Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)

 - Class of 1924

Page 105 of 142

 

Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 105 of 142
Page 105 of 142



Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 104
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Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 106
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Page 105 text:

E L i 'Q T 5 5 il anus, I . . . - E l i i I l . - Q E 2 l - I .. l i - i - i P '-' -un, ---u 'Wi fmilmmi .... .-JSIIIIIIIIIIIIIPFQNW ,.2fiiiillliiliiliili:::::'iff? V .ll f the olrl flrafls together, .Xlhert is some hustler anfl when they get started it is sure to he some meeting. lirecklein's Rialto l'harmacy, which enjoys a national reputation as a RIC.-Xl. pharmacy, has live of our gracluates, and Breeklein-XVilliams has three. Une of the frown Pharmacies has six in one storeg rather looks as if the K. C. tl, P. boys were capable. Lawrence XY. Hart, popular president of the 1917 class, is with the Sterling Procltiets Co. ,lust as happy antl as pleasing a disposition as ever. -Iohn li. Massman, representing Burroughs, XVelcorne Co., is a very energetic hustler for the Kansas Pharmaceutical Travelers' program eaeh vear. Frank liarnes is making a success of the canfly brokerage husiness, anrl we are glad of it. Clarence Fowler has that new store at 59th and Holmes and is in a new clistrict where it seems nothing less than success is coming his way. lYe hope so. Quiet as a mouse is lf. li, Fraas. His hoss says he is some competent clerk. There was one registerecl assistant in the Junior Class this term. Edna Maxwell of St, joseph. Someone is going to have a hustling clerk if they engage the services of Richarrl Morrow, who hails from Carmen, Okla. Young, hut capable. There are so many real nice juniors, hut space won't permit mention of them all. XVait until next year, hovs. we will get you then, Oklahoma is some live state. that we atlmit, hut they must he lacking in some aeeiimplishments, for Gerald Nutter says he tlitl NOT learn to PL.-XY Tl l.X'li in his native state, XYe lllissourians clo like to SHOXV people, ,Xlhuquerque eontrihutefl several stuclents this year-long, lean, active Traev Mclntosh, who never tloes get quite through the lah experiments, ancl ilanual l.ovato, our -Iunior who came near going home last fall. hut whom vou eoulcln't steal now. XYhen he cloes go hack he will teach them something. Alwavs looking for something, never quite gaining all he shoulcl like. hut getting hv most of the tinie. who hut Louis lfleishman. R, XY. Smith. our XvL'St1IUllltCI', anticipates gaining his eclucation in medicine anfl if he is as stuilious then as now, he will he a crerlit to the pro- fgggirm, Holi is always looking ztheafl, tio-operation one must have if they hope to meet with SLlC'C'lf9S, If the :XlJVlClQ'lilSlflQS hafl not helpeil us you would not he rearling this .Xnnual Hive them your patronage, 1',i,.- ow fliifiaf. fwfr.- . llllllllll IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIII Ili, 35' El . f 1 - 1 2 2 2 - - 1 E 2

Page 104 text:

'Wu lluulllnl W' i':::1. 'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWFT ' V' inunuiiiiiiiu::::'1:r'f V 'll gf John Glazier XYilliams is probably the most successful of the graduates in the drug business. As one of the firm of ljrecklein-XYilliams in Kansas City he has by hard work and personal attention to details, keeping quality and service always to the front, gained a reputation for real drug service that none can exeel. XVith him is his brother, Sumner. and two other graduates of the school, Lester R. Barr and Geo, R. Horst. the latter being the senior clerk in charge. Nicholas Hunter opened the first drug store in Kansas City that was minus the usual soda fountain, etc, He now operates three stores. Brecklein and Brecklein-XVilliams have gained a name for real drugs and service and are the largest prescription drug stores in Kansas City. Also they gained considerable attention when they refused to have a liquor permit, which so many druggists seem to think essential. Also they are believers in drug clerks that have an education and their stores are manned by graduate pharmacists. Mr. NVilliams, who operates the Brecklein-XVilliams store, is a graduate of this school, also his brother. Sumner. George Horst and Lester R. Barr. Mr. Horst being the senior clerk. At the 904 Grand store will be found Ada Hoover, Roy Buckingham, XV. A. Archer, Dewey Raish, Frank -lohnston and Percy E. Taylor. Our girls are SOME girls, and generally speaking, a very happy lot. Dorothy likes boys-better than booksg Ellen, equally as wellg Aileen and Della, being married, naturally like booksg Evelyn is non-committalg Nina. no doubt, is satisfied with fair grades if she is having a good time, and Maxine just has the good time all the time, but don't forget her lessons. XVhy do they have such things as botanical names? Gee, they are hard to remember, Seigle. The oldest and one of the most likeable students in the junior class is Fred Anderson. Quiet, gentlemanly, earnest in his effort and ever ready to lend a helping hand to the boys. To one who has taught school as he has it must be quite an experience listening to the many breaks some of the Juniors make. And he is only forty, that's young, and he has red hair. Bennie Donaldson, our vocational Junior and the popular president, is on the job all the time and has the class believing him. lf they follow his instincts they will be better and wiser as the years roll on. A class secretary must be one with the power to extract the necessary funds for class purposes. In selecting john Smollinsky they have a chap that is popular, always good natured, polite, fair, who will to his utmost do his part to produce harmony and good feeling in the class and at the same time keep the finances in a creditable condition. Leslie Hunt, as treasurer. will keep the books in order and does not need to give a bond. YVe all know him. Albert A. Padula. a vice-president of the N. A. D. C., president of the 1922 class, and who hails from St. -loe, is very much interested in getting lhlgr Um' Ilumlrwil Tzvu 9' 'U-T-Bi 'IIIII lllnFin'Qnj' --ri. s., I ' , .,,- , .llll lllll. lllL.nm .. l t i E r E E E K l



Page 106 text:

lllullv .... im 1 ---H .adam X' t Nuff, We i 'lllIIlllllllllfNN V iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiw' -- , fer-f lu I THE JUNIOR PROM The unior Class of '24 entertained the Senior Class with one of the best supper dances that they could ffive, nothing was spared to make it a success. and the event will dwell long in our minds. XYe will look back to it in the days to come, and our hearts will quicken as we express our gratitude to those who helped make it a success. lt was the climax to the number of events in which the two classes have participated. lt can truthfully be called the climax. because there were no social events of the college year that would equal, or come upon the same plane with it. liveryone enjoyed themselves from the faculty to the youngest member of the -lunior class, and from the constant flow of conversation that arose from the card tables, the ones who were not engaged on the dance floor seemingly had just as much enjoyment. At 10 o'clock the doors of the spacious dining room of the Bellerive were thrown open and there the two classes assembled in congenial groups at the many tables. A three course dinner was served, and between courses, all those who wished. danced to music furnished by one of the best dance orchestras in Kansas City. After the dinner, which was complete in every detail, dancing and cards filled the program for the rest of the evening, and it was there on the dance floor under the colored lights that the beautiful ffowns and corsages worn by the younff ladies, stood out in greatest relief. And from the many gay smiles that broke forth. it showed that although we have to spend from ten to fifteen hours behind a drug counter, we still know how to enjoy a Good time. Many of the boys had spent the greater part of the day in a drug store. but they completely forgot their weariness, while keeping time to the syncopated music of the K. C. A. C. orchestra. Not only were we entertained by the many numbers which they played, but the country at large was also able to glide to their entrancing waltzes and snappy foxtrots, owing to the fact that the music was broad- casted through one of the strongest radio stations in the United States. livery one so thoroughly enjoyed themselves, that the early hours of the morning crept around before we were aware, but it was not until after the last dance, did anyone make plans to depart, and innumerable were the thanks and appreciation bestowed upon the junior class, and especially those who worked so hard, in order that it might be a success. It can be called a success from every point of view, and the unanimous wish of all, was that they might be able to again enjoy themselves as they did on that particular occasion. NVe have mastered XVhitney's Theories in Pharmacy Have located 'l'aylor's Epithelial Cells, Have sterilized Logan's Hugs in Solutions l -1 - 2 l 1 - -- - .: :' i il A lt J i Hut have missed Gus' problems. Uh! l.. if j l rag., our 11-i..,.1,-t-.1 law rf f V lllllllllllllllllllll IllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIli f 'in -f -A ,dmingllmp rulll lllllu llIL.um ..

Suggestions in the Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) collection:

Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 19

1924, pg 19

Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 39

1924, pg 39

Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 31

1924, pg 31

Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 109

1924, pg 109

Kansas City College of Pharmacy - Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 108

1924, pg 108


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