Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA)

 - Class of 1931

Page 1 of 76

 

Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1931 Edition, Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collectionPage 7, 1931 Edition, Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 76 of the 1931 volume:

5 ii 3 5 2 1 21 4 S 9 5 E5 Qi fc 31 13 ll 7 5 L Q: fs 33 s 9 a C f! n Y! K E !! fr I F H 5 '4 2 S5 5 hHRmQwLMO.1w 3.'9FiLLJafff-M3557 'FP':5iEl'w?.k7-'44.vi'a I3w lir55AS'!f.?2K.7 .JiE1XJ4E5'..'ri1fYLt -ET2'I T4kI'?,K'i55 I ,1.3.. W- '-?!?EWT42ihlQ7?..iJ'2'iu.BlMD'Z il' .. F E .U ,, X2ZIZIXIXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXZ XXXZXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX lj CfQnnnnn , Eg lass of I9 I W e congratulate you upon your graduation IOWA CITY IOWA Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Senior Class of Center High School from the Iowa City Press-Citizen J. Ned Smith, M. D. H. F. Smith, M. D. Physicians and Surgeons Iowa City, Iowa MAR ER ADAMS unera! Dzreotors Ambulance Service No Extra Charge for Hospital Calls Phone 48, Kalona Phone 170, Riverside Phone 131, Lone Tree E1 El E - -xxxxxxxx xxxzxzxxxzxzxzzxxx :xxxxxzx xxxxxxxxxxzzzzzxxxxxzzzzzxxxxxxx: I . E El...... ................. ............... - :mx-x z x z x x z x x x x x x x x x x x z z ZIZIZISIZIXI -z-x-x-:mx-x-x-z x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x-am B ...... ................ ............... E1 D P W 4 I ' a - . - n . u n X go,-0 'o See Us First at the ' KALONA SHOE 8L HARNESS SHOP I Emery Gingerich EI H. J. FRY DIAMOND SERVICE STATION Kalona, Iowa Diamond Products That Good Gas and Oils Free Air and Crank Case Service H. J. BIGELOW Phone 183 Agent Geo. Gingerich 5 Veterinarian -0-0-l-,2N-0-I-mx Kalona Iowa General Merchandise R. R. No. 4 '35 Telephone Sharon 12 on 9 Joetown Iowa Q lnuunln lluluu Q Congratulations Semorsf CHAS. A. BECKIVIAN QE 'i PHONE 278 IOWA CITY. IOWA E, ....... ------ 15 QEnnulnnlllullnlullullnn us::nlull:lilIllzulu:annualluululunnnllulllulnulllulluulllll 'zlziz 2 X X X X I 2 'Xl2lxlIIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXUXIZIXIXIXUXUXU l lxlflxlxlxlllxlXlxlxlxixlfi 'Xl UXUXIXIXI X X X X Eauullnnnllnulnulnunluuuul nl:ullln:nullnnlullllnaunl:nunnulnlllulluuullllunulnlulunnlnn H E E XXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXXXXSXXXXXX X222XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXZXXXX X!!22! Eg nn--nnnn Brenneman erndgll Seed Store Quamy Foods 62?-. - Fry Brothers Seeds That Grow . .............. .............. . Seeds for Field, Garden Sz Lawn 210 South Dubuque St. ozo 1 Phone 187 and 188 Next to Interurban Station Iowa City Iowa Iowa City Iowa HUMMER GROCER CO. Open Evenings Iowa, City Telephone 298 Groceries, feeds, meats, fresh fruits and vegetables Flowers express without words Love and De- E'-'E votion. Use them often, that others may be happy. 'f Aunous FLOWER SHOP 5 and Greenhouses i ,' Q55 is Opposite Hotel Jefferson F33 li.: L 112 S. Dubuque 800-724 Church 2.2 31?- Ennn- E1 El XIXZXXXXXXXXXSZZXXXXZZZX X X XXXX2XXX2XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXZXZXXXXXZSZXXXXXXXZ ll E BIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E ' X XXXXZIXIXXZ XXXXXXXXXIXIXXZXXXXXXIXIX 'Xl I,I,I,IX 2I2I2I2I IXIXIXIXIXIXIXI2I2I2I1IXIXIXIZI2I I I I I I I IXI I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I2 GiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I Sinclair Gasoline Regular H-C Aircraft Mobiloils and Greases The only service station in Wellman that gives EAGLE STAMPS dams 0' Company I J I I I I I n I I I I I I I I I 7 I I I I I I I I I I GO T0 Gardner's Variety Store Wellman, Iowa For all kinds of groceries, candies, fruits, breads and cookies. Also dishes Welhnan Savings Bank 03 KXZ2, lv E i .V- The Bank that Appreciates Your Business 0:4 Four Per Cent on Savings and variety goods Accounts, Compounded L. E. GARDNER, Prop. Sem1'AnnuaHy I : 1? LLMAN IMPLE E T COMPANY WELLMAN, IOWA McCormick-Deering Tractors, Trucks, Harvesting and Tillage Tools 0:4 SALES AND SERVICE 5 All-Ways and always a good show Welcome to Wellman ' at The Wellman Theatre QE:IIIQIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E 0QQOOQU '3'X'X'3'3lXl!l!lXlXl IXIXIXIXIXIXI IXIXIXIXIXI IXIXIXUXIXIXUXU lil!'XIXlXIX!!'XIXlXIX'XIXIXIXIXUXUXUXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI I EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E I I .53. IQI I I I I I I I I I I I I I oo I I I , I I I I I I I I : I I I I I I I., I I : - I I I I ' I I I : I I I I : I I I I : I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I : - I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I : I ?IIIIIIIIIlligiggmII35IIIIIIIIIIIgg:IIIIIIQQIIIIEEIIIIIIIIII ,QEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Dr. W. S. Mclntosh Wellman Iowa Dental Work in All Its Branches Extraction a Specialty X-Ray Service for that hidden trouble 3 Phone Red and Blue 36 M N N . oo M Jones Insurance Agency Everythm g 1n Insurance Wellman Iowa R. E. SNAVELY 0:0 Plumbing a Specialty Hardware, Farm Implements, Wagons, Windmills, Gasoline Engines, etc. Wellman Iowa Dr. R. W. Wirtz Dentist Off1C8 1n Mackey Bulldlng Phone 28 Wellman Iowa OF COURSF INQAQAGI I Wear, Dry Goods or GFOCGFIGS You W1ll find Just what you Want here and our prices are rlght . It pleases us to please you Phone 55 DURST S DEPARTMENT TORE Wellman, Iowa eo N oo N : I . : : E I E E : J : I : ' E 5 You Want the best and that is what we show, whether it is Ready-to- I : E : : I : I I I : 9 E I QEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ IIIIIIIIIIIIIIE- : ff A A AQQOCI: :ii IO I , I : ' I I I ' I - - I . I I - - I - ' l 5 l ' I - ' I - - I - - I - - I I I I - I I I I : I , I I : If , I I I , I I ' I I I I , ' I I I I , I . I I , I . I I , oo I I I I I I I , I , I I I ' I I I I I I I ' I I , I ' I I , I , I I I , I ' I I , I ' I I , I , I I I , I ' I I , I ' I I , I ' I : I ' I I , I ' I ' I ' I I I I I .I --E1 ifUf9:fC9ff4:V3:i7l7IQffCfC8Q7Q: IXIXI IXIXIXIXIXIZIXISIXIXIXIXI III I IXIZIXIXIXIXI2I2IZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXISIXINXIXIXIXI IXI lllllllllllllllIllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllIllIllllllllllllllIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll DDQDQQQQDQUDHDDDDDODQDDDQD130133212373 QDQQQQDDDUDQQWS 3 Washington Oil Company Wellman, Iowa Blue Ribbon and Ethyl Gas Kerosene and Grease Valvoline Motor Oil Newber Studio visvioioiniuioinilrioioioinql INQQQJAI 16 So. Clinton St. , D, 33 , gg l4'orQl'i'fJTbpt Service . : 'a ' on .5 . gl J. J. MILLER sl SON Iowa City, Iowa 3: of aaa -an Q: 0 N A L L Unlque Cleaners CHEVROLET Phone 2777 We do Work for particular : COMPANY people Iowa City, Iowa Iowa City Iowa ll ff -X Shell Petroleum : OLINEX ' 5 7 H, ll Corporatlon Phone 1373 mlm Bontrager Brothers Z' Iowa City, Iowa if Pocket Watch or Wrist Watch? if Be sure the watch you give is a J VQLW TIMEPIECE ' Elgin, Gruen, Bulova, Illinois, Hamilton ix IE ll and other good watches EE I : DS 8 14kt.g l l1 ase pi 15jewe1movement IOWA CITY '7 E1 gocfcwtf -OG :O: -O. 202 -O- 102 -O. 10: -O- :og .Q. :Cu .o. :fag :g: 2352 EEE: Eg: .CL- 20: :3: :CEI :Q: .Q- :Q: -Q. :g: ici :Q: .o. zg: EQE .Q- :Q: :3: ESE ESE 525 555 51265 :Ez E05 :gi Eg? 5 Q Sim 35 liulgluuuunu11551:nu:11351335551SzggzgagbggkliggizggagakliitlgaigInnu: nnnuluuuuuuunulullunifgunnag ununulnununuuuuunnulnuuunuuunnnnuuununnununuunnnuunnuunuununnnnuuu IIIluuluuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuun O oo 5 :I -D- --l-I-I--0-n-0-l-l-D Center Your Thoughts on Clean - 9 Clothes G AM Then send them to Paris Cleaners 0:0 0-U- -0-u? '0- 115 Iowa Ave. Iowa City Clothzrzg and . . . . Painting and Furnzshmgs P h , -f-0-f---f-f-f'---- l'l ln Oz. apex' a g g AUGUST A. FEHLBERG Iowa City Iowa Wellman, Iowa Phone 198 P. 0. Box 99 e-.QYQQ We are the Largest Buyers of 1 QI If Poultry, Eggs and Cream - p Direct from the farmers that we know of. You will always receive the highest price that can be paid if you will market your produce with Iowa City Poultry and Egg Co. Phone 612 Iowa City 5ii555565 . Ellllllullllllllulllnnlllu E mlllluu lllllllul Ilulululnlllnuluuuuiuuuilll : I SIZIXIS 2 X 2 2 X 2 2 2 2 2 2 X 2 X X X XIX!!! UD QQQQQQQQUQ g IQIWIIUII l'l'll'lll llllllllllllllllllllllllm I.: ' l I u n l ' I I : I o . n I u I ' I i n , FRANK FRY W . , xx . . 5 1 Q O' 0:0 Mx a General Merchant We're still in the grinding busi- ness at Frytown, Iowa We Specialize in White Rose Ethyl Gas and We appreciate your grinding Enarco Motor Oil business whether it be large or small. ----- Phone Sharon 2 42 J. L. BELL Frytown Iowa Frytown Iowa Leslie Ihrlg Servlce Statlon Standard Oil Products Goodrich and Atlas Tires-Pressure Greaslng Grease and Gas With Us Phone Sharon 5 on 2 Frytown Iowa i S General Automotive Repair Shop f 4 X Nothing Too Large rs Nothing Too Small , K Your Patronage SOI1Cl'L6d Phone Sharon 12 on 42 1 S J GINGERICH FRYTOWN IA OOO0OGOQQ QZIKZDDUUYIQUUGUUUUUUOUUUUDUUUUUCYQ YZEYIVCEBBCQYCIZIE 9 0 0 0 0 1 lfw... ,,,.', p. , - E , , ,X . uzfifju N ff L I W -I - I V - 1, 'ir ' f , 392' If 'f ' 2 J 3 . . tif c,5a L3 'PIX C Q , , C : : : E : . pan:uno:gunugunuuuunuu:nunuununnn1n11nununnunaunnununnlnlnuunuunnusunuunnu nunluuuuuuuulla Quinn!!nlulllullnllullallnnlllll1llulu:uluuuuI:nunsuuuunuluullluuuuuunnlnul lnuunulnunlllluu E E lu llunuI-IIInns::unInunnl:uullluuuuuuunluuuuunuluu I Q E O :uuuniuunnnnnnnnnnnunununnunnuununnnsnununnuunuun . E Dexter Washers Perfection Stoves Sincere best wishes to the Aermotor Windmills Seniors of Center High J. W. SWARTZENDRUBER 'ini' Hardware 'O' Wellman Iowa The Wellman Advance E. D. Miller, M. . , , OO 99 General Practice . ,z, 0 Glasses Carefully Fitted Office in Miner Building Published in the biggest little Phone 128 town in Iowa Wellman Iowa Graf's Bottling orks 'E' 'P 'E' Manufacturers of CARBONATED BEVERAGES Distributors of COUNTRY CLUB If it's made by Graf you know it's pure . IOWA CITY IOWA ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' E lllullnlunlnlnluulnlulullulnnnnuulsul:nnnlunlllnllunlllllllllluuunnllllunuluunlnlnllllllllllullnllullnlnn E IllllllIlllllllIIIIllllllllllllllllIIIIlllIIllIllIlllflllIlllllllllllllIllllllllllllllll-ll p u uxlgugngnguiaxlxuhx:XIXn2u2l2l2l2n2a2a2l2lXI2I l lxlzlxl lxlxlxlxl lzlzlzlzlxlxlzlzlzlzlzlzlzlzlzlzlzlzl E llnllulllllnun:ulul:uuuolusnnuunuunlnllnluuuuIll::nu:nunasIunlllIInIunuunuuuuuuuuuuuuullluu B EIJMUNDSUN DEPT. STORE R GROCER A home owned store offering standard brands of merchandise. Peters shoes, Ball Band rubber footwear, Mayfield Woolen Mills clothing, Sunproof paints, Hightstown rugs, Field quality dry goods Try Your Home Store First Kalona Iowa SEE KALUNA MUTUR COMPANY For the Best Car Buy a Service and bring it back to the best equipped garage in Mobiloil by KALONA, IOWA Shell the carload Telephone 120 Gasoline High pressure greasing and car washing Menno Bontrager Meat Custom Butchering Satisfaction Guaranteed Phone Sharon 25 on 32 Kalona Iowa R. H. Peterseim Funeral Director Modern Equipment Lady Assistant No Charge for Hospital Calls Phone 176 Kalona, Iowa We bu hogs and truck them We are buying hogs for the Sinclair Company, of Cedar Rapids. We truck them from your farm viithout cost to you. Call us before you sell your next bunch of hogs. DO TRUCKING OF ALL KINDS We also do trucking of all kinds-long or short hauls. We have three trucks. Rates: 40c per mileg 50c per mile for two-ton loads. NIGHT OR DAY SERVICE WE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS Telephone 9 on 9, Wellman, or 30 on 138, Kalona Earnie Shetler, Kalona Earl Shetler, Wellman Wm. Shetler, Kalona Drs. Crow and Thomas Veterinary Surgeons Iowa City, Iowa Phone 2978 129 N. Gilbert St. QE nunuuuunnnu-nun nnnnnnnuunnnnnunuouuu E OCLCLCLCP . .UQQ so oo oo M I N I oo I oo I oo I oo M oo N no oo vo vo I 'I .I I .I .I I 'I .I I 'I .I :QI QI .I uI aI .I nI I 'I I I .I NI :I I I MI I 'I NI aI .I NI aI .I ul AI .I NI II I QI nI I .I el I QI nI I I . I I YI I I nI I I I I .I nl I .I nl I -I en I NI I NI I .I NI I I I : I -I : u : I I : .I YI u: I NI I .I nu I .I un I -I ul I I I I2I2IXI!IXI2I3I IXIXIXIXIXQIXI lzlzlxlxlxlzlxl lxlxlxlzlxlzlxl lxlxl IXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI2IXIXIXIXI2I2I2I1I2I1I2I2I2I I THE CE TERIK I Published by Center High School, Kalona, Iowa VOL IV. MAY, 1931 NO. 1 The Staff QJBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIhIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E II l an aI I AI gl I an an I al aI I al an I an aI I an an I al II I ll m I I I I ll ' m , E1- - an II ' : I NI I: - I. I I II ' I . - I I I I I I I Editor in Chief ...... Assistant Editor ..,., Business Managers ....... Sports Reporter ...... Feature Reporter ........ Senior Reporter ....... Junior Reporters ..... Sophomore Reporter Freshman Reporter ....... Emily Slaubaugh Paul Beard Lloyd Fry Frederick Beard Victor Hess Charles Semler Martha Swartzendruber Laverna Robertson Lois McKray Darlene Fry Lester Reber QIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ -x-z-x-x-x-xm -x-x-x-x-xm - IZIXIZIZIXIXIZIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIZIXIXIXIXI IXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI2IXIXISl!IXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIZIUXIXI -x- HIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I E EI EI lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllll I'III2IflzlzlzlxlxlxlxlflzlzlXlzlzlxlzlzlxlxlxlzlzlxlxlxlxlxlxlzlzlxlxlxlxlxlzlXlxlXlXlXlXIXl:IXlzlxlxlxlzlzlxlxlxlxlxl 1:95 qu llnlllllnlllullllll :uuuu:uuIuuuuuuuunlllnlsuuuuuu:uu:nuulnnsnluunuuuuuulnulnuuuuuuunuunn nunnn Q Q DEDICA TION : To the fond memory of Marvle Evelyn 3 5 Palmer, our lately deceased classmate, We, the E 5 members of the class of '31, tenderly dedicate E E this fourth issue of the Centerika. E 'l V Y : l I 2 : MARVLE EVELYN PALMER I TRIBUTE 2 I Throughout her brief life, Marvle was 5 closely devoted to her school Work, her greatest Q ambition being to finish her high school career. E Her high school Work, of which her first year ' was completed in 1928, was interrupted by a I year's trip throughout the West in the hopes . of regaining her failing health. Following 2 ' this trip, but partially successful in its purpose, ' she did her Sophomore year's Work during the I winter of 1929-30. After a complete break- : E down in health last summer, she had to forego 5 E her plans for finishing school, and during her 5 E last few months she was a patient and constant E E sufferer till the end, January 31, 1931. E 5 ......... ........................................................................................... .5 oooooto, , - Glulullllllll lllllillunlIllllllllnull1luIIllull:Illllnlulllll1ulIIlIlllllulllllllllllllllluullllununllluunnna I2I!IXI1I2I2I2IXIXIXI2I2IXIXIXIXI2IXI2I1I3IXIXI2IXI2IXIXI2I!I2I2I2IZIXIXIXIZI2IXIXIXIZIZIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIZIZIXIXIXIXIQIZI UE! . El : :L I I I I I : : I I I 2 : : : : I I I I I I I I I I I I I I N I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 2 : .. ,, I I I ' I I I I I Q I ,, l I I I II I I I I I I I I I I I I ' I I I I I N I ' ' I I I I I I I I I : : I I I I E : I I I I I I I I I . I E E I I : I I ' ' I I : I 'Q' : N gg I I I I N : I : I II g BOARD OF EDUCATION I E . . E I oo : I I I : : ' ' I : E ' I I I ' I 00 I I g g I I I I I I ' I I I : E : I . : l I : : ' I I I : I O' I I I I on : I I I l l I I I n ' I I I : N I - : I ' , , I UO I I : , ' I Left to Rlght-J. S. Palmer, Joel Reber, Pres. C-. C. Swartzendruber, M. F. Palmer, : I UQ I Treas., U. A Mlller, Secy. I I I ' I I I ' I I I I : ' - I QIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE l2I!IXlXI!IXUZISIZUXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZI2I2IXI2IXIXIXIXIZIZIZI2I3IXIXIXIXIXIZI2IXI2IXIXIZIZIZIZIXIXIXIXIXIZIZIZIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZI I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE BunsulInlInuulunu:un::nurunnin:Inulu:Iuuuuulunuuuuullllnulll Inu:nunulllllllluullllullullululluu E DHZIBEDQQQQDDUQQDUQYHJ UQODDDDDQDQDDDDDDDDDUDDI8lQUUQE E 2 53 'QDTGQUDQ 5 LTY CEU 07300 DUO DDUUCP ODD E MRS. RALPH A. SHALLA SUPT. RALPH A. SHALLA E : Mathematics, Languages Science, History, Manual Training E B. A. 'Cornell 1924. B. A. SUI 1928. 5 Graduate Student SUI Summer Graduate Student SUI Summer E 1930. 1930. UGO UOCfQD?1CVO'QUUfCEO DTQUDDDUUUOD 5 MISS ALTA BRENNEMAN 'I Domestic Science, English FU P' Q o ffl If fb 25 P-5 no oo 9 .h.- CJ 5 Q. Q: wil Pm U2 rf' C Q. FD 5 Cf' U2 G P-I U2 SS 3 E! rn fs 322 U31 . U33 OOO . Qmn... O: O- 0: O- O: 0. Q: O- Q: Q- Q: D. E: ai 5: gs Q........................................................................... YZSQUQ WZHCGZBZYCZKZS Ea E lIlllnu:nunu1-IllIllllIlullluulInulu:nlunululllluul:lullllununlullllluillllillll G .gn nguguxlxnguxlxlxuxnxnin lzlxlxlxlxlxlxlxl 12: l IXI2uX:XlXu2l2lZIXI2IXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIZIXl!! E :nunnun:uunnnnnunnnununnunuuununnnI1nuunIunnunnnnnnnnnuununnunnnnnnununuuunuuun E..F2..F.I..9.5..l..ff..F: WORK WILL WIN One of the most valuable lessons to learn in life is that of hard work. Work may ibe said to be the most important in vocabulary of success. It is the one essen- tial to accomplishment. Frequently we hear this statement: You get out of some- thing just what you put into it. This can be applied to work. The more effort one puts into his work, the greater will be the returns. Take a glance at a prosperous farmer, financier. musician, or author. Did they receive their positions in life by idleness? No, not by any means. They posi- tively could not have attained their position if it would not have been for the small steps taken toward the road to success. Our position in life depends upon the steps taken today and upon the willingness to work. Some of the greatest achievements in the world's history have been accomplished in some of the most unusual places. Some of the world's greatest problems have been solved in the wilderness, on the frontier, and in the backwoods. The victory of success is half won when the habit of work is gained. One of the greatest secrets of success is in having a goal-A definite mark toward which to strive. When one has a goal, he will always be striving and working to reach the mark of his ambitions. Then work becomes more interesting. Moreover it teaches perseverance to overcome the difficulties and to keep on persistently until the goal is reached. Roosevelt once said, The life worth living is the life of a man who works. Fear of work is a great fault and often hinders from accomplishing worth while things. lPeople who are afraid of work detest to put th-eir shoulder to the wheel, but they do not hesitate to give orders to others to do the work. It has been said that indolence and laziness are the chief obstacles to success. There is also a proverb bringing out the same thought: Folks who never do any more than they get paid for, never get paid for any more than they do. One of the greatest men interested in thrift, industry, and hard work was Benjamin Franklin. Nearly all of his maxims and proverbs bring out the thought of industry and work. Industry is one of the chief issues in the nation today. Nearly all of the peoples are dependent upon work for their living. When we have chosen our life work, we are responsible for accomplishing something. When we have begun our work, we should also see to it that the work is completed, that we really do accomplish something. Having our heart set upon our work is one of the mbest ways of accomplishing something. Work half-heartedly done will never be worth while nor will we derive any benefit from it. Emily Slaulbaugh, Editor. OUR WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY Shall I go to high school? This question no douzbt confronts every eighth grade graduate some time or other. Much depends upon the different circumstances involved. Some parents do not want to send their children to high school, although the children really want to go. Other children have a chance to go, but do not want to go, thinking they cang work and make more money instead of spending four years of time going to high school. There are boys and girls who have had to work very hard and under very difficult circumstances, yet they have push-ed their way through to higher knowledge, in spite of these difficulties. They had a determination and a will to learn moref to educate themselves. In any case, whether it be the parents or the boy or girl E lllllllllllllllllllllllIlllIllllllllllllllIllllllIlllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllQlllllllllll E -gn: XIXIXIX xnznxn ax-:nga n3I3n3n3Ix-3.3.3-3I313n3uxuxuxu2:xoxoxI:u2IXIXIXItl21302IXI2I2IXItltl2IXIXI2I2IXIXIXl2-2I2IXIXIXIXIXIXIXIIIXIUZIX 2' I E IllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlIlllllllllllIllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll E E IIIIIIIIII-I-lllllllll lllllllll-lllllllll-Ill' E 1212121212121XlXl21212lXl2l2l IIIZIXIZIIIIIZIZIZIZIIIXIZIZI E. 1l111111111111l11l 11111111111 1111111 E who is overlooking the importance of a high school education, we must bear in mind that four years is a very short time in which to prepare ourselves for our life's work. In fact, these four years of training do not prepare us adequately for life's work. They merely give us a wider knowledge and a greater appreciation of the things that make up our complex living. Some people have gone to school all their lives, and yet continue to learn more. There is always something new to learn. Todiay we 'can learn so much more in a less time than people could in former times. This is brought about largely 'by new discoveries, fbooks recording these new discoveries, along with those of the past, and taught by more capable teachers using better methods. But that is not all. The high schools have been built not only in our cities and towns, but also in the rural districts where the rural boys and girls may have access to them. Before these high schools had been started in the rural districts, a large percentage of farm boys and girls started out in life without a high school educa- tion. The city high schools were so far away from home that it was very inconvenient, and sometimes impossible, to get back and. forth. If the boy or girl boarded in the city, considerable amount of money had to be spent for board and lodging. But now, since we have the country high .school so near our homes, and since it is within the means of the parents to send their children, all these problems are solved. Should they not take advantage of their opportunity? The teachers become acquainted with the students' parents. They can also give more personal attention to each individual student than city high school teachers can. . The boys and girls can help their parents before and after school hours, and can also receive their parents' personal guidlanice in many different matters. For 'these reasons may we grasp this wonderful opportunity to attend our country high school, thus preparing ourselves better for a life of usefulness to our fellow men. Paul Beard, Assistant Editor. BE AN HONEST SPORTSMAN Sometimes it is understood that a sportsman is one who hunts wild game, fishes in the streams, or indulges in athletics of all sorts, and is successful in one or more of them. One can be a marksman or a good basketball player andf still not be a sportsman, for one authority says, that a sportsman is one who is a good loser and? .a graceful winner. If that is true it is evident, then, that one can be a good sportsman or a bad one in alm-ost anything that one does. In athletic contests between schools, for instance, there is a broad oppor- tunity to show the public whether one is a 'good sport' or not, because, in every' evient of this sort, there has to be a winner and a loser. If you lose do you 'knock' the other fellow? If you win does it 'go to your head'? Or arle you a good sportsman? Are you fair and honest with your teammates? And do you give them their righti- ful opportunity to improve themselves? Usually if one thinks himself far superior to others he is badly mistakxen. Your team-mates are the ones that can best judge your sportsmanship. The class room affords another opportunity of showing whether or not one is a 'good sport'. Are you fair in written tests? Do you 'borrow' the next 'fellow's' knowledge? Or do you knowingly allow him to copy from your paper? If you do, you gain nothing but have a big chance of losing the respect of friends. We are all far from perfect and have many faults to overcome, but what are we going to high school for and, when will we ever become honest sportsmen if we do not practice the art now? Anyone with a reasonable amount of intelligence can answer these questions for himself and decide whether he has played the part of an honest sportsman. F. B. '31. Not Even a Puff Harold: Man, if ah didn't have no mor' brain dan what yo' got, ah'd- Eldon: Hesh up, boy. If yo' brains was dynamite, and dey doubles every second fo' a hunnerd yeahs and den sploded, dey wouldn't blow yo' hat off on a windy day. E 1 1 1 1 1 1 Izlzlzlzlzlx zlzlzlzlxlzI:lxI2IIIxlXIXIXIXIXIXIxl1lXIzI:lXl:l:lzlxI2I:I:l E j llllll llllllllllllllllIIIllIlllIIIIIIlIlllllIlll I I I B lllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIZIXIXIXIXIXIIIX!XIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXlllzlxlzltizizi IIlllllllullsullI:Iunun:lullIllllllIruin:inIII:uInulnuuuuunuullllululllnllnl E ..l.9..B... SENIOR CLASS HISTORY Four years have passed and fled since we entered Center High School, as Freshmen. Now our high school work is being brought to a close, but with great joy we welcome its completion, for this means the receiving of our hard earned diplomas. In 1927, a class of fourteen green Freshman entered the doors of Center High . We had the honor of being the largest class entering this school. Our first year in High School proved to us that things were certainly handled differently than in grade school. Our bashfulness and shyness soon wore off , especially, after the time of the initiation. It was during our freshman year that Center High School sponsored the first Washington Township Fall Festival, which proved to be a suc- cess, and which has been the annual custom since. The faculty consisted this year of Mr. and Mrs. Osborn and Mrs. Hanson. We ended our first year of school by helping the Juniors present the play, Aaron Slick from Punkin Creek, and also the negro minstrel. We enjoyed the last day of school by going to Sharon for a pidnic dinner. The next year found eleven of us coming back to continue our raid upon studies. The vacation had proved too much for two of our members, namely: Lloyd B-ender and Lyle Yoder. 'Marvle Palmer accompanied her parents to the West for her health. Verda Gingerich also left us, but we gained another member when Earl Amelon joined the happy group of Sophomores. In this year we gave the play entitled: The Perplexing Situation, which was very perplexing, indeed. In Declamatory work, Paul received first and Lloyd Fry second in the oratorical division at the final home contest. Our teachers for the year were Mr. and Mrs. Osborn. We ended. the year by going to Muscatine visiting K. T. N. T. and various other places. We returned home, as most of the pupils will remember, in a cloud burst. What an endiing for the Sophomore year! The third year of school brought us back as full fledged Juniors, striving with pep and vigor to overcome all that confronted us. A new teacher was added to the faculty, namely, Miss Krueger. This year Lloyd Bender decided to resume high school work with the Juniors. Martha Swartzendruiber, coming from the Goshen Academy, joined the class that year. Earl Amelon came for about eight weeks and then decided to discontinue his high school work. Then we numbered only eleven. Two Junior-Senior plays were given, namely: Smile, Rodney, Smile, and And Mary Did. The Basketball team consisted mostly of Junior boys. In declamatory work Lloyd Fry represented the oratorical division from Center at Iowa City. A number of Juniors were represented at Washington in the Academic meet. This year we spent the last day by having Sharon come to 'Center for a picnic dinner andl sports events. The fourth year of school brought us back as intellectual, dignified seniors. An entire new faculty was selected this year, consisting of Mr. and Mrs. Shalla and Miss Brenneman. We entered school this year with more energy and strength than ever, for we knew that earnest effort and hard work meant the receiving of our diplomas at the close. The Declamatory work was again taken up this year. Lloyd Fry and Paul Beard took first and second place respectively in the oratorical division, the former representing 'Center at Iowa City. The graduation of the Senior class this year will somewhat cripple the Basketball team as the Senior class lfur- nished five strong players. At the Basketball tournament this year Lloyd Fry was placed on the Johnson 'County all-tournament team at the position of forward. As a last remembrance of the class of '31 we gave a play Yimmie Yonson's Yob, which proved to be a success. A vaudeville act was given by Lloyd Bender and Frederick Beard, namely: A Special Sale. The Baccalaureate services were held May 10th at the Lower Deer Creek Church. The sermon was preached by Simon Gingerich from Wayland, Iowa. Com- mencement night, the evening we had so long waited for, came at last and our diplomas were handed to us on this night. E. S. and L. F. '31. B nlluuuulnullnulunulunnnnnnuuu anrunnin:IlllllnunlulunnInnllllluuuulunuulllulllllluullulll E 2 X 2 Z 2 XIZIZIXIXIXIXIXI2u:u:u2nZu2u2lZlXlZl!l IZIIIXIZIZIXIZIZIXIZIZIX!!!XlXlXlZ!XlZl2lXlXlililil!IXIXIZIZIXI2l!l2lXlIIXl!l2lX X E iuluniulllllllllllllllluull llll1IlullullIlIIlllIIllilIIIlIllIlulullluullllllnllllllnl E BIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E 32g833Z83 ' IIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 'I I I I ' ' I I u ' l I I I so 3 I I I I I I I I I bo I .. 2 I I I I I I I NI I I LLOYD E. BENDER I Sprout - Class Secretary-Treasurer '28. E Excelsior Literary Society '28, '30. 1 And Mary Did '30. A Special Sale '31. EMILY KATHRYN SLAUBAUGH Declamatory '28, '29, '30, '31, Baseball '29. Excelsior Literary Society. A Perplexing Situation '29. And Mary Did '30. Yimrnie Yonson's Yob '31. Secretary-Treasurer '30. ff , N at X. V Q I k I ' --- I TEQQ 25 Basketball '30, '31. : Q: Baseball '30, '31, 5 A Perplexing Situation '2l9. Senior Play '28. Smile, Rodney, Smile '30. Yimmie Yonson's Yob '31. Centerika Ass't Editor '31. :DblllllllIllllllIIIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIOIIIIIIIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll E :DQQOQQQQQj1 IXIXI IXIQIXIIIZIXIXI I IXIXIXIZI I I IXIXIXIXI IXIXI I I IXI I IXIXIXIXIXI IXIXI I IXIXIXI IXI I IZI IXIQI IXIXI I'I'I Q.......U.-...U--.-H..-.-U...U.UU...........................................H.......,.................. .- Glee Club '31. 3 Centerika Editor '31, ' ,QLI X, ' PAU L W. BEARD g Declamatory '29, '30, '3l1. . Irving Literary Society '28, '29, '30. - E1..........-aa.....-na....---.-.aa.--..-.................................... .-........ue-................g SEIDDQUDOODDDDQQUDUQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQUUQQUQQQYEQQQ, , 3ZXU33YIQ?333fO33733O3CB5l5g15 Iunuunnnunnnnnn-I-1.1.1ununuInInInInn:IIuI-funn-I-----'Inna-u-I-anununuunu Innunnuuuunnuuuunnuuunnnuu 3: ig O' :cg OI :L 25 55 22 :lcv 15 3 -3 8 FREDERICK J. BEARD :gy 3 Fritz ig Excelsior Literary Society '28, '29, '30, Q5 Glee Club '31, :Q 95 Class President. '30, I 3: The Lamp Went out '29. : 335: And Mary Did '30. 8: A Special Sale '31. I j Q- Centerika Business Manager. '31. :U 33 315 DI g f 3: E gi ig S: i 8. 332 VICTOR 0. E. HESS gl Deet 25 Basketball '28, '29, '30, '31. Capt. '30, '31, 3: Baseball '28, '29, '30, '31. Capt. '30, '31, bg VIC9-?TtESld5351t of Irving Literary So- Q5: C16 y ' . gg 'Class President '29. 1 : erp exing' Situation '29. 3: Smile, Rodney, Smile. '30 QI Yimmie Yonson's Yoh. '31, gl Centerika Sports Editor. lj- 33. O UI kj- 252 Q: : LEOAN IRENE LIEBE gf Declamatory '28, '29, '30, '31. ic, 13: Irving Literary Society '28, '29, '30, Ig 0: A Perplexing Situation '29. Z6 3: Smile, Rodney, Smile '30, Ig Q: Yimmie Yonson's Yob '31, I6 3' Glee Club '31, I f 01 55 8 3: Q 3: . D5 -9 gl : gi CHARLES EDWARD SEMLBR i Q: Charley E E 35 Basketball '29, '30, '31, 5 Q: Baseball '29, '30, '31. : gg: Irving Literary Society, '28, '29, '30 E gg 2 Perplexing Situation '29. - 1 1 nd Mary Did. '30. E gg Yimmie Yonson's Yob. '31, : Q: Centerika Feature Editor '31, g 2 3: E 81 E 0 : OE-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIG ' UQOOOOQOOQUQHUQ'Q I I I lxl I lxl I I Ixl I I lxl I I lxlzl I lxlxlxlxlxlxlxlxl lxlxlxlxl I I lxl lxl I I lzlxlzlzlxl lxl lxl .... 3 .J, ....... llllll IIIlIllIllIllIlllllIlllIlIllIllllIllIlllIllIllllllIIllIllIIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllll I'IZI:I:I:I:IXlXl:IIIXI:l:IXlXlxlXIzlxlXlXlXI!!2I2IXIII:I1IIIXlzlzlxlxlxlzlzlxlzlxlxl!l:I!IXIzIXl:l!lxl!Izlxlxlxlxlxlxl Gull: lluluulllllul luulnuulllul:ulIlI:ulasulllInIluIlun::unluIlllunuullluuulluuunuuuunuu A I : . I 5 LEONA MARIE SWARTZENDRUBER - I -2 I Irving Literary Society '28, '29, '30. E A Perplexing Situation. '29, E And Mary Did. '30. E g Yimmie Yonson's Yob. '31. Q Girls' Quarte-tte '29, '31. 1 Girls' Glee Club. '31. I I r. I I CLIFTON W. GINGERICH UC' Wx! Basketball '28, '29, '30, '31, Baseball '30. Excelsior Literary Society '28, '29, '30. A Perplexing Situation '29. ' Smile, Rodney, Smile . 3 Yimmie Yonson's Yoh. '31. ' U ' I 3 I MARTHA SWARTZENDRUBER : I Goshen 'College Academy '29, : Excelsior Literary Society '30. ' And Mary Did. '30. Yimmie Yonson's Yoh. '31. I Girls' Glee Club '31, ' LLOYD V. FRY HFry!l , Basketball '28, '29, '30, '31. . Baseball '28, '29, '30, '31. Class President '28. , President-Excelsior Society '30. e Declamatory-Oratorical '30, '31, ' Freshman-Sophomore Play '28. A Perplexing Situation '29. And Mary Did. '30. Yimmie Yonson's Yoh. '31. 1 Centerika Business Manager '31, I I g6Q5E5i ' Euulunlllnuil Inlllll:lu:lulunlllllllIlllllllIl:IlllllllllInlllululllllllulllnilllulllnuln E llllllllllllllllllllllIllllIlllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllll x x-z-z-z-mmx-x-x-x-zmx-x-x-x-x-x-x-smx-x-x-x-z-xm:-x-nx-x-an-2.3-mmm.g.g.g.m.m.mmg. IIIIIIIIIIIwIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII SENIOR CLASS WILL Being fully aware of the fact that we have enough creases in our brains to. start us out into the greater things of life, we, the class of '31, have decided to will our surplus property to some of the lower class members who will need plenty of aid before they leave C. H. S. To the Juniors we leave our hope that their class might grow larger. To the Soph we leave our good behavior knowing that it is greatly needed. To the freshies we leave our great and noble power of concentration. Lloyd V. Fry leaves his date getting ability to Eldon Kesselring. Lloyd Bender leaves his magnetism for the freshmen and sophomore girls to Harold Reber. Leoan Leibe leaves her sober expression to Hilda Hukill. Leona +Swartzendruber leaves her merry outbursts of laughter to Donald Beard, hoping he will make frequent use of them. Frederick Beard leaves his curly, wavy hair as a pattern to the oncoming shieks. Emily Slaubaugh leaves her superior mental ability to Thelma Gingerich, hoping she will make good use of it in the future. Victor Hess wills his ability to behave himself no matter what the case may be, to Ellen Beard. Clifton Gingerich leaves his basketball suit to Lester Reber to fill out. Paul Beard wills his studious spirit to Ruth Amelon. Charles Semler bequeaths his everlasting athletic optimism to oncoming athletes. Martha Swartzendruber after much debating wills her quiet disposition to Lois McKray. Witnesses: Wheely, Whoosler. 926 Will Rogers, Notary. A GLANCE INTO THE FUTURE I One evening while I was sitting on the porch in Honolulu, Hawaii, my mind drifted back to the States. I had given one of my programs over the air and was wondering if any of my classmates in the class of '31 had heard my program. While I was in a reverie the doorbell rang and a messenger boy told me that Leoan Liebe called and said she would see me tomorrow. She had heard my music and singing and thought it was splendid. She was having a vacation from her duties as secretary to the president of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. She brought a 1950 vCenterika with her. Of course I was anxious to see it, lbut was especially interested in the alumni section. I wanted to see what my former classmates were doing. This is what I read: Martha :Swartzendruber has settled down with a prosperous Iowa farmer, who is now the originator of the Wingless Leghorn so that she can raise a garden without the Leghorn's aid. Emily Slaubaugh is at the present time at the head of the English Depart- ment of Center High School and is arranging a new form of dictionary. We under- stand that there are about one hundred pupils in attendance there. A gym has been built, also an enlargement to the school house. Dr. Paul W. Beard, who has just completed his course in medicine, is serv- ing his interneship in a large hospital in Cleveland, Ohio. , 'iExtra! Extra! Big circus coming to town. Victor Otto Eugene Hess is the Celebrated Clown. We will remember that he always was a clown when he went to Center High. Lloyd Fry has accepted th-e position of basketball coach at a well known Western University. This is only natural, of course, because of his clean sportsman- ship and his wonderful ability that he exhibited while at Center High School. Lloyd Bend-er and Frederick Beard, co-partners in General Motors-, Inc., have just designed a new kind of automobile that is three feet high and thirty feet long. It travels at the rate of a hundred miles an hour in second and two hundred and fifty in first. Good old Physics Book. Noted Flyer has fl-own across the United S-tates in three hours. This flyer is Charles E. Semler. Clifton Gingerich has perfected a new reducing chemical which is sweeping the country by storm. He himself will take advantage of this wonderful opportunity to lower his weight from 443 pounds to a level where he can hold his heavyweight championship title of the world in boxing. He started his career at Center High School. L. L. and L. S. '31. E IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE x x x-:mx-z x x :mm-x zz zu:-z x x-x-x-an x x x z x-z-x-x-x x x-x z-z-z-2 x z-z-z-x x x x-x as: z 2 x z z x-z-z-z-z III I IIIIE ' I I I I ' ' u I , n I I . I oo I I I I I I I oo - I . of ' ' N ' ' I I ' I - I I N I ' I ' ' I ' I - I I I on I oo ' . I I I ' 5 I n I I I ' ' I u I ' I I n ' n ' ' O6 l ' so ' I I I ' ' ' be ' I I I , I I ' I I oo I ' -Q I ' l I I I oo - I I ' I I I I I so I no I ' I I l I I ' I I l . I ' I I I . I ' I I I . I ' I I u I 'J N II vv Q 0 evo Q I I I I ,I,I I I I I I I I I,I I,I I I I I I I I,I,I,I I,I I I I2I2I!I2I2I I llIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllm E-1...................................................................................................................E1 DE?OOOOOOOO000000000O000000000330000OUQDOUCtOOUQUOUQOFQOOQDOOQQUQDOODOOO00000003R3 Q uunnunnuuuunnuululnnnuuuuuunnunnnuuuuunnnuuun-ununnu:uununnununnuununuulunuulnuuuunnunugnu---nnnnununuuunull 0: go 52 55 cf: IQ Q2 E3 ga ......... ....... . ..... :D : -1:2 Q: J U I O R S 53 Q: 22 1 nnnnnnnnn qnnununnnnnnnunnnn I Bs 53 81 E3 25 :S 3 3 as Q 032825 003300 OOD0'OUOOUUD3ZrDOOD 9555155560955 E Left to Right-Lois McKray, Laverna Roxbertson. El f: E co so CU F' as U2 U2 E U2 Pi o so -4 31 : In the year 1928, six Freshmen eager for a further education, walked up the : steps of C. H. S. The members which made up our class were: 'Chase Millice, Arline 3: Patterson, Leota Yoder, Eunice Reber, LaVe1'na Robertson, and Lois McKray. We - 3: had as our teachers, Mr. and Mrs. Osborn, who helped us successfully. .Soon after 3 6: the first semester we were sorry to lose' one of our members, Leota Yoder. In the 35, latter .part of December the Sophomores with our aid gave the play, A Perplexing :U g: Situation. We .found that our class had ability in declamatory work, for Lois took :S gy: first att4Center in the humorous readings. In Basketball, LaVerna served as jump- gg ,Z mg cen er. - CZ- IQ gg u The next fall we started 'back to school, but found one of our members missing. ig Q: This member was Arline Patterson who is finishing her high school education in Well- :Q 3: man. This year Marvle Palmer, who had taken a year's trip west, was gladly wel- 5: comed into our class. Eunice Reber did not stay with us long and 'Chase Millice left :Q gl UF at the eildavof the first Isengvestier, redulcinrg our numberftci three. We had as our gg O! cass p ay, aiting or t e ro ey, w ic was success ul y given with help from :Q Q! the Freshman Class. We had three teachers, namely: Mr. and Mrs. Osborn and :Q 02 Miss Krueger. 'Cf O: :Q 22 We are now known as the Juniors. Marvle Palmer was unable to return be- gl caiaselloflher faE1ilr:gthealth.OThits leit thencllass vgitgia onlygltvsio mesh?-rvrs, Lgis McKray :S Z an a erna o er son. ur eac ers, r. an rs. a a an iss renneman, gi gl have helped us considerably. In declamatory work Lois helped to bring the long gg 22 worked for cup to C. H. S. This contest was 'among the smaller high schools of :S OE Johnson County. LaVerna played jumping center on the basketball team this year. :gg Q: Although there are only two of us, we hope to reach our destination within the next :U 3: year. In this way we will prove that it isn't always the large number that succeed, lg gg but those that have courage. L. M. and L. R. '32. D: Q33 its D- - - ICQ OI - Q- I OI At a recent Old Ladies Picnic, Leona Swartzendruber won the ladies rolling' ' gi pin throwing contest by hurling a pin 75 feet. Victor Hess won the 100 yard dash. 01 O. O- I Q2 - O- r ' E1 En GQ oo515f5156E6E6E5E6f'a5Q3a2Ef35w35c2wQ' ' ' ' E55555:Zwn Simon' ' ' ' ' 'iam' ' ' ' 'fi555w3Ez5f21133:b535135i5f'cfQu' ' ' 'w5Sw555w55:Is5iiw555w5mQon so g...................................................................................................................El ig2g5if55563582Z152I6i5w5Q655E1156E6555521133153+S35Ek1E123w5351535E.21w535w3E5F:513Es3' ' ' ' ' 'SBSESESEASE-535355 n-un---nu-...I InuI-----nuInnu--nun--I----I-.Innun-n-nun-nu 1-nn-n-n-nun-nn C, UC! 0. . o: :S D: :cf Q. .Q 'I IQ A ' anannlnuunuluuluunnnnnunnnuan nuunuunnuuununnuaunuunnu . .0 I IQ QI 2' i S O P H O O R E S 0: :lg DI nlIInuulllnuunnuuuuuunuullllu lnlnaunuuulnllllnullnllu 'O D: :o Q: .Q 3: E2 Q' H A. if MI Q1 as 3 32: cf v O W 2 FU cf W 0 3 asf f Q0 C5 Q Q CP Back Row: Left to Rright-Darlene Fry, Mena Gingerich, Thelma Guengerich, Ruth I Amelon, Velma Swartzendruber, Nadine Bontrager. Front Row: Eldon Kesselring, Harold Reber. 63? .guy SOPHOMORE CLASS HISTORY , 5 The class of '33 entered High School while Mr. and Mrs. Osborn and Miss IG 1 Krueger were teachers. The shy freshman class consisted of six girls and seven It gl: boys. Later Margaret Ihrig joined us for a short while. In December we assisted Ig QI the Spphompres in gixgng afplay entitled, Waiting for the Trolley. During that Ig ,I term our o our mem' ers e t us and we ended the school year numbering only ten. I6 I IU 3: After vacation we entered school cheerfully, greeting our new instructors, Mr. :Q 3: and Mrs. Shalla and Miss Brenne-man. We were disappointed to see only eight of lg U: our .members return, namely, Ruth Amelon, Mena Gingerich, Velma Swartzendruber, ICE Q: Nadine Bontrager, Eldon Kesselring, Harold Reber, Ward Miller, and Darlene Fry. I3 I Thelma Guenigerich joined us after two months of school had passed. In the Declama- IQ I tory work in which we all took part, Thelma received first place in the Dramatic IQ ' section here at Center and at the County Contest at Iowa City. At the end of the Ig first semester, Ward Miller moved to Wellman where he joined the Sophomore class. :g : Our class elected the following officers, President-Darlene Fryg Vice-President- :. ,: Nadine Bontragerg Secretary-Treasurer-Velma Swartzendruber. In March, with the D: aid of the Freshman class, we gave a play named Miss Patricia. D. D. F. '33. DI 'Q5 D: Aw :ef Q: : 12 TURKEY MEAT Eg I I5 One evening one of the men of the troop came in late. The captain had the : cook feed him and while he was eating he asked what kind of meat he was eating. I The captain said it was turkey. The man ate a little longer and said, are you sure this is turkey? Yes, it is turkey, said the captain. After he was through eating the captain said to another man, Bill, saddle our turkeys. L. R. '34, Ognnn-nnnnnunn-u:ummmnnnnunnnun..----I-nuuununnnnnuuunnunnunnuuI1Inn-nn-nn-nlnnnnunnuunnun nuunlnuluununnnnnnllfj DOQOQOOOOOOOOOO ?ZiCti3OYZtUQQOQQCiOQQCECECl73i0.O.C1QUQUQQUDUQUQQQYBIQQQQQUQQQIZYQQUQQQQQQQQQD mununnnnnnunInInnunnnnnnnnunnnnnnnnnunnmann:Inun:nunlnnlnIIInI:luulnunnu:nunn:lnnun1Inulun:llulllluluuuuuuuulllnnu--E IlllllllllIllIlllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIllllllIllIlllllllllIllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIIIE m Eg :ll lll : E r A : I5 5 5 u . 5 . uunuunluuuunlunuunllllulluu . ' F R E S H . E .-.......................... i - I : n : I I l I Q I I I - : I : ' I 5 : E : E -- it - : I 1 ' I I I I , . Q Back Row: Left to Right-Margaret Fry, Evelyn Beard, Donald Beard, Clayton White, I Hilda Hukill, Ellen Beard. I Front Row--Ruby Taylor, Lester Reber, fCleo Yoder, William Reber, Beulah Slaubaugh, 2 I E 9,22 ' FRESHMAN CLASS HISTORY - : We, the class of 1934, entered Center High School in August in 1930, as green : ' freshies. ' , Our instructors were Miss Alta Brenneman and Mr. and Mrs. 'Ralph Shalla. 5 We were twelve in number, six boys and six: girls, namely: Beulah Slaubaugh, : Ruby Taylor, Hilda Hukill, Evelyn Beard, -Ellen Beard, Margaret Fry, William Refber, 5 Donald Beard, Cleo Yoder, Clayton White, Charles Capper and Lester Reber. 5 During the first semester, Katie Kaufman joined our class, but 'before semester g was over she left us. ' ' In March, 1931, the Freshman and Sophomores gave a play entitled, Miss : Patricia. l l L. R. '34. : FRESHMAN FUTURES : Hilda-Milking chickens and raising baby cows. Margaret-Gypsy fortune telling lady. Beulah-Singing nursery rhymes. Q I Evelyn-The governor's seamstress. I : Ruby-Working for a M. A. of Gigglers in Europe. E Q Ellen-Teaching algebra at Yale. : Donald-The new candidate for president. : : Lester-Helping wifey with the housework. E 1 William-Building a new scientific machine for protecting the eyes from : - grapefruit. ' . :E 'Cleo-Inventing a new patent paper wad that returns as soon as it IS thrown. g ' 'Clayton--Conductor of Toonerville Trolly. : : Charles-Performing butler duties in a senator's house. R. I. T. '34. : I l I E - I E Qbnnnnnnunlllli llllIllIllIllunlnl:uull:lunulluulllu:IlllllulllIuunllllullluulluuulluullnllulllllllnnllunllE OOQQOQCY I Gnuuululuuuulll annul:ll:nuIluIlIulIInun:nuns::nlll:IulIIllullll:luuluululllilIllIll:lunllulluullluluulunnnnunm .?2?2f'SQQ :s:f. :D': .55- ISE Eg: 1352 ESE Eg: :gi E25 ld: -rf. E21 :gi :QE 555 :gi :CRE .Q, :Q- -Q: :Q- -Q: :Q: -O. ........E1.3. CMQCHOCHDC1: CH? air ................................................. D R A M A T 1 C s COUNTY CONTESTANTS Ci IBQII , DEBUG QQCLQOQO w . IBQIY CHU WUZBQIBUIBQCHG . o LBDIBUCHU LBQIIC8DIZ!!l1lg!3USifll!l9Kl!l3MiB!!lBlIEiFl8! : Left to Right-Lois McKray, Lloyd Fry, Thelma Guengerich. 5 E DECLAMATORY HOME CONTEST Back Row: Left to Right-Taylor, Swartzendruber, Guengerich, McKray, Bontrager. I Front Row-Reber, Fry, Beard. cf! IQ OEnuuunuuulllnnuInIlnIunnlnnIIIunnnIu:nunnuuununnunnnnnnnnuuuunn unIun:nuuIn:lumul:II:Iuuilnlunlunnnnuuuuuuag E3QCHOI1CHQCICN C8 CFOKIliliinRlilSliiiSlURH!lSiSlNRlSU!UitiSl1SliQi1El3Kl8IIElSil3lG!lElS!!BlS!SlGil3'SlUUliiii!l!!18l8llS!!U3QQ .........................................................---..... .....................-.-.....-................5 D El El O IOXIFXUCH U3 H E o uv 'U F' :D 4 'O'O'OUTODIQ'C5fQ so I I I Q4 I of I M I 7DUOUOfODUUU so I 04 I so I oo I N I no I oo DQOOQOOOOCOUIGYZEWUFQ 3399.0 OD 0 OOOQOOQQU,OQQ31Q0,0.Q0.03flDfDODQQQUOUQQQQOQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQU331300001300 0730137113 I I Q I . , I I I . . , I I I . I , I I 3 n u Q' I I E ' I I I 'E n n Q' I I 7 I u 'Q I I 5: I E Back Row:Left to Right-L. Swartzendrmber, Hess, Gingerich, Fry, P. Beard, Semler, I I M. Swartzendruber. I I Front Row--F. Beard, Bender, McKray, Liebe, Slauzbaugh. I 5 as 5 FRESHMAN-soPHoMoRE PLAY n u u 1 n I I 1 n u I oo I 'GOD I vo I N I I oo I N I N I so I no oe oo oo UQOfCEOfQIClQ'03SlIL ACHDUOUEQUED I Back Row: Left to Right-Hukill, Ellen Beard, Swartzendruiber, Yoder, Fry, W. Reber, I Bender L Reber White Beard Fvelyn Beard I lfront Row D. Fry, Taylor Kesselring, H Reber Bontrager, M. Fry : f : ' f ' E I Q26 worse they got stuck on a muddy hill. After considerable anxiety and pushing and E 'O'ODOOOC'O 000150 : I'0Ul 21115 eager for some fun one morning thought they would take a spin : There was only one half hour left before classes should begin To make matters 1 planning, they backed down the hill, arriving at the school house only three minutes : before classes began. : 1 Afterwards one of the girls was prompted to write this verse to the tunei, I I Springtime in the Rockies. I I Oh, Semester Exams at Center, ' I And the roads are muddy, too, I And four girls in a 'Chevrolet I Act as if they had the flu. I Then started up a long hill, I They got stuck in the run, : And four of them got out and pushed : Oh, Boy, ain't we got fun. N. M. B. '33, 0E1............................................................................................................E13 OQUCYOACLDDDUOTOIOAOKDDQOD OOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ iZiOUOfOUO7QOfOOOOi50OOOOUCXOUUOQQOOIOOOC1OOOOOQDOQQOQQDQQOQUQDQQQQQD ci El g? QE Q. gf: gi gi gi gi gi 25 Cf: Q. ff: cf. 25 Cf: is gi SE 0: 2: Q: g: gi gi gi cr. 35: Q. g: Q: gi 35 Q: 2: cf: , Q: CL CE- EI t5?uuuunuunnnn--nun--In nnuuunnnnnnnnununnnuunnunnnunnnnnunnnnunuunnuunnuunu ulnnunlnnnnuuunuuunuuuu-4213 S: :Q Us sg ,5 go I lllllllllllllllIllll : U S I C 52 Q! 32 :S 0: IQ F: :g I GIRLS' CHORUS :ff S 1 r - - r fra 2: :EQ .2 IQ u IQ I .Ci -2 :Q - . Back Row: Left to RightaEvely'n Beard, Ellen Beard, Hukill, Robertson, Guengerich, ': M. Swartzendruber, V. Swartzendruber, Amelon. : Middle Row-E. Slaubaugh, B. Slaubaugh, Liebe, McKray, Taylor, A. Brenneman, : Director. 1 Front Row-M. Fry, Bontrager, Gingerich, L. Swartzendruber, D. Fry. E SE? GIRLS' QUARTETTE is . '35 Q IQ I Left to Right-Thelma Guengerich, Leona Swartzendruber, Darlene Fry, Nadine Bon- trager. 23: -W. :ce me as se- CENTER HIGH SCHOOL 5 I 331 Our school is small, Our teachers are kind, I Our sports are clean, What a troublesome task, '. We're the happiest school To answer all the silly questions, That you have ever seen. That we are sure to ask. We obey the rules, We tell the truth, May the days at Center High, Be as sweet memories of Youth. L. L. '31. oi E E OE1............-.--U.................................-.nn..................nu.H.-ln...-un--.........U50- CXODEXQCXQDDQOOQCDICZZZCHZKQDUUCECSCECYCZCZCEZQYILDCEQQHQQH UUQQUUQI81QQQDQGQQDQQQQQQUHGD D lg llIlII llllllIllIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllIlllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll :Zu2n::ZigI2nga!!!n2n2n!l2n2lXu2n2n2nh!!!n2l2l2u2l2s2l2lXI2n2I I lxlxlxlxlxlxlzlzlzlzIXI2lzlzlzlzlzlzlzlzlzlxIXIXIXIXI Q:E Dull: ulnllnlllllllInlillllnunnuluII1IunuunuI1unIunInuIunInu:uInuuuuluuluuuuulluuuunnuul E I I I l ' A T H L E T I C S . : IllllllIIIlllllIlIllllllllllllllllllllllll 3, . 5 I 1 . 1 I BOYS' BASKETBALL E , 5 l I 3 3 . I .5 . 3 Z I I I I I I I I 8 E Q u 5 Back Row: Left to Right--Yoder, D. Beard, P. Beard, White, Kesselring, R. bhalla E 5 coach. : Front Row-Reber, Semler, Fry, Hess, Gingerich. 5 933 I I BASKETBALL 1930-31 I f 2 5 Boys Z Center 103 Alumni 19. I Center 13Q Sharon 17. I Center 83 Sharon 16. 3 -Center 16g Oxford 19. 1 f IQ, Center 173 Wellman Sec. 14. 5 .3 if-3' Center 25 Shueyville 13. V r- , Center 133 Cosgrove 31. Q QLQ Center 103 Oxford 18. l -4-57 Center 16g St. Mary's Riverside 15 s ' T271 Center 163 Wellman 29. Center 133 Kalona 316. 1 I 'Center 27g Ely 17. . Center Sec. 233 Ely Sec. 21. I wr ' Center Sec. 73 Tiffin 11. I - mf Tournament 5 Center 19? Lone Tree 40. 2 Center 263 Cosgrove 45. I ' . Girls GNT CY ln Afftlbil, Center 53 Shueyville 14. . Center 53 Oakland Grades 4. Center 113 Tiffin 14. I Center 43 Sharon 24. ggbkliff' ' El I I lx Xl IX li ,' la - 3525 IgIxI3IgIgIgI3I1IgIg 'IngIgIgI:I:I.I.I:I'IxI'IgIgIxI' zI:I:IxI: I:IxIxI:Ix IxnxuxIxuxu2Ixlxuxlxlxltltltlxlxltut 2I!I!I2I!IXI!IXI! IXIXIXIXIXI IXIXIXIXIXI I2I XIZIZIXIXIXIX I! IX III IZIXIXI I D03 I :IE I II II II I IIIII II II IIIIIIIIIIIIIII II I II II II I III II IIIIIIIIIIIIIEAI :.s' 5-1: I 3: I , I I , :,,: 13: I . I ' A . 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EARL'S ENTERTAINMENT E On the evening of March Twenty-fifth we had the pleasure of presenting the : Riley Man to more than one hundred people. : 7 l n n V I David Riley Earl is at present 1County Superintendent of Grundy County. Mr. g I E-arl, reader, impersonator, and interpreter of literature, early learned to love the 2 I writings of James Whitcomfb Riley, after whom he was named. .Mr. Earl's parents I I were Hoosiers and lived near the Rileys in Indiana. E Mr. Earl knew James Whitcomb Riley personally and just a few months before E I his death had the rare pleasure of visiting him in his u lLock,1erbye Street home alt : I which time Mr. Riley approved Mr. Earl's interpretation of many of his poems. He : I has visited the old Riley 'Homestead in Greenfield, Indiana, and walfkeid up the stairs : I made famous 'by Little Orphan Annie. He has seen the porch where we et out I I on the porch. He has walked up and down the Brandywine and looked at the I E 'WOld Swimmin' Hole and other scenes where Mr. Riley received his inspiration. E E 'Of the many Riley poems Mr. Earl presented the following: Out to Old Aunt E 2 Mary's , That Little Boy of Mine, Bumble-Bee, The Rabbit in the Wood-pile, : I The Butter-fly, At Liztown Store and 'Howdy fMr. Hoptoad. E E Mr. Earl used wigs and grease paint to bring out the characters impersonated. g He prepared his make-up in full view of the Audience, while he told humorous : : stories. His characters were natural and not overdrawn. Everyone present enjoyed I : his lecture which was full of humor, combined with the proper amount of pathos. I so , 1 I vo 3 . M. P. G. 33. . 5 I . . E I 924 : I : THE FLOOD LECTURE 5 I n I N E On February 16, 1931, Francis A. Flood gave a very interesting lecture at E g Center High School. He told about his trip to fSouthtAmerica. Brazil, as he described : : it, is ia land of contrast. Perhaps in no other land can one see such great variations : : as found in Rio De Janiero. Mr. Flood stated that a person c-ould say anything about g : this country and not lie about it. ' : E The Brazilian Jungle was full of wild animals and insects and strange and E 5 colorful birds. Mr. Flood has several whistles with which to call lbirds. He vblew 5 g some -of his whistles here 'but no lbirds appeared, on 'the stage. : I His set of slides and moving pictures clearly portrayed the scenes and events I I of his trip. They were very colorful and realistic. ' I ' I I : This was Mr. Flood's second lecture at Center High and we hope he will g : give many more here. He plans to go to Borneo next summer to visit the wild men : I of Borneo. Last year he and his partner Jim Wilson crossed the Sahara Desert on I I motorcycles, the first time it has been done in history. We expect to have him with I I us next year at 'Center High School. E. K. '33, H. R. '33. I 'i as i E ' ' E 5 FALL FESTIVAL 5 I I l 7 E The Annual Washington Township Fall Festival was held at Center High E g School October 3. : I There was quite a large display of exhibits which proved interesting to every- I M I I H 5 5 . . ' I 3' QE!!lxlllnuuuuunnliunnnnnn-I -nun:nnanuInunnnununnunnnnnnuausnnunnnnuuqlnnuluuusllnululuuna l IQYIUHIQYZEQQHILCZDXQCHZQU ' En:nunnlunnunuunnlulnlnunn IllllIllIlllln:uunIInlInlun:nuIIllulllnlIllllllllulllllIllllnnnnnE E IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII lllllllllllll E . IgiglzlzlflzUzlzlzlxlzliizlfi '23 UXIZUZIXIXUIIIU X X 2 X X X B1 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIII one. There were not as many exhibits as we had hoped there would be, especially in cookery and canned goods. Next year 'bulletins will be issued, telling the people what things may be placed on exhibit. We hope that we will have more exhibits in every line. The forenoon was spent in judging the exhibits and lannouncing the winners. The judges were from the Home Economics Department at Iowa City. At noon a delicious Turkey-Chicken dinner was served by the ladies of the community. ' After dinner an hour or two was spent in running races. Immediately after the races everyone returned to the schoolyard to hear the program given by five Jubilee Singers from Prentiss, Mississippi. They sang a num- ber of songs and one of their number gave several readings. Everyone seemed to enjoy their program and was sorry when they had given their 1-ast number. We were very fortunate in having these men with us as they were 'just passing through this part of the country on their return tour to Mississippi. Professor Shalla's mother also favored the crowd with a reading entitled Vote for Schultz. V. S. '33, N. B. '3f3. LETTERS During the period of one's high school career there appears to be no little, value in the training of one's mind and body. However, does it not give great satis- faction to compete with one's fellows and win or lose, as skill and luck -deem it? Few realize the valualble experience that can be .gained in contest with others. In athletics, scholarship and in declamatory work one receives more good than he or she can realize at the time. The IC letters are given to remind us of those who excel in these fields. It gives Center High as well as its patrons a satisfaction to give these tokens of success to the young men and women who have 'been successful in these events. The idea of giving letters was started in 1930 by a committee which the sch-ool appointed for that purpose. Letters are given for Athletics, for Scholar- ship, and for Declamatory Work. This offers a greater opportunity to earn letters. For those who cannot excel in athletics have a chance to earn a letter in scholarship or declamatory work as their talent permits. In athletics letters are given for those playing in three-fifths of the Basket- ball gamesg in Scholarship the first in each c-lass are. given these awardsg in Declama- tory work letters are given to the first one in each division. Onlly one letter its given to each individual each year regardless of whether he excels in more than one field, i. e., a person winning first place in both declamatory and scholarship will, however, receive only one letter. The following receive letters: 1931 Sports-boys: 'Charles Semler, Victor Hess, Paul Beard, Clifton Gingerich, Lloyd Fry, Harold Reber, Cleo Yoder. Girls: Darlene Fry Kcj, Ruth Amelon, Nadine Bon- trager, Ellen and Evelyn Beard. Declamatory-Thelma Gingerich, Lloyd Fry, Lois Mc'Kray. Scholarship-Not given until year complete. 1930 Received their letters. 1929 Sports-Walter Marner, Vir Jones, Wallace Gingerich, Melva Gingerich. Declamatory-Melva Gingerich. Scholarship-Melva Gingerich, George Hess, Seth Eimen. 1928 Sports-Clifford Hess, Vernon Bontrager, Maynard Reber, Jacob Swartzen- drulber, Mary Eash, Fern -Swartzendruber. Declamatory-Maynard Reber. Scholarship--Francis Palmer, Jacob Swartzendruber. E IIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E I I I I I I:I:I2I:I:I2 I IQIXIZIXIZIZI2I2I:IXIXI2IXIZIZIXIXIXIXIXIXQIZIXIXIQIQIX XIX E II I I Illlllllll I IlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I E I:I2IXIXIXIZIXI2I2IZIXIXIXIZIZIXIZIXIXIXIQIZIZIXIZIZI2I2I1IXIXIXIZIZIXIXIXIXIXISIXIXIXIXIXIZIXI2I2I2I!I2I2I:I:I2I:I!IZI I EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE I I I S' I I I ,, ,, I I I I I I Q OO - I . I Q .I I I I 2 7 I I ? N I I I 2 n I I I ? N I I I I I I I I I ,, ,, I - I I I I ' I 5' Q I I 5 ,, I I I I I F - I I n I , f I I ' N ,, I I - - If - 2 I I I ,, ,, I I I I I I 2 2 : : '- no I I I I I Q I I ,, ,, I I I I I I 2 w I I I, ,, I I I I I I I I. 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T ' I 3 I I I -'A 1 I I I ' I 5' N I I ' I I4 2 I I I I I n U ' I 3 0 I I I I I I 4. ? I I 5 .. I I I I I I n Y I I 3 N I I I I I I n E' ' I 5 I I I I EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIB 9 I VO IXUJXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXI2I2IL!!IXI!!!IZ!!!ZIXl!!ZI2I2I2I2I2I:I2IZI2I3I2I!I2I2IZIZIZIQIXIZIZIZIXIXIZIXIQIZIXI:I!IXI!IXI2I!I:IXI2I3I2I2I!I2I2I3I:I2I2I I Q..............................-..-....U.-..-...........--....H-................................-.................El gg0O0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO000OOOOQUOOOUOOOQUOUOCUJOOO00000000043OgI3 O: IO gi E8 CENTERIKA STAFF Eg 352 lo : IQ ,' Ci 8 8 B S 00000000000 0565526603560 0 3 Cn D 33 D Q D CY O Q 8- -3 Back Row: Left to Right: F. Beard, P. Beard, R. Shalla, L. Fry, Semler, Hess, M. QI Shalla. :Q 01 Center Row-L. Reber. :Q gl Front Row-Slaubaugh, McKray, Swartzendruber, Robertson, A. Brenneman, D. Fry. :Q ol :li OI 552 -Q O ' -6a- 232 O5 :Q FRESHMAN JIINGLE F stands for Freshmen Q! The class of Center High so bright, gg QI Whenever the rest are in trouble, :U They call on us to fight. 'Q R stands for races ICE 3: To which we all belong. :Q A '- Green is our color I' Q: With our twelve strbng. O: E stands for evil, :O gl In Sophomores it is found: Q! But we hope the Freshies :gg Are always on clean ground. gg 02 S stands for Shalla's :Q gf Whom we hope will come back :g O: And help us next year :Q 3: To stay on the right track. H itangs liar happfineis, Q: n gel ra we 1n. .Q 3: But we must confess ig Q: We can't leave English behind. gl M stands for memories gl Which we'll never forget gg OI As long as our minds :U Are firmly set. :g E stands for English ice 3: In which we all work: :ig Q: Because of our good teacher IQ 8: We never shirk. Q: N stands for noise Q! Which the Seniors make :Q QI Scrambling' for the basketball :U gl For Old 'Center's sake. E. B. and M. F. '34. :S Cf: I QI - o- - 02 - Q- .3 OZ -O G0 OEI 02 O. O: O. 0: O- 0: O- 01 O. O: O. Q! Q: 2: CEI Q. Q: Q1 Q. Q: Cf. O: Q. QI CP. Q. Q: Q- cf: 0: 2: 3: CE! Q! 2: SE 25 2: 25 25 3: cf: 0: 2: Ci! 3: gf gi gi Ci: 25 EEE EE on 00 E1...................................................................................................................13 E..........................-..............-...--............................................................-.. Q 25000000ODDODQRQQHQRQRQRQRQ?QRQRQDDOODODDOUDUUDUDDDUUUUDUDQUDOUOOODDUUOOOOSQ -5- - Q: . 'Q' 8. 15 3- S' f . ,Q 8. O Y O 33: 2 39: : o S: 'PA, wmti tn: A, ,X : 3 33: MEA-rxinG of ,' 34: L5 5 '32 Exmflsiawf 454- ' - .Cr F3 u Wig? N v -- '5g . Q 2,5 ff ,, VKX 5' - lg gg M 'V : r I7 A Q1 W f X , .46 : : bu V :ff -' Q1 . as :O : my ey! , Rufxs 'PAL X X Hgcvl-1 4 gg? : Q 1 X H g 'gh :Q K : cu sf 4 mc, 'Jw J f ig 23 ' 941.4 H? ' 10 LJQF S LESSON-S ,Wx ff 5 ,Q-Q Kb 41 ' X 5, Q' S' K.: QL, ' ' gif '+ ,j l-as sg I NNE E, .I 'IW' 6? CY Q- 1 , - Rf Q ' PM 'X-44? W 'Q 5 - 5 X f : ' f ff- ' :Q JJ. yn. 8:LvEYf 'TWT E : j Assswr Mums 'rv E .N :K HEART' GROW I-QNDER? iffm. 3 . f X ' j X V -fi-Z?gY,L7fAl57, x if -L i '?1- 5?-'if ' '- ' ',QXM',j.SJfn'f ,N 5? ' 17526 F tune WELL, You MGH w1Q 4?fii7 :3 , 1 if A ..- - : : V 6- 'TRY IT Fok rm ' 4- 1'-'-i '1 :Q QR Fam mow 1'hS A UI X , 7 17+ 21:4 QE ,, is ' JF :S Q5 r:-- - : 3: ,gnif Q?-ff 'Wada me AND ZBEA UL j v QI uT N lg U - :sw 'E-Fvzau. A I mm? War N. A Q5 'we 'Pmwme RMWEH 6 Q5 52521155111 C 'CLvw ur THAT , ' gi 9 4 l Au EVEN N uma ans 429 3 ' ' ' ,,'...Z I1 , geggggaffg oF FIGUWES ' 3 3: :QM -wgggsggggyns! g Au as in Q 25 Q 'ML A. , me -wg. 53 il f4 .i..' v- , W ri SLINGRS V451-ccmmtf THE X' LLer.D mr AM mnmrr BEARD Fnssn mn :g . :D 51 3: :Q QE Q n Q: O: ' Q Oannununnlnuuunnnnnuunnnnunnnunnunnnlnuunnnnunnn:nunnununnnnnnluInnuInuIul:lun:IIunununnnuqllluIu:lu:l:nunlunnE E22222222222222OUQQQUDUQUQUQQUUQQQOOOQOQUDOUUUQUUQQQQUUQQQQOQQQQQQQQQDQQQQQOgm ,ZSEIEEZZEEIKSZI 33831 'QYCSDDDQQDQQQBSLQCSS Q I 3 U ni n EENYEii '13'iEE 5E'ii'6'5'L u .. 1931 .U UQ CECFCBCED UDQUOCQOUAQUQQ UQUAOIOCEQAQ LHARLES CAPPER Class of 1934 As Charles was absent on the day when our group plctures were taken we pre sent hlm alone He should have been ln the followmg groups Freshman group Freshman Sophomore play Basketball Center Hlgh group DQDOQUOQQQ D Q OOOOOOOQCYOUUUUU QUQGOQQDUDUD QQUUQQD UHUQf8lUUQUUUUQDUDUDQUO 5' : .ga I I I g I 1 E 'E . : N X : 1 : : : ,I 5 E l , Y 9 ' 1 : . g 1 . 2 g ,' I , I ,I , - Qi I . : ' - 3 X I .,I 'v f' - 2 , : ': I '45 I I I I I I I I I : I I I 1: : I 1 - I Q...-...HIL--I-'IIJIIJIZ--I-.IIL..--UI.I....I..JIII-........X....Ulu..II-...II-I..-I..--In-I.-U-............... 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I I I , SI F4 2 - m I I Iv:- :OI O : I IN, .sr -- N O . : :A- I I FD '1 :rj I . ,5: 'fl CF Ph : I Ia, I: m E Pb EIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I : QI O O I I I I , w: :S 5 I: : : :V- 2: gf' 3 Q-4 : N I IS: 3- sw cz ' : :H I I I I I .II UQ U' I I IN' 3' cn fb SZ : ' '5: al -s Is m - 2 2.5: QE C6 c6I K6 EIII II II II IIIIIE - I N :'E 'J' I ' EE : E A- - 'El E I NI I I I ' I I' I ' NI I I I . l VI I I OO I I I I I' I ' E: : I I I I 3'EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllIllllllllllllllllbx E IXIXIXIZ Il lol If XlI'3'3'X'3lXUXUXUXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIUXIXUXIXIZIIIII!!XIXIXUXUXIXIZUZKIXIXl!!XIXIZIZIXIXIXIZIZI2IXIXIZIXIXIZIXUS!!IXIXIIIXIIIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIX'3lXl2lXl2lXl2lXl!lf'X'3'X'!'X'3'!'!'!'3' 9 I E IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII 2 3,3I3,!.g.3.g.g.3-3.3.gggI3IgggI3I3I2IgI:I1I2I2IXI2I2I l lxl I2ISIIIXIXIXIZIXIZIXIZIZIXIXIZI3I!I3I3I3I3I3I IX' QQQUQUQQUQQQUCUU IlilllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII EDITORIAL An Economic Situation Relief seems to ,have been the cry of everyone the past few years. What about farm relief? We had a bill passed some time ago which was to vbring about relief. How many of you have been benefited by this? What irony that one of the greatest depressions should come when farm relief is about due. Just what are we looking for? If we expect to find money we need but look back to our early settlers, such as the Spaniards, who came to this world for gold. They found little of it in North America and said that this country was worthless. At present Iowa alone produces a corn crop each year whose value is greater than the total amount of gold mined in the entire world. It is true that there is a seemingly misadjustment of prices but can we fix prices lby statute law? Anyone acquainted with economics will know that pricesuare fixed by Nature's law of supply and demand. Perhaps our infant industries fwe have ten billion dollar corporations in the United States at presentj are old enough to get along without the protection of our high tariff. About the only effect of this tariff, besides keeping the price of a few farm commodities a little above what they would be otherwis-e, is that we are paying far too much for the machinery and farming utensils which we buy. Why not allow the goods of foreign countries compete with those of our great factories and farms? It might be that these great factories would suffer malnutrition if free trades were allowed. Not so bad, they are over-weight anyway! TO THE CLASS OF '31 Class of '31 we congratulate you on having equaled our efforts in surviving four years of school work. You are fortunate in not having been overcome by the giants, English, Algebra, Geometry and Chemistry. fHowever, these giants have not yet harmed anyoneh. Regardless of this, we are glad to receive you into membership in our Association. Introspection What matter if the way seems rough? Things will clear up soon enough If we just forget the past few tears, And look into future years. Perhaps, if you and I, Instead of standing by Frowning and pining, Would get to work Laughing and smiling, Others would see And say, Well, he Seems to get by, Why can't I? I'll try. for 'Tis easy enough to be pleasant When life flows along like a song, But the one worthwhile, is the who will smile When everything goes dead wrong. I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIsIIuIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIII OQOQQ lxlzlzlzlzlxlxlxlzl l lxlxl lxl I I lxlxlxlzl lxl I Ixl I lzl I lxlxlxlxlxl IXI I I I I IXIXI I I I I I I I I I IX' E I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E E1111 I 1 121 12121212121 121 121212121,12121212121212l21 1212l2l2l21212121 12 ZIXIXIX - 1: 11 11 11 11 11 11 Q11 11 11 11 11 11 11 1:iLQ1 11 11 21 11 11 111 Q11 g5sEG5,?:1 1 1 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111E Q 1,1 IX XIZIXIXII 0 1,1 121212121212 CFI! X I I ' Z 2 XI2IXIXIXIXI2IXIXIXIXI'IXIXIXI3IXISIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIX IJ 1 11 11 11 111 11 11 11 111 1 11 111 11 11 11 11 11 11 111 11 11 11 11 11 111 11 11 11 111 1111 11 111 111 121 1 1 1212121 1.121213 E1 135 ijQlj3Q 12121 12121 1 121 1212121 1 1 12121 121212121212121212121212121212121212lXlXlX1 I..........,-I-...UI............I.I...IIIII...IIII-I..II...-III...---I--------1 ...EJ Top Row: Jacob Swartzendruber, Maynard Reber Clifford Hess. Faculty: Mrs. Lena Hanson, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Osborn. Fourth Row: Otha Jones, Vernon Bontrager Harold Miller. , lllllll Qlllll ISI I I I I.I I I IXIXI I IXIXI'I IXIXIJQIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXI I I'IZIZIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIX IX!!! IXlX1!1.1 121 1 1,1 1 121.1 12121212121212121212121212121212121 1212121212121 121 121 1 1212! IXIZIXIXI IXI IOYCE . . . . . Nl I . . . . . . : 5 , ET' : Q' I CL I 'JU : o . 2 . - E. I sw 1 H I '42 . I M 1 N 1 U1 I S' . , I w 5 22 g : I m : 2 ' 5 I ET I3 CL H F U' l V CD I :1 . . 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EE Zig 3-5 9? 52 EE 5- ' if 5'-5' g ES W5 Sgr wg 5' :S gg, gc- :Go Q25 1225 Z5 '4 9: 3 .-. , g EU 'ess si is 2? 5 is . H- ur sim ssc are 22 53 ' ..-.HO Q' 0 HD- fp 4 Q gi Hug 5 Q5 9 C1 ca '15 'D 5' 2 5 5' m-1 -U... . K - o -ff'-'U H.-1: 5 'S Q... 5 5 2. QTUQ oO0Q mv-4 :ref - sas -'ss 51?-T s - Q ff s 75' vcr 0,1 QQ 5 O 5 :Q om - 5-.-0 3 e Q ---5 Q. '1 on 51:4 I0 v-1 L'-'H-- 1 O H50 H -foo ' ,S '42 L: 2 tr' rn 'WE-N :A na B U' Q O c..-eo Orr Kew 4 5, o'g fr Gp :N-v-4 m Q- SCH- UQ!!! C 5 we as-M I :ff 'D a .5 - TE..-f Gm F5 mg 'Q E O 5 S 5' EDM: 51037 W O m W fu ,,. o :s -we Q, -cr o- SE.. si? 2, me -ss 2 mpgs 2-E42 gc Em-1 5 E ff 5. M55 Q-N 3,2 sg- 555+ E 52 5' asa are gs 'f E fi T. mwg, :shr-sg 53 gi E 3 2-.fo cmd- gg.. gp o gg Ug- gan spfha .-5' C33 3 O H 4 gm E-EE, ff,-Q 55' 2 sw- S2 Zia- 02:2 :sm as za.:-'S ,,.'E.-1 ' S- W 2-Q2 '4 CI :rg wg' To Eg Paw O 5-1 'DFL Q fb Z H- mg Oqquj .--. 4-rs H .. O-2.5 5--W ' 55 Elm 2 H-sg .95 sm Us-'S' - sr 2 8:17 pi -an m rm -5 rr... tb rf N '-'- an -s I-1 2, H, 5 91 :B Q29 SE 50 e 5' S' 935' Sgr.. .259 S-Q 3 Us P 51-1-2 4- tb 0 H0 STN --92' 20- 2' 3 m '15' 50-nm 1:2 E un ff Z Q --SV' F3 Sw: 5' 2 ixqq: N ---gg 5 F1 1+ NW? 900 'U gm ' W :W ff:-r 4? Q 9 'fb ' iz sw is PS- 52' 2: .... sa as as s 2 2 .f fuer Q5 '40 ro cb 3' cb llllll lllIIlllIllllllwllllllllwlllllllllllllllllllll if QC? QHQDQUQGOQQQGQ6 UQUQQDQ - Clifford Hess '28 has closed another successful year of teaching at the Oakland E : Vernon Bontrager '28 is not sorry he attended Center High before he started : farming. A general knowledge of this sort will make any good farmer better. Vernon : finds use for a Ibaseball glove once in a while and knows how to use it. E Walter Marner '29 has -been making use of his manual training skills. When E - it comes to finding bargains in woodwork, ask him. He has a well-equipped shop and ' CECEQ H335 does some good work when he is not busy with farm work. QI ics O. . . . . it l O: Francis Palmer '28 spent his second year teaching at the Lincoln school QNumber 33 8: 63. He will again attend summer school at Iowa this summer. There is just one ob- :ig gg jection to this. Someone will find some A's missing. :Q 1 ' IU Ol -O O3 George Hess '29 spent his first year of teaching at Willow Grove school in :Q O , . D 2: Hardin Township. George is growing, but not enough for salesmen to definitely tell :S f - the difference between him and the pupi s. ' Qu IQ O: IQ Q- :cs gl 'Cecil Bontrager '30 did many things in the last year. Farm work took up most :O of his time. Just the same, he got up enough strength and interest to be out for :Q 3: Alumni basketball practice in the fall. :g D5 Eu gi Mary Eash '28 was- working' in Iowa City most of the time. She found her way IS 05 out to some of the High School activities however. :O 0- ' - ' 30: Arvilla Eimen '30 fMrs. Litwillerj is the first of the graduates of Center High ZS 82 to be married. Of course, housework requires most of her attention, :besides the IQ Q32 attention she pays her husband. I3 3262 : 9' ' iii' ' : Otha Jones '28 is another faithful farmer who is planning on -being a retired : : farmer some time. His wit may bring home the bacon some time. We hope it will 2 : soon. I OQCFCPOD 3535 OOC ooo om- O: o. 0: o. 0: O. 0: O. 0: o. O: Q. Q: Qs gs QE cz: 3: ,ggi o: Q. cr: g: QE Q. Q. cf: Q: QE g: gi gg! cs: gs UE 2: gs gl 35 35 Q. gg: gi gi gi 45: CS: g: ff! 2: 3: Cim- me 5...................................................................................................................E1 . 1 H.. H.. M... . -. H.. ... Q 4 1 4 5 4P4L4MP1Hi4Hl4llb4h4r4r1 174 4 MH14 Upper Row: Walter Marner, Seth Eimen, Walter Reber. Faculty: Mrs. W. W. Osborn, Mr. W. W. Osborn. Third Row: George Hess, Melva Gingerich, Wallace Gingerich. Fourth Row: Laurine Miller, Vir Jones, Ervin Eash. 1 --as --uname' n nn-nunun.:-I-an-nununnnn---.mann-uunnnnnnun nun- nn.-1 fv r v nr4r4Nuuvu444NuwvgqnwuuMnunb4nMnw'Mr4y4wrb4b,v4ur4v4nnrnnnnuuu 4 l ' ' ve' w-f v .vv--.'--'.. -vw. A mm- num-un 1-ulu-:mu-nnnuuununuuununnunn--.enum nun 1 an -unsung B IllllllllllluulIIIllluul:Illunuulllllll!IIIllllllulllllllllnllillllllllu llllllm lla!!!IXI2UXIZIXIZIXIXIXIZIXIXDZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZQXUXIZI2I2IXIXIZIZIZIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXI I Gi lllllluulllluuuulluununuun:nunu:ruin:un:uililluuuullllnuullllullllull lullla Ervin Eash '29 continued his work as a clerk at a store in Iowa City. He attends most of the meetings at Center. A high school education is a mighty fine thing. George Pennington '30 spends most of his time at Mount Pleasant Q!!!J. He is attending Iowa Wesleyan College. He also preaches at Salem and finds his time well taken up with church work and his school work besides. He called several times at Center the past year. Fern Swartzendruber '28 was busy at home most of the time the past year. Other members who worked at home most of the time are Edna Yoder '30 and Mary Swartzendru-ber '30. Edna also acquired a little experience in the teaching profes- sion. Laurine Miller '29 found most of her time taken up with house work. Mar- jorie Hukill '30 attended Business College in Cedar Rapids last summer. She is working at home now. Helena Amelon '30 has done housework at several places dur- ing the past year. Melva Gingerich '29 continued her work at Iowa the past year. She is still proficient in her work. Teaching will likely be her profession. Indeed, she is now teaching a numrber of pupils in piano. Ferne Wertz '30 lMrs. Whetstonel was at home most of the time the last year. She is the second of our group to be married. The Association extends them best wishes for the future. Harold Miller '28 is also farming. He takes quite an interest in his work. High school education is not a waste, even though you intend to farm. Seth Eimen '29 finished his second year at Woodland QNumber 35. Next year he will be busy with the pupils of the school near his home in Hills. He will thus be able to follow the doings of the wrestler Croy at close range Jacob -Swartzendruber 28 has finished another year at the Center Grade School, where he will be employed next year. This summer will find him at home on the farm-his first vacation from school work since September 1927. Eulah Miller 30 after a false start finished the year in a school near Iowa City. What she will do next year is only a guess Well tell you more next year Vir Jones 29 is more often thought of than seen. However he has been doing farm work the past year. A special attraction seems to be bringing him back nearer this community Delmar Brenneman 30 after considerable thought decided to attend college Coe college succeeded in gaining him Just the same home is a good place. Delmars visits seem to prove this It might be interesting to follow some of the former teachers of Center Harold Bare 25 is in Liberia, Africa, teaching the negroes new and more substantial ways of farming. O. Ray Bontrager 26- 27 is superintendent of school at Lone Tree, Iowa This is his third year in that capacity 'Miss Ross fMrs. Dunnj 27 is living at Madison, Wisc Mrs Hanson 27- 28 is teaching school near her home at Titonka, Iowa iMr and Mrs. Osborn 28- 29- 30 are at the Elvira Consolidated schools near Glinton. They seem to enjoy their work Miss Irene Krueger 30 is attending Coe College as a further preparation for teaching. Q . N U o l - no I - ' I n I I 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 ! . I r A 4 , . 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 I I a lllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllll 5 QQQQQ IX:XlXl2l2l2l2l2l2l2l2lXlZlXl2lXIIIXIXI2IXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI lxlzuziflzl2l2l2lXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXlXlXl2l2l2!2l2l2n 'J G nnnun:nunsInnunnnnnnnnunnulu:un:nunsuuuunlnnunlunIunnnllnlllIIllunlunnununnullulnlsllnllun:una Ll .30 x44 4u4vul4v1n Top Row: Eulah Miller, Lois Bontrager, Delmar Brenneman, Edna Yoder. Second Row: Cecil Bontrager, Mary Swartzendrwber, Marjorie Hukil, Ferne Wertz Whetstone. Third Row: Agnes Swartzendruber, Arvilla Eimen Litwiller, George Pen- nington. Helena Amelon. Faculty: Mrs. W. W. Osborn, Mr. W. W. Osborn, Miss Irene Krueger. l y 4 v 4v 4+ 4 4 4 1 441 4, vr l nun 1 n 4 E lllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllIIllllllllllllllllllll'lll E l2l2l2I2l 2n2l2l2l2l2I2IX!!!Xl2l2l!l2IXuXu2l2l!l2lZl:lXIIIZIXIZIXIXIXIXIZI ALUMNI PLAY Cyclone Sally fApril 16-17, 19313 Jack Webster, Owner of the Webster estate ..................,...........................,....... Clifford Hess Reggie Manners, A young Englishmang An adept at plucking peaches ,,.,,,.,,,.,,,,,,,,, Jacob Swartzendruber Jim Jerkins, Courted for twenty years but not yet discouraged .............. Walter Marner Willie Clump, Sue Bascom's beau and the World's eighth wonder ................ George Hess Sally Graham, Cyclone Sally .........................................................,.....,...... Lois Bontrager Jenny Thatcher, Fortyg and the object of Jim's persistence .......... Fern Swartzendruber Ruth Thatcher, A peach Reggie would like to pick ....,.,,.,.........,.........,.,.,..,...,, Edna Yoder Effie Varden, A cute little neighbor ......................,......................... Ar-villa Eimen Litwiller Vivian Vernon, The ibelle of Cedar Point ............................,................. Thelma Guengerich We are indebted and grateful to Thelma Guengerich, who, even though not a member of our association, so kindly helped us. ALUMNI BANQUET The Alumni Banquet was held at Center High School, May 8, 1931. Eulah Miller acted as hostess and Jacob Swartzendruber was toastmaster. After a delicious three course dinner the program taking on the nature of a voyage was given. The Ship Launched ..............................l................. Clifford Hess The Captain .............,., ..... F rancis Palmer The Pilot ................. ..... L ois Bontrager The Helm .............. ....,,.,.. W alter Marner First Sailor ,............ ...... F rederick Beard On the High Seas ..... ,,........... M elva Gingerich Second Sailor i......... .....,.. D elmar Brenneman The Masts .......,...,. ....... V ernon Bontrager The Sails ....i.... ............. S eth Eimen Third Sailor .,........... ......i..... L loyd Fry The fProw ......................... ...... M aynard Reber The Ship Anchored .....i.. ............ M r. Shalla KA., E llllllll lllllll Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllill Q u I:I!!zlxlxlzIrlzltlxlxlzlxlflzlxlxlzlxlxlxlxlxlxlxlzlzlxlxlzlxlglzlzlxlxlflxlzlxlzlzlzlzlxlxlxlgltlxlxlzlz E lllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllIlllIIlllllIllllIIllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllll ElulunllulluIluIulllllInuunllllliulllllIulllliIllil:Iunlullllulunlull:llulullilunlulunllullnl -...Im IXl!l!l!l2l!lXlXl!02l!lXI2I2IXIXIXI202I2I2I2IXIxIXu2nzsza2n2u1I2u3n3-3.3-1u3I3nxnxaxnxn:-3-1-3-xnxnznzuzum:-3-gngnzngn V ?lllnlnlluuununu:nunlxIullnuualI:nuIl:lulluuu:nnrunnin:lnnu::sulll:IIuuuluuuulunlnunuullluul nuns? 5 - I 'R 5 I ' 'J 3 I I 'J E Illlllllllllllllllllllllllli g g llllllllllllllllllllllllllll g Y : : S I . : Q 2 Latin : 3 E All are dead who wrote it, I I All are dead who spoke itg g g All win die who learn it, 5 : I Blessed death, they surely earn it. : : N. M. B. '33. 5 525 E E , : I Thanks for the Ride. I 5 One day, we Frytown girls decided to drive Thelma's 'C-hevrolet roadster to ' : school because we didn't have time to walk. Before we started we looked at the gas g g and tires. The tires were not very good so we expected to have mulch trouble. We : : reached the school house without any trouble and in time. : : When evening came and we were about a quarter of a mile from home, Miss - . : Lady Luck left us. The engine decided to stop and so it did. We didn't know what I I else to do, so we, LaVerna, Ruth, Margaret and I pushed the car home. T-helma had , I to keep the notion of the car of going into the ditch out of the car's mind. Axfter I ' much pushing, we reached Frytown and instead of us thanking Thelma, she thanked ' I us for pushing her home. D. D. F. '33. ' s ig . 5 ARE WE TRICKY? I I I wonder what's the reason When we're feeling drowsy ' ' The teachers watch us so, Oh yes there's reason for that, They think we're full of treason, The professor say-s so kindly, Of course we're not, you know. Will you get your coat and hat? If Prof should catch us che-wing It's fresh air that you're needing 5 , A wad of Wriggley's gum, Will you kindly go outside, : He says, Put it in the basket, And stay there fifteen minutes, I Do you think you're here for fun? 'Till you'reV not so sleepy eyed ? ' I I If we look out the window, Our school days- fast are passing, I I Again we hear him say, Our work will soon ,be done, I Are you expecting company- But we'1l always hold in memory, , ' ' Any relatives today? The place we had our fun. I ' I suppose we are mischievous, , But we are good at heart, And they will miss us sadly, - When we from them do part. L. M. '32. I va g Lloyd Fry rapped on the class room What kind of a noise annoys a noisy I E : door. . oyster ? 3 E gh'zwca,:5E,o1m:0g11g Out. A noisy nloiseiannoyss a noisy oyster. E : at 1: as E : Miss Brenneman: Leona, name the It nearly makes : I three most important parties. A man shed tears g I Leona: Democrats, Republicans and To hear the women g E Whoopee. Strip the gears. g E I 'J g I 3 En:lulllllullllulllllllnaunnnnunulllull:IllllllnnlnlunllnlununulnulllnlnluullllIllllllllllllllllllillli lliua 'J I N I I oo I vo I BIIIIIIIIIIII E l!l2l!I IXIXIZ! I I I!!!IXIXIXIZlil!IZIZIXIXIZIZISISIZIXIXI lxI:IXI:IXIXI2l2IXIXl2IxI2lXlXIXlIIXlxlxlxlxlxlxlxlxlxlzlxl Q I i DO I I I I I :- I C I I I OO I I I I I I I I I I I I I l I I I I I I I I I I I I I l I I I I I I I I Extravagance John Smith was over in town last week and when he returned he had with him a new fangled barometer. What's that contraption, John? asked Sade, his wife. It's a barometer, mamma, answered John. What on earth is it to be used for? asked Sade in amazement. It tells when it's going to rain, replied John. To tell when it's going to rain, replied Sade. Why I never heard of such ex- travagance. What do you suppose the good Lord give you your rheumatism for? A Belgian student was relating his experiences in studying the English lan- guage. When I discovered that if I was quick I was fast, he said, and that if I was tied I was fast, fif I spent 'too freely I was fast, and not to eat was to fast, I was discouraged. But when I came across the sentence, 'The first one won one one- dollar prize,' I gave up trying to learn English. Confidence Charles Semler arrived before the heavenly gates and found that things aloft were as fine as he had been led to believe. One of the receiving angels took him in charge and asked him if there was anything in particular that he wanted. Yep, I always did like choir music, said Charles, Get me ten thousand soprano singers. An unusual request, commented the angel, but you shall have them--any- 5 I thing else 7 I Ten thousand alto singers. I And ten thousand tenors, ordered Charles, -and that will be all for the E E present. 5 Well-er--how about the bassos? inquired the angel. g I'll sing bass. E Long Time credit E The local church was making a drive for funds, and two colored sisters were I 5 bearing down hard on Uncle Rastus. 3 - I can't give nothin', exclaimed the old negro. I owes nearly everybody in . dis here old town, already. I : But, said one of the collectors, don't you think you owes de Lord some- 2 thin' too? I I I I I I does, sister, indeed, said the old man, but he a1n't pushm' me like my E other creditors is. : as 4 , Thelma: fVisiting the farmj Is it true From Chemistry I that you have to spank yourI cows? Little drops of acid, I Eldon: Gosh, no. Why in the heck Little specks of zinc ' should I do that? I , ' 5 . Thelma: Oh, so they would give whip- Put into 3 test tube I ped cream. Make an awful odor. 1 . . : I The Freshman stood on the Fburning deck, I But all that we could learn, The fire injured them not a speck, They were too green to burn. I glllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll OQOQODO. EIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E Q..................-....................................................--......................-...................I3 Q00OOOOOOOOOOOO00000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOODOG OOOOC'OOOO'CfOOOO wji QEl.................... ........................................................................................g,-, OO 3 0 ' ' A o: :.5 3: :Q gf : . I ' U 35 53 3 g 5 1? 85 - I J gs o: :S 0: :o so . 0 O I Q D I O 33- -3 O : 5 o gs wf.f.,P-ww WSH 3 53 : :Q Q 5 5 T5 QE C H A R L' E T' E Q3 Harm: Ig Q: CH ffL'f -8 gs ' Z CHAW sg an : f.f.Zf:.,fi2Q'11if44Sif1ff , : 3 D: ?:195E1fff:'g.g1jf 4' . 7 :Q Q , X18-nrrxk-i?5. XX tf : O Q5 ' . . 9 QSQQQIHQQ :S 25 h1'Q'x -5 1 25 gi ' 4' eps, F Q5 5 Z ig 03 '90 ' ' O 4 - S : if W eg QE df:-ff: co ag- ' LonS'5 QABI' Eg Q5 ' ' 'P out-if W 35 W : : QJ fa '23 P: ' 53 S: 'Q '6 , I W 1 ' 3 , 22 G I N . X 1 1 6 ' , - ' v 33: -X X5 gg f . 1. :o 0 ' x ' - X 51- 'ff IQ 1 W- ' ' 23 85 1 wi V , , 3 2 55 35 , N ,, gg Tay 5 C Eg 0- ef w,rY1'w': -Q gf Q wx wx: Mull , In f xx I ' H 1 wx 'f 4 ' I 3: W Q M :Q O: 'I wi : .A 1 :o 25 :WJ 1: 52 3: -.Q1.1g:,'!!,l ':' Q 53 , 'p,,qaY, C EN TE R 5 Lloyt hymn 4 Q . . gf :DoNT ru' Egg' :Bus DRWEH WHILE IN eng 0F Eg gs 8vRRY Fon HILDA? : I Q 31 E3 Q u u Q :gg 0 ' :cs Q . . Q Q . . D O I 45 Q n n o: :O Q . . U 9: I5 0: :o 5. E1 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOC1TOOOOOOQQOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQO15 E1 UU.: QE: nu: YJ: .V la: IE! 272 .':. ll! Ill :'f: la! III la! la: la! 25: :'f: 2351 .5:i. Ulf: .gn :UI .pn :a2f: .pn IO: .pn UU: .g:f. 255: ES: czcz E1 IND E1 P Q ,. , ..x . . 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'XA HAD X Loose Cou.GH Inv MY X Y THHMT AND WAS 1'a0hf:mNG If WM' A f Monxsx y41qET1r.H Slg'NED :Han S J03 THELMA ' on 'N ERP? ' 'tl A1340 1,6 FORHELP WHEN 'I'HELMA'3 CAR -SYAQLEJJ AND ffirfawn tu-3FNt5 'Pmsuzv USE OOXOQOOOQU HILL om OLD SM? Hmm WISE owl. + W ,XFX YZEOSCQDZCYCLCL 52 gg 55 IXIXIIIIIIIIIXIXIXI2I2IXI2IXIXIXI:IXI2I2IXI2IXlxlxlxlzlzlxlxlxlxlxltl IXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXI2I2I2I:I:I2I3I:I3I x CEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I II IIIIIIIIIIE E : : . : : : I I I I I I IIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I I I E E I I I I E : IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII : I I : : I I : : I I I I : . : I I I .I , BRUSH No. 1 5 I I E 5 : ., .' ' ' : : I 5 I : : ov I ' I I I I E E I I ' I I I u I 5 . Y ' ' I ,YW Y I E Harold Brogla, Harold Young, Elman Bontrager, Everette Plecker, I - :Evelyn Amelon, Lilah Plecker, Dora Plecker, Amy Otto, Lloyd Plecker, Fern : ' Plecker, Lillian Bell, Billy Evans, Leo Evans, Calvin Bell, Isabelle Moyer, Clees - E Gosnell, Evered Ihrig. : I I no I I I no I .99- I I N I I I X I 289 on OAKLAND No. 2 5 oo I no I u I I I Alva Grout, Harold Rohret Lester Yoder, Deane McKray Mildred Kin- singer, Clifford Hess teacher, Beulah Gosnell, Charles Gosnell, Treva Beard, Howard Yoder Myrtle Gosnell, John Beard, Ruth Gosnell, Helen Bontrager Velma Bontrager, Lorena Kinsinger I 5 I I : I I I I I I I 5 I A I A I I ' I I E I I I I I I I : E I I I I I I I I ' : : : r r E I I v I I I 5 7 : I l . I ' I I I I I ' I I A , - A I I I I I 3 ' : I GIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE IXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI2I2Itl2lilXIIXI2I2IXlXIXIZIZIXIZIXIXIXIXIZIZI2ISl!IXI2IXIXlkltltliltliltltltlllxlXlxltltltltlt-XlXltlXlxltltltltltlrltlxlx-xuzlxuzn EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I0 I ' I I Clifton Moyer, Donald Fry, Margaret Guengerich, Donald Guengerich, Mar- I ' guerite Graper, Ruby Bontrager, teacher, Ronald Guengerich, Howard Gosnell, I on I . I I Hun:Iln:IllllIluIun::nuunallluluuulu:uluullunulnllluinuununol lulinunulluuuunulunullunuulm QSWUDWMmUmUWmmm?fE?P:?2?2'?23??E . . . . . .33?833?2?3i'?'EE'?3??E?3S2 Q: Ei : . 5 WOODLAND No. 3 5 gi . E at 95 Helen Miller, Evelyn Bender, Dorothv Gingerich, Seth Eimen, teacher, Naylain Smith, Donald Slaulbiaugh, Edward Hill, Elsie Graham, Margaret Yoder, Virgil Brenneman, Arthur Hill, Herbert Hill, Cecil Miller. HICKORY GROVE NO. 4 ' F ' A I 5 : I E Florence Yoder, Dorothy Miller, George Yoder, Effie Swartzendruber, . 5 gg Elta Miller, teacher, Kenneth Schmucker, Edith Swartzendruber, Shirley Erb, I 5 'Q Helen Slaubaugh, Carley June Erb, Pauline Miller, Carl Rogers, Geneva Spicher, E5 ' Ellis Swartzendruber. : : 55 2 Vxanpnnuuuull IunnluIl:lu:Inln:runninunions:lllslulullullnullnlllunnlunnulllnuuulullul nllnlllnlnulilllllu 5 CfCIh4Zi.QQ55If I o mu...--lu-n.---un......H--H...--HU-.............nn..................... --.II---------------n......E UOACFOTCf4'5CYCY0'0AO'O4OiCVOUCfCYO'QDfOUOO56 :E - 55 13 :Q ' Q 12 E2 :Q I3 555 - Q' IO - CI' E2 :Cf -G I CF ' Cf :Q :E IQ G IQ H E3 E 12 m :G so 53 z :lg Q cn 3 32? I Cf 1 5 EQ EQ - Cf :Q ' Q :S : :u ' Q I Q ' Q I O 12 n....nnununuuuUunnn5S .ClODQCEUCiQfQO,O.O,O,OQOfCYOOQCZQO,O,C1.QO0Cf OGCYCF OOOAOUUQDUQUU D33fC531Y 5:53535 Of , N .... ...-U... . ..... . . ... ................... . I-flgggze-rtlj 554OsSH .- N5 M ,-CL mc...- mfba '15-'fb '1 5 msg ' CU Ps ufbso' r4O5rf-5 ' D-1215 o'.:1 O-N m.-v1.-.-maj 'gfef,gg,e-51-1 - , o cu mid,-,, U25 ::1ru:,-,Q52473 Q 15 :' I-s mu v-479300 H mv-ser :I ' gm SNIA: 'imgdgim N'-sU 'Q.-PB ev-P-'mu-gr-490 E13 gG 5 gg' s.5g'5: E m'm5v5W Z ldmggs '-:fi Q wig fb SBOQ: 4-54 . vs O ev 559- 5 F 235 wwmgsvz Z . . msg-43.4.12 5v-LCN QS,- z Ss 5252 o ES?5P ' - 3gvq:f,,,2IP 77 gigmggg -. gms-gS'37 2-'mei' :D so? Q5 5.g,'1'4:'lT1lgm Eggmies Ngzfgivz mm -:cn 5 Ulf! Sai? S E.E..w9-ZHQ mm 4En:g,',-. :sv-:Q-Qysmft W ,UQQBF U1 'S Q- ggwmv -1'-4 3354553 C5fUrufD5, roco 22-57:55 A A A A A h A ................ . . QQQQ 'QQQ 32822 . 353CECP,QQO CPU OACY 05335 gl Elsie Gingerich, Mildred Gingerich, Francis Palmer, Teacher, Wood- Eg og row Liebe, Milford Shelter, Marvin Yoder, Vera Fry, Lala Hochstetler, Arlene : Q: Fry, Grace Shelter, Ward Leibe, Willbur Yoder, Arlo Fry, Eldora Gingerich, :Q 33: Floyd Gingerich, Jacob Gingerich, Chester Gingerich, Arlene Hochstetler, Luella :Q 3: Yoder, Maxine Liebig, Leah Yoder, Cleo Dickel, Duane Yoder. :Q5 O I I ' OElnnnnu nuunnuun nnunununuunnnnnn nnuunununuunuu uuuuuunn unuuu nnuuunnnn nuI:nuIInIllqnllilulnlununuulnulab O21?2,?iPOPOOOOOOOBQYIQQUDUUBQUQQQQQQGQUUDUUQQQD Y2Il?11?1?2E33i33i433ZEQ UQ?3BECiO D EJ EnnunI1InIluIlnulluululllulllllllullIllIllllluulullulnrlllllllllullllilluIIIllIlIlllllllullllnnllullnllll llllllllll : . :ggulunlnuluiulnlnillulInl:nulllillnllulluunuuuulIllullululnuIIlluululnulullnlulllllnlI Il llllllll iuulusq Soi E . 5 . I 5 I I PRAIRIE DALE No. 7 : - : I I E- 5? :: I I I . I 1 A I ' I I N I ' lan :: I E I I I I og :: ' 5 Dale Brenneman, Fannie Brenneman, Maudie Brenneman, Ruth Bren- I : , 5 ' neman, Leo Yoder, Arlene Ihrig, Grace Swartzendruber, teacher, Merle Ihrig, I , 5 , Eldon Brenneman, Edith Yoder, Floyd Brenneman, Melvin Gingerich, Helen ' - Q Boller, Willard Yoder, Kathryn Brenneman, Mildred Brenneman, Christner, I : . I Martin Boller, Leta Brenneman, Ellen Miller, J eane Christner. ' . 5 ' BRUSH No. s f - i E I . l 'I . J' ' ' l 5 I - I I A I : ' E ' i 5 E . I i I 3 - an :I : Ada Brenneman, Doris Slaubaugh, Wayne Yoder, H. Ropp, Pauline E : : Slaubaugh, Bernice Yoder, Glenn Miller, Miss Bontrager, teacher, Eli Yuzti, E : 2 Ellen Yoder, Edna Miller, Hilda Gingerich, Myrtle -Gingerich, Raymond Woods, : . 3 Roman Yuzti, Paul Swartzendruber, J. Ropp, L. Ropp, Eldora Stutzeman, 'Cleora - ' Q Ropp, Paul Troyer, Albert Jane Linneman, David Brenneman, Daniel Brenne- g I I Q I man, Orval Yoder, Freeman Gingerich, Emil Ropp, Cleo Troyer, Donald Woods, g . E Q : 'Clarence Gingerich. : : E : 5 I I A i ' ' l 5 u : l I A g ' E E 5 I A I ' 1 1 Q :U I l I ' ' I A llllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII5 I OOQOOOOHQDQUIZUH BllnnuulullnlnllunlulllllululllllllllllllllunllnnnllnlululIIllIllllllllllllllllllllIIllIll!Illlulllllllillllllllllll 3 I I I I I I N I u no so oo so on N I2IXIXI2IXIXIXIXIXI3I2IXIZI2I2IZI2IXIXIXI2I2IXIXIXIXIXIXIII2IZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI2I2I2I2I2I2I2IXIXI:I:I2I2IXIXIXI!I2I!I:I2I 4 EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII:IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIE PACIFIC NO. 9 Rollin Steckley Roy Gascho, Ruth Doolin Claude -Capper, M. Detweiler, teacher, Ellen Swartzendrwber, Cleo Gascho, Owen Swartzendruber, John Capper, Gerald Swartzendruber, Nora Doolin, Arlie Steckley, Verda Hershberger, La- verna Steckley, Joseph Swartzendruber, Gladys Gascho Dale Steckley. ESSAY ON A COW The cow is a female quadruped with an alto voice, and a countenance in which She collaborates with a pump in the production of the liquid called milk pro- vides the filler for hash, and at last she is skinned by those she has benefited, as mortals commonly are. The young cow is called a calf, and is used in the manufac- ture of chicken salad The cow s tail is mounted aft and has a universal joint It is used to disturb marauding flies, and the tassel on the end has a unique educational value. People who milk cows and come often in contact with the tassel have vocabularies of pe- culiar and impressive force. The cow has two stomachs' the one on the ground floor is used as warehouse, the raw materials being conveyed for the second time to the interior of her face, are pulverized and delivered to the auxiliary stomach, where it is converted into cud The cow has no upper plate all of her teeth being placed in the lower part of her face. This arrangement was perfected by an efficiency expert to keep her from gumming things up. As a result she bites up and gums down. A slice of cow is worth eight cents in the cow, fourteen cents in the hand of the packers, and 32.40 in a restaurant that is specializing in atmosphere. H. M. H. 34 'Nolan' I I I I I l I ' : I : : E E 1 E I I I Y I - - . . I E E : : : I I I 2 . . I .. . 1 - - a I I 7 Q I I I . ' 7 3 I 9333 I ea . I I . I I I 5 . . H there is no gulle, I I ' . I ' I I - : oe I ' 40 I oo I oo I M I oo I M I oo I no I oo I oo I oo oo I I oo I no I vo I N I oo I I I ' 7 I I I I I .Q I ' I I - I : I I I ' . I I I A I 5 I I I E , 3 : I I . . E - : , I I : I I I I I . I 5 I ' I ' I on I E I I I I I . : I l I . . I I I I I ' I I : N 3 E I I I 4. , - : : I : : I ,, I I I - - I I ,, : : I I EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE I2IXI2I2IXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIIZIZIZIIIZIZIXIZIXI I I I I IZIZIXIII!!!I2IXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIZIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZI I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIII I II I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE I oo I oo I oo I E lllllllll llllll llllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllIlllllllllllllll H Xl2l!l!l!l!l!l2l2l2l2lZl 2IZ!2I2I2I2IXIXIXIXlXl2l2l!l!l!l2!2u2l2uXIXIXIXIXIXIXl2I2l2l2l2lXl!u2l El lllllllIl llllll IlIlllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllll E J UN IOR-SENIOR BANQUET The Juniors entertained the sSeniors Cby giving a banquet at 'Center High School, May 1, 1931. The talble was decorated with candy May-poles, while the favors were smaller ones. Darlene Fry painted fthe Seniors' Wise Old Owl on the programst A very tasty dinner, which was prepared by the Juniors' mothers, was served by the Sophomore girls. At the conclusion of the dinner Lois MicKray, as toastmistress, pre- sented the following speakers' in a program: The May Pole .........................................,.........,............ Mr. Shalla Orchid and Gold fMusic and Dramaticsj ...... ..... L eoan Liebe Green 0StudiesJ .............................................. ...... P aul Beard Blue and White QAthleticsJ ....... .............. L loyd Fry Rose QStun1tsJ ........................................... ............... V ictor Hess Purple and Gold QSeniorsJ ........................ LaVerna Robertson Treasure Hunt 9 An Appreciation We take this opportunity to thank our many advertisers for their kindness in placing their work with us. Without this appreciated aid it would be impossible for us to print this, our H1931 Centerikaf' III X 2 XIXIXIX X X X X X X 2 X SIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI IX XIXIXIXIXIX XIX X X X X X Xl IXIXIX X I2 Zllill lllllllll I l llllllx ll: D llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll m Eg..--..-.U-.-UU..-....I.UnH-I-nnI--In-.......-...---U-.---n E1 ??2?2??2Q???P?Q?E??QUVmUQU0wmmlli A O ............... n . I, ,MEQWWMI 15. s OTHER CAMERAS from 89c up Here at our store you will find all that goes towards making good pictures, -A-Films, Portrait attachments, Albums, and so forth. Mail us your films for finishing. You'll find our work of the highest type. H EN RY LOUIS DRUGGIST The Rexall and Kodak Store 124 East College St. Iowa City, Iowa Q- l XI I I I I Q le f a P l ,GS U oo I I I I GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR Best on Earth Strickler 81 Swartzendruber Electric Wiring and Radios Phone 109 Kalona, Iowa If You Please? The business managers of the 1931 Centerika will deem it a favor if you mention to our ad- vertisers, that you saw their ad- vertisement in this issue. Yes, W e Printed The Cem'erika.' x We offer you the facilities of a modern 'N ff? up to date Printing Plant, equipped with the latest type faces and automatic ma- chinery. With our equipment We are able to give you the finest workmanship and ' prompt service, also the advice of expert craftsmen. We can serve you and serve you Well. M. E. Baker 0., Printers O XFO R D I 0 WA r1'f'l5Ci fzeacrocz EE, I I I XUXU a 41335422 QE..nu...-nu.-.I--.... ..I....nn.---...........--U.-u E1 D QQQUUQffO XX XXXXSXXXX XIX!!! 22 g K , ISI I lxl I I I lzlzl I lxlxl I IXIXIXI I I I I I I I ' EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIAIQEI Elullulu llnuuluulnulluluuulullllluln E1 IXIXIXIZIXIXX 2 XXX XXXXXZZXXZ XXX X X X XXX!!!XX!!Z2X2223XX!2lXl!l gailluuuu lilnl:uul:nunuuuuunlnllluIEg Chevrolet Cars and Atwater- Kent Radios Q A Cup of Coffee You Will Never gg Forget Sales and service We reiiiililliiikes of gi -,-,-,-.-2,-,.-,,-.,-.,- Smitlfs Cafe Phone 206 gi J. F. DURST Iowa City 81 11 S. Dubuque St. N ever Closed i Wellman, Iowa NNOUNCING : SENIOR BOYS OF 1931 SUITED AND SATISFIED V ' B V' H Ll . Endorsed . Frederick eard lctor ess oyd Fry CCHZYQICBIQEIPQCQ : 4LClifton Gingerich Lloyd Bender Paul Beard : 100fZ9 PURE VIRGIN WOOL FABRICS 5 Tailored to any Conceivable Posture and Guaranteed to Fit TQ in iSatisfaction Workmanship Q: Guaranteed i Material Service QE LStyle Fit 15. 55 WEAR A SIMPSON GARB 1: WITH YOUR - Individuality tailored to your Personality and be Always Satisfied All Ways J. B. SIMPSON, INC., Chicago. Represented by I, MARK RUSS, 1Phone 11 on 1025 Kalona Qglllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllla OOOOOOOQQCXQIUZYBCYCKU . ISQIZECSCRZQQUUUUCEUCE ZX El .15 ?3 : BUY WHAT YOU NEED WHETHER TO EAT OR WEAR OUR QUALITY WITH THE REST WILL COMPARE I3 EI DRY GOODS : A CLOTHING in SHOES GROOERIES General Store Kalona Iowa B 0 0 N E C 0 L C 0. 0:0 IOWA CITY, IOWA PHONE 204 0:0 .COAL THAT SATISFIES, QE .--.. 5 Z! X! XXXCXXXX XXX XX X! ZX!! XS!!! ZX X! XXXXSSXXXXXZXXXXSXXSXXXXIXIII lllllllll X X X XX ' ' ' i5555H5umuumxgg pGu:uuun unuuunuuuuuuuuuunuu uuuuuuuuuuuuuuu Q QUQUDDDUUOQUHUUDD. , 13333513 U OOTCFQ UIC8'l OO. DUCOTQUXIPTQ , UC'fCPTCfOf0IlfCR3, D. E. Bontrager Joetown Iowa General Repair Shop All kinds of wood and iron work Saw filing, saw gumming etc, See us for steel roofing as I can save you money WELLMAN CLEANERS Clean Clothes' Clean L. G. STUMP 8: LLOYD B. At the Toggery Wellman, Iowa 'Phone 136 Auctioneer My services are available as Auctioneer 0 9.0 Motto: Energy plus ability equals success N o sale is too small or too large Give me a trial, I will be glad to help you make your sales bills, and will try to satisfy the man I am Working for as well as the buyer. Call or write to me at Wellman P. M. SWARTZENDRUBER CONGRATULATIONS! Q2 True success in life comes only through industry and thrift. Don't wait for things to drift your way-go after them. Greatest success in life to each member of the Class of 1931 Maplecrest Farm Hatchery Wellman Phone 213 Iowa QEy.........k...A.............. ............................. l llllllllllllllllllll 'CL ?Z8Z?Ct ?Z8ZLC838Zi3Z93t?Z81W33l'z7213C135c EI 3 0. L. GREE 020 Produce and Feeds u if I 3 'D Q sf 1 'fljgg 5 .Q-.Q X. -1555-23. ' HM fp . ... I, ., h I .I-4, J, -e Phone 218 Wellman Iowa Gardner and Hambright Co. 0 0 0.0 O 0.0 0.0 Lumber and Building Material ego The best is the cheapest in the long run 0 0 0.0 . 0,0 0.0 Wellman Iowa D G YODER AUCTIONEER 00 00 Dates made at Kalona News Office Wellman Advance 0ff1C8 Telephone Kalona 33 on 2 Snair Hardware Compan John Deere Farm Implements Amerlcan Zinc Insulated Fence Keen Cutter Store Furnace, Plumblng, Rooflng and Spoutlng a Speclalty Kalona Iowa 2 7 I I I 00 I I I 00 I 00 I I 04 I 04 I I I ' I oo I 04 I 00 I oo I oo I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 I on I 00 I 00 I 00 I oo I va I n I 00 I N I 00 I oo I 00 I M I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 I 00 I oo I 00 I 00 I I I 0 o : I I 0 I 'Q' I I 1 I : 0 I 'Q' I I I 9 9 I 0 0 : . . : I I v I I I I ' . . I : , . 1 I : 4,4 : I I . , : 'Q' I I I I ' I I I I I I I I I I I QQ IununnunununnnnununnnuunnnnnnnnnnunInnunnnuuununnnnnu:IIIInIInIInInInunnunnuuuuqllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE 'RI3'X'XlXI2IZIXIXIXIXUXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI 'Xl ' UXIXIXI lXlXIX'XIX!!!XI!I!lXIXIXUXUXIXl2I2IXI!lXIXUXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI IX! E IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIInIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIII:IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE HIIIII IllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IZIZI2I:I2I1I2I2I2I2I2I2IZIZIZIZIXIZIZIXIZIZIXIZIXIIIXIZIXIXIXIXIXI ISIXIXIXIXIZIZIXIXIXISIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIZIZI KK IIIIIIIIII lllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIllllllIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllll Sale Bills Job Printing The Kalona News 52.00 Per Year Want Ads Subscribe Bring Results For the News Lincoln Cafe W. M. INGRAM, Proprietor Kalona, Iowa 0 0.0 Rain or Shine, We're Here to Serve You All the Time UQIIIIIIIII no I I I I I I I I I I I I 3 I II I I I I I I oo l I I I I I I on I I o I I I I I I I I I I I I I I oo I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II I I. I I I II I I I I I I I .I I I I I I I I I I I .. I u I I I I I I I I I I I I I on I I I I I I o I on on n oo oo N Beck Sz Son 0:0 024 Buy your groceries from us YOUR NEIGHBORS DO One of the R Grocers We pay one cent above market price for eggs Kalona Iowa FARMERS SAVINGS BA K KALONA, IOWA Your business consistent with good banking solicited Capital and Surplus and Undivided Profits 560,000.00 and more F. E. Skola, Pres. V. E. Davis, Cashier Belle Davis, Asst. Cashier QEIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII UQQQQ IXIZIZIXIXIXIXIZIZISI I2ISIXIXI2IxlxlzIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIIIXI ISISIXIXIXI IXIXI IXIXIXIXIXIZIXIXIXIXIXIZI Izlzlx XIXI Ellllllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllIllllIllIIIIIIIIllIlllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllll E y EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll:IIIIunlllllllIlluIIIllI:IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII E lxlxlZlxlxlxlxlzlzlzlxlxlxlxlxlzlzlxlzlxlxlxl I2lt!xl!lxI2lXlXIXl2lxlxlzIXIXIXIzlxlxlzI2IXlxlxlzlxlzlxlxlxlzlxlxlzlxlzl Q3 UBI-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIInuIIIIInIIIIIIIIIIIInIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIuIII EIO I 1 : . - - . . w I . ,5 E E 5 E : THE THE E'GHO'DELL FARM : I 0 I : W ayslde Garage : : .20 : N I I U : I 5 : Goodyear Tires, Mobiloil, Acetylene 2 .5 E Welding, Cylinder Boring The Guernsey Herd without a E N I . I ' : Oakland and Pontlac sales cull : M I I ,Q 5 I I 5 I H. B. BRENNEMAN ,Q I - o - E Joetown X Iowa E Apples that can't be beat 5 5 HONEY-Nature's own sweet 5 5 Modem Cleaners The Health Sweet 5 fi 5 , , , The sweet with the flavor of the 5 : Magestlc Radlos flowers : : : ' I I l :Q E Refrigerators ,:, Q If : ' - 2 ' 5 . 81 J. Kepler n. B. srwmzeunnunen E' E Kalona Iowa Kalona Iowa ' QIIIII IIIIIE I : E : 5 ' I : I I E E I I I 5 E E : : : MELLI GER LUMBER CO. . E ' 5 50 Years in Business - 00 I I : : : Kalona Phone 16 Iowa I I : : E hill!! IIIII6 E E 5 : E - - : : allllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllIllllllIllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIE E m,.... lnlluunullurlull H lflflfll! XXXXXXXX X XXXXXZXXXXXXXXXUXIXXXXZXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXIXIXIXI mg QU SAY! , When You Go to Kalona 5 Stop At TO. as gi FRIESE gg Everything to eat and drink 3: Service With a Smile Kalona Iowa 35 Bender Sr Marner Q. 0:0 Hay, Grain, Feed and Custom Grinding gl TELEPHONES G: Residence 208 Office 219 E Kalona, Iowa TEETS BROS. Chevrolet Co. 0:0 0:0 For Economical Transportation ,-.H UL-.- LSB EVRO ggi! iii' A Six in the Price Range of the Four Kalona Iowa STANDARI-I OIL SERVICE STATION 7' 4-D2?'!'??6N' 3382822 5 E. E. GRECIAN, Agent Ckililfkbbxllbf SOTCYCSIL TZYCSZZ g Phone 223 KALONA, IOWA Phone 223 . Complete Line of Atlas Tires Also - Tire chains for all passenger cars-Also truck chains Cf: pg.....i.,.A.............. E1 OOOOOOOQQCSQQIKQH Gu1nlIllllllnnnllluunulululllu 'll' E El EJ 222 2 2222222 22 22222222X222222 2222 2222222222222222222 U QE! E0 9 0 w ' People S Barber T the C'??5ea1iS??,? Slaszgzh the Shep A. J. Hellner Open Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday nights Colnpany Your patronage solicited Men's Clothing and Shoes F L Ladies Ready't0'Weaf Wellman Iowa Wellman Iowa We carry a complete line of SPEAR BRAND FEEDS MILL FEEDS AND TANKAGE Highest prices for poultry and eggs CASH FEED 81 PRODUCE COMPANY Wellman Iowa ' Iso-Vis STANDARD OIL COMPANY HOMER YODER Agent Phone 196 Kalona Iowa The company that appreciates your business Red Crown Ethyl .5 ......... lllXl2X 2222222222222222222222222222X2222222X22222222222222222222222 lllllllllllllll E Q: 5 The Floerschiem Shoe For the Man Who Cares ago ego Qt' N. E. WAHL Where Satisfaction Better Shoes for Less Money W ll I ls Guaranteed e man Owa 2 0:0 gi LOUIS J. Kehoe ii 9 gg S Attorney and Counselor-at-Law Iowa Cityfs Finest Store Specializing Trial Court Work For Men Wellman Iowa Park Hotel Small Barber East Side Modernly Equipped Large Enough to Serve You Wellman Iowa Wellman Iowa Weidlein Meat Market Fresh and Cured Meats Wellman Iowa I ' roman ELECTRIC sHoP Qual'ty Electrical Supplies Skelgas for Lighting Cooking and Reffgerators Phone 187 Wellman Iowa I QE.:nnununnnnuunuunnu---II-nnuunnununuunuuuuuuunuu unuuuunnnnu lllllla E0OO000UQ0U0UUUiQ U U . 3:9391 E lu:ulunlnunnlnn:nnInuln1nunsnnnnnnnnnununnnlnnnnnnu unuunllnunn alll: X 2 X 2 E Xlxl lzlxlxl lxlzlxlzlxl lxlxl lzlxlxlxlxl lxlzlzlxlxlxlxlxlxlxlxl lxlxlxlxl lxlxl!lXIXlxlxlxlzlzlxlxlxlzlxlxlzlzlzl DBs:annumuunnnnunnuunnnuunnunununnsnununnunuuuInnuIuunununuuunnuuuunuunuuunnuuuuuuuunlunnnuuu Walter G1llg6I'1Ch Chiropractor 'Xgcf Neurocalometer and X-Ray Phones Office 137 Residence 90 Kalona, Iowa 0. L. Rogers The Rexall Store Drugs-Kodaks-Paints ECIIPSC Lumber Compan 0 0.0 Manual training lumber, Shellac, Oil and Varnish, Stains, Quick Drying Enamels, and Paints of all kinds. Cement, Hardware and all kinds of Building Mate- rial. School Supplies 'z' Kalona Iowa Kalona Phone 13 J. L. FRY C. G. TILDEN Res. Phone 46 Res. Phones 123 Doctors Fry and Tilden Physicians and Surgeons Office Phone 80 Kalona, Iowa KALO A SAVI GS BA K The Bank that Wants Your Business Kalona Iowa -ummmnnIununuusnnnuuunnnnnnnnnnnunnu:nnnun:unnnnnnunnununnununnnnn-nnnnnnannnnunununnnnquunnnunuuuu E XIXIXIXIXIXIXIXI ISIZIXIUIIIXIXIXIXIXIZIZIXI2I2IXI2IXIXIXlXIXIXIXIXIXI2IXlXl203IXIXIII2IXIXl2-2I2IXI2IXIXIXIXlZISIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIXIX 2 2 X 2 X E lllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllilIllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil lunuun Illlullullulnlllllll B m QQQDQQQQH Clothing and Furnishing Goods for the U Man and the Lad Farm D TQ 0 0.0 Our Prices Mean a Saving Q: Home of the Tamworth 3 M. E. YODER, Prop. THE TQGGERY Kalona Iowa Wellman Mearl Munson Iowa 3. gf: in-i V it till Q W W Q: Edl Bll,J. D.G.Yd Q. Dr. R. E. Foreman ar ey, e ' 0 e' g l List your forms for sale Q . Chiropractor Wm' Q fNeurocalometer Serviceh Eardley BCH, Jr. gl Q Phone 175 Land CO. E Wellman Iowa Weilxlhthlis iygwa gl:l:ria?ioti:'la2 5 SECURITY SAVINGS BANK 3. S WELLMAN, IOWA FO, QE ,H WEEKS gg PERSONAI, Cf! SIRVIU Q: 33: Q 8: UE Large enough to Serve you Strong enough to protect you Small enough to know you Q: 032858320 E1 El O0OOO0UCiCiCiO33353ZE3ZE EuI1unnnuunllulillllullnunulu :lull:lilI:luullnluunaulunnnlunuunllul In Autographs Autographs E E i I e i !


Suggestions in the Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) collection:

Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Kalona High School - Centerika Yearbook (Kalona, IA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940


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