wfinski-Seemed to have .1 good idea. He asked me for S10 .ind I had 'lil 1 Red Kelly says that he will gr.1du.ite if the faculty does not request an encore. Meet Your liriends at Kienly Drug Co. Prescription Druggists Not How Cheap But How Good Sixth and Main Streets New! Quick Drying! Smart Colors For Interior Surfaces KYANIZE Quick Drying Dries In Four Hours And Is Dust Free In Less Than 60 Minutes Lustaquik Finish Schnaihle Dru g Co. I'iiifv' Uni' llr1mlri'1l Forlf . 7. Plssly W 1sg1Y Helps Those Who Help Themselves Dorothy Reynolds: It's .ill over the school. Oscar Alvord: Wlmat? Dorothy Reynolds: The roof, dummy, the roof. Mrs. Pensingtr: Helen, did you put fresh water on the goldfish today? Helen: No, mother, they haven't finished the water that I gave them yes terday. Howdy Hughes: I owe everything to my father. Jack Camardy: How about that five bucks you owe me then? J.C.PENNEY Lafayette, Indiana Wfhere Savings Are Greatest Cn Everything You Buy I ru-Inu'I1lrmIrf'1IF1ftk11 BO0liS Stationery D soofr senses -- srA 1-fofvfns ECKE BROS. or-'FACE N- our,-ff rreps Office Athletic Outfitters Goods Don Wolfe: I asked the barber to attend to my hair, and he poohed me. Dave Ziffrin: Wliy' clitln't you slam him? Don: XVell. this was only a sham-pooh. Carl Martin: Yes, I paint Ll picture in a tlay and a half, and thinlt noth- ing of it. Grace Talbert: No wonder. Newly Arrived Englishman Cwntching archery practice in public parlij: I've heard that America was a little behind the time in preparetlness, but I diclrft know things were this bad. Henry Poor Lumber Co. Lumber, Millwork, Builders' Supplies Phone 3083 l'lljlt'U!l1'Hllllrl!'1'1lFlflllf-ll KNOWLEDGE which lends to EFFICIENCY in the application of While You Have Grown In the ARTS AND SCIENCES which you have learned. KNOWLEDGE of the most EFFICIENT care of clothing which We Have Grown In . . IICCOUHLS for Ollf ever-lnCl'C2ISII'lg VOLUME of business. Crown Laundry Co. Master Dry Cleaners For that lousy feeling-scratch! Meeting called to water, screamed the coach as the swimming team dived in. Second childhood wculd not be so lamentable a state if it were followed by second adolescence. Helen is the most modest girl we know. When she plays tennis she sews lend weights to the edges of her skirt. Your coffee is on the table, sir, and the Rolls is outside. Telephone service between the United States and England is our idea of an Anglo-Saxophone. CLEAN Graves Bakery Fine Breads and Pastries QL Party Orders a Specialty Phone S001 Phone 3852 We Deliver J. M. Clark Coal Co. Page Our' Himrlrerl Fifty-two F5 ? .J -A-,,4-,,.,...J- ' , ' ' . If r-- f I 9 J 0 .Q ,Mp M. Y F. Dorner Sc Sons Co. The Flower Shop Phone 6050 663 Main Street Member of The Florists' Telegraph Delivery Association You see a beautiful girl walking down the street: she is, of course. feminine. If she is singular, you become nominatiye. You walk across to her, changing to the verbal and then to becoming actiyeg if she is not objective, you become plural. You walk home together. I'Ier brother is an indefinite article. Her mother is accusative and becomes imperative. You talk of the future, and she changes to the object. Her father becomes present and you become the past participle. Miss Leiter-Tomorrow I'll ask some questions on the Indiana bankg I might not get any answers but I'll ask them anyway. Miss Fletcmyer-Wfhat Lafayette man made a fortune in iron? Bright UQ Junior-Wfinski. Mr. Wolfe-Why, boy, don't you think it's about time for you to stand alone? Don fcheerfullyj-Sure. pop! I can stand 11 loan any time. Dancing, as every other art, has a definite technique-a right way. Good Clothlng Ballet, Tap and Ballroom Dancing Costs I-955 Here Private Lessons by Appointment We Simply ask you to Come and See Dial 2150 if that doesn't ring true! P. M. Allen . Geisler Clothes Shop Instructor ' . L f , I d. AIIen's Third Floor-Murdock Bldg. S00 Mam St 3 ayette n i r Page Une H1mflredFifty-three I C 9 0 U '- L lx., if-rr., iv ' -' V, U 'A Clean, Comfortable, Efficient Service, Safeguarded Witli Every Safety Device, is Qffered the Patrons of the Lafayette Street Railway, Inc., for Five Cents, Including Transfers. Your Patronage Is Appreciated and Solicited Q5 Lafayette Street Railway, Inc. Two Sjwvifils Ezwlv N0011 fronz fbc High School O. Alvord:- XVhy didnlt you answer my letter?,' Dot R- I didn't get itf' O. A.- You didn't get it.', D. R.- Nc, .ind besides, I didn't like scmc of the things you said in it. Mr. Hammons-XVhat is the quickest way to make sawdust? Dick S.1mple-NVhy- er- Mr. H.-Come, come, use your head. Joe Bloom-See any change in me? C. Byers-No. J. B.-I just swallowed 15 cents. The Murphey Book Store High School Books-Supplies 666 Main St. Grand Pianos Upright Pianos Cable-Nelson-Mason SL Hamlin Chickering-J. SZ C. Fischer These Are Some of the Makes We Sell George R. Durgan Murdock Bldg. Sixth and Ferry Sts. 1 11v1mi'I111ruIrr'rIFlllifrfnur 'E . 'Q' . B EMG rs., ' 3 ,if 5 N - i , i . r , 1.. 'R 'l lllilfi. The Lafayette Life Life Insurance START RIGHT A life insurance policy that pays you yet living costs but little more when in your earlier years. Ask us about it. while taken A. L. Alexander, President. Comp.my's Building Ezwr'-1' P11l1i'yli11lili'r' An Uuurr W. VV. Lane Dr. E. L. Marshall W. R. Smith Secretary Vice President and Actuary Field V. P. Salesmen: C. W. Ebel T. R. Smith E. N. fRedj Sleight H. R. fSpokJ Smith H. A. Kamp S. A. Ebel Geox. M. Kunkel F. M. Kuipers T. Talen Pfljfljfllll' lI1mfIri'4IFif1 YV!,!1..Efl'x-I f ,-. LL. i 1................ l l T Vi.: . lan Ha Jefferson High School Was Heated This Year By Wfinterglow Coal furnished by the Jordan Coal Co. 1500 Wfabash Aves Phone 3825 Mrs. Troutman-Luther, the house is on fire! Lute Csleepilyj-XVell, go shut off the furnace. There's no use wasting coal. Edna Hanna-And these are the dirigible hnrigars. Oh, Harold, do they really fold up those big things and hang them up like Clothes? T. Gullion-Whyf do you carry 21 nest of moths around with you? J. Knhl-I put them in the girls' parachutes and don't tell them about it till they threaten to drop out .ind walk home. Glen Greenwood feditorj-Answer the question yes or no' Helen Haag-Yeah? Paine Motor Company Lincoln Fordson Friendly People Telephone 2325 14 North Sixth St. P fi' Um' IllllllllfllFfffkUSl.1' Montgomery Ward and Company Lafayette, Indiana gi? 3 A z THINK FIRST OF WARDIS WHENEVER YOU THINK OF BUYING 1 II Iliff he Warren Studios Portrait and Commercial Photography Distinctive Portraits General Commercial Work Motion Pictures Aerial Views Qfficial Photographers For the 1930 Nautilus Dial 2010 for Better Photography 1 II 1 Illll If YOUR ANN TA HIS, your annual, which expresses the personality and tradition of your school will be cherished by you as a memory book. As time goes on you will point to it with pride, as you have done your work well. Success is a combination of planning and exe- cution and We take pride in having been chosen to execute your work. Wfe are equipped to handle all classes of printing from a visiting card to an elaborately planned Yearbook and delight in adding rlmuu details which tend toward perfection. Lafayette Printing Co Lafayette, Indiana lhlycllfiwllflifrll fllljlrl A at 1' ui Q' J. H. Young, Grocer 1600 North 13th St. Mr. Rogers-Can you give a definition for an orator? Herman Berger-Yes, .1 man who is ready to lay down his life for his COUHIFY. Miss Young-W'ho can nlme one important thing we have that we did not ave a hundred years L1gO. Prep-Me! Miss Marlin-Wfhen was Rome built? K. Neumann-At night. Miss Marlin-W'h.it makes you think so, Kenneth? K. Neuman-XY hy dad told me Rome was not built in a day. Hotel Lahrv Comfortable Rooms Center of All Local Activities Lafayette, Indiana Bohemia Cafe and Cafeteria in Connection Sport Oxfords Doctors for G. A. and T. S. Thomas Spring Dentists g Lafayette, Indiana The Varsity Boot Shop Schultz Bldg. West Lafayette Phone 2279 I 1' lim' ll1Hl1Irv'1IN1.rIy Compliments of A. E. Kemmer General Coniracior J -va-se ia: I 'aL T' Lafayette, Indiana Lafayette, We Are Here! Through thick and thin, storm and fair weather, basketball tournament and football crowd The Indiana Central Lines Serve Lafayette If its a special car for rooters to a game-we always have it. If its quick, clean, convenient transportation to a nearby city-we have that ready, too. If its service in a pinch with a smile and the extra mile-we are always ready to give it. Indiana Service Corporation Dick S-Dad, can you shut your eyes and sign your name? Mr. Sample-Certainly. Dick-Well, then shut your eyes and sign my report Card. Here, here, gentlemenlu exclaimed the train conductor, finding two of his smoker passengers in .1 brawl. XVhat's the trouble here?', My pocketbook's gonef, replied one of the combatants when peace had been restored. And I think he took it. I-Ie was sitting beside- I-le's crazy! interrupted the accused. I never stole a penny in my lifeg I don't have to steal, I'm a plumber. Lafayette Typesetting Co. Linotype Composition-Ludlow Makeup 310 M North Fifth Street Lafayette, Indiana I 41f'Hm'1l1ifnl,wINiflil-111-o Time Is Your Qnly Real Wealtli Am! Your Public Ufilifiux-Gas amz' Elec'f1'ic'ify-An' Engrzgra' In Snlfiug Time for You Tfarougb a HlllIl1ll'f'l1l DiVgl'I'l'l1f C!JHII1lt'1X Wfonderful and numerous as the uses of electricity and gas are today, as you go through life you will find their services is increasingly valuable. Engineers and technicians are constantly finding new uses for them both until today they are among man's best servants and imagination fails to foresee their many new uses for tOU1Ol'l'0W. As you go in life you will find these two giving you more and more help in the conservation and best use of that real wealth that comes to each of you-TIME. A SERVICE DEDICATED TO RELIEF FROM DRUDGERY AND TI-IE SAVING OF TIME Northern Indiana Public Service Company Salesman Qshowing customer some sport stockingsj-just the thing for you. Wforth double the money. Latest pattern, fast colors. holeproof, won't shrink, and it's a good yarnf' Miss Slayback-Very well told, too. Eddie Brown Qto Miss XVhite at orchestra practicej-I ean't ever get clear through this piece on time. Doris Thompson-just follow me and you will get through four measures ahead of time. XVilson Galbreth-I believe I'll go W'est and settle down. Roger I-Iayth--You'd better stay here and settle up. Peter nderson Company For NVreeker Service Tire Service Everything for the Auto Goodyear Tires and Tubes Delco Batteries and Battery Charging Dial 40-IS Sixth and Columbia 151111-rlzif' IlzffirlrmlSir!!!-flu A Good Place To Do Business Gui' Facilities Offer Every Convenience for the Transaction of Business and Personal Banking. Prompt, Courteous Service. -V1 On Savings Deposits Farmers and Traders State Bank Lafayette, Indiana A three-hundred-pound man stood gazing longingly at the enticing display in .1 l1.lbCI'ClLlSl'lCI'iS window. A friend stopped to inquire if he was thinking of buying the marked-down lavendar silk shirt. No, replied the fat man, wistfully. The only thing that fits me ready- made is a handkerchief. Judge O'Flaherty--Haven't you been before me before? Prisoner-No. Y'r honor. Oi niver saw but wan face that looked loike your's an' that was .1 photograph of an Irish king. Judge O'Flaherty-DischargedY Call the nixt cast General Electric REPRIGERATQRS No Owner Has Paid For Servict Wolever Electric 642 Main Street Dial 4852 Good Bread-DELIGHTFUL ROLLS-Fine Cakes If It Is Quality You NVish, You Wfill Find It Here t'Quality', Is the XVork-Wot'd of i 3 Ruger s Quality Bakers 1 1 ,iifffi1'IIz1m1n'fISurry-follr I . Success To Jeff Is the Wfish of The Rapp Co. CUT PRICE STORE Scuth Side Square-Lafayette, Indiana Ei'i'1'jlfJ11!q In W i'm'-Fri' All ffn' I i.1i1.'l.i'-Gmiif I'iif11i-i-liujvirlilr Prii'i'f A duel was lately fought in Texas by Alexander Schott and john S. Nott. Nott was shot and Schott was not. In this case it was better to he Schott than Nott. There was a rumor that Nott was not shot and Schott avows he shot Nott, which proves either that Nott was not shot: not withstanding, it may be made to appear on trial that the shot Schott shot shot Nott, or as accidents with fire- arms are frequent, it may he possible that the shot Schott shot shot Schott him- sclfg in which case the whole affair would resolve itself into its original elements and Schott would be shot and Nott would not. XY'e think, however, that the shot Schott shot shot not Schott but Nott. Anyway, it is hard to tell who was shot. Roth Florist, Inc. 635 Main St. Phone 7955 Held Brothers State Auto Insurance Money to Loan at a Low Rate of Interest Steamship Tickets lawn' Um Ilr4i11li'riISi.r!ll-V71 Af 'T' -. 3 s . S 'IJ P I l xt' s ' A xx T15 ia' A I-Iotel Fowler of Real-Genuine-I-Iospitality I Good Food-Excellent Service You'll Like Itu L R. E. MEI-INE, Mgr. Lafayette Ice and Coal Co. Telephone 9078 Mr. McCarthy fa few minutes lnterj-Are you ready yet? Mrs. McCarthy-In L1 minute. - Mr. McCarthy fa few minutes laterj-Are you rmclyyet? Mrs. McCarthy-Listen, haven't I told you for the last half-hour 1'd be ready in 11 minute. She-How did you get that black eye? I-Ie-The fireless cooker. She-Nonsence, impossible I-Ie-I thought the same until I tried to fire her yesterday. High Class Drugs High Class Service Vellinger Pharmacy We Operate the Best Soda Fountain In the City 854 Main Street Phone 2727 I 511' 11110 HI1111IV1'rI NWI! THE BANKING HOME or The FirSt-MCrCh2111tS jEF1fERsoN HIGH SCHQOL , ACTIVITIES National Bank Solieits the accounts of instructors students and Student organizations. Lafayette, Indiana The National Fowler Bank Oldett Bank in Tippecanoe County Com lete Bankin ' Service . p 3 Columbia at Fourth Street We think Helen fl-laagj is the meanest girl we ever heard of. She promised RedU QKelley, in ease you askj that she would give him a nice, long kiss if hell drive around the cemetery on the left hand side of the street and park next to ni fire-plug. Imagine the sad case of Killer Kelly, the star captain and fullback of the Atlanta pen, who was pardoned on the day before the big game with Sing Sing. Mercedes Mooney-Gimme .1 marceling iron and a bottle of carbolic acid. Clerk-W'hat are you going to do with them? M. M.-Gonna curl up and die. Gerry Mohlman 85 Bros. Jewelers-Optometrists We Carry a Complete Line of High School Rings and Pins 434 Main St. Lafayette, Indiana l'11!fw1mv' Il111nl1'1':IN1.rI-ilivwl' UPI! Findings ffm' Tbosz' Wfao Som' fo Hcfigbfsj Choral tone of a motor's purr, From a plane as it strikes the airg Bringing courage, high hope astir, Singing nerve to do and to dare. Today he heard it. Leaps into blackness, leaps into dawn, Wfinging over the world,s great morn. All terror and darkness is gone. Earth Wakens to beauty new-born. Today he saw it. Far-flung the Cry from earthly things! Reaching summits, attaining dreams! Flashes of a plane,s star-touched wings, Taking the path that star-touched see Today he found it. -WILMA A. FLETEMEYER. ms! Quality Above All Herff Jones Company Designers and Manufacturers of High School and coiiege Jewelry .incl Commencement Invitations Official Jewelers to Jefferson High School Shambaughk Garage CHARLES E. SHAMBAUGH, P1-Op. Authorized Buick Sales and Service . Sixth and Alabama Phone 3033 I '1'1lzi4'lllm1Ir1vlF If fit S. H. Bylsma Plumbing and Heating PI'10DC 7976 11 17 North 14th Street. R. W. Peck,s Famous Home Brew Recipe-Chase wild bullfrogs for three miles and gather up the hops. To them add ten QIOJ gallons of tan bark to give it a body, half a pint of shellac to make it smooth, one bar of soap to make it foam, and four dcorknobs to hold it down after you drink it. Boil this mess for thirty-six 1363 hours, then strain through an I. W. sock to keep it from working. Add one grasshopper to each pint to give it a kick. Pour a little in the kitchen sink. If it takes the enamel off. it is ready for bottling, and how!! fXVith apologies to Mr. Peck.j Miss Aldridge-Should I mari y a man who lies to me? Fortune Teller-Lady. do you want to be an old maid? Joe Bloom-I think the trolley has passed. Abe M.-How do you know? J. B.-I can see its tracks. Ha! Ha! A woman walked into an insurance office and asked whether they dealt in fire insurance. We do, a clerk replied. XVhat do you want insured? My husband. Then you don,t want fire insurance, smiled the clerk as he reached for another application form. Irwhtlf you Want is a life insurance policy. No, I don't! exclaimed the woman. I want fire insurance. My hus- band's been fired four times in the last week. Prlgffilnr'llHff1l11'rlNf1'l1ffA 1 Matt Schnaible Coal Co.. 'tjust Good Coal and Coke Phone 5476 519 Erie Street Soph-Do you multiply the opponents in the problem QSy4j33?x Mr. Lewis-No, you multiply the exponents. A farmer once asked the editor of L1 country paper for advice, as follows: I have a horse that at times appears normal, but at other times is lame to an alarming degree. Wfhat shall I do? The reply came: The next time that your horse appears normal, sell himf' A marriage license is n slip of paper which cost you 52.00 down and your entire income for the rest oi your life. Jeff Students Hold Your Parties Here Lincoln Lodge DANCING SPECIAL DINNERS North River Road For Reservations Phone 75256 Korty Coal Company QMKOR jf: -U - A-T1 Phone 403 3 Vim: Hur'l1HH1If'r'flN1'1'r'Hl 1 E. A. Shriner Grocery-Meat Market-Bakery Wfholesale and Retail Quality Merelmndise EVHCIENT SERVICE Ross Cam--Lever Steering Gears Excel On Automobiles-Trucks-Busses Farm Tractors and Motorboats Pufff' rm I1 I I N If George H. Schilling WI-ICLESALE CANDY Telephone 2297 210 North 11th Sr Wl1o is the responsible man in this firm? asked the caller. I don't know who's the responsible man, sir. said the office boy bt I always get the blame. Youth-Mr. Slow, I love youi' daughter more than words can tell Mr. Slow-XVell, maybe you state it in figures. I-Iow are you getting on with Carl? Oh, he's a most disappointing lover. I purposely blew out rh light fuse last night and he spent the whole evening mending it. Shoe Repair Service Quality Materials ' Kodaks W'orkmanship White Palace Shoe Fresh Films Better Finishin AI. ERNEST CARR, Prop. The 118 XV. Side of the Square Foster Phone ESOS Lafayette, Indiana Shops Go To Wells-Yeager-Best Company Wfholesale and Retail Druggists 120 North Third Street For Your Prescriptions Drugs and Toilet Articles Lafayette Iridiini 1ll1'HlHllII'1'IlXtl'1 il! I Tippecanoe Loan and Trust Co. Start NOW Save and Deposit With This Bank HayW00d's Everything for the Office Fifth and Ferry Streets, Lafayette, Indiana I II ll I Mars-Luna-Family Success to the Class of '30 Fourth Avenue Amusement Company TALKING PICTURES XVhy are you so pensive? he asked. I'm not pensivef' she replied. But you haven't said A word for twenty minutes. XVell, I didn't have anything to say. ' Don't you ever say anything when you have nothing to say? N0 H u XVill you be my wifef, Mr. Jones-I-Iow did the protest meeting go off? Mrs. Jones-XVe had a row. I was outspoken. Mr. Jones-Surely not, my dear! By whom? J. I-I. Evans Coal Co. coat AND BUILDERS' suppuias Cjffffc' :Iliff IIZIHIS 1312 Underwood Street Lafayette, Indiana Residence Phone 5767 Business Phone 3704 Glatz Confectionery The Jeff Booster I B -B I Home Made Candies I I Costs Cost tl and Published by the Students and Ice Cream Printed by the Vocational Main Af Sixth Printing Classes I ff' unc IIIIHIIITII Scrcnty-four Arthur Lahr Plumbing Phone 2978 Lafayette, Indiana WHAT'S IN A NAME? Smithson entered a rest.1ur.1nt .ind looked at the menu card. Chicken soup, he ordered. Presently the soup was put before him, but with the hrst mouthful the w.iiter noticed that something was wrong. Do you cull this chicken soup? asked Smithson angrily. Yes, sir, replied the waiter. that is chicken soup. But where's the chicken? asked the diner. I see none in this soup. Quite so, explained the w.1iter, and there is no horse in horse radishf' fn u John, you think more of that old radio than you do of me. Well, dear, I get less interference from it. .f Every sale at this store carries with it our Assurance to you of Complete va satisfaction. We promise every customer that OUR GOODS MUST MAKE GOOD OR WE XVILL' REIFERS NINTH AND MAIN STREET Orth Plumbing Co. J. O. Perkins LUMBER eoMPANY PLUMBING and IVR SVU Good' LIIIIIIWI' HEATING Phone 6704 901-903 Wtlbasli Avenue 609 Columbia St. Phone 3953 P11510 Um' llirmlrml S 1 flji GINGRICH Nine Home Owned Stores Del Monte Canned Foods Fancy Fruits and Vegetables Quality Meats Service With a Smile The Latest in Decorations, Dance Call Programs, Souveniers and Party Favors B. F. McCormich Dairy Lafayette Calendar and phone S741 Novelty Co. for PtI.YfZ1fjZl'll' Milk Hill! Oflwr Dairy Phone 3352 ' . . P' I 42 Loan Bc Trust Building ml mil Chambel-ling Coney Island Lunch Quick Service Wonderful ICE CREAM All Kinds of Hot Sandwiches. and SHERBERTS Phone 6977 215 N. 4th Sf. Phone 3028 Lafayette, Indiana I 14 Hur' 11llIIllI'1'llS fl 'P ' ' - , , 5 Pen Scratches S GD SCHODl C-N ?f51Ef --1 Ni Scribbings D- Irwin 3 -Fw 1 uv. Chicken Tracks ---- ! I 1 n 11 1 4 ! I Q -'--,D .g , .1 wx 'L' uh rf? 5 ' ' I john He1j1ry's 'I ' ' I 4 Ve 5 u . ,, 1, 41 X- .E 2 L2 2 , . .541 :I ,Q ' 'lv cl ' ply -u 5 1 .A I X. . fx fl ,, LX f'- . 1:5 .xt 'iff' , ,. ,. wp, . V - fi- QF' 2 lv, ,J--I W A Q.. 5. ' 5 5 7V .Q f I K K ' -zu l r r ' W I Ili I'Sv-IT, bil, is -Jo' 'W I 2 rf 1' 4' A ' ' I , 1 N 3 rg: I , I,I Q I II , -LII ,. I I ', ' la f' rw .- :II I , I V I I31, II ', I IVIII . 4- -I,I' III '- .I , - II V , :I ri! F ' L ov. - ' - , 'C wif'-:?T?' W ,L '. f ,, . 7 it A? V ' ' rf V, ,vw ' ' 5 ' 'rf' 1' 4,. :Y ' . ' '. I , ,V .- i ' . 5- J ,vii V X V , ' - 3 -534 . E' I I x A Q x IIT' -SI gf ., ' 4 . .fix x 'H - SQ -. ' ' f . 1 I .i .V lg . V 3 , - f 'e 1 A.. - . if , - Q. A 5 ,Q ' . 4. X ' . vf , - ! 'N'- 1 -. -4? I . H 1 ' A - IIIII I l ' I I . 1 . IQI 'Q . ff: q , sw ,. 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' ' , iffy u V Q A ,I A , A lf K 5, 4 r '. i 4 , 'V 'I '44 H K: '- 2 p ' V' ' ' Qs-I ' . Vt - XV, , in I 3, U . 3 U 'V as.. ' ' , ,vi ' 'N gui - ui 'V' hx. A' , , , YQ ' 'E ya- L - U Q If ' 1. ' ' 4 , ' 'N , 5 ' gc 4 N V'-' 5.5 f 1 -if f yy., - 1 t JV' ' wh: ' - ,hh .M 3 . 4 Mft , Ma., , X ' 'u l . 4' --'!:'.:' , Nl fgf- Q3 f w mg uni ...rx r , Ie- ' 'SFR :!'iH1 LL: 1. Y JU .1 ,,, F . , , -' i, -X ., ,v '- 'I x g1lf'il4!:L'!!.v'1 ' 4111! 1 -wif ' 4114 -,Q iff 47 ,fit ,? 'f ffrf !,,,' H MIM! gf .., It .' 11. . v , I' Yr 51'-'ifl w .v 14 If .. ... - ,VII fl: , gif wwrel , fff I wi 'l'1fi x'sf vi' ,l'12 giIjvl!'l 'I I 'fl f -Mig f 1- 1 ..-.-5 ,:.v 'i N112 .Im 15.,.t', i x '17f'.' .,, 1 3. , Nlfnk 21 , , V. ,.' , .,4 .I ', .1 : .L ,H 15.1 ' 1 Z! 1-4,- W if 13 'Z iv I fi if: .is V T252 19151123 ,w ' , Hi! Zi! 15' Q3 VTE' ri . :, .HV I X I 3 f! I, zz 5 5 ll? i Dan XV. Simms, Prmlilrrli B. L. Emens, TIUINIII The School Board Mr. Dan Simms, president of the city school board, has been .1 member live years. During this time, with the assistance ot the other school oll'ici.1ls - has seen many of his desires .ind plans for better schools fulfilled. Mr. W. secretary, was recently rc-elected, and Mr. B. L. Emens succeeded Mr. A. E. treasurer. The parents and students of xlellerson High School are cognizant Ll' for the last Mr. Simms T. Morin, Malsbary as of the fact that they are deeply indebted to these men for their careful direction which contributes so much to the success of the school. NV. T. Morin, Sut'n'1a1'3' 1',,,,,3g,L,,,1u',, i 'Ai 1'- y 4, . . M. . L 3 F is 51 I' K L, . , NS. Is' V. 5--8 Y Qs, cg ,L I A RMA j-1'-tit. X- fr 'fllllllllv pee- 3.5 , - W 114 N' r.fN,fXf'ggg91 'r,is,. as .- -fr!!! Principal L. E. Singer, A. B., A. M. Appreciation Before the pilot can safely lift into the air he must have a fairly smooth and level course over which to guide his plane. Over this narrow stretch of land the plane bumps, rocks, and arights itself until it is ready to glide out into its flight. The story of the air is that of the school. The course which Jefferson High School must take in finding its way to the ideals of the administration is not so rough, rocky, and difficult as it would be if it were not for the untiring efforts of Mr. Singer, who, during the past five years as principal of this school, has shown his efficiency in its management and improvement. It is due to his ability in the development of the educational standards of Jefferson and also because of his splendid co-operation with the teachers and students that Jefferson High School has succeeded in securing the exceedingly high honor of rating fourth among the high schools of Indiana. The students and patrons deeply appreciate the services of Principal Singer, who has been so instrumental in obtaining this honor. Mr. Singer received his A. B. degree from Indiana University and his A. M. degree from Columbia University. Page Eighteen. it .V .4 . A xx. K ' I YA, I , .137 ll, Jvc' im ' e Lf' fix t '-'-'M C , i ll . llllgl' Superintendent A, E. Highley, A. B.. A. M. Tribute The excellent aerial views in the scenic section of this book give an idea of the city of Lafayette as it appears from the skies. Each district varies and each home in each residential section is different. Although this diversity exists there is no home but what is reached in some manner by the public school, one of the great unifying forces of America. As superintendent of the public schools of Lafayette for the last seven years Mr. A. E. Highley has had control not only of the educational elements which serve to unify the schools but also of the many diverse physical needs of each individual school of the city. The rapid development of aeronautics in the last few years has made the aeroplane a practical invention. Each year demands that education be more directly applicable to the everyday needs of the individual pupil. Such rapid changes in the educational ten- dencies involve the most constant study and selection that only the most advantageous methods and equipment be used. A position with duties which influence so many lives demands ceaseless effort and energy and can only be successfully filled where there is such interest for the welfare of the school children as Superintendent Highly has evidenced. P41110 N1uL'ICt'n lf. A ' M Q 5' 5 ' -,, Jn., uxaea .ii .l'11j'! Xqf 2: fi ,Q U1 iii iQ' 423, ' an ,no- 'Li-r-QN. 1 Earl Hinshaw, A. B, Maude Leiter. B. S. Bernice Young, A. B. Wilma Fletemeyer, B. S. AIM-iiin Cullggr- l'u1'ilue l.'iiix'cre11y Mizmii University M. S. lylml-31 Xiu-mgil l'uiver:ity wf l'-il-irml-i llist-lry Purllue L'niverSifY ln-ligiim l'i1ix'ui'xity Swcizll Science HiSf01'Y llutler Cwllm-gg liivici. Eglin vl1llL'Q 333 Q Xxx 5 Vw... .. 3851 A Xe. X Cecil S, Webb, A. B. Mable R. Beaver. A. B. Marguerite Ward, A. B. George F. Lewis, B. S liinlmiiri I'iiivei'fi1y liilllziiml'i1ix'crA1ty Trinity Fwllcge lmlinna State NI-rmzll Ywczitiwiizil liiiwi'ni.ni4-11 Hist-:ry lllitmry llutler College lrlistwy. A-sixtgiiit Science Sliciifl-igy Purfluc l'nix'ei'sity .Xtliletiu Ll :icli Kl:xtlicn1:.itics 'fx '-Ms. Clarence Lane. B. S.. Mary Frances Secver, Elizabeth Rothrock. Lynn Miller, A. B- A. B. A. B. A. B. lnvlinna University 'uiitrnl N-wrnial L'-ilk-ge Terre Hziuu lllfllfllllx l'nix'e-rsity Purrlue U1'liVCY5ltY lnvliaua State N-irnizll XYiscf-nsiii l'11ix'r-rfity Miitlicnizltics Mathematics lnflizmn University Uiiiversiry -if C-il-'mil-1 Intcrmural Athletics Mathematics Matliemzitics l'u11C Ticvvztif are nf , S 1. atv.: 1: 1 - 1 ,1 'a 1 1, 11 Luther H. Troutman. 111 iw Lelah Egnew Clark. A. B. A. B. 11131111 State Tsr1c11e1's' 17eP:11111'1'1111'e1'x111' 0.111626 1'1111'1:1'i1t1' 111 XY1Qc1111Q111 C11e-n11Qt1-y .1-1111'11.11is111 English , . , ,,, 1-bg. 13 1 fc ' 95 331 Q- K' 1 Annz1 M. iWood,wA. B. Lucile M. Fenton, A. B. 1111111111.1 51.l1L X111111.11 I B. F. w 1'11111-nity 111 XY1fc1.11s111 111111-vw Nutr X111'111:11 1 111111 111 111 1'I1i11 1 11111 111 -K . . 1f11g11i 5 vur: '- 111111 ' 'Q ' 11 X11 1 11 111111 1 Y 111111: 11111 1' ' ' '-s 1' 11111-1w1ty 1'111Q11S11. 1l1':'11111111CQ Ida J. Fleming. A. B. M. C. Marshall, B. S. ESIEUB Kimmel. S. Mary C. Kennedy, B. S. 11111131161 U11i1'ersity 11111111113 Flats X1-1'111:11 1'AU1 1l1U L'1111'?1'11l5' 1'111'1111c 1'1111'Q1'411Y Chicugn L'11i1'crs1ty H1m111'cr C1111-gt l'I1lXL'1'S1lj' 111 1'111c.1g-1 1'111c:1g1f I'1111'u1'i1ty E11g'1is11 111.1111 uf 11-11's M111'11l'1'UY5' 1i11g11N11 Enuligll 14'1'u11u11 13r1111 111 l111'1S XY1Qc1-11Ni11 1'1111'c1x1t1' it-5311... ii George Kelrzlgr, S. Ralph H. Peck, A. B., Loy C. Laney. A. B. Roscoe W. Peebles, Pu1'L1.ue 1j111'erS1ty I A. M.. Hu11ti11gt1111 Cullege A. B., M. S. P115's1ca1 1Ldu.c:1t1o11 11111131111 L'1111':rsity 1'111'f111e L'11i1':rQity E:11'111n111 ll-llegu Mclthemaucs P1'lj'SlC5. 11111131111 1'11i1'e1'si1y 1'111'11ue 1'1111'e1w1ty 11n111c'111a11v:s English I11111:111n 1'1111'crSi1y B-.1t.111y, 1'11ysi1,1l11gy I P11170 T1c'c11ty-0111 1 - fr ,I I 5' 5 Q' 1 f Camilla White. B. S. Bemicg Gallqwgy, B, Mary Ryan, B, S, Gleelia Rafgliffe, B, S, N-11'tl1wrste1'11 L'11ivc1tsity l11rl1:111:1 LlllVt'I'SlIj' Purdue l'11ix'e1'eit5' Purulue l'11ive1'sity Clll'llEglt' Institut: Clnczlg-1 L'I1lN'El'Sllj' C111-king Hume Eq1111.1miqg BILISIC .X1't, Art :md C'r:1fts Y fglfg-tt-fin Irma Slaybiack. S. Emi1yYJ.A1drif1ge. A. B. Harry E. Taylor l'111'4i11u l111ve1's1ty XX estcrxx Lullcgc' Stout Institute' l11tlia11:1 State Norxna ll11111e Ec11111.111ics lmlirum Ivl1lYC'I'Slfj' MC'Cl1QIUCiil DTFIWIHE General Shop Pl1ys1cz11 Educnt11-11 Xwczntxo-11:11 Drnwsng Mgqlmniqal Dram-mg .' -T 17 '5E'f:f-IfEHE3i:3 ,' , 1- N - -- -Q 1. .'.--. , ,.,.,x.. . 2, .iff '- -2- I gi,-vygii . . 5.35.-, 1' , '- 1 'gi I 1'-iii: A' - W? -ff' -.5 t ' if : V V ' -...1:f?a2i::5.5:g A fra-3:2211 1 , Thomas E. Conder. I. T. U. P'urdue University Y1,1c:1tiu11nl Printing J. R. Hammons 'l'1'i-State Nornml Incl. State NOYIHBI Terre Haute Ind. State N-lr. Muncie Industrial Arts Blillllllll T1':1i11i11g Harold J. Wills Purmlue l'11ive1'sity M:1cl1i11c SI14111 Am1,1111ecl1:111ics Prmc T11iC111yI11'0 1 41. 4.1. , 1 1 ' 4 5 mv 1 I,Vffx -f 1 x 56 1305 l 11. Q, af f - 1 B ff A. W. Maurer, A. B. l wunnu 'Il fi .3 if 'll ,, ' 'S' A .K Elizabeth May Hanna. Emma C. Cook, A. B. Bessie Martin, A. B. lmli.m:i l.'liix'cl'sity lmlizum l'nix crsity lYittrulmrg KU-lla-ge l'nii'vi'sity -if lYiscunsi11 Spanish A. B. lnflifum l'1iiu-reity l'1iix'rre1ty uf Vliicxngli lhlllliilrixx l'l11x'crsity Latin Lntm Lillian Congleton, A. B llupc thlleila- Ilciliwn l'nivereity 1'l1ix'.lg4- l'11lv:'r4lty Frciicll. English an L0ya1 G. Minier, A. B, Frank Replogle Verna Webking, B. S. Arlie Norman. A. B. li, :xml Nl. Fully-ge llzulcliustcr lflfllf-gc lnflmim State N4-rnml lmliqmn l'nivL-rsity Miuliiglm l'nix'e-rsity Ml. M4'Yl'l4 l 'llf'lll' l'l1lYC1'HlU' 'ff lllllllllllllil lU.lulnhigl lhiivsrsity Iimvlclcwpiim. Y.-czitilnigil New Mrxici- N-friuzil Sl1.n'!lmn-'l. Tl'l'lU! Sllimisli. EHRHSII lnf4n'11i4nt1fni Business lfllgllfll Siu-1'tl1.i114l, 'l'y1I1lip4 ll-unlilivqlilll an-iv, ,rv-fp Vernie C. Rogers. B. A.. M. S. Uiiivc-rsity of Louisville Purdue l'nivex'sity Mural Education, English Public Spanking 4 Morris E. McCarty, B. S. Alva Botkin, A. B.. l ur1luc l'uivcrsity A. M. Athletic Mrmnger lnrli:m:1 l'i1ivcrsity llczilth Eflucziti-an Athletic Cnzlcli Gymnsisium .4 L ,-. If f' '- , fl N T' ' n 'nt .X 5 . ,ruj 4 i Page Tlufinly-three V ' f 'Z YF k i ,Q gi .F K : f Sv' fi ' ,Q Q Q i t4'Q ,313 M?1l'Y,Clem9U5 Helen Grey Thelma McCarty Schomp A, B, Skidmore l lCYll Secretary lnfliana l'iiix'ersity Bgmll 140,151- l.ilirLu'i:i1l The Teacher By FRANK DAVID BOYNTON HERE is no calling or profession, save that of parent- hood, which offers such opportunities for service as does Q teaching. Past the teacher's desk the unending stream of i youth must go-the authors, statesmen, bankers, busi- il ness and professional men and women, those Who are to build or wreck empires-and as they pass give the teacher his opportu- nity to touch destiny. A phonograph can hear recitation, but teaching, that process by which one, skilled in the things of the heart and brain, undertakes the task of enlarging the lives of others in all the varying possibilities of self- enjoyment and general usefulness, has always called for and had the mightiest hearts and intellects in human history. So long as we continue to man our schools, these bulwarks of our liberty, by men and Women whose sterling honesty, whose ruggedness of character, Whose courage and compelling personalities mark them as leaders-civic, social, religious-the Republic is secure, what the teacher is, the Nation will become, what the school is today, the Nation will be tomorrow. -I 1111, iam: Teacher. I'r1flf''I'14'Cnt1f'f0z4l' ae- 'F i M 5 at . -2 3 s . HI. '15 C. ui-nun... 'un- Jack Swezey Thomas Gullion Thomas Williams .l3Clf1REiYCmCYCl' l'ri'-lilciit Yin--l'n-si1hfii1 St-vielziry lfl'-IFUVU' HE CLASS or 1930 DEAR OLD JEFFERSON HIGH We were preps as green as grass, Now four years have passed. We were sophs and knew it gill, The others we outclassed. Our junior year brought happy days, Good times great and small. But our time, we're with you now, Will be glad cl.1ys to recall. Clmrzzx- Time has come for parting, Dear Old jefferson High. And our tears .ire starting As we say good-bye. Our time with you we'll never forget, Friends so good and true. The only thing we have to regret ls that we're leaving you. But it's time for parting, Dear Old Jefferson High. -XVords and Music by Ferdinand Foltz, '30. .a. - 9 , rt I ,i ,' 1 . ! ' 'E X 1 ' 1 -3 -'X 1 l'zmr'T1t6ntu-Ii llmllllllNllYIilWIHlNlNIlIIWWINNININIIHIXHNINNI 3 1833 01883 0486 TN , V T155 f X ' 1' ,A ' . , -.Y Y . l ,.ifMI Ill IM a in XX ,K WM, A, f, i i -. 'asm X.. ing 515' MLW avr Lf GM VV . 4,11 w, F R lr as if? f fix 4 W. 'S' 2 'vw 'Y' THF. Robert Orr, Drug Slore Cowboy, Pickles, Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, Cat and Canary, Interclass Foot- ! ball 2, 3, Interclass Basketball, 2, 3, Nautilus Novelties, Boys' Ad. Coun. 3, 4, Chairman Senior Dance Committee, 4. Marguerite Yeager, Woiitrha, Girls' Glee Club, 2, 3, French Club, 1, 2, S. S. Society, 4, Girls' Ad. Coun., 3, 4, Pickles, 2, Christopher, Jr., 4, Forensic Club, 4. Elizabeth Schnaible, Dorf! Bc Like Thai, S. S. So- ciety, 1, Z, 3, 4, Girls' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 4, Latin Club, 1, 2, French Club, 3, 4, Delturian Club, 2, 3, History Club, 4: Secretary, 4, Press Club, 3, 4, Vice-Pres., 4, Booster Staff, Mgr. Editor, 3, 4, Chair. Xmas Baskets, 1, 2, 3, 4, Pickles, 2, Belle of Bagdad, 4, Glee Club, 1, 2, Forensic Club, 4, Debate Team, 4, Sr. Dance Comm., 4. Lorentz Schmidt, Vagnlloml: Varsity Baseball, 3, In- tramural Basketball, 3, 4, Sr. Basketball Team, 4, Boys' A. D., 2, 3, 4, Second Team Basketball, 3, Delturian Club, 3. Donald Payne, Lucky Boy: Jr. Hi-Y, 2, 1, Sr. Hi- Y, 3, 4, Glee Club, 1, Grchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4, His- tory Club, 3, 4, Latin Club, 2, Boys' Coun., 3, 4. Constance Conlon, Icrvelz S. S. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, Chair. of Christmas Basket, Carrie Comes to College, Nautilus Novelties, Pickles, 1929 Revue, Stunt Night, Belle of Bagdad, Glee Club, 2, 3, All State Chorus, 4. Margaret Heighland, Szwrfvr Than Swvffz Comm. Club, 1, 2, S. S. Soc., 1, 2, 3, 4, Delturian Club, 3, Spanish Club, 3, 4. Donald Wolfe, Brigb! Boy. Harold Beeler, An Old Guifar and All Old Refrain: Varsity Football, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Football, 1, Track, 1, 2, 3, 4, Band, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Carrie Comes to College, 1, Pickles, 2, Belle of Bagdad, 4, J Club, 2, 3, 4, Sr. Basketball, 4. Jessie Meiser, Sing a Liiflz' Lore Song: S. S. So- ciety 1, 2, 3, 4, Home Economic's Club, 4. Puyc Ticcuty-sir A QL! 1 I-,U I Y ,pf ' C, -TAA . i'i:. .-'.'l.?' PU 1 Betty Howard, Ytlllift' fbi' Only Our: Glee Club, 2, Evanston High, 2, Girls' Advisory Coun., 43 His- tory Club, 43 Belle of Bagdad, 4, Sunshine So- ciety 2, 3, 4. Keith Malfbary, Itllllfl Hull, Ir. Fdwin Moore, Bail Mini. Doris XY'inski, HOIIA'-1'I Sun, Society, I, 2, 3, 4: Chrm. Xmas Basket, 1, 2, 3, -lg Girls' Ad. Coun., 1, 2, 3, 4, Latin Club, l, 2: French Club, Z, W. 4, Treasurer 2, Secretary 3, Vice-Prev., -4, History Club, 1, Delturian Club, 3: Girls' Glee Club, Z. 3: Band Booster Vaudeville, 1: Carrie Comes to College. 1: Booster Stunt Night, 1, Pickles, 2: Cat and Canary, 3: Senior Color Comm., 43 Belle of Bagdad, 4: 1929 Revue, 5. Audrey Lawson, Snnliw: S, S, Society, 1. 2, 3. -1, Latin Club: French Club: Girls' Ad. Conn., Booster Stunt Night, Pickles, 1920 Revue. Harold R. Memmering, My Lucky Shir, Glee Club, 1, Fuutball, 1, Intramural Football. 1, Debate Team, 4. Alden Schaffer, L011i'.m1m'. Martha Friberg, My Sli17fwri'ui'n' Desire: Latin Club, 1, 2, History Club, 1, Z, 3, Delturian Club, 3, Sunshine Society, 1, Z, 5, 4, Band Booster Nov- elties, Z5 Nautilus Novelties of 1929, 3, The Belle of Bagdad. 4. Florence McLain, Slllllfllllf Iriifv Eyes: Xmas Basket Comm., Chair.. 3: Pres. of Spanish Club, 31 Home EC. Club, 5: Sr. Convu. Comm., 4, Chair. Sun- shine App't, History Club, 2, 3, 44 Girls' Ad. Coun., 3, 4. Bob Neuman, Is ll P0xsil1li'?: Intramural Baseball, 1, Intramural Basketball, 4, Spanish Club, 4, History Club, 4, Sr. Class Color Comm. Chair., 4, Del- turian Club. 3. ,vi -1-I .ME ,, , E45 fl- ',, ,vi ,'i5': Page 7'u'enty-surf-ii Page T1rC111'y-Cifflit -it in 3. .,. fi-as tl 1 Mary Shambaugh, S1vvclbvur'l of All My Dreams: Girls, Council, 2, 3, 4, Photo Editor of Nau- tilus, 4, Stunt Night, 2, Nautilus Novelties, 2, Christmas Basket Comm., 1, 2, 3, Delturian Club, 3, History Club, 2, Carrie Comes to Col- lege, 1, Pickles, 2, Band Booster Vaudeville, 2, 1929 Revue, 3, Pres. Home Ec., 4, Belle of Bag- dacl, 4, junior Dec. Comm. 3, Chair. Member- ship Comm., 4, Senior Invitation, 4. Thomas Bauer, Douglas Fuirbunks, Ir.: Boys' Coun- cil, 2, 3, Pres., 4, Point System Comm., 3, 4, Hi-Y, 2, 4, Invitation Comm., 4, Junior-Senior Picnic, 3, Football, 4, Basketball, 3, 4, Circula- tion Manager of Booster, 4, Latin Club, 2, 3, 4, Press Club, 4, History Club, 2, 3, 4. Jane Shearer, Lou' 'Em aim' Lean' 'Emz Girls' Coun., 2, 3, 4, History Club, 2, 3, French Club, 2, 3, 4, Vice Pres., 3, Ad. Mgr. of Booster, 3, Editor-in- Chief of Booster, 4, Pickles, 2, Nautilus Novel- ties, 2, Revue of 1929, 3, Senior Sweater Comm., 4, Christmas Basket Chair., 2, 3, 4, State Secre- tary of I. H. S. P. A., Belle of Bagdad, 4, Press Club, 4, Co-Author Class Prophecy, 4, jr.-Sr. Picnic Comm., 4. Glenn Greenwood, Sailing Home: Band, 1, 2, Or- chestra, 1, 2: Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Hi-Y, 1, 2, 3, Pickles, 2, 1929 Revue, 3, Latin Club, 2, His- tory Club, Z, Delturian Club, 3, Boys' Coun., 2, 3, Belle of Bagdad, 4, Ad. Mgr. Nautilus, 3, Editor-in-Chief of Nautilus, 4, Co-Author Senior Class Prophecy. john Kahl, If's a Habit of Mille: Varsity Football, 3, 4, History Club, 4, Delturian Club, 3, Span- ish Club, Z, 3, Intramural Football, 2, Hi-Y, 3, 4, Track, 4. Helen Haag, Glad Rag Doll: Sunshine Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, French Club, 1, 2, History Club, 1, Glee Club, 1, Nautilus Novelties, 2, Pickles, 2, Chair. Christmas Baskets, 2, 3, 1929 Revue, 3, Girls' Ad. Coun., 3, 4, Delturian Club, 3, Booster Re- porter, 4, Home Ec. Club, 4, Alumni Editor, Nau- tilus, 4, Belle of Bagdad, 4. Dorothy Reynolds, Aizff Lore Grarnl?: S. S. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres., 4, Christmas Basket Comm., 1, 2, 3, Girls' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 4, Chairman Membership Com., 4, French Club, 2, 3, 4, Pres.. 3, Booster, 3, 4, News Ed., 4, Forensic Club, 4, Sec., 4, Press Club, 4, Pres., 4, Sr. Invitation Comm., 4, Delturian Club, 3, History Club, 2, 4, Pickles, 2, Belle of Bagdad, 4. Oscar Alvord, One Alone: Band 2, 1, Orchestra, 1, 2, Boys' Coun.. 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, Z, 4, Hi-Y, 1, Z, 3, 4, Pickles, 2, Belle of Bagdad, 4, Ath- letic Ed. Nautilus, 4, Vice-Pres. Forensic Club, 4, Delturian Club, 3, History Club, 2, Sr. Invita- tion Comm., 4. Robert I.. Arnold,I'll Nvrfr Ask for More: Band, 1, 2, Orchestra, 1, 2, Intramural Basketball, 2, 3, 4, Intramural Football, 1, 2, Track, 4, Booster, 3, J Club, Press Club, Sr. Dance Comm., 4. Marguerite Glenn, True Blur' Lou: Sunshine So- ciety, 1, 2, 3, 4, French Club, 2, 3, 4, History Club, 3, 4, Press Club, 3, 4, Forensic Club, 4, Girls' Advisory Council, 3, 4, Booster Staff, 3, 4, Chair. S. S. Program Comm., 3, Sec. of S. S., 4, 1929 Review, 3, Treasurer of History Club, 4, The Belle of Bagdad, 4, Senior Dance Comm., 4. 4. I- . A -- 4. C.. 5 all K D l V 'freeware , , Q -r 'a , i. -.infill i .. ...zz J- .- .Ti Marjorie Rush, Marjiv: Girls' Coun., 2, 3, 4, Vice- Pres., 4, French Club, 2, 3, 4, Pres., 4, 1929 Revue, 3, Press Club, 4, Secretary, 4, History Club, 2, 3, 4, Christmas Basket Comm., 3, 4, Sunshine Society, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres., 3, Booster. 3, 4, Feature Editor, 4, Glee Club, 3, Belle of Bagclad, 4, Forensic Club. Richard Gery, Cuff! Hclp Lovin' That Man: Ad, Mgr. Nautilus, 4, Pres. Jr. Class, 3, Latin Club, 2, 3, 4, Pres., 3, History Club, Z, 4, Vice-Pres.. 4: Boys' Coun., 2, 3, 4, Pres., 4, Band, 1, 2, 3, Orchestra, 2, 3, 4, Hi-Y, 2, Varsity Debate Team, 4, Sr. Dance Comm., 4, jr.-Sr. Picnic Comm., 3, V. Baseball, 4, Delturian Club, 3, Intramural Bas- ketball, 3, 4, Sr. Basketball, 4. Robert Mcliaig, xvdlkillg Wifb Suriv: Latin Club, Hi-Y, Boys' Coun., History Club, Glee Club. Elizabeth Rush, Brown Eyrs: French Club, Z, 3, 4, Secretary, 4, Girls' Ad. Coun., 2, 3. 4, Secretary, 4, Sunfhine Society, Z, 3, 4, Studio Club, 3, 4, Vice-Pres., 4, History Club, 4, Comm., 3, Christ- mas Basket Comm., 3. 4, Society Ed. of Nau- tilus, 4. Frank Scott, Rm1 : Varsity Football, History Club. Gertrude Minier. BIU7It1'j'. Georgia Wallis, Lrf Mt' Hari' My Drcizuzxz Latin Club, 4, Sr. Activity List, Sunshine Society, 1, Z, 3, 4, Spanish Club, 2. 3. 4, Commercial Club, 4, Latin Contest, 4. Bob Steiner, Somvlimc, SOIIIL'lL'bL'l'L'Z Comm. Club, 3, 4, B. A. C., 4, History Club, 3, 4, Sr. Hi-Y, 4. Grace King, jus! You. Orval Wray, Sousa, Ir.: Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4, In- tramural Basketball, 3, 4, Band, 2, 3, 4, AsG't N Dr. of Band, 4, Boys' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 4, Secre- tary 3, 4, Tuxis Sr. Hi-Y., 3, 4. , I N 1, rf. U '-El: Xyiwyj if 1 f 4 l tx J l Q W' 31193 iz ' fx: 1 lgfgfiv-,li l P11110 Tltcnzty-nizri he i Qiwj 'ijt ,- . 4 gf fnijg 't - , M 'Xf C-W,L- e ' Mildred Kerkoff, Red Head: S. S. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4g History Club, 3, 4g Basketball, 4, Volley Ball, 4. vs, Marguerite Taylor, Peggy. Ruth Newton, Srlfixflrrf: S. S. Society. 1, 2, 3, 43 Delturian Club, 2, Home Ec., 4. 'NN ,4- Floyd Ellis, PbLlllfO1l1 of tba' Opera. Ralph Plumb, Lilac Me' Less. --... Dorothy Van Dame, Do Somvfhiug: Sunshine I, 2, 3, 4, Comm. Contest, 2, 3, Xmas Basket Comm., 33 Commercial Club, 3, 4, History Club, 5. Jack Tschopp, Sparks: Spanish Club, 1, 2g Del- turian Club, 3, Boys' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 4. fum' '- M Y I ,U Helen C. Gray, Cbrisfimzz Sunshine, 3, 4, Bas- 'J ketball, 3, 4. Herbert Moore, HF.: So Uunszml. Lydia M. Peterson, Little: Sunshine, 1, 2, 3, 4g Delturian Club, 3. Page Thirty 'ul-51-Z i sf -5, 'l ,Le -mm .C , e I9 Eff J 0 i' are -- nwfeaft is .Qfw Y, -,.. , r rlsiojii'iii '1gr. r ... t , . 'o , ,Nell llllll -.. NN, ,. T ,f ug it Gertrude Panlener, I Ain? Got Noboily: S. S. Sn- ciety, 1, 2, 3. 43 Spanish Club. 2, 5, 43 History Club, 4, Comm. Club, 4, Secretary, 44 Girls' Ad. Coun., 3, 4. Robert Westphal, Rmlxlcillz Boys' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 4, Comm. Club, 3, 45 Spanish Club, Vice-Pres., 3, 43 Sr. Hi-Y, 43 History Club, 3, 4. x' ,ff nxt Dorothy DeLong, Ezinlgullrlvz S. S. Society, 1, 2, , 3, 4, Delturian Club, Booster Staff, Comm. Club. ' lf' Robert Huff, Liulirs' Mun: Hi-Y, l, 2, 3, 4, Boys' Coun., 3, 4. Raymond Swatts, Bnllifog Dmmmnml. Irwin Rosoter, Cursm Loren Kantz, Hz s a Good Mau. Dorothy Gross, Wixbilllq ami Wfuiliug. Irene King, Slvrpy Timr Gal. Dorothy Young, Irirzorrlllx of Paris: S. S. S0- ciety, 1, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, Zg Pickles, 35 Sun- shine Play, lg Comm. Club, 2, 3, 4, Comm. Con- rest, 35 Booster Staff, 4. S 'x T.. N. ...Ui 14 i E Puy1cTlLirly-one Y-1. 7 l . ,C -- e .SCU ' Vi.. t -f' ll, J.g,,l ' 54, -W YC C -- 4,4 :Q ii R1--.gt-vp-7,7 iltgrg r P .A.?2?'!-Yr.. . .,,,, 's ,Aan-Q, '11 rg 5135 -as me Thirty-two X-- gain. Rozella Baker, Da1u11rc Fred Featherstone, Tha' Boy Abou! Town: Track, 2 3, 43 Relay, 3, 4, Booster, 4, Intramural Basket- ball, 3, 4, Intramural Football, 4, Forensic Club 4, Press Club, 3, Delturian Club, 3. George May, P11g. Irene Franks, Herr I Comr, Jane XVrigl1t, Lozmblrz Logansport I-I. S., I, 2, Latin Club, Treasurer, 3, President, 4, S. S..S0- ciety, Chair., Program Comm., 41 G. A. C., 3, 4 Latin Club, 3, 4. Paul Wfilliams, Cifrro: Band. 45 Orclieztra, 4, Spanish Club, 4, I-Ii-Y., 4. Ferd Goodman, Lifflz' Bu! Mighty: Hi-Y., 1, 2 3, 4, Football, 3, 4, Forensic Club, Pres., 45 Boys' Coun., 45 History Club. 31 Sr. Basketball, 4 Lenore Hughes, L011isz':. Comm. Club, 1, 2, 3, 4 Secretary of Comm., I, 2, S. S. Society, 1, 2, 3 45 Girls' Ad. Coun. Oliver XVlurron, Sirlgin' 41 Song: Track, Z, 35 In- rerclass Basketball, 3. Riclurgl XVall1er, Old' Corixiiluliouz Forensic Club, 4 ire' 4. N 1 Xi, f s-a so I .V Y i -.Miki . , ,Q ,- ', ,K H , v, , . aYK,Ji I! : 25355 like .. .uwuxilif-Q., ' Donald w'Cl1f, Boy Frivmf: Varsity Football, 7-, 4, Intcrclass Football, I, Z: Studio Club, 4: Hi-Y., 1, 2, 3, 4: Glee Club, 2, 4, 1929 Revue, 3, In- tramural Baskctball, 4. Opal Marshall, Lmfy Dizim Katherine Mitchell, Broun Erwv Wbri Ari' Yun Blur? S. S. Society, 1, Z, 3, 4, Girls' Glec Club, 2: Pickles, 25 Comm. Club, 4: Comm. Contest, 3: Girls' Ad. Coun.. 4. Arthur Lahr, 1'11 Gd By. Bernard Cunncwald, Biirim Herb Winski, Hvrl1 : Booster, 3. 4: Intcrclaw Basketball. I, 2, 3, 4, Interclass Baseball, l, 2, 3, 4, History Club: Latin Club, l, 2, Press Club, Dclturian Club, Tennis. 1, Z, 3, 4. Henry XVatkins, Tiny. Tom Davis, Spf-flu. Lillian Holliday. Ramona: S. S. Society, I, 2, 3. 4: Comm. Club, 2, 3, 4g French Club, 2, Comm. Contest, 2, 3g History Club, 4, Delturian Club. J. Dorothy Repschlager, Dah Pant' Tliirlu-linac E X if' If 1 . ,i ' 1 . i fl, , W... ,,., fl ffi all - 1 ,....., r . fix - H t ' y 'W ,ggi ' 'H '+R ' f - Nor --'ZA 1 , K use .. M illllkw 3 Raymond Thompson, Ray : Orchestra, 1, 2, 3, 4, Band, 2, 3, 4, Glee Club, Studio Club, Boys' Advisory Council, Nautilus, 45 Belle of Bagdad, 4. Katherine Rodriguez, Swrelbrart of Sigma Chi: Spanish Club, 25 Pickles, 2, Nautilus joke Ed., 3, 4, Sr. Dance Comm., 4, Chairman Xmas Bas- kets, l, Z, 3, Nautilus Novelties, 2, Booster Stunt Night, 2, Carrie Comes to College, 15 History Club, 25 S. S. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, Delturian Club, 3g Band-Booster Vaudeville, 15 Football Recep- tion Comm., 3, 43 Sr. Convo. Comm., 4. Vera Barnaby, Loifeublz' and Swvelz S. S. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, History Club, 2: Xmas Basket Com- mittee, 1, 2, 3, 45 Belle of Bagdad, 4. Willard Cheeseman, Dr Baler: Boys' Coun., 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres., 43 Hi-Y., 1, 2, 3, 45 Nautilus, 3, 4, Business Mgr., 43 Latin Club, 23 History Club, 2, Sr. Convo. Comm., 4. Alice Friedman, Hello, Suflsbilzr, Hello. Howard Hughes, Ho ufdy. Max McLean, The High School Hero: Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4g Varsity Football, 2, 3, Captain, 43 Yell Leader, lg Pres. Athletic Association, 35 In- terclass Football Champions, lg Baseball, l, 4. Tena Bouwkamp, How About Mc-P: S. S. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4g Comm. Club, Booster Staif. Carl Martin, I'm 11 Dreamer: Nautilus, 4, Latin Club, 2, Studio Club, 3, 45 History Club, 33 Boys' Coun., 3, 4. Lorene Greene, Giggles: Glee Club, Studio Club, 45 Belle of Bagdad, 4. 3- 'ii fi lr. xl, ' I n ANR, lgpild p YW x7-T4 7.1-1-. ,-A-K 1 flf' ' ' 'H 'L 9vi el.-.ee . + . .. . .. xii 4... s e' Chr. l I A Mlll.lXfv .8 ill ,L Robert Ott, Anxufvr to Ll Maldmfs Prayer. W? A r A--., reg Sara Huff, Slnuly Lady: S. S. Society, l, 1, 3, 4, Comm. Club, 3, 4, Treasurer, 3, Delturian Club, 3: jr.-Sr. Picnic Comm., 3: Point-System Comm., 3, 45 Latin Club, Z. VA., Doris Hale, Shox Funny Tlmf W'ay: Latin Club. Z, 3, 4, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, History Club, 4: Forensic Club, 4: Varsity Debate, 4: Central In- diana Oratorical Contest, 3, 4, Pickles, 2: Belle of Bagdad, 43 Girls' Ad. Coun., 3. 4. Bhan- 'S fs- aw Dale Cruea, Spvll of the Blues. William Chee'eman, Izzrlovmlz Boys' Council, 2, 3. 4, Hi-Y., 23 Treasurer Jr. Class. Helen Winter, True Blur: Pres. of History Club, 4, Girls' Ad. Coun.. 2, 3, 4, Social Comm., 3, Chair. Social Comm., 4, District Latin Contest, 25 Girls' Glee Club, 2, Pickles, 25 Latin Club, Z5 French Club, 3, 4: History Club, 2, 3: S. S. Society, l, 2, 3. 4, Program Comm., 4, jr.-Sr. Picnic Comm., 3, Associate Feature Ed. Booster, 45 Press Club, 4, S. S. Xmas Baskets, 2, 3, 4. tx Mildred Kantz, Dance, Lilllc Lady: Latin Club, 1, 25 Comm. Club, 3, S. S., 1, 2, 3, 4. ,ff--4 William McQuisten, Buxlvr Kvalml: joke Editor, Booster, 5, Copy Ed. Booster, 4, Milton Dykhuizen, Burly. Mildred Lambuth, Precious Little Thing Called Low: S. S., 1, 2, 3, 4g Carrie Comes to College, 3, Comm. Club, 2g Girls' Glee Club, 2, 35 Home Ec. -Club, 4. 1 J Page Thirty-ji Q Lf' z 1 me A .-gf ' V relief l' L' Flight Ilfflur-G1.r NN GIKLI' xxx nun mum ALIlhIXL'V'1NY'Il L xkrm CTH1 1,51 STAN flgfull.'f'+Ix1di.1n.111ulis I'.I1jlI'.1Yil'lg Co. P1'Ir1lU1'fLJfaycttc Printing Cn. Wrufugmjvflrr'-T11c XY,.1I'I'Cl1 Studiu 930 Je' . .N X. pa... me ,eg but .:. A I - 'Qi' 'V ,.. . .. sQ,.,s,..,,, as 5.1.-15-s.:., . N .fs V is J , L' V. . 1 'MEM Albert Krabbe, Right Kind of Man: Stunt Night 4 'C Comm., 15 History Club, 25 Delturian Club, 35 Sr. Hi-Y., 3, 45 Nautilus, 4. Qx Aileen Baer, Some Baby: Girls' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 45 Society Ed. of Booster, 3, 45 S. S. Society, 1, - . 2, 3, 45 French Club, l, 2, 3, 45 Secretary of tb- QS 9. 1, Q A U 1 Page Thirty-sig M, French Club, 45 Press Club, 3, 45 Booster Staff, 3, 45 Sr. Sweater Comm., 35 Xmas Basket Comm., 35 Stunt Night, 15 Nautilus Novelties, 35 1929 Revue, 35 Belle of Bagdad, 4. Lucy Jean Harvey, Bright and Shining Lighl: French Club, 1. 2, 3, 45 History Club, 25 Delturian Club, 35 Girls' Ad. Coun., 3, 4. Walter Keller, Racbmaninojf, Ir.: Boys' Coun., 2, 3, 45 Hi-Y., 1, 2, 3, 45 Latin Club, 2, 3, 45 Pickles, 25 Belle of Bagdad, 45 Glee Club, 4. Helen Pensinger. To-Nile You Belong to Me: Stunt Night, 15 G. A. C., T, 3, 45 Pres. of G. A. C., 45 Latin Club, 25 French Club, 3, 45 Chair. of Pro- gram Comm., 45 Sr. Color Comm., 45 Sun. Society. Edgar McKinney, Mmm lo Mc: Hi-Y., 15 History Club, 15 Boys' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 4. Edna Hannah, I Think You'rz' Night5 Sunshine Society, 1, 2 Z, 3, 45 Girls' Basketball, 45 tilus Novelties, 25 Delturian ball Booster, 3. Harold Wilson, Wonderful You 35 Delturian Club, 35 Hi-Y., Club, 35 Marrying Marion, 3 Wonderful: Stunt 3, 45 Girls' Coun., 1929 Revue5 Nau- Club5 Girls' Base- Junior Basketball, 1, Z, 35 Spanish Frances Horner, Among My Sonvvnierx: Girls' Ad. Coun., 2, 3, 45 Sunshine Christmas Basket Comm., 35 Chair. Outside Sunshine, 45 Sec. History Club, 25 Nautilus Novelties, 25 1929 Revue, 35 Belle of Bagdad, 45 Nautilus Staff, 3 Kenneth Holtman, Sfretrlaz Basketball, 3, 45 His- tory Club, 45 Latin Club, 25 Forensic Club, 45 Delturian Club, 35 Boys' Council, 4. . 'i w - . J N, if fs ll i l fi llgxxi U I-xx, Mary Catherine Carrol, Lucky Day. jack Camardy, All Thu! I'm Asking It Syvlpufliy. Neil Simison, Wisbiaig am! Wuilirzg for Low. Rozetta Hilt, I'I1 Never Ask For Marv: S. S. So- ciety, 1, 2, 3, 4, Girls' Council, 4. Lois jane Bryant, Ain? Mis'Brlmi'in': S. S. S0- ciety, I, 2, 3, 4, G. A. C., 2, 3, 4, Secretary S. S. Society, 3, President, 4, Latin Club, Treasurer, 2, Program Chairman Latin Club, 3, 4, Secre- tary Junior Class, 3, French Club, 2, 3, 4, Latin Club, 2, 3, 4, Pickles, 2, History Club, Z, 3, Stunt Night, 1, Point System Committee, 3, Sr. Convo. Comm., 4. George Weist, Close Harmony: Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Orchestra, 1, 3, 4, Glee Club, I, 3, 4, Belle of Bagdad, 4. Bertha Bauer, Ain'l Shi' Su'ee'1'?: Stunt Night, I: French Club, 1, 2, lnterclass Basketball, 2, Del- turian Club, 3, Circus Latinus, 3, History Club, 2, 4, Sun. S. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4. Loren Shaff, Takes You: History Club, 3, Sr. Hi- Y., 4. Thelma Williams, Red Lips: S. S. Society, 4, French Club, 4, History Club, 4, Girls' Ad. Coun- cil, 4, Hoopeston, 1, 2, 3. Eloise Grey, Little Pal: S. S. Society, l, 2, 3, 4, French Club, Z, Home Ee. Club, 4, Delturian Club, 2, Comm. Club, 4, Treasurer, Baseball, 3, Volley Ball, 4, Jeff Tumblers, 4, Comm. Club. -Q-1 i Puuv Tliirtu-seven ,,. ...W5 7+-f- -I H f x ,mae . , . Nall! 'Ns '.- ...-..ff i --up-...,, ' Glenn Panlerier, I'm Sfill Curing: Hi-Y., 3, 4. Eugene Killian, My Troubles Are Over: Interclass Football, 1, 2, 4, Interclass Basketball, 1, 4, Comm. Club, 4, Interclass Football Champions, 1. Estella Howe, Sunny sill? Up. Burdell North, S'1w.iin' NVilli:1m Rover, I'm Tbirtly for Kisses. Thornton Meyers, You W'onldn'f Fool Mr Wfoulil Yon? SENIOR OFFICERS jack Swezey, Le'l's Fall In Low: Band, 2, 4, Or- chestra, 2, 3: Football, 44 Track, 1, 2, 3, 4g Latin Club, 2, Booster Staff, 3: Vice-President Class, 35 President of Senior Class, 4. jack Reitemeier, Lifllu Boy Blur: Varsity Basket- ball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Football, 4, Varsity Base- ball, 3, 45 Treasurer Sr. Class, 4, J Club, 2, fl, 4. Tom Gullion, Dad Filradny: Varsity Football, I, 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres, and Pres. of the jr. Hi-Y.g Treas. and Pres. of Sr. Hi-Y.: Band-Booster Vaudevilleg Boys' Ad. Coun., Pres. 3, Vice-Pres. of the Sr. Class, Chair. Sr. Convo. Program, junior Class Basketball Team, 35 Sr. Class Basketball Team. Tom Williams, Hof Sbof: Secretary of Sr. Class, Boys' Council, 2, 3, 4, Latin Club, 2, 3, Or- chestra, lg Delturian Club, 3. Prlyfm' Tllll'llll'l. lHllf ,YLEP -e-' .FX . '-31,4 - e assi x - 2g,-.-5-1-,N,,, .,, -a ,l'7f'ff., uv e 'e 'fall ri' e' if .wil gflvilgx The History of the Class of 1930 Four years ago, in 1926, about one hundred and fifty freshmen who were to form one of the most illustrious classes in the history of Jefferson, entered the vast portals of this noted institution of learning. The boys, all, for a time, suffered the inconveniences of the horse tank. while the girls were razzed in the most embarrassing manner when they happened to be seen on the wrong side of the stairs. After the Sunshine Society initiation the girls began to feel that they really did belong But soon this was all past and gone. and in the Sophomore year the class began to show signs of what made it so distinguished. Many of its members were on the honor roll. While the names of several of our class have headed the list ever since. Many of the girls exhibited versatility as exponents of the terpsichorean art in the choruses of jeff's musical comedies. Glenn Greenwood first showed his remarkable ability as a comedian in Pickles A large number of the boys and girls became mem- bers of the G. A. C. and B. A. C. and other extra curricular organizations and worked diligently on the committees to further their success. Jef1'erson's new edition was finally completed in the fall of 1929 and the class of 1930, as juniors, was overjoyed, for the new edition was all that could be desired, and with this as a background the class of 1930 began to take an important part in the activities of the school. The class was organized with Richard Gery at its head. The Junior-Senior picnic given at Rotary Park was a success due to the cooperation of all the Juniors. Harold Beeler, Max McLean, Kenneth Holtman, and Jack Reitemeier became prom- inent on the basketball floor. Wliile on the gridiron Thomas Gullion, John Kahl, Ferdi- nand Goodman and Max McLean were stellar lights. XVilliam Fisher, one of the best track men in years, led the track team to many a victory. As the beginning of the Senior year dawned the 1930 class came to school with a new dignity and looked down from its exalted position to the preps who were constantly under foot. jack Swezey was elected president of the class with Thomas Gullion, Thomas Williams and Jack Reitemeier holding the other offices. The Sweater Committee, headed by Howard Hughes, chose blue sweaters with blue and white J and numerals and their brilliance cf color will long be remembered in the halls of jeff. The rings and pins were the same type that have been worn by the Seniors for several years. Jeff's Debating team, composed of Harold Memmering, Richard Gery, Doris Hale, and Elizabeth Schnaible had a very successful season. The Booster and Nautilus, Senior publications, have had very successful years and they show the work and time that have been put in them by the members of their staffs. The Senior dance given in the gymnasium was one of the big affairs of the season. The orchestra was wonderful and the programs proved to be something ditferent. The com- mittee in charge was headed by Robert Orr. to whom a great deal of credit is due for the success of this undertaking. Green Stockings, a comedy, was presented by the class, and was everything that could be desired from people having such remarkable talent. So, as the Class of 1930 leaves jeff, a quite diierent manner than they entered it. they wish their successors all the good fortune and happiness that have been theirs. -JANE SHEARER, '50. Pane Thirtyrnine 3 gli .QAXQ ' I., Q 'vQ. M x K N B, x 5 A gt, x Q gg Q?2i'.Q3 1, . iw 2 w R+, , '92 51 i:f',i 'f' A .. V z..z-JI., , ' - M.- - B Paglf' Forty So-50 X Yi A X QQ ....' m C ar 2 53 d Crowd N H Id f please IQ Crfy Shefks .2 JJ, T C f, ,rf if W ' 1 u T77 Ca icylz er .s uniors Aluhn Schweitver Bud Clayton Ruth Anderson Dave Curtncr W'illiam Fletumevcr Katherine Galloway joe Alberts Velda Pcnctnn Flivabcth Scipiu ,Inc Cavanaugli Dick Owens Xvillard Scott ,Itiycc Young Dunold Stallard Margaret Rush Laura Nickels Bernice Whit: Abraham Slcsser Myrle Carlsnn Herman Berger Ifthul Smith Grace Talbert Hugh Titus Randulph Mcliiniss Doris Tlwnipson Alice liisenbach Richard Moore Mary Rose Teal Lula Bunt Ray Buyer Maxine Edwards john Vyverberg Anna Mary Nichols Doris Yust XVilmcr Vess Orville Shriner Doris jane Bylcr Albert Highley Carl Breitmeiser Vernon Gery George Yuill Guris Dykhuizen Ethel Bass Winifred Wenxfcr Katherine Tlmmpsnn Cheslyn Marshall john Bart Bernard King Roland Martin Virginia Castor i Pflgfc Forty-one , -.i .. N14 'Milk a-41' .ye 4... aff' Page Fortyefxvo .L 126 '6- John Wright Mary McCormick joe Diamondstone Mary jane O'Mara Edna Reifers Rosamond Maple Lee Norquest Helen Curts Vincent Miller Francis Keyl john McNary Anna Margaret Ross Mary Louise Warnke Doris Anderson David McQueen Glenn Wright Margaret Dexter Reed Keller Owen Fix Margaret Crowe Doris Dittmar Harry Slack Martha Griffin Eleanor Phares XVilliam Driscoll Gordon Liphard Francis Buxton Ernest Childers Irene Maguire William Van Arsdall Alice Buit Cecil Law Edith Goris William Trillingham Merle Shall Ruth Helmond Frances Liphard Howard Hiett john Halsema Norman Simison Dorothy Cook .lean Connor Irene North Edward Elliott Thelma Garrigues Charles Reddish Bernice White Wilma Brown Clark Morin xiii' I 54,1 new B A, ,.i if! l - I 1 D ' ! A1 fx ,Lg I B X fs gi. if Claude Campbell Meredith Campbell Maxine Morrimn Russell Bowman John W'eise Richard Schwartv Charles Kemmer Betty Timberlake Cliflord W'iauing Marion Pope Iilinbeth Gray Helen jacksnn Samuel Goodman Alberta K.1t7m.in Lucile Rice Walter Burnell Margarite Bart Marjorie Fagin Iilfie Vandergraff Charles Callixun Stanley Dcardorff Robert Ruycr Doris Zachary Herman Cohen Adeline Drummond Mary lf. W'altcrs Yvonne Columbe Elizabeth Harriman Gerald Mnure Lelia Carter Henry Earhart Mary Lou Gardner Mary Faurute Virtue Dcardnrff Harold Strung Joe Vaughan Ruth Maple ,lean Hammel Oliee Carlson David Nublirr Pauline Platt Charles Reiley Agnes Ruth Teal Christina Riley Barbara Monroe Hazel Horton -rzihltlviv 1, a i i . 4 . . I . I la r fl Y Q 1. 1 -1 ll li M1 cl 'Q 41 - my T' 'ff' 26' 1 2 4 t. Xlld-if 1 ., 'yltif L -M Q 'B 565 1 7' W .4 , va. '-A W A Q 6- K 9 fa- ,f .gf Pane Forty-three .. 7-. V X i 2, v ,Nlllalllf 1- - I . , I .---'war 1---n -V., ...A We -..A .ag gf rf 'SAV ...Q 'if l -:' QP y-. B of nur' ,av ,.- -39' Page Forfyrfozzr 'v .rf Nl' ii A I 4, .4-A ,WX lag ee We - P .s - , ,., C ,Ot i 53143, if ACL... g Y R 4 XYW, - Sophomores Marjorie Crips: Catherine McMillan Don Casad Nadeen Paul Wayne Gingrich Fletcher Wellington Violet Stuckey Gladys Peterson Arthur Carte Mary F. Michael Doris Strong Elizabeth Mack Harold Wallace Virginia Foster Dorothy Perigo Kenneth Neumann Geneva Titus Charlotte Wehr john Casey Louise Giltner Velma Burroughs Harriet Bull Norman Reinhard Mary E. Ross Helen Whipple Margaret Gardner Rofemary Boyer Angeline Hinkle Carl Tully Mary Dailey Fred O'Mara Margaret Dietrich Paul Davis Esther Sites Charles Fairchild james Lawler Lena Wilson William Mahoy Raymond Shambaug Wanda Jones Earl Guinn Joe Petty Catherine Stitz Charles Dodson Amro Stauifer Kenneth Ebershoif Russell Davis Donald Oberle Mercedes Mooney Glenn Dreblow h . -i-is ,,,,,, ' , gA,,, -- .. ,U-, 3, 1, Xrx Louise Morin Harry Kazey Marilyn Collins Richard Goff Kenneth Mahoy John Bol Levi Rudisail Gertrude Ward Gordon Bryant Robert Goff Leslie Martin Anna Ritter Niles Stair Kenneth Laws Lois Jane Gillespie Laverne jones Mortimer Winski Geneva Perry Jack Harrington Ruth Kantz Joe Reifenrath Thistle Hammel James Minton Mildred Ward Mona Wright Eddie Browne Madalyn Hursh Mildred Anderson Jessie Arnold Mary Jane Steele james Callahan Margaret Felix Reynolds Hart Thelma Knott Bert Mullins Sylvia Van Scoyoc Margaret Stradling William McCauley Louis Silance Stuart Sietsma Ruth Vogelhut Trena Torrcnga Edward Wray Helen Williams Leroy Marftellar Mary L. Gillespie Lorene Vandermay Donald Overley Margaret Farrell Huldah Lewellan , X NM alll I X1 A Page Forty-rim' L. I9 J W I I 1 W Iifagw? 7 0f lguhliuhrh Ammzllg bg tlpr xg Srnlinr Gllzum XR nf X 3lrffrruun Eiigh Srhnul Q M W vr Sp 3 X 3 'Y P1'i V ,X 5 mt! 1 WSQQ. 52 fx Q 1 E if , 1 f Tj xlg' 1 ,pk -yyf!,g X 'x3X N af .5 in ff K .. , NS ? fu Q f7 X ' ,,2 1 Qs: ' -:nk :R if 1, ' all x Xff ' ff R kfff' fury W ,X ,I W f J' xx 7 .fffx-X. Q19 X f X ff 'Y I 1' l? xx1x1 J I RPN, .flfygf 'small' X 'NL I 'l N 4' Xmxx lx ll I Il 'mix ' ' 1 I , ' ' 1' Zz ' y T5 ITS 1 ' I , I 3 4 X X 1' xx .HI 1 AX- 4.-. .A ...-. -- t f A ,, ,j - i,,., Freshmen jean Adkins James Martin Kenneth Brown Robert Tzucker Tochie Wallace Minadel Venemann Norwood Watkins Roberta Marshall Robert Bell Dorothy Drummond XVilliam Blistian Carroll McCord Mary Wilsoiu Leonard Blackburn JOB Rush Horace Dykhuizen Dorothy McCabe Ora jackson Betty Huff Garrett Kamstra Mary Knarr Marshall Dittmar Elizabeth Florer Robert Deeter Vivian Slipher XVoodrow Carroll Peggy Hiner Arthur Conner Florence Silverman Herman Lodde Ina Ewing Eugene Moore Edna Knott Herbert Dixon Mary Counts Gladys Pitman Marjorie Knott Harry Mack Alice Anderson Madonna Graham Bernice Beeler Ruth Ezra 1 Annabelle Smith jack O'I-Iaver 1 Elizabeth Hill Magdelena Brower Tom King Sara Schaaf Francis Goldey Charlotte Hensell Pag1cForty-sim ' L'iill klf A xlg f ,M 4 A 5 1 r .4-.u.' ,, 5 -am A-,171 lf 7 X4 -,,4---N'- ,! s ,xx 5 ,4 'x' Ina Anderson Robert Reifers Doris McMillan Clarence Lamb Martha Yuill Earl Haley Opal Carlson William Miller Mary Korschot Robert Young Velma Daugherty Paul Howe Geraldine Arnold Robert Wallace Irene Caldwell Wilbur Overley Ruth Kendall James Kantz Henrietta Terpening Marian Cooper Mary Cole Jack Finnegan Melba Minniear john VanNatta Mary Pfrommer William Nisley Maxine Hootcn Vincent Schrader Henrietta Sietsma William Neal Virginia Brenner Gilbert Altlierr Garna Peterson Bob Bedford Jane Allen Tom Callahan Marjorie Connell Charles Dicks Doreen Winegnrner William Weiler Alice Stair Jack Small Jean Munger James Martin Mildred Wliitesell Dwain Moore Anna Williams Robert O'Reilly Maudie Burnett Merril Stacker . lli' 2li,l,ll,l, xx : 3 ,X lxff Page Forty-sCL'ci1 ra 'W ' 4153 i funding .AIN f 1-, V. N, 1 4 , I5 ' .1 ,V kt F I ,--L r 137 4' 1,4 . , Ng- x ' 1 ' . I . fi, V I' ,I 1 . - ' 1 sf. nv 1 waz: am .Q 1 , 4.5. . . .F W ., -4- .nf 2 1 - .- 'X T -gf .-1. f..-- A -1Q.i!1 , .V K Q. . 2... 1 - 3.-.,, 1 . 'fa f' f f vii ' --'Hier 2' - Ja! 5.1.4 -3 Q 'pill' f -, v. 2 Q: A jj i' Ali jg? . '-I L., , Ne ix , 85 K . .Q ' . .. ' J ' -. ' - , ' , hggff- kg.. . 'F' ' , 'S A : 45 ' ' 1 . ' ' 'j?1'ff33i .Y K I' K X ' f 'f' .. 1 . H 14 f 's-33 . in .' 2 1 Al ' . tk A .24 f . 1 4553 STL ' I mtg, -qf.:1.g,W,, Love loms f - . 35442635 ' .- ax ' .uf'.a-.4 P . 1. -w .V-- -, . Sil1Jf0U45 V ,Y 'f .' f' ' X. Jun tx-mx ' -' . JU 4 f Yfl? Y Anus M A E L at ,. . ,A ff 193 N'-1:3 u. xwxr N' -z oi if xt E24 ,em 1' xg N wdtifl Mfah-Y fvex where - '351 3'555'3i'f2:, Y vsggg' 4:w .,. :5. 1 .A ,-3-.1 gl hikgfg. - -' ,. ..,5 ,.Z?-Q15-.itzg'-fgftjg-A232351 3 - ' - -15:,.t2f'gE1f1-Ziv,-55.Q ., I Love Sei XM Vfijsffferf Pczfu' F0z't,af-wilffllt Gone Bai Noi 7'0f90i-teh 1 2 S 4 s sign-.ew :fum-f Activities HE activities of ,Ietlerson may be compared to those of the aeroplane. Wfeek by week, month by month. year by year. things are being dis- X covered in the large field of aviation: thus the activities of our school are rapidly improving and are gradually becoming .1 very important -- feature in our school life. All of the extra-curricular activities tend to prepare the students for .1 well rounded life. jefferson is very fortunate in having .1 number of clubs, one representing each de- partment, the purpose of which is to promote a clcarer understanding of the subject and to instill in the students .1 lieener interest for their studies. ln addition to these there are organizations which emphasize creative ability and self expression which benerit the individual and bi'ing honor for the group and school. The students who h.1ve participated in dramatics are proud of their productions, which have been rising in the estimation of the public. The weekly newspaper. The jeff Booster, is ranked as one of the foremost high school publications. The day on which Q'The Nautilus is distributed is one of the most impoi'tant occasions of the year, and rightfully so, because the book holds Ll place of honor not only among the students but also in the State. The music department has grown to the extent that it was neces- sary to add a new instructor to the music faculty. The special activities of the band. the orchestra, and glee club are enjoyed by the student body as well as by the partici- pants. Oratory and debating have brought unusual honor to the students who entered the contests this year. The contests sponsored by the state for the Latin and commercial students always find successful entries for Jefferson. The spiritual and moral side of life is emphasized through the activities sponsored by the Advisory Councils and through the Young Men's and Young XVomen's Christian Association. The splendid co-operation of the high school Y's and the city Y. M. C. A. has contributed much to the development of the four square life. The Sunshine Society of Jefferson is one of the largest in the State and the entire school is greatly benefited by Sunshine's deeds. P41110 Forly-miie ' ' Til- i 339- f ia, . X The Nautilus Glenn Greenwood. Wfilliard Cheeseman, Ea'l10i'-ilz-Chief BllXilIL'XX Minzugrr The general plan or dummy, as it is called, for all year-books is practically the same each year. The theme, the art work, and the pictures vary from year to year and the staff of 1930 is pleased to present a book with the very popular theme of aviation. Inspirations come as the work on the annual progresses and the editors of the various departments have done their best to give the school a record which will be of more value as the years go by. The photo editor, Mary Shambaugh, has been able to secure some invaluable photo-- graphs for the scenic section. These pictures have been copyrighted by the photographer and it was only by a special arrangement that the pictures were secured. The process necessary to obtain many colors is very expensive and would have been impossible if it had been done by the regular mehtod. For this reason the colored plates which add so much to the main division pages were tinted in France. Owen Fix has done all of the art work. The initial letters introduce the pins or seals of the various clubs and will serve as a reminder of happy high school days. Glenn Greenwood is very versatile in his accomplishments and for four years he has been actively connected with dramatics. The unusual dramatic section is very repre- sentative of the interests of the editor-in-chief. . Y l Hugh Titus Bernice Galloway Circulation Mgr. Sponsor Page Fifty Only a few of the many points of interest in this Nautilus have been pointed out and theistaff feels that each student can find much more which will be treasured. The stafl: and sponsor, Miss Calloway, wish to thank all those who have been instrumental in the production of this annual. The services of Miss Slaybaclx, who assisted in the Candy sales, and Miss Beaver. who helped proof-read, and also Miss Fenton, the coach of the plays given for the benent of the Nautilus, have been appreciated. Only the untir- ing etlorts of all have made it possible for the annual to come out early and thus really establish the precedent started last year. THE 1930 STAN: Editor-in-Chief Literary Editor Art Editor Photo Editor Society Editor Athletic Editor Calendar Editor Joke Editor Alumni Editor Music Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager General Assistant Faculty Adviser Cilenn Greenwood Anna lXlargaret Ross Owen Fix Mary Shambaugli Elilabeth Rush Oscar Alvord Grace Talbert Catherine ROLll'lgLlC7 Helen llaag Raymond Thompson XVilliard Cheeseman Richard Gery Hugh Titus Carl Martin Miss Galloway Standing-Martin, Fix, Alvord, Gery Sitting-E. Rush, Talbert, Rodriguez, Shanibaugh. Haag ,Ross f'1lij1'l 'llI ,bw The 1930 Booster jane Shearer. Marguerite Glenn, liilftui'-111-Clurf Business Eilifor Another step forward in the held of good journalism was made by the Booster this year. Beginning early in the first semester an effort was made to confine the matter on the editorial page to editorials and literary efforts of the student body, and since that time not a line of local news or advertising has appeared on this page. Boys from the Vocational Printing classes hand-set the type for this department. A This school and The Booster also became better known among the schools over the state and nation through the honor given the editor-in-chief, Jane Shearer, who was elected secretary of the Indiana High School Press Association at its annual meeting in October. The Booster won third place among the National newspapers this year. Jef- ferson is very proud of this honor, since the majority of schools in the class this year were larger than Jefferson. jane Shearer has headed the staff this year as editor-in-chief, with Dorothy Reynolds assigning the news stories, Marjorie Rush and Helen Winter writing the features, Eliza- beth Schnaible planning the issues and other duties of a managing editor, and Aileen Baer again acting as mentor of the society column. William McQuisten was drafted as a member of the staff this year as copy editor. Mrs. Lelah Clark was appointed as literary sponsor this year and her journalism classes have furnished much copy in addition to the work of the regular staff. Miss Webking, as typing supervisor, and Miss Grey, as auditor, have cheerfully devoted much effort this year toward the aim of achieving a bigger and better publication. As last year, The Booster is produced in the school print shop by the Vocational classes of Mr. T. E. Conder, who also acts as technical advisor and supervisor of the staff. T. E. Conder, Mrs. Clark, Sponsor Liierary Sponsor Page Fifty-two LITERARY STAFF, 1929-30 Jane Shearer Editorfin-Chief Dorothy Reynolds News Editor Marjorie Rush Etature Editor Elizabeth Sehnaible Managing Editor Aileen Baer Society Editor NVilli.1in McQuisten Copy Editor Thomas Bauer Exchange Editor Clyde Byers Rewrite Editor Williittai Pletemeyer Sport Editor Elizabeth Gray Henen Wfinter Girls' Sport A ssoeiate Feature Editor Etlittll' Reporters-Mary XVarnlte, Margaret Rush, Sara Schaaf, Betty Timberlake, Alice Eisenbaeh, Maxine Morrison, john Harbaugh, Irene Maguire, Chas. Barth. Typists Dorothy Young, Sarah Huff, I.illian Holladay, Tena Bouwltamp BUSINESS STAFF Marguerite Glenn Business Manager Harold Meminering Advertising Manager Vivian Miller Circulation Manager Ad Club-Harold Memmering, Robert Suter, Maxine Morrison, Edna Reifers, Peggy Dietrich, Petty Mack. NIECHANICAL STAFF Charles Zahn Pressman John Polstra Assistant Pressman Standing-Clyde Byers, XY'illiam MeQuisten, Helen Vfinters, Tom Bauer, XVilliam Fletemeyer, John Harbaugli. Harold Memmering Sitting-Ebby Grey, Marjorie Rush, jane Shearer, Dorothy Reynolds, Elizabeth Sehnaible, Marguerite Glenn, Aileen Baer l'114ft' Fifty three Top Row-Xlr. Carver, Ferd Goodman, Nlr. Yfebb Below-Idgar Xlclimnev, Tom Gulhnn, Albert Krabbe THE SENIOR HI-Y Offict1'!'.x Thomas Gullion President Edgar McKinney Vice-President Ferdinand Goodman Secretary Albert Krabbe Treasurer HE scope of the Senior Hi-Y is broader than either the Junior or Tuxis because it is an outgrowth of the other Y's and is made of an older group of boys. The purpose of this organization, as stated in the charter, is to create and maintain and extend throughout the school high standards of Christian character. Since the majority of the boys who are elected to membership have taken an active part in the other divisions of the Y. M. C. A. they are well prepared to accept the challenges of the charter. The meetings are held once a week at the city Y. M. C. A. The social season opened with a Halloween party and several bean feeds have been enjoyed by the boys. These boys have their own quartet, a basketball team and a gospel team which travels over the state. The county Older Boys' Convention has always been looked forward to and this year the convention was held in Lafayette. The purpose of this conference was to en- courage the formation of Hi-Y Clubs in the small high schools of the state. About ten schools were represented. Glenn Harmeson and Mr. N. Kiser, head football coach at Purdue. were the outstanding speakers at this convention. Mr. Webb of Jefferson and Mr. Carver of the city Y. M. C. A. have been the sponsors of this organization. I'v1rf1'l ilIjf-four Top Row-Mr. Laney, Richard Moore, Mr, Carver Buttoni-Owen Fix, Herman Berger, David Curtner TUXIS CHAPTER OF SENIOR I-II-Y Ojiwm Herman Berger President Dick Moore Vice-President Owen Fix Secretary Dave Curtner Treasurer HE Tuxis Hi-Y, a newcomer to our outside activities, has just com- wit pleted its first successful year under the capable direction of Mr. Y Laney, school sponsor, and Mr. Carver, outside sponsor. This club has .1 twofold purpose:-first, to create, maintain and extend throughout the school and community a high standard of Christian Character: second, to sponsor the Junior Hi-Y. They feel responsible for the Junior Chapter because they are .1 direct outgrowth from the Junior Hi-Y. Members are chosen from Junior and Senior classes. At present there are twenty members. Meetings are held weekly at the Y. M. C. A. A luncheon is held in the high school cafeteria for the members once a month. This club has a bright social side also. All the boys will remember with pleasure various bean feeds and the I-Iallowe'en party held at Kemmer's Club House. Pfifft-l 1fLy-line I to ,v If ' X , I . 5 I 1 ' X . - 4 .7 Q 3, x T7 1 , n 0 K 3 Q my Z if gg, Sw FQ f XSPJKHYQXNX r A Xllf Xxx ' f 'll'-ff x Q X ff if W!! M f ,f X XM ff x Trip Row-Mary L. Gillespie, Nliss Slavbaek, Miss Rarclitfe, Miss Ryan. Marjorie lXIarqni'z lit-liiwfXlild1'ed lanibulli, Mary Shambaugh, Ruth Kant? THE HOME ECCNOMICS CLUB Ofj9Ft'I'S Mary SIi.imb.iugli . President Mildred Lambuth Vice-President Ruth Kantz Secretary-Treasurer Mary L. Gillespie Chairman of Programme Committee Marjorie Marquis Chairman of Social Committee C5555 3 'fi . . e . . . .. . OME Economies Club is .1 newcomer to our outside activities. This 9 elub was organized early last fall for the purpose of stimulating an - interest in home economics and to train the girls for eihcient lead- M' ership. This club has a very bright future because it is alhliated with the State and National Home Economics Association. Many helpful suggestions con- cerning programs are sent to them. The majority of programs have been based on these ideas. The First meeting after they were thoroughly organized was the Christmas meet- ing. The program consisted of interesting tales about Christmas in foreign lands. The mothers were invited to both the Mai-eh and May meetings so that they could become acquainted with the worli that the girls had done. Those girls who qualify under the point system are entitled to wear the National Home Economics pin. As it is quite an honor to wear this pin, the girls strive to do the work required for this privilege. The president receives three points and the other oiheers two. Several points may be earned by serving or by acting on a Committee. Plans are being made to send two delegates to the State Teachers' Association to attend the student meetings. Ruth Kantz became treasurer after Ann Rutledge left school. Miss Ratcliffe is to be commended on the splendid work of the club. 1515713 I-'ifly .sitr Top Row-lotiise XY'arnke. jane XY'right, Miss Seexer, Frances Horner lieliny-Xl.irgiierite Rilenn. ,lane Bryant, Dnrothv Reynolds SUNSHINE SOCIETY CJf7il't'l'x Lois Jane Bryant President Dorothy Reynolds Vice-President Marguerite Glenn Secretary Frances Horner Chairman of Outside Sunshine Mary Louise XY'arnke Chairman of Inside Sunshine jane XVright Chairman of Program Committee fp ff UNSHINHS deeds are as widespread as her fame. There is hardly uf, , . . . . , . . , Q 'L any activity in -Iefterson High School in which the Sunshine society 5 dats nrt take an active part. The immediate purpose of the societv I . ' flflll is to make each new girl acquainted with the other girls of the school and to make her feel at home. To carry out this purpose. parties are given semi-annually to welcome all new girls into the school and the society. The Society, as a whole. attempts to spread sunshine wherever it is needed. The most im- portant activity of this organization is the contribution of iafty or sixty baskets to poor families of the city it Christmas time. Every girl in school is given a chance to participate in spreading this bit of Christmas cheer. To further spread sunshine, flow- ers are sent to members of the society who are ill. The party for the Mothers is one of the most delightful events of the year. The party at Christmas time for the Children's Home and the party for the alumni are also important events of the social calendar. The society also had the privilege of installing a chapter at Linden, Indiana, this year. The State convention is held annually in the spring and all the girls look forward to this with pleasure. jeff has the honor of having held the first convention in the state. The Society is one of the largest in the State and it takes an interest in the State as well as local affairs. Pane Fifly-sei-viz Top Row-XY'.ilter Keller. XY'illiard Cheesenian, Tom Bauer, Orval NVray Botuini-Mr. Marshall, Richard Gary THE BOYS' COUNCIL Ojfffrvrs Richard Gery . . President Xvillard Cheeseman Vice-President Orval Wrgiy' Secretary-Treasurer Tom Bauer , , President QZJ Wgilter Keller Vice-President QZJ EFFERSON High School is proud of the Boys' Advisory Council and the work which they have done this year. This organization is made up of a group of boys who strive to raise the standard of the student body. The most responsibility for this particular phase of the Council's activities falls on the Problem Committee. The boys are elected as members to the Council, after they have been recommended by the faculty. The maximum number, which is hfty, has never been Hlled, although twenty-six new members were taken in this last semester. The members of the Council may be identified by the pins, which they adopted this year. This year the Council assisted the Sunshine girls with their Christmas baskets. Mr. Marshall has been the sponsor of the organization for a number of years. P11110 I if!3l-Gigli! Top RUSS'-'XIJXIHC NIorr.s1111, Nlariurie Rush, I'li1.1l1etl1 Rush I5elmvfHelt'n llensinger, Xliss Ii1111111el TI-IE GIRLS' ADVISORY COUNCIL fJfIItI'l'x Helen Pensinger President Marjorie Rush Vice-President Maxine Morrison Secretary Elizabeth Rush Tre.1.urt'r VERY girl aspires to be worthy of becoming .1 me111ber of the Girls' Council. The faculty recommends .1 limited number of upper class girls for membership, and it is an honor to wear tl1e emblem of the organization. Tl1e Girls' Council h.1s many purposes: perhaps the n1ost im- portant is to develop a feeling of fellowship toward the school. The council aims to trai11 the girls for leadership, to encourage service to tl1e school, and to cooperate with all other school activities. Ofhce and Library Scout work, and Sunshine First Aid Room are among the most important opportunities for service. A banquet held in the school Cafeteria to honor tl1e football and basketball teams was one of the prominent social events of the year. Another event of the year is the tea given in honor of the mothers. Much time is spent o nmaking this party .1 success. The Council presents ten dollars to the most outstanding Senior girl each year. lhmw I-'iffy mm Top-Doris XVinski, Marjorie Rush l'mttom-Elizabeth Ru-h. Miss Congleton, Aileen Baer THE FRENCH CLUB Ofj'i1'4'rX Marjorie Rush President Doris Wixiski Vice-President Aileen Baer . Secretary Elizabeth Rush Treasurer HE French Club has just linished a very enjoyable and profitable year. The club decided that there would be only six regular meetings and a picnic at the Close of the year. Miss Congleton has been the source of inspiration for the club. Helen Pensinger, chairman of the program committee, was able to secure some excellent talent. Mrs. Roy W. Wallace was the outstanding speaker for the October meeting. Her talk was based on France and the French schools. Later an open discussion in French was held. Several really clever plays have been presented by the members. Among these were: La Faim est un Grand Inventeur and La Classe Francaise. The members of Le Cercle Francais feel that the aims of the French Club have been fully realized this year. Page Sixty Top Row-Xvilliani NVeiler, Dick libersliolli. Paul XVilliams Belowfllutli Kami, Nliw funk The Spanish Club OFFICERS Ruth Kantx President XVilliam XVeiler Vice-President Paul XVilliams Secretary Dick Iibershotl' Treasurer X X SPANISH CLUB has just completed another successful year under , 4 Miss Cooks able guidance. Several years ago this club was organized for the purpose of creating .1 greater interest in Spanish language, the country, and its customs. Members of this club were interested 1 very much in the Mexican Boy Orator, who gave his oration in Spanish. Meetings are held in Miss Cook's room once a month. Anyone taking one semester of Spanish is eligible. Georgia XVallis and her committee are to be commended for the very excellent programs. Perhaps the most interesting of these was Senora Rhea de I,ozanne's talk on Mexico. She told of the sports, the most popular being bull iight- ing, dress, various holidays, and liestas, the IIIOSE important of these being Christmas. She Compared shopping in Mexico to shopping in America. She said merchants de- mand three times as much as an article is worth but you can bargain them down to the real Cost. An open discussion followed the meeting. The club presented Senora Rhea de Lozanne with .1 box of candy to show their gratitude. Page Sirry-one Top Row-Mary Louise XVarnke, Lois il. Bryant, Miss Hanna, Nlargaret Rush Bottom-XY'.ilter Keller, ,lane Vfright, Albert Highley The Latin Club OFFICERS Jane XVright President Albert Highley Vice-President Wgiltei' Keller Secretary Mary Louise Nvarnke Treasurer Lois Jane Bryant Chairman Program Committee Margaret Rush Chairman of Entertainment Committee lit ATIN students may become members of the Circus Latinus after l they have made a B average in scholarship. The Fascisti move-- mtnt was much in evidence at the opening meeting, which was a 7 o'clock breakfast one October morning. The scourging rods and 1' the hre brands of the Fascisti served as excellent equipment for preparing the wiener breakfast. The subsequent programs assumed a more serious nature, as they were intended to introduce the pupils to Roman life, government and customs. Latin play, songs, conundrums and games were arranged to give the students an additional phase of Latin which might not be obtained in regular class work. Miss Hanna, as sponsor, has encouraged participation in the Latin Contest and as a result Junior Steele, Margaret Rush, Robert Royster and Charles Plank Won the flrst prize in the County Contest in their respective field. IJllflf'Si.l'f1j'tIl.'O Top Row-Grace Talbert. Raymond Thompson, Elimbeth Rush Below-Miss Galloway, Ann Ingram The Studio Club OFFICERS Grace Talbert President Elizabeth Rush Vice-President Ann Ingram Secretary Raymond Thompson Treasurer gee RT for art's sake is a slogan which has been commonly associated with the art world. The expression has come to have very little meaning because the word art has almost as many interpretations as there are individuals who may pause to consider the word. A new slogan Art for Life's Sake has been adopted by the Studio Club. The study of the relation of art to everyday life has resulted in the pursuit of many worthwhile affairs. Club members have scoured and polished statues, visited the Lafayette Art gallery, studied the Hoosier Salon or discussed addresses pertaining to art, all with the greatest amount of enthusiasm and appreciation due each particular activity. The members are elected from those pupils of the art department who have shown unusual ability in originality in the creative side of art. Only a limited number are chosen each year. An open meeting for the entire art department was held at the Lafayette Art Gallery. Miss Galloway, the club sponsor, showed how the gallery might be of value to the students and emphasized the importance of studying the current exhibits which are brought to the gallery. All the meetings which have been held were intended to present visions of the LIFE world whereby one may become an artist citizen,', although he does not enter the world of professional artists. Prlyni .Sixty-fli We Top Row-Richard Gery, Helen XY'inter, Elizabeth Schnaible IiUlLlXYmxT.1l'gllCl'ifC Glenn, Miss Fleremuyer. The History Club OFFICERS Helen Wiiitei' , . President Richard Gery Vice-President Elizabeth Schnaible . Secretary Marguerite Glenn , Treasurer HE History Club was re-organized this year with Helen Wfinter as president. The first part of the year was spent in organizing the club. The membership was made open to all those taking history cr any corresponding social science. The regular meeting was held the first Thursday of every month. The committee also decided to make a special elTort to observe important holidays with signilicant programs. One of these celebrations was shared with all the students at a Convocation held in honor of Abraham Lincoln. One of the most interesting meetings was held at the Lafayette Historical Museum. The members of the club feel greatly indebted to those who have contributed to the museum. The value of such material and the many ways in which the museum may bs used were pointed out. The Club members resolved to avail themselves of the many opportunities which the museum offers. The success of the club has been due to the interest and time spent by the oflicers who were under the capable direction of Miss Fletemeyer. Page Sia-ty-fo-ur Top Row-Mr. Rogers. Ferdinand Goodinan, Oscar Alxorcl Bottom-Dorotliy Reynolds The Forensic Club OIflf1Cl5RS Ferdinand Goodman President Oscar Alvord Vice-President Dorothy Reynolds Secretary ' HE Forensic Club has not been closely organized this yearg in spite 7 of this fact they have passed a successful year. ' This club grew out of the public speaking class of last semester. The purpose of this organization is two fold: First, to promote f- contests and debates and also interest in public speakingg second, to give members practice in parliamentary rules. Meetings are held every month. Probably the most interesting feature in this work during the past year was the Christmas party. There were eight members pres- ent. Inexpensive gifts were exchanged. Each member gave a presentation speech and the recipient gave .1 speech of acceptance. Mr. Rogers is the sponsor. l'i111yNi.i'lip-fin U dicafion It is with true sincerity .md l'CiPCCl that wc, the fitnff of the 1930 Nauti- lus, dcdicatc this book to our vury .Ibis and inspiring Assistant principal. Mr. Earl H. Hinsliuv, who so willing- ly puts forth his ciforts to misc thu st.1nd.1rds .ind ideals of klcifcrwon High School. X X ff x fi? 4 rl, ,f ff ' . f jff f t , .X X! X flfx ' N thx ' ' ff' X X4 IQ .H ff' 4 f K X ,fig-1'-f ' , ff, f' K A I,.i X , xl K 1 ' iz ii-Egx '53, ZZ' X- X- G .ii '?? :Efi'iX ' V K 'li i ' ' , 1 V! N f I 0 ff , ff? ,IV , f ,. X N V this ,,,f f f I ,V X J l fi!-X X VM , VM 'team X fx Uf f W0 f Q LX, f Q I yi? NL I mfr I-YM X 1 X 1 ' ' f A 1 Z , I , 1 T 1 X I X1 X, T Top Row-Herman Berger, Richard W'alkcr Below-Paul Murphey. Mr. Rogers, Dorothy Dykhuizen Oratory f4 HE School has been unusually well represented in oratory this year. QQ The student body should be proud of them and lend them more support. The season was opened by a local contest held the latter part of 1. October. Doris Hale and Paul Murphy winners in this contest, rep- iesented Jeff in the Central Indiana Contest held at Tipton, November Z. Paul Mur- phy won first prize and a silver loving cup which he presented to the school at con- vocation. This beautiful trophy can be seen in the library. Paul chose Patrick Henry's very famous Virginia speech. On Tuesday, December 18 a local contest was held. On the Way to Peace was the subject sponsored by Indiana Council. Herman Berger was placed first with his oration on World Peace and Youth. He represented Jeff at Lebanon in March. Richard Walker was Jeffis representative in a contest on the Constitution spon- sored by the Bar Association. Dorothy Dykhuizen was Jeff's representative in the State Discussion League held on April llth. She talked on the question, Does Indiana Need a New Constitution? Page Sirty Sim Top Rowfliicliartl Uerv, Har.-Id Nleinineinig, Nlr. Rogers. lielow-Doris Hale, lllilaberh Hchnaible Debating Team , HE team started to work on their debates early last November and V went through the season practically undefeated. They have argued Tl pro and con the question, Resolved, That Indiana Should Adopt By Law the Principle of Old-Age Pensions. Llelf has won from RensSelaer, Fowler and Monticello, both here and there on both sides of the question. Jeff and Haniinend tied for first prize in the Tenth District. They then debated at Hammond to work ol? the tie. Jefferson debaters labored under a great handicap because they had only one team, while Hammond. the opposing force, had two teams, a negative and affirmative, In spite of these obstacles Jeff was victorious over Hammond, who represented the district last year. The winning of this debate allowed jefferson team to represent the district at North Nlanchester in April. The success of this team was due to Mr. Roger's able coaching and the good material with which he had to work. l'r1f1i'Ni.i'Ij1fv ini THE HIGH-Y CLUB The Boys, Glee Club A ..L.. l ' 89 I USIC is in the air may be truly said when this group of boys appears G on the program. Some of the most talentcd boys in this group or- D ganized a quartette and an orchestra and Jefferson students enjoy a real treat when George XVeast, Harold Beeler, Glenn Greenwood and Oscar Alyord, accompanied by XValter Keller, furnish the audi- torium music. The leading roles for male voices and the choruses of the Native Guards were chosen from the Glee Club. Hugh Titus, Leonard Ade. Harold Beeler, Floyd Ellis, Mary jane O'Mara, Anna Mary Nicholas, Sarah Sehaff, Constance Conlin, Elma Murphy, Oscar Alyord and Fred O'Mara represented Jefferson in the All-State Chorus. The members of the Glee Club are listed below: Gilbert Althen Leonard Ade Robert Bedford Harold Beeler Herman Berger Harry Covington ll Qiffifyciqlit Ferdinand Foltz Allen Francis Arthur Lahr Delmar Madison Robert McKaig Bert Mullins William Neal Fred O'Mara Merrill Stacker Junior Steele . Harold Strange Raymond Swatts ' 9 The Girls Glee Club ,X IGH School Choruses form an important activity in the musical H I program at Jefferson High School. During the first part of the N school year the Girls' Glee Club took an active part in several audi- toriums. They also sang for a Christmas program given by the Sunshine Society. Two choruses for the annual musical cometly, The Belle of Bg1gdad were selected from this group of girls. The leading characters of this cast were also chosen from the Glee Club. First Row, left-Mary Karr, Betty Wiright, Ruth Kendall, Sara Scharf, Margaret Strailling, lileanor Phares, Dorothy Perigo, Louise Morin, Anna M. Nitliolas, lftlna Reifers, Katherine Thompson, I-.blsy Gray, Daisy Cunditf, Charline G.1hag.1n, Kathleen Bowers, Mariorie nl. llagan, Nliss XY'Iiite. Second Row-Dorothy llaun, l.ouise Hughes, ldoreue Greene, Doris Hale, Sally Throclxmorton, Llara Holtl, Doris Strong, Gertrude Corbin, Mary R. Teal, Helen Davis, Katherine Stitl, Betty Timherlalie. Prmr- Sifllf nine The 1930 Orchestra RCHESTRA activities for the year 1930, although following the line of previous years, have been of better quality and more nu- merous. The capacity and tone quality have been more highly de- veloped, allowing a study of more advanced compositions. The orchestra has been playing arrangements from the Contest numbers of the National High School Orchestras. The orchestra played for the Senior play, Christopher Juniorf' DeMol:ly play, the musical comedy, Bagdad, and for several convocations. The entire direction of the orchestra is in the hands of the competent directoress, Miss Camilla White. Left, Standing-lrene Maguire, Arthur Freiling, Herman Cohen, Marion Rogers, Mary Elizabeth W'alters, Helen Bowers, violin, Mary jane Steele, David Ziffrin, C melody saxophone, Ester Frieling, piano, Leonard Ade, double B. haw, Donald Edmonds, saxophone, john Harbough, E Hat Clarionet, Ainiel Chastain, B flat elarionet, Russell Bowman, saxophone, james Minton, slide trombone, Harry Mack, trumpet, Leslie Goddard, bass: Paul NWilliams, bells, Marion Pope, drums. Left, Sitting-Raymond Thompson, bass viol: Milton Crooke, George Xveast, clarionette, Donald Payne, Henry Earhart, Eugene Steble, Harry Kazey, Kenneth Ebershoff, Thomas King, Paul Howe, violin, Charles Callison, piccolo, Wayne Gingrich, Gordon Bryant, trumpet: Jason Yocum, alto, Nvilliam Demerly, Lola Bolinger, violin. Pflflc Scrcnty The 1930 Band W l V HHN Mr. Skidmore became director of the band it became possible 4 for the band to participate in more school activities. Mr. Skidmore is a successful leader in as much as he is the director of the Armory band. The band has taken an active part in all the athletic activi- f---f ties and has raised the spirits of the rooters and the players when none came from other sources. This unique band accompanied the football squad to Logansport, followed the basketball team to the college-town tourney at Greencastle, and also met the Frankfort band while in that city. Mr. Skidmore has entered the band in the district high school contest. The players with their instruments are listed below: Standing from Left-Mr. Skidmore, directory Paul XVilliams, Alto clarionetg Raymond Thompson, bass drum, Goris Dj'RllUi7Cll, cymbolsg Leslie Goddard, bass horn: Marion Pope, drum maiorg Leonard Ade, double B bass: Richard Lawrence, bass horn, Charles Harbaugli. snare drum, Eugene jackson, Charles Grannon, Harry Mack. trumpet. Sitting, from Left-Edward W'ray, Amiel Chastain, Fred O'Mara, clarionetteq Orval Shriner, bass snare drums: Milton Crooke, clarionette, Vernon Gery, clarionetteg John Harbaugh, E flat clarionetteg Paul Murphy, piccolog Robert Golf, tenor saxophoneg jason Yocom, Emmet Ade, alto saxophone: Richard Goff, baritone saxophoneg Willis Mead, alto saxophone, Albert Highley, XVayne Gingrich, Gordon Bryant, trumpet, Vern Punkerton, Clayton CILIPEJU, baritone, Robert Pearson, slide trom- tone, Raymond Phillips. Ora jackson, Orval Wray, trumpet, james Minton, slide trombone. Page Seventy-one Top Row-Iiloise Grey. Gertrude Panlener, Claudine Richard Biittinn-Xlr. Minier, Robert Steiner The Commercial Club OFFICERS Robert Steiner President Claudine Richard Vice-President Eloise Grey Secretary Gertrude Panlener Treasurer 4 Q OMMERCIAL CLUB was organized seven years ago for the pur- 'iE5'Q5?? pose of producing interest in the Commercial department. The 2 . . . Club serves as ll connecting link between the school and the busi- ness men of the town ,K r . The Club sponsored the auditorium program presented by Mr. Hasstield. the world's champion typist. The ability in the skill and technique ex- hibited by Mr. Hassfield proved a source of inspiration to rhe Commercial Department. The skating party held at Maple Point is an annual social event. The proceeds from this party. and others held during the year, are used in defraying expenses for the Commercial Contest. l'firr Ne uvity-tit'0 Top liow+Nl.iriorie Rush, Nlr. Cnmler, Nl.ll'llUCl'llC Glenn l'3uitum-lflilnbetli Selinnble, Dorothy Reynolds Dorothy Reynolds Elizabeth Schnnible Marjorie Rush Margueiite Glenn The Press Club OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer HE Irtss C ub was organized early in December with the purpose of furthering an interest in journalism. Anyone taking journalism or anyone who is on the Booster staff is eligible for membership. The Pen is Mightier than the Sword is the motto of the club. The Press Club along with other clubs of the school, sponsored the ban- quet given for our football and basketball stars. Mr. Conder has been the sponsor. Page Se've'nty-three The World Takes Wings Roads and wheels tell the bygone story of man more truthfully than do the dates of battles and rivalries of kings. The most convenient means of travel before the discovery of America was by water or foot. Thus a few sailing vessels were made and through great will power Columbus, with his three ships, the Santa Maria, Pinta and Nina, landed on the shores of the West In- dies. The Covered Wagon carried Young America across the Continent, and in its track cattle grazed and wheat fields yellowed to the harvest and the smoke arose from farmhouse chimneys. The coming of the railroads amounted to a Revolution, open- ing vast new markets to farm and factory, and linking villages and cities with the chain of a common interest. Within a generation, automobiles have transformed the every-day living of every-day people the wide world over, establishing new customs, offering new pleasures, providing a thousand new ways of getting a better living. And now, in our own day, is written the newest and most marvelous chapter of all: THE WORLD TAKES WINGS. In imagination we picture the travelers of the yesterdays marveling at this wonder, the Indian on his piebald pony, camel-riders of the desert, pioneers with oxen and cov- ered wagons. the drive and passengers of the adventurous Stagecoach days, the engineer with his hand on the throttle, even the Eastern potentate, carried upon the shoulders of his score of swarthy slaves. Bold travelers by all the roads, behold a new road opens! A whir of motors is in the air where the trackless road of the future lies. A whir of new dreams, new hopes are in our thoughts. What is coming this time, as once again men open a breach in the wall of their limitations? We cannot see tomorrow, but one thing is sure: Every new gift that the intelli- gence of man has given to his fellowmen has brought with it a new opportunity. That is more than ever true with the Conquest of the Air. A World at War seized the opportunity first. But a World at Peace has already surpassed triumphs of the war- birds. Explorers have seized the opportunity and have pioneered an airway above un- known lands and seas. The mail service puts our air-mail on our desks with winged speed. Traveling time is cut across the continent and across the ocean. Business speeds up service at every point. And we know that we have barely begun to see and use the marvelous opportunities of the opening day. The wings that flash against our morn- ing sky will show us ever new ways to enrich our lives-new ways to serve our fellow- men. However wings may change the outward ways of men, they can not change eternal values. To serve has always been man's highest privilege. To serve will more and more be his highest privilege as the wings of service are given to the world. FRANK Scorir, '30. Bibliography from Henry Hintermeister. Page Seventy-four : 5 1 X K if mx .iriblill XQ , -'Y TRAVlIl0l3Ul 1 FFAvCr -Y, ,,, ,, . ,nnvwtv Fore ord Our aim in this volume is to bring before you 11 higher ideal in school life and n school spirit that has soared up- ward. XVC are striving through the guidance of our teachers, who are our pilots, for the very highest nttainnient in education and the Hnest and most sincere youthful friendships. if X X f A 550 ek K 0045, fs. Q M' rin g e Q f K t t i i ll' Q I I 'gif' ,ff ' i Ziff ,X--Qi' X WD . .A , 515 ilflff' X 1 I ., Ll I ga Qu 4. ,L yi 1 w- 1 3+ 1 v 1 1 V 3 L, yy The Student Pilot Learning to fly compares closely to learning to live our lives. The student pilot is under a supervisor as you and l are under our parents. Even though we are able to be independent before we are twenty-one, as a student is able to fly before he is licensed. we are not allowed to be until we are legally eligible. When you are twenty-one. will you be a good pilot? Will you be able to fly your plane out of the tight places you are bound to get into? There are crashes every day by pilots who think they can fly but can't. This should encourage us to be better student pilots. The first thing a student pilot does is to take his ground schooling. In this de- partment of aviation one learns the language of the planes as he learned to talk at the age of three. Here is where he must learn to act dumb and absorb everythnig said concerning the subject. The ground school is that period in a student pilot's life when he longs most to grow up into a pilot. The next thing the student has to do is to learn to observe. The instructor takes the student up for a number of flights, called observation flights. The instructor ex- plains the puzzling things about the plane to the student in much the same manner that your father explained the mechanism of the old pump to you. Observing be- comes a habit, and a useful one. The first things we learned in life were results of observation. After the observation flights comes the big thrill-the dual control flights. These flights come to the student when he is in his teens of aviation. His ship is now equipped with dual controls, that is, controls in both cock-pits that work in unison. The instructor flies the plane from the front cock-pit and the student follows through with the controls in the rear cock-pit. Earphones are arranged between the instructor and the student so that he may be told what to do if necessary. After a few lessons of this type of flying, the student takes control and the instructor follows through. The pilot grows in flying ability as we grow to learn to handle our own affairs without the aid of our parents and instructors. In these dual control flights the student also learns to use the instrument board and to recognize the signs that tell him that he is off his course. After you leave your last teen behind you, you feel that you are almost a man. Such is the feeling of the student when he is told to solo. Being quite confident, he takes off and it isn't long before he finds himself one thousand feet above Old Mother Earth. Then he discovers that he is all alone and that he must base his confidence on ability. After a few solos he is licensed. This is like his twenty-first birthday-the day he becomes a man and a pilot. It isn't long after this before he picks up a co-pilot and these two start out for themselves with wishes of good luck from instructors and friends. And, who knows? Maybe this ex-student is instructing students pilots him- self now. MEREDITH CAMPBELL, '3 1. Page-Seventy-five The Sensation of an Airplane Ride I-Iow many people have ever had the experience of an airplane ride? Those who have, I know must have had a real thrill. I remember my Hrst one quite well. It was at Toledo, Ohio, two years ago last summer. Upon arriving at the Held I noticed that passengers were taking rides in huge monoplanes and I thought that it must be real fun to go sailing through the air like a magnificent big eagle. After a moment of careful watching I went to a ticket office nearby and asked the price of an airplane ride. The ticket seller told me that a ride would cost me two dollars and a half, so I dug deep into my trouser pocket and brought out three dollars. That would only leave me fifty cents on which to get homeg but as I thought this was the chance of a lifetime, I bought my ticket and went to the pilot of one of the mono- planes. I I took the front seat in the plane and was strapped in tight. I also was fitted to an airplane helmet. A nervous feeling ran through my body as the motor started and my heart seemed to jump in my mouth as the plane went over the field and took off slowly to the sky. I had told the pilot to give me all the thrills that he knew and I assure you that he knew a lot of them. The plane circled above the Held a few times and then with a jerk it slowly ascended to the heavens above. At that moment I really thought I would be going to heaven very soon. Suddenly my feet slipped out from the floor and I thought I was a goner, but the thought that I was strapped in, re- assured me. The first stunt that the pilot made was the loop the loop. When the plane turned over and over, I closed my eyes. Everything was a blur when I opened them and I was thankful that this stunt was over. The program wasnIt finished, however, as he piloted the plane into a tail sping and I feel quite sure that if there had been an animal in the plane, its tail would have spun too. He also maneuvered the plane into a nose dive. Great was the sensation when it was on its way to terra Firma. The plane shot like a skyrocket towards the earth and as I looked around it was moving so fast that I could see practically nothing. The sharp breeze stung my face and my insides were tumbling around like a jar of jelly when it is suddenly shaken. After the plane straightened around in a horizontal position, I felt that I would like straight flying a great deal better so I yelled at the pilot and told him so. I-Ie soon landed at the airport. I stepped out and when I touched old mother earth with the sole of my foot I thought that it was the most beloved thing in the whole wide world. I sat down on the Held for about ten minutes in order to find relief from the great sensation I had just experienced and to collect my thoughts once more. When I felt well enough to stand up properly I took the fifty cents that remained from the three dollars and hopped on the car for home with the moral that I would never again tell the pilot to maneuver the plane into tailspins and loop the loops when I took an airplane ride. JOHN HARBAUGH, '31. Page Seventy-sin: Ambition Ambition is a great thing and a rare one, It pushes us onward and upwarclg It makes us strive for what others have won, By being pushed onward and upward. In some it is lacking, but those who succeed, Were pushed there, onward and upward, By Ambition-that which is mighty, indeed, That pushes us onward and upward. MARGARET I-IEILAND, '30. True Friendship On this stage of life, behind the curtain, Untrue friends you'll find, that's one thing certain, They'll make the lights dim when you're not near, And bright as the sun, when you appear. If by chance you haven't found one already, Who'll keep the light clear and steady, Then seek for him, this very minute, In after years you'll never repent it, For him, who shall always be true, In every respect, to your friends and you. -CHARLINE GAHAGAN, '31. The Bosphorus at Night Along the Bosphorus shores at night, one sees The mosques outlined against a moonlit skyg And the hills of Asia that in the distance lie Are dark and purple shadows. Cypress trees- Their tall and slender bodies in the breeze, Are swaying and their branches softly sigh. On the strait below the starry sky on high Are moonlit sailboats with their sails at ease. One hears the water lap the rocky walls Of the castles that along the Bosphorus rise, And the whistle of a steamer, loud and shrill. The night bird also often sends a call, And spreads its wings all noiselessly and flies. Then when the moon has disappeared, all's still. -ELIZABETH Scuvio, '31. Page Sei'entg1.serCu if . ,fri Pnqr' Scivrntif-ciyvlit Win gs Flying thru space, with nothing below, But a mass of green foliage, or a world of snow. Nothing between us and earth far below, A death all uncertain may await us, who knows? But danger or no, we all must fly, 'Till, like the bird, we have conquered the sky. Flying onward and doing our best, , Eventually ceasing and taking our rest. -MARGARET HEILAND, '33 Clouds Clouds, way up in the sky. Clouds, that are black, Clouds that are white, Clouds way up, ever so high. Clouds that go scurrying along like .1 deer. Clouds that go floating so far yet so near, . Clouds that are low and bring on the rain, Clouds that are high and let sunshine through again. Clouds that seem happy, Clouds that seem sad, Clouds just like people, Sometimes good, sometimes bad. ARTHUR LAHR, '3 1. Drifting I like to drift on down the river alone. The banks pass slowly by as I float on. I see below the clouds above. Anon, The trees, the fish, the plants all seem my very own. Like saints. the weeping willows seem to moan. I think, and dream as I float on and on Past towns, meadows and woods, they are all one Haven of God's good work, that is being shown To me. My bark glides lightly down the stream On top the water smooth and still: the trout Below dart past, bound homeward on their course. My wandering mind comes back and I now deem 'Tis late. The sun is down, the moon is out. I gaze at it and see her, Delores. -Sonnet by Lee Norquest. E -'13 fi' TSE! X i P,-ff si, J EQ' .'221?13fg5'liE,il?-T Q .I 7!ll..Agi':L. HL- . 1 J M ' .5,,:, x fgwJ'ji'. . Sf ihe ' 3 1:-,. .ami rt we ff x nfl -V ' . M .qi 1-3. , X Lg, Hg.- 2, ' 'V -'lx A f f 'T . Nj75'5'4.f'v ' nf ' . , . fs?-3 n'?f3', 'fc '- L - w X. 31,9 ,, 5 , Hi? L M A . H4 1'-LU-Q F 6 Z E11 F,-i N114 F V AI. 3:6 t ,- 'Mk CTIVITIES L .mc 1.' 1'. .1, .1 1 1 A -11 1,1 ,,x. V, 1 1 . 1 1 1 . . , . 1 1, .11 1 1.1, Q ' Y 1Q1:'f',, , 1 J ,1 3 I V r. 1, 1 ' Y x I I YJ gfwli 1' f' .WR '11 1 ' ! I ..x111 , 1 11 11' 1 -'Q-1 4 .1l 1 .1 L. 1 Q , 1 - 1 . iii 95 44 ...Q vi. . 17 1.11-, 1x f I R 1 Y! 1'1lEar'. v 1'L 1-,11g1. -in: !Y'x.-' 151-1 nfl. 1 ,f .A.,, .1 1: '51' K rf 4653125 9 . 1 4 1 A' v ,1 ,L 11 41 ,14,111:1i -wg. 11.1 1 1 1. I 1 ,.,.1, 1 4,1 .. 1,Q I 1 rapt' 2 Q.. 1 1: :funn ,sf ' YI V - J F? 2 I1 if ,..l 1. i 1 ,. VF 'a Q 315 x, N 1., lf 2' 1.21 s1.f'Q :if ,Ig Green Stockings Green Stockings, a comedy written by A. E. Mason was the production of the 1930 Senior Class. The title of this play is based on an old country custom of Eng- land. The custom requires the elder sister to wear green stockings at the wedding of .1 younger sister if the younger sister marries hrst. The plot Centers about Celia Faraday, twenty-nine, the oldest daughter of XVilliam Faraday, who having worn green stockings at the weddings of her two sisters, Madge and Evelyn, refuses to wear them again at the marriage of her youngest sister, Phylis. To avoid this, she announces her engagement to an imaginary Colonel Smith, of So- maliland. Immediately the entire household and all the eligible bachelors, Admiral Grace, Henry Steele and James Raleigh treat her with a new respect. Celia carries her imaginary love affair with enthusiasm, and unexpected complica- tions arise when Colonel Smith appears on the scene. Celia in all her escapades is aided by her devoted Aunt Ida. Lois Jane Bryant as Celia captivated her audience with charm and poise. Harold Memmering as the imaginary Colonel Smith played up to his usual standard of doing all things well. Aunt Ida, the lovable quick tempered aunt as played by Doris Winski was excellent. Phyliss, the rather thoughtless youngest sis- ter, was played by Helen Pensinger. Richard Moore, her fiance, was equally thought- less. Robert Orr, Paul Williams and George Weast, as suitors of Celia, all created many interesting situations. Thomas Gullion, as the father of the girls, was well por- trayed. Marjorie Rush and Dorothy Reynolds, as the sisters, Madge and Evelyn, carried the parts well. Alden Shaffer furnished atmosphere as the butler. Miss Fenton as sponsor of the play, deserves much credit for the unusual success of the play. Christopher Junior Christopher Junior, by Madalene L. Ryley, was chosen for the all school play. The stellar role of Christopher, Jr., was cleverly taken by Joe Vaughn. Hugh Titus as Christopher, Sr., an irrascible father was capably portrayed while Betty Bellinger as Mrs. Jedbury, a haughty society woman, was excellent. Dorothy Dykhuizen as Dora Headway, played several roles-the loving niece, the sweetheart of Junior and all the time she was his wife. This was brought about by a previous contract when neither party had been allowed to see the other. Herman Berger as Major Headway was well portrayed. Joe Alberts as Mr. Simpson was a real dyed in the wool villian. Irvin Ro- sater portrayed Job, the valet, and Wilmer Vess was a convincing butler. The part of Tom Bellaby, a young lawyer, was earnestly portrayed by Gerald Moore. The play centered about Christopher, Jr., a young English boy, the son and heir of a wealthy merchant, who wished to go into business, but his father wanted him to choose a profession. In addition to choosing his profession his father had also chosen a wife for him, but through some unusual circumtsances he was already married to a girl whom he had never seen. At the same time he falls in love with Dora Hedway, but realizes his dreams cannot come true as long as he is married to the first lady. In the end everything turned out all right and They lived happily ever afterward. Miss Fenton was the capable coach. Page Seventy-nine li . 1. ' ' bl 2 . 1 ' , . .h The Belle of Bagdad Olberclfa In Two Ads-I'1'csw11'eJ By fbr' Music Df'f7lll'flI1UIIf of Ivferson High School, Marrb 28, 1930. Staged and Directed by Miss Camilla White. Assisted by Thomas E, Conder. Af:- companist, Walter Keller. THE CAST Mrs. Horace McCann, new American Consul in Bagdad . jean Hail Elsa McCann, her daughter , . .. , . , Marilyn Collins Anna Blackwell, a friend of Elsa's ., . . Mary Counts Archie Fitzgibbons, from dear old London , George Wcast Zelinda, a dancer , , ,. .. i .. ,. .. jane Allen Rose, a daughter of the Caliph . Mary Jane O'Mara Lily, another daughter i ,, . , , .. Anna Mary Nicholas Ali Ben Mustapha, the perfect of police . , Hugh Titus Hassen el Carib, the Caliph of Bagdacl ,. .. Harold Beeler Jewel, his favorite daughter Constance Conlon Bob Ballentine, an airplane mechanic , . Leonard Ade Bill Blake, his friend and companion ,. . , Oscar Alvord Henrietta Whipstitch, a romantic Spinster .. . , . ., ,Sara Schaaf Dick Taylor, from the Super-Supreme Film Co. . Glenn Greenwood Assassin . ,.,. . , .,., .,,. . . ,, . ., , Fred O'Mara THE CHORUSES Specialty Dancers-Allen, Fagin, Conlon, Collins, Howard, Dietrich, Curtner, Fix, Zovod. Oriental Dancers-Fagin, Adkins, M. Wilson, Dicks, Byler, Cundiff, L. Hughes, Haun Kendall, Knarr, Perigo, Knott. Guards-Messrs. Stacker, Althorr, Frances, T. King, McKaig, Lahr. Neal Swatts, F. Foltz. Natives-Messrs. Strange, Bedford, Steele, O'Mara, Madison. Moving Picture Chorus-Misses L. Vick, K. Thompson, T. Hammel, Messrs. J. Albert. R. Thompson, J. Arnold. Aviator Tap Dancers-Misses Baer, Maguire, Crowe, Cripe, Howard. Anderson, L. Gillespie, M. L. Gillespie, Mack, Leaman, Dietrich, D. Cook. Sailing Home Chorus-Misses M. Rush, Haag, Schnaible, Shambaugh, Bart, Paul, Hor- ner, V. Miller, Eisenbach, R. Vogelhut, Florer, Winegarner. U. S. A. Consul Chorus-Misses Burkhardt, Barnaby, Ezra, Florer, Brenner, Butz Klemm, Baum, Holder, Mooney, Felix, Winegarner. Mesopotamia Oriental Chorus-Misses Morrison, Young, Berger, Winegarner, Carroll, Green, Reifers, Friberg, Hughes Yoo-Hoo Chorus-Misses Winski, Reynolds, Morin, Florer, Glenn, Gahagan, Brown Platt, Thompson, Stradling. J s s SYNOPSIS Act I-Scene, Market Place in Bagdad. Time, the present on a bright morning in summer. Act Il-Scene, same as Act I. Time, afternoon of the same day. Musical Overture by High School Orchestra. Directed by Miss Rena Rice. Stage Manager ,... . . .. ,,.. ,... .. . .. i ,.., ,.... , ..,.,Don Stallard Assistants , ., .,,, .Richard Moore, Herman Berger, William Shigley, Richard Owens Page Eighty fWUUUlY f ,ZQX W ,Zi I V F Gkkwfff J M X, X XXL! f I r X if ' X I THE 1929 REVUE ,l-:4nx'b1,?fi! 1 f I-n an wW gfqg w MW - W a islivvfr I Conlenf SCHOOL ACTIVITIES ATHLETICS , Ii TRAVELOGU ADVERTISEMENTS X 1 ,NET1.c,: A ,N A W N,'ff,.f'X,5.23Ny: , 456 f' y x 1: I -A ffL.,Y f ' L- 5 A Wx ' C mx-,-.,, ,Ig . ,x ' f fl laleflh- I lj -01 ff ' I , f X ii? S f ' ' V 6 7 ' fneesaeroeo TC K -2-'W' 1,4 5 fs! X K ' CZ TT if K 'C V' fx ' Am' C-N -An, . X f. , , , f '- ' 11 fu, .Mff Z f Xfr'1 'A 1.JA H ,cj ' X- W Lx Av XI- -1 A 'TE 2 F9259 , TT Ex!! , XX V V... . f ,. i- M'--'--f - ,. e Niki. I HUA? M M . v ', 1 i 1 XXV, 'M '-'- -' ' - ' i -, ...L .....-n-anihknrvne.-...k vw IES ii i Q- U l Ei ,. i :j ,..vv-v--- - E A tl ,I 1 nv 1 . V 1 . fa fi i f. 19 i i gi 11 .i I 9 ai ..sJ 1'- 's i L if' -x Qi Ti 1. iii . i. 3 W . fv fi .jg Vr 5? U' if i L6 , 1 I If i B7 1. ,lcd- Hal Ha! Mr. Glibb was quite garrulous this morningg he coughed once and I saw him elevate ' 32 his Cyvebruws twice. l i 2. Mrs. llcdbury- Will you have some coffee, Mrs. Glibb? t Mrs. Glibb- Thank youf' ff i fi i fi 1 i Przylvljiylliry-lu'0 I. j'uj..fl N 1 ' 'ff' ll ii bl W IIAU uWl'flll1DQfitN-YllUlU!N fx N' 111 1.1. J ' 'fl' -,,u,,..?'-+ f' -.I , , ,. . Q- X., N, ,if '----1.3, V -- ., HY, x-u-,.f-- , , - ----:y- , . . -VV., Wf,. V T' T - --,M NX,,.,,-----x,,,,, L N.,-MJ' l 'N-.., ,,m.,L ,,, , , ..-.... .--- 427 To-1' TS ...- 125.215 .122 J.. , .QI El .H-N 'i . I 4. Yi A Ya. l 'A A' X if F H ' W l Mr. xledbury- Your kindness to mx sun shall not be furguttenf' Mrs. Glibb- Then you have mur entered the matrimonial field, M.1jur? Major Hedway-- No, wumm ns man 5 natural burn enemy. -' , . A-1,--M ..Y. - . Y., ' V ,.....-......., Jig Pmlf' I-111111111 Ihr 1 , A .f-V' 0 'Qs ., p , .... ....-,......-, ' I' 2 Y ,ff f r - ---,...-.,. P II lv mMMM,-e'Mfl1LMMWMJ 1r,r I P- T f xx x -V fflyl-x f N 1 Vw - fy 1, 'Q 5h '32 4 f i l I 1. The dance of the . . . veilb D 2. The Caliplw, his daughters .md his gucsta. 23 15,1 ! 1 lfnyfjIy'1'.fI1lv1f-lullf' -L Y. 'V I .-,uwmyu 'J 1. I J ' 'gf y'f A wNVQJ,.f ,fjv nik wlrr w:'nuuu1,'vvr H 1 I: 5 N I 1 A + 'N .-f'f,w,N, V vswunvnmwmr.-smlw: . 1 , ,, s. 'vvfunsa vm! aw' My C L ,iggfwaa -A 1. ,,. u- J.. , ,fi 'W 1 , -Y SZ. ZQIT' 1. The pun 3' clmrus. Spccinllim-K - ,md XVIIJI' -nm lbw' I.A1l1IU!1:1 I 1 'A -Y a', ' I .if 55, ,X 1. 4. u 'Y I S , J. Wt, lk' -A 1. H 1, it 1. 4 1 V. M J I' I ' f as V 'N UHHX' 5 il Q- A ' I V .astiilfin-nv.,.,, I rg' QR 1 X 4 l ik iw 2, 3. S. F L, 4 fi '1 n ,, I Tl? ,1 h V 3 I. The CNunSL1l'x milnr l.1dd1cs . 4. 5' ' l'lC.lI'd 1 little bird go . . You Hoo. QDnn't Ruwlmi 45 l-.1.,f, l.1rl1rl1!.x!,1 .ki If -r 0 lun-uuumwlswuuaa ' ' . ' if ,. . . at-,Q y, 4 rilianvii- fur X 194 f f K it NP div ,ff X X, f ff! Z. linscmlwlc, etc. etc. w I c FU.l5HI'lN mln' WG gn Hilnling Ilunw 3 x if P11111 I- lull ...H:v --------A-----w-Mv-'-- W 'i-sn ,N 14--1, N Q x,,,4g-l5 1 V I YKKY - Mff? NS. ., - ' X . K h E - Y ,I I - x,-II f1i,'::fx ' ' jgv- -3' I I If Mu ln uw in I x - I . '- ,-If - --rm ,M --f- --tiff' I 5 ' A,--H ' w..,sYVl'!1 Y ,A W ' I I - 1-. 5, I J I I . I I I , I I i II I 1, I I I I I V- i A I I , ' I I I 1 I . I , I I I. WI1ere many .1 lad and maid hath rustled some weighty question II I I 2. The great Search for thc musc, Calliope. I Ir I ll1'RIlllllAlf'l'Ill1lf 1 -1 , ,XI I VW i.mmW, .. I . . I IRIX 'AWP i-mL3n f': - -ffqT,....... ....i.4- , ,, .ff - I Y- f- A, M ff-. ..7.- -,V---H-W - I 5 5 1Jl'a'f? ,,...- S-,,-,,. Q . T77,....,...,M .......?- --0-... . .,. , , ,MQ 41' rp' X I . 1 - . , . nf- A, s r f ' '- :--., f P . Vvwfi' -V - y, , f .xx x V M xr NZ- Evcry brain cell working LU. A lu: nf noise in .1 big hurry, Ak I'fnff I 11 ru 1 N 1 4 ay ?i,+. -f X 4 'f 2 I 1 D l4Jq'bv 61? . 'ML up . f,'f,jf1j ' wvfffwx, l . , , . , I, v , .. Af, -N. . xl I 4 1 I fm 1. The closest way to L1 max-Us heart is through his stomach. 2. Sewing on the buttons and Hxin' up the holes . Pane Ninety . N, ' A 4 'T.fLlL.'l.1l.',J-Pnylvmgn-,,,..,.,--W-ui- ' ' , '.' x , K -- Y 4, Q-I In X h--M Q I 0 h X 1, ..., X Q ,- -.-.: K 4.-. 5 Aw I IN , ,,,,..,-,.,.,.....,,.
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