Kansas City School of Law - Pandex Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)

 - Class of 1921

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Kansas City School of Law - Pandex Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1921 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1921 volume:

U K if . 4 1 I 5 il 3 Y 1., 1 IZ Of i . 1, 1 AT fc 2 i 1 is ?2 x , 434 31 V HF H: 8 Yi' 2 3, If W. li is vi 1:- fa. ,X 1 L 21 !': 45 ! A4. grew 5' sf- i -..-.....-......-..-..-..-..-..-.....-..-..-I Published by the Senior Class KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW 1921 i With the Cooperation and Assistance : Of the Student Body IIREEDERS PRINTING CO. 1108-10 W. l2lh St. Kansa.-1 City, Missouri G! is Y I F Ja 1 -n 'i ei Y, i THE PA DEX 'N.frh4U wuGk..67 2:-iQ:-5 N NX, 3 f 1 NINETEEN HUNDRED AND TWENTY-ONE VOLUME XVII GEN . 3 Kansas Pandex 78 P192 1921 City School of Law lllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllll 3 oooo 00161215 30, FOREWORD Any success which we may achieve in this, our initial venture into the fields of publication will be due en- tirely to the cooperation of the fac- ulty ancl student body of the Kansas City School of Law. THE EDITORS. I Af, 4 , I O N . L ? WE lg f 'Q l f fr ff ff ,ff ic , A W?f'1l fi J lg!! 'IMJ' y,f,g I I K 1 ,I , 1 , ,f L, ffl E6 Qlfiflglyldld EO THOSE Honorable Gentlemen, our eminent Preceptors and Friends, this volume of the PANDEX is cordially and respectfully dedi- cated as a tribute to their mature judgment, pro- found learning and the fidelity of purpose with which they have so earnestly, zealously and mas- terfully instructed us in the fundamental prin- ciples of the law, thereby leaving upon each mind an indelible impression of the wisdom of their legal utterances, and as an acknowledgment of the continued kindness and ardent encouragement with which they have so anxiously urged us on to our best endeavors in order that we might become thoroughly and fittingly equipped to enter upon the discharge of the duties of our chosen pro- fession. ...,..n,f ,.., ,. .,, mkwx , rn SANFORD B. LADD A C t' Sk t li fI'l bl 0l'ver H. B?5.?iiZ.? Hsnfnracble 523234 E. Lslda , fBy Elmer N. Powell.D It was a gracious thought of the Editors to make dedication of The Pandex, 1921, to Honorable Oliver H. Dean and Honorable Sanford B. Ladd, jointly. This is a recognition first, of the enduring, wonderful friendship of these distinguished members of our Faculty, inter sese, both of them fore- most in the original little group of founders of the schoolg second, this joint dedication gives opportunity for timely expressions of our profound admiration and affection for these learned expounders of the law, third, it affords an opportunity, which we welcome, to emphasize our deep ap- preciation of these scholarly gentlemen of great hearts and of great minds. I am requested to write a comparative sketch of Mr. Dean and Mr. Ladd herein, a privilege and an honor that I appreciate. What an inspiration they have been and are to us all! Their un- selfish devotion to the Kansas City School of Law, their keen interest in the student body, have been the subject of comment throughout all these years of the School's history. Their names have become inseparably as- sociated with our Law School. The manners of born gentlemen set naturally upon them 5 their kindness of heart, the hallmark of true gentle- men, has surrounded them with such friendships as grapple us to them by hooks of steel. The privilege given us to enjoy the scholarship and the influences of Mr. Dean and Mr. Ladd in school relations and personally, serve as daily reminders of the sublime truth that there is nothing so kingly as kindness , their close friendship and keen interest in us, in each other and the common affection and admiration we have for them as our legal guides and friends, cause us to feel that you and I belong to that great Invisible Order of Friends. Oliver H. Dean and Sanford B. Ladd both received their degrees from the University of Michigan, about five years apart, and both emigrated to Kansas City within three years of each other-Mr. Ladd having ar- rived in this great metropolis in the year 1867 and Mr. Dean in 1870. It was here their real acquaintance and friendship begang a friendship that has remained unmarred throughout these many years. We note much, in common, in the abilities, personal characteristics and life of these noted lawyers of our Bar. While most of -us have had intimate knowledge of their earlier his- tory in- sketches, given in previous Pandexes and elsewhere, permit me here, f'1n the spirit of review, to refresh your memory in this brief, com- parative sketch. We shall then, I believe, easily understand some of the reasons why these gentlemen of similar tastes, abilities, training, student habits, natural gifts as advocates would be drawn to each other-both in private and professional life. They settled in Kansas City amongst the pioneers in the law, they came at a time when conditions were primitive indeed: at a time when Page 8 Ninth and Main Streets, where the Sheidley Building now stands, held a woodyard and the New York Life Building site, where the Kansas City School of Law was originally opened, was a hole in the groundg at a time when the best of law offices were of necessity located above small shops or drink emporiums and when the court rooms could be reached only over or through mud or dust. There were no paved streets and scant board sidewalks. Graphic descriptions of their early day life here were heard at the dinners given by the Bar Associations in honor of these gentlemen a few years ago. They were, with other lawyers at that time, compelled to undergo early disappointments and apprehensions about the daily bread problem that many others of us have since experienced. Those were days of trial that tried the souls of men strong as these gentlemen, even. But their struggles and hardships then have quickened their friendly sym- pathies for the young men in the law, in their early struggles today. I have it from friends who knew them intimately in those times, that their courtly manner, and distinguished appearance caused them to be styled Democratic Aristocratsf' Mr. Dean and Mr. Ladd both were reared in country towns, Mr. Dean having been born in Montour County, Pa., near a village called Washing- tonville, something over a year after Mr. Ladd's birth at the Village of Milford, Mich. They received practically the same educational ad- vantages-each excelling in Latin Cthis was then quite significant, since a young lawyer was required to have had a thorough training in Latin in many states, before being admitted to the Barb. Mr. Ladd took his Latin instruction under the village preacher. Mr. Dean taught Latin in the Tuscarora Academy in Juniata County, Pa., when in his 19th year. This accomplishment of Mr. Dean's led to his having learned to sing college songs in Latin while at the University of Michigan, and moreover, we have been informed that he sang them well. I pause here to rejoice with you that Latin is a dead language, otherwise, the profession of the law might here been robbed of one of its greatest expounders thro' the call of grand opera syndicates to our Mr. Dean. As raconteurs, Mr. Ladd and Mr. Dean are without peers, save possibly our friend, Judge J. E. Guinotte. Of strong personality and forceful presence, they possess, alike, the natural qualities that make effective, convincing, eloquent public speak- ersg moreover, the fine lucrative practice which they gradually built up was composed of clients from the same high type business meng they number many large corporations in their clientele. Their professional as- sociates in the practice have been referred to time and again, and it is needless to mention them again. It has occurred to many of us that a copartnership between them would have been an ideal one in the law. Both public spirited men, high minded, cultured gentlemen of un- questioned integrity throughout their honorable, successful careers and recognized as among the strongest lawyers in the State of Missouri, both men of exceeding great modesty but men whose counsel and opinion are sought in the great public questions of the day, men whose opinions are a guide to the laity and to the lawyers. It would be strange, indeed, where those of us who have enjoyed the benefits of close association with Mr. Dean and Mr.. Ladd should not have become more useful citizens and lawyers with a high regard for the Page 9 ethics of the profession, because of such influences. Their reputations as lawyers may perhaps have become more widely known because of their devotion to the Kansas City School of Law and their leading part in the direction of its affairs, but the Kansas City School of Law and its twelve hundred alumni would have been less great without the legal guidance and impress of the characters of Mr. Dean and Mr. Ladd. They have held the highest honors it were possible for our Bar Associations to confer upon any lawyer, as tributes to their ability and as marks of confidence and affectiong these and other honors have come to them unsought, al- ways. Kansas City, the Kansas City Bar Association, the Missouri State Bar Association and the Kansas City School of Law, the public generally, all count themselves fortunate, indeed, that Honorable Oliver H. Dean and Honorable Sanford B. Ladd chanced to select this metropolis of the West as the field for their legal activities. Our Bar Association, too, would have been great-many able lawyers are numbered in its membership- but it would have been less great without the impress of the strong char- acters and rare ability of our Mr. Dean and our Mr. Ladd. , V- Page 10 HARVEY D. TAYLOR. RUFUS BURRUS .... HAROLD C. STOA, .. JAMES H. ANDERSON. EDGAR E. ADAMS. .. IRVIN YVALLS .... LOUISE SCHUTTE.. . . SUSAN LIANDEL ..,. JENNIE ROSENBERG. . . . .Associate Editor Business Manager .Advertising Manager .Associate Adv. Mgr. ....,Literav'y Editor ....Society Editor ... .Local Editor ... .... Art Editor Editor JUNIOR PANDEX COMMITTEE Ivm F SWEENEY ROY L. VICKREY RAY G. COWAN FRESHMAN PANDEX COMMITTEE ISAUORE RICH THOMAS J. BOMAR JAMES BARNES NALL, JR. Page ll -1 M--hr 'b- - ,.. The Kansas City School J Law CBy Elmer N. Powell.J The Kansas City School of Law received its Charter in 1895 and has grown steadily since its foundation until it has taken rank among the best Law Schools of the country. Dating from the organization of this institution, the students have been afforded an opportunity to combine the work of the school with that of the office, so that both the practical and theoretical parts of a legal education may progress together, they are at the same time given the opportunity to earn a livelihood while acquiring a profession. The system employed here possesses a further advantage not given to most law schools, namelyg that of employing the time and talents of instruc- tors and lecturers engaged in the actual practice of the law. The greatest advantage of a law school, as pointed out by Justice Brewer, is that its students have the benefit of instruction under leaders of the Bar and Judges who could not under any other plan devote their time or their talents to the work of legal instruction. The first years of its existence, the students were confined to Kansas City and its immediate vicinity. In later years, the school has drawn students from many different states and some of our twelve hundred graduates have hailed from other countries. Beginning with the school year September, 1899, there was added to the curriculum a postgraduate course of one year, but it was not found timely and did not meet with particular favorg it was not continued. The Kansas City School of Law was founded as a lawyers' school and has always remained true to its traditions. The first year there were enrolled fifty-seven students and twenty- seven thereof graduated in the first class, 1897. With the increase in the student body removals of quarters have been made necessary twice. First, from the New York Life Building quarters over to the second floor of the Ridge Building and eleven years ago to the more spacious quarters on the fifth floor of the Nonquitt Building. Now, another expansion is made necessary, so that beginning with the school year, 1921-22, the entire fifth floor of the Nonquitt Building will be required, a term lease having al- ready been entered into covering this entire floor. . To meet the growing demands for a higher standard in the Law School and legal education generally, the course was extended in 1902 from two to a three years' course. And now, the Faculty has arranged for a course of four years, that a standard of scholarship shall be maintained in the Kansas City School of Law equal or superior to that of any Law School in the United States. The Faculty and all other friends of the School point with pride to the distinguished careers of a great number of our alumni. It may be of Page 13 interest to note the following in this connection, that of these graduates one has been Mayor of Kansas City, two Prosecuting Attorneys of Jack- son County, six Circuit Judges of the County, while many have served in the Legislative Assemblies, about thirty per cent of the graduates are found engaged in business, in high school work, or 1n the medical pro- fession, these have achieved prominence and success in business and pro- fessional life. About seventy per cent of the graduates of this School. have actually engaged in the practice of the law, this is found to be considerably in. ex- cess of the average proportion of Law School graduates that continue the practice of law, after receiving their degrees. A word personal to the Class of '21, the personnel of this Class is recognized as one of the best in the history of the School. The Faculty has enjoyed the work with them, and I feel that I reflect the sentiment of all when I predict for you a full measure of success in the practice of the law. The Faculty has been greatly strengthened by the addition thereto of distinguished members of our Bar from time to time. It is also of interest to note that our own Law Library has grown until it practically meets all the needs and requirements of the student body. We again acknowledge our debt of gratitude to President Dean, the late Judge John F. Philips, Mr. Sanford B. Ladd, Mr. Wash Adams and others for their fine contributions to our own Law shelves, these, added to our original purchases give us a fine working library. The Washington's Birthday Banquet, one of the best in the history of the School, if not the best, is referred to elsewhere as is the story of that interesting night when honorary class membership was conferred upon Mrs. Alice Dean Greene, Mrs. Alice Van Valkenburgh, Miss Ethel Ridenour and Miss Mary Simpson, I would not regard this sketch of the School as complete without express mention of these affairs here, and of the fine appreciations of the Classes to Mr. Dean and to Mr. Ladd. In concluding this brief story, the writer feels warranted in stating, that that was a good day of educational enterprise in 1895 when the Kansas City School of Law was founded. That the foundations thereof were well laid and with corner stones of granite in the selection of the great lawyers of this Bar and State as its head, I refer to such men as Honorable O. H. Dean, Honorable Sanford B. Ladd, Judge E. L. Scarritt and the late Francis M. Black. I P214 Q f 'fl .ff . f, rf f FACULTY N . 1 l f fxlffll .1 , I ' fa Wf R ' 3 .5 X, Mil if - Mgmrlqall gx 'f H 'Ski 'fx-'li 'xx 'ig-f Vg., W ,lmxvlI!!.0 Hon. Oliver H. Dean Hon. Sanford B. Ladd Hon. Edward D. Ellison Hon. Elmer N. Powell Judge Robert B. Middlebrook Judge Willard P. Hall Judge Thomas J. Seehorn Hon. M. A. Fyke Judge James M. Johnson Hon. A. L. Berger Hon. Thomas H. Reynolds Mr. Ludwick Gra Special Judge Arba S. VanValkenburgh Judge Shepard Barclay Judge E. E. Porterfield Mr. Ingraham Hook Hon. Henry L. Jost Mr. John B. Pew Mr. Thomas A. Costolow Mr. John B. Gage Mr. Caleb S. Monroe Hon. Frank C. Wilkinson Mr. William E. Byers Mr. S. O. Hargus Mr. A. P. Leacy Mr. David P. Dabbs ves Lecturers Judge Joseph A. Guthrie Judge J. E. Guinotte Hon. Wallace W. Greene Judge Ralph S. Latshaw Edward H. Skinner, M. D.- B HON. OLIVER H. DEAN President of the School and Lec- turer on the Law of Corporations and Constitutional Law. Page 16 HON. SANFORD B. LADD Vice-President of the School Lecturer on Real Property. and HON. EDWARD D. ICLLISON Demi of the Sclmul :ami Lecturer on Negotiable Iustruinents and Statu- tory Rights and Rcmedies. HON. ELMER N. POWELL Secretary and Treasurer of the School and Lecturer on Domestic Relations and Partnership. X Pane 17 JUDGE WILLARD P HALL Lecturer on Extraordmary Rem- edies Page 18 HON. MATTHEW A. FYKE Lecturer on Insurance. A MR. SAMUEL O, HARGUS IA'x'flll'91' on Iivirlc-ncc. JUDGE ROBERT B. MIDDLEBROOK Vice-President and Lecturer on Rent S Commentaues. I Pale I9 MR JOHN B PEW Page 20 Lecturer on Public Corporations and Torts. MR. WILLIAM E. BYERS Assistant Instructor. N . r . ,MM kmx JUDGIC A. S. VAN VALKENBURGH Q M I.L'Ctlll'L'1' on Federal Jurisdiction :md P1'r1r'0QflL11'u. HON. THOMAS H. REYNOLDS Lecturer on Bankruptcy. I :Y k 1 ff - 1 Q' M ,Ms , V W l'f-nv 21 HON. HENRY L. JOST Lecturer on Criminal Law and Pro- ceedure. Page 22 HON. ALBERT L. BERGER Lecturer on Agency. ' 19 N. A. L. COOPER I,f,-cturer un flonmwn Law Pleading. JUDGE JAMES M. JOHNSON Lecturer on Equity, Pleadinpg and P1'2lCtlC13 and Blackstone? Commen- taries. , rxxhy, H 1 l'1ll-Kc 23 HON. FRANK C. WILKINSON Assistant Instructor. Page 24 Y MR. DAVID P. DABBS Assistant Instructor Q A far .--.JA MR, ANDREW' P, LEACY Assistant Instructor. MR. THOMAS A. COSTOLOW Registrar and Assistant Instructor Page 25 P1126 MR. JOHN B. GAGE Lecturer on Wills, Sales, Bailments and Carriers. MR. INGRAHAM D. HOOK Assistant Instructor. MR. LUDWICK GRAVES Assistant Instructor. Special Lecturers JUDGE J. E. GUINOTTE Probate Practice and Procedure. JUDGE E. E. PORTERFIELD Juvenile Courts. JUDGE SHEPARD BARCLAY Trade Marks and Unfair Competition. JUDGE RALPH S. LATSHAW Criminal Evidence. HON. JOSEPH A. GUTHRIE Legal Ethics. HON. WALLACE W. GREENE How our laws are made. EDWARD H. SKINNER, M. D. Medicolegal Aspect of the Roentgen Ray Commencement, Class 1920 PROGRAMME Organ Recital .... ..................................4 M r. Powell Weaver, Organist Hon. Edward D. Ellison, Dean, Presiding Invocation ....................................,...... Rev. Joseph M. M. Gray, D.D Oration- Post War Sedition Laws . . . .---.---.--- El'U95t D- Wilson of the Graduating Class Duet ............................. Mrs. George Cowden, Soprano Mrs. Arthur D. Brookfield, Contralto Presentation of Prizes .,..........,............................. Hon. John B. Pew Francis M. Black Honor-Set of Books on Equity Jurisprudence Erick Phillips First Junior Prize-Scholarship in Senior Class ......... Mrs. Masie Jones Ragan Second Junior Prize- Black on Rescission and Cancellation. .Peter Richard Etue Offered by Vernon Law Book Company. Third Junior Prize-McQnillin on Instruction to Juries ...... William J. Coonrod Offered by Vernon Law Book Company. Fourth Junior Prize-Cyclopedic Law Dictionary. ........ Miss Dorris A. Marsh Offered by Callaghan 8: Company, Law Publishers, Chicago. The George Mowry Wayland Prize- Brandenburg on Bankruptcy Frederick Coleman Offered by Mr. John Wayland of the Kansas City Bar First Freshman Prize-Set of Greenleaf on Evidence. .Harry Nelson Burkhalter Second Freshman Prize-Cooley on Constitutional Limitations .................................................CharlesMcCordGrayston Third Freshman Prize-Pattison's Missouri Code Pleading. .Joseph Gayor Halpin Offered by the Vernon Law Book Company. The Mrs. Mary A. Powell Honor- Bluclds Law Dictionary ...... Roy Leo Vickrey Offered by Hon. Elmer N. Powell of the Faculty. The Ben E. Todd Prize-Tiedeman on Real Property .... Harry Nelson Burkhalter Offered by Mrs. Ben E. Todd. The William P. Borland Prize- Borland on Wills ..... Charles McCord Grayston Oration- The Kansas Industrial Court ................ William Stone Flournoy, Jr. of the Graduating Class Music Commencement Address-'ilndnstrial Legislation ........... Hon. William L. Huggins Presiding Judge of the Kansas Industrial Court. Music Presentation of Diplomas and Conferring of Degree of LL.B. and Honors .........................,...............................Hon.OliverH.Dean President of the Faculty Page 28 Roll J Graduating Class M' 1920 Receiving Degree gf LLB. John Tallman Barnes William Ambrose Beck Oscar H. Brinkman Henry Edwin Bucher Frederick Gregory Buffe Eugene William Colville Clifton Craig Byron Reid Calvin Irene Canterbury John Dodson Choplin Domenic Denardo Percy Longley Dwinnell Carl William Fincke 9FWilliam Stone Flournoy, Jr. William Ira Fray Oliver Henry Gates Albert Henry Gillis J. John Gillis Ellis Neel Hardaway Harry Hayward Otto Paul Higgins Lee Guthrie lngraham Benjamin Jacob Kirchner Charles William Knipmeyer Edwin Oscar Koch Summa cum laude 'K Cum laude Harold Gavin Leedy tShepherd Leffler James Joseph McNamara Henry Earl Meade Demetrios G. Michalopoulos tRaymond William Moore Alva Raymond Morse Oliver W. Nolen Franklin A. Parker James Michael Pendergast William Douglas Price ttVivian Eric Phillips Egbert Barrows Sanders, Jr. Myrtle May Smith Edward Jefferson Surguine William Edward Stickel Joseph Herbert Tedrow Edwin Henry Tellejohn H. Winslow True 'James Ilvin Wagner Cyrus Bayard Wall Lillian Elizabeth Watson 'fHarold Waxman Ernest D. Wilson Homer Weese B Page 30 7009? '13 Class OfHcers FIRST SEMESTER JOHN HARVEY RONEY ......................... President JAMES H. ANDERSON ..,. .... V ice-President LOUISE SCHUTTE ........... ......... S ecretary WILLIAM M. ANDERSON .... .......... T 1-easufrer WESLEY A. CHERRY ...... THOMAS E. WALSH, .. Referee ............. SECON . .. . . . . Sergeant at Arms ,...JUDGE JAMES M. JOHNSON D SEMESTER PETER R. ETUE ............................... Preszdent BYRON L. DUSKY .... SUSAN MANDEL ....... WILLIAM J. CO0NROD ..,.. . . . .Vice-President .... .. ...Secretary . . . . . , . . . . .Treasurer LEMUEL P. KIMBRELL ....... .... S ergemzt at Arms CLARENCE M. MCCARTHY .... ............ C ritic Senior Class Roll Adams, Edgar Earl Anderson, James Harold Anderson, William Monroe Andrews, Austin Chandler Burrus, Rufus Bell Cherry, Wesley Arnold Coleman, William Frederick Connor, John Franklin Coonrod, William Jefferson Day, William Merle Dusky, Byron Lee Etue, Peter Richard Fredman, Harold E. Galvin, Robert James Halbe, Leslie Winfield Hammack, Miss Gladys Hunt, Lee Romain Hughes, Hilliard Klaber, Frederick W., Jr., Knapheide, Julius Ernest Kimbrell, Lemuel Parker Lynn, Joseph McCarthy, Clarence Martin McGlynn, Thomas Felix McNamara, James Francis Mandel, Miss Susan Mann, Robert Hood Marsh, Miss Doris Aleen Masters, Harold Medill, William Harold Parkinson, John Alexander Petersen, Edward Moritz Ragan, Mrs. Masie Jones Roney, John Harvey, Jr. Rosenberg, Miss Jennie Richmond, Alfred B. Scarritt, Arthur Davis Schutte, Miss Louise Shackelford, William Harrison, Jr. Shay, Reuben Jennings Sheskin, Harry Shipley, Jesse C. C. Steele, Don G. Stoa, Harold Clinton Taylor, Harvey David Voorhees, Ephriam Walters, Eskel Oliver Walsh, Thomas Ernest Walls, Irvin Wendall Webb, Paul Gail Williams, Bryan Herbert K P I j-ug. ntre 32 EDGAR EARL ADAMS WILLIAM MONROE ANDERSON Phil Alpha, Delta RUFUS BURRUS WILLIAM FREDERICK COLEMAN WESLEY ARNOLD CHERRY Phi Alpha Dcltu, WILLIAM J. COONROD HAROLD FREDMAN LESLIE WINFIELD HALBE X' ,ai JAMES HAROLD ANDERSON ,I ' I'lIl ,-llphu Dollar J OH N FRANKLIN CONNORS li X X :tv !' 1 . 1. 0-,1 .V -Y. 4.2,-Q 9,-3, , X Hrri.-f:.51'J-'IJ--' sz-'ssf fi--S31 -,fr - fix.-' .f-cawif ' . fm -.-A. - . -. .w '25-pf . , A if fLif'Zf ,agp I L, ,':..,Qgf'.if,- .- ' - 1.1-.wgf-e. ,VER A ...KI 4f'L1?f5?1:-Esfffi I 'M ' -. if '49 931' fi- ,Q . , ,ffgw - I, A , . ,- .,.. ., , 1 .f , fn NIJ, - K7 2-4 Llp' I 4'x,fQk' I V J 1 9 m H, R arg .u ' I W' l. W. 15 Tx I' x ,I -:sa 'ig 2 if Q 7 xi Y 3 Y ,, WILLIAM MERLE DAY A' '3' 'U' 'S REQ, f - 'UI fr, N1 l ' v H ' ' I-af' 71' 1 , gg: X 1 5.-If ,I A PETER RICHARD Phi Alpha Delta ,ig ETUE I ' f7T+f -Qs, . ,', -f2QiW ,I ,A A X A - f ' ' . :,2g,rCxfaffgY'11 .- 3 Q I iffivx-1ff:NfP2 , if I..1,,P,.. N - .6 I 'uf-Is:-A ff pfrdr.. -- gm,fA.,f 'L FQ li-Q A 'Q Q , A 5 ,EQ 5 1 f 4 3 5 Bs V ., L .jp 4 ffilfffi 'iixi . A. XV:-:ff ,Q -ww -152' 195 Y V A ' I' Ii: 1 I H- . ' riff, ' ,g.,, Q1-,I fgjxfg ROBERT JAMES GALVIN 'E R' Phi Alpha Delta -l, A ' I - f .gf je.: f 5 K 2 Fwlrlg Y - , .' LEMUEL PARKER KIMBRELL A Q A x:5?,Q2i,ii3y' A 46221 -f, ,TQ-'ff' E D 3233 fig '-li: av- 'D ,-A - 'A ' ' jf CLARENCE MARTIN MCCARTHY bf ' 1 ' Phi Alpha Delta ' , ' RRRWUf+' A 1 TIIOMAS FELIX McGLYNN ' A M A1 171 aff Pate 33 Page 34 HAROLD MASTERS SUSAN MANDEL JOHN ALEXANDER PARKINSON MRS. MASIE JONES RAGAN JENNIE ROSENBERG JESSE C. C. SHIPLEY REUBEN JENNINGS SHAY Phi Alpha Delta LOUISE SCHUTTE Kappa Beta Pi THOMAS ERNEST WALSH Phi Alpha, Dalia FREDERICK VVILLIAM KLABEII Phi Alpha Delta -IULIUS ERNEST KNAPHEIDE EPHRIAM VOORHEES IRVIN WENDALL WALLS Phi Alpha Delta HARVEY DAVID TAYLOR Phi Alpha Delta AUSTIN CHANDLER ANDREWS JOSl'II'H LYNN Parc BYRON LEE DUSKY Phi Alpha, Delta ALFRED B. RICHMOND Delta, Theta Phi JOHN HARVEY RONEY Phi Alpha Delta DORIS ALEEN MARSH WILLIAM HAROLD MEDILL Phi Alpha Delta PAUL GAIL 'WEBB ESKEL OLIVER WALTERS BRYAN HERBERT WILLIAIN HAROLD CLINTON STOA Phi Alpha Dclm IS 3-E-mgpheraok E' Lumvgn-mga-mmno.g -an Class Officers FIRST SEMESTER HARRY Owl-:N ......... .......................Presideut GEORGE V. AYLWARD .... ..... V ice-President DIARY MCDONNELL .... DENARD HICKS. , . . .. EDWARD E. HOOPS. .. SECO GEORGE V. AYLWARD.. RAY G. COWAN. ...... .. LORETTA MCDDNNELL.. D, FRANKLIN PARKER. EDWARD M. TRACEWELL. . . . . ........ Secretary .. . . . . . . . . . Treaszwef' . , . . .Sergeant at Arms ND SEMESTER .......................P1'eside7Lt . . . . .Vice-President . . ........, Secretary ...........Trcasurer . . . . .Sergeant at Arms MHRUQFD Pale 37 Junior Class Roll Aber, Max Dirrim, Jr. Allen, Orville Aylward, George Vincent Backstrom, Lathrop Gustaf Barrett, George Beard, Claude Arthur Benton, Sherman L. Bonewits, Doyle David Boterman, John Frederick Brodie, Francis R. Brandom, Smith Franklin Brown, Cyril Byron Bruce, Dewey Bruun, James Anaultas Bryant, Winifred Buckingham, Charles Grant Burnett, Irene F. Carr, John Peter Carroll, Alfred Edwin Carroll, Mrs. Lucy Pauline Casemore, Russell Owen Chinnery, George William Clayton, Joy Gladstone Colt, Albert John Cook, Frank M. Combs, George H., Jr. Conway, Thomas Francis Cotter, James Michael Courtney, Fred Zaiss Cowan, Ray George Cowden, Letson Balliet Crafton, Rosemary Caceilia Cubbison, James Kerr Cummins, Raymond Woodson Curran, Raymond Warren Daleo, James Davis, Harry Scott Drummond, Warren Atler Edwards, Robert Barthlow Fraher, John Edmund Floto, Charles U. Fritch, Frank Joseph Galvin, Jerome Gregory Pg38 Goldberg, Arnold Gorman, Joseph Edward Graves, Walter W., Jr. Grayston, Charles McCord Hagaman, Frank Leslie Hakanson, Valerius Halpin, Joseph Gaynor Hamlin, Lee Hannibal Hartig, Cyril Michael Harpold, Ned Eugene Hardman, Paul Clele Harrell, Hugh E. Harding, Ralph Hazard, Leland Walker Hicks, Denard Hoops, Edward Earl Hornecker, George Hovey, Clarence Earl Hull, Lee C. Imes, Terrance W. Ingram, Irwin Clifford James, John Riley Johnson, Lindsay Johnson, Sherratt Marcus Kahmann, Chris Kendall, Frederick Calvin Kirby, William M. Kirk, George Washington Kratzmeir, Fred Carl Kuhns, Ivan Clarence Kulka, Maurice Israel Leimer, Walter A. Littick, Lucien Warner Lytle, Miss Cleo McCutcheon, Harold C. McDonnell, Miss Loretta McDonnell, Miss Mary McFadden, Lantz Okla McFarland, John Barnett McFeeley, Henry Wevand McQueen, Joe Welch McWilliams, Alexander B Mackey, Robert Thomas Mahoney, Timothy John Marks, Walter Earl Melching, Charles Franklin Melching, Roy Clifford Menges, Oliver Adelbert Middleton, Charles William Montgomery, Forrest R. Nigro, Michael O'Dowd, Hall Benjamin 0'Keefe, Miss Marian Cecelia Owen, Harry Palmer, Harry R. Page, John Greenleaf Parelman, Jacob Parker, D. Franklin Parks, Clarence Elwood Peerson, Bernal Diaz Perryman, Curtis Barbee Ralston, Eugene Jackson Ray, Thomas Brown Reed, Garnett Workman Rice, William Ivan Rich, Louis Rich, Myer Mordecai Ridge, Guy Roswell Rolston, Robert L. Riley, Frederick Sickles Rose, Robert Bell Shay, William McBride Smart, William Randall Smith, Roy E. Speece, Miss Nell Steinhilber, John George Stevens, Harry Chester Stocklin, Theophilus Stoller, John Cotter Stone, Sylvan Ralph Sweeney, Ivan F. Swetnam, Jay Richard Swoboda, Leo Anthony Sympson, Ralph W. Taylor, Elbert Allen Tague, John B. Tharp, Clark Alvin Thompson, Arthur Rose Tracewell, Edward M. Tucker, Charles Fuller Tucker, Clark Edward Turner, Miss Lucille Turner, Lyle Milford Vickrey, Roy Leo Walinov, William A. Wallace, George Kennedy White, Frederick Robert Wollard, Nathaniel Jackson Wood, Virgil Dwight Wright, James Leo Zeigler, Charles Vernon L Page 40 GEORGE VINCENT AYLWARD Phi Alpha, Delta ALBERT JOHN COLT Phi Alpha Delta FRANK M. COOK RAY GEORGE COWAN Phi Alpha Delta ROSEMARY CECELIA CRAFTON GEORGE WILLIAM CHINNERY JAMES DALEO Phi Alpha Delta JOHN EDMUND FRAHER GEORGE VINCENT AYLWARD Phi Alpha Delta, ORVILLE ALLEN JAMES E. MCPHERSON GEORGE BARRETT Phi Alpha Delta LATHROP GUSTAF BACKSTROM Phi Alpha Delta CLAUDE ARTHUR BEARD JOHN FREDERICK BOTERMAN Phi Alpha, Delta SMITH FRANKLIN BRANDOM Phi Alpha Delta w Paga 41 w I Pzfrze 42 CYRIL BYRON BROWN DEVVEY BRUCE JAMES ANAULTAS BRUNN WINIFRED BRYANT Phi Alpha Delta JOY GLADSTONE CLAYTON RAYMOND WARREN CURRAN Delta Tlzeia Phi ROSEMARY CECELIA CRAFTON FRED ZAISS COURTNEY Phi Alpha, Delta ALFRED EDWIN CARROLL LETSON BALLIETT COWDEN Phi Alpha Delta RAYMOND WOODSON CUMMINS THOMAS FRANCIS CONWAY JAMES MICHAEL COTTER Phi Alpha Delta ALBERT JOHN COLT Phi Alpha Delta GEORGE WILLIAM CHINNERY JOHN PETER CARR Pane 43. l 1 l w Page 44 MRS. LUCY PAULINE CARROLL RAY GEORGE COWAN Phi Alpha Delta FRANK M. COOK HARRY SCOTT DAVIS WARREN ATLER DRUMMOND JAMES DALEO Phi Alpha Delta ROBERT BARTHOLOMEW EDWARD JOHN EDMUND FRAHER CHARLES ERVIN GRAYSTON JOSEPH EDWARD GORMAN JEROME GREGORY GALVIN MARVIN ADELBERT GLOYD ROBERT J. GALVIN Phi Alpha Delta Class of 1921 NED EUGENE HARPOLD HUGH E. HARRELL JOSEPH GAYNOR HALPIN Phi Alpha Delta Pane 45 ,. , ., -4 warg -v 7' ' . ' ff mf-Jg,q,,i ,- I4-.,.-443.1 J., VH? ,yyf 5 - 1. , I , 7,3 Q A 'E' ' ' - ' 'F-1' fidgizzbg 3 ...J as 1.--:.,, ew J I -f-'fri Y L- J-54:--' Q. 111 ' In , 'W :TES-f . 5? QA A, MA? 'df W fa . '4 wg: Ja 'Syl ,X h . A A ,N A-2+ 1369-L1 A . A .f xii ' .A.,f.,:.i Ig.. 8'-ifjwg, .I .E . 45 ff xi:if,'c.'3-.' 'A Q- Mfr. - leafs' . f f A..,Nx . ,., A uf- ' 5.2211-' L .M ' lex. V -,ee J? v ,ig?:.u.'f, , H-,if W. 5 , .1m'1Y 'mf , ' 1 V - Q ,g:f:::m1,:' 3.-,pfifa . P, J 4' x51Mf,'1 ':-vfrfv-' 15:31-4 1: W, L' 'Wag-'2fs+3g:3y Q . U. ., , . ,,5.1'4.ggLv -. 11-.ig 4, ge., ' -. -2'i:a'f?P Q'-sw 1 ...Q fi' Sgr' Ggfffii ,w -: C',-iw, 1' ' i ev' 1252 51' -52325 V ' Q ., . gm-,LQKL rw., KH' -Le. ,- 2' 4 .1 1, Zilfsf., SWR, A4 .lf iw' Af, W5 f, A :Ex 1 1? 'zvf ,fl 'f 52 V4 PM r W Kr M-,JY ,:v.1, Z+-1 , - -Q ' Met f' ' ...,. s-w,,qf1,, .- .3 ,. .xi-V :fe A . HJ. Ear if ' 1 if 'A .1 5::.'.55:,3 4 4 .' A. 'Y1gxf1v - ,'?f! ' ' - 7Q'5 Y-.-J' '93 N523-., 1, , L ' .1:.j,,44L-,4,Y.f-5551 :frm 344 r, - 1.11 V ,el-.g,.f.., .5-. .M A 1.61 7' wiqffa, 4 -5 r fQ4??4f ,,gM'fz? np? r' glingayjv , mi ' gf' ' Y , Qi - y N. ' ' f ' '-wvfqj ' 1 'Ar ' Y ' N, I ft' 1 ,..Y .ix .A X 5, 5 - . f:Q'E5 X- Q 3 f ,A ff., , vw . ' 55,4 Ag: ' -f,2..,,a 1 r - fx -f-f,-f.- 2' ..f :H-Q :M 5? i,' , an I? - .Aa '. A , - A , v, j I -qt, , ,L f -,JAN l rw r, 'J , ff- , 1 W f. , 'A :Af . . L iv I ' agar? -f J 'f ' , ji.. f Q4 3 af. f , A ,ff 1H-:- my -' 3 -' uf -J My , WS 3.75: J ' V A W ., J, .J , A Elf f- 1: 1- E J.: f X :wi bffxb-' ', , 5 vi: '- dawg 'ff N 'sf' 'V Wil: 1 M11 , -gp-if 'ffL'T'Q, 21 J gfgffa F1'v,ffj' L , , ,, . A. afgfgqiwwwz uma .,, ,wg M-..'Qg'f' L..- gf.- ' 'i5z'ZQ:3m.g:L?:?4..ii Parc -16 JOSEPH GAYNOR HALPIN Phi Alpha Delta RALPH T. HARDING LANTZ OKLA MCFADDEN JOHN RILEY JAMES PAUL CLELE HARDMAN Delta Theta Phi LEE HANNIBAL HAMLIN EDWARD EARL HOOPES JEROME G. GALVIN CLARENCE EARL HOVEY Delta Theta Phi CYRIL MICHAEL HARTIG RALPH HARDING GEORGE HORNECKER VALERIUS HAWKANSON DENARD HICKS Phi Alpha Delta PAUL CLELE HARDMAN Delta Theta Phi IRWIN CLIFFORD INGRAM Pace -17 Page 48 SHERRATT MARCUS JOHNSON Phi Alpha Delta LINDSEY JOHNSON IRVAN CLARENCE KUHNS FREDERICK CALVIN KENDALL Phi Alpha Delta FRED CARL KRATZMEIER GEORGE WASHINGTON KIRK CLEO LYTLE LUCIEN WARNER LITTICK LORETTA MCDONN ELL WILLIAM MCKINLEY MCADAMS MARY MCDONNELL LANTZ OKLA MCFADDEN ALEX BERNARD McWILLIAMS Phi Alpha Delta ROY CLIFFORD MELCHING CHARLES FRANKLIN MELCHING l ORliliS'l' R. MONTGOMERY Page -19 Pane 50 NN 1 .U --A , ' xm. I lf? xy? 'ff ' 'my ,, ,, fm j . CHARLES WILLIAM MIDDLETON Phi Alpha Delta ROBERT THOMAS MACKEY OLIVER ADELBERT MENGES WALTER EARL MARKS MARIAN CECELIA O'KEEFE BENJAMIN HALL O'DOWD Phi Alpha Delta NETTIE PURDY JAMES HENRY PRITCHETT, JR. ' D. FRANKLIN PARKER A , , Pl1iAlplzf1Deltu V Q ' U I 41? C Q ' 2 . Jw: A , ' HFZQA' Y XA , A A ,E .V Q ,W R I -5f f1-5-.:6g1'.Q ' OLIVER ADELBERT MENGES - , ., '-.4,..:. '.s,fg33a': ' l if'-'iff-FL 6.43 . ,?3g1QA5Qg'1s,, , . Gif ' . 'Mm' Q 5 ROBERT THOMAS MACKEY A ,, if -' Li-?i5?:Q:2Lf2:3?iii T ' A gif Y H' L XE CHARLES WILLIAM MIDDLETON 1' ' 'I 5' Jfffilg , 'Y , - 1 Phi Alpha Delta ,-':1f.EF5..::.- ff-L , -A , 1.- 1-:L -.314 A f,- . .gg-,4.,r5',..3. , 'f , 9:- 1 ii X , , :R ,X M- IH' f Jig Ayn., 1 2,224-.9,,F: '5'A ' , . - wav 'ggzfagQga,1l. ' e ' Ai!Qf2fI'fE- -1 1f5l1'5vif I V' A A 1 A HENRY WEVAND MCEEELEY ' ' f'aTf5g'i5f:IX1,fa5' Sf:,'3.-egg. , a ,f 9:f5f-il ' ..1k,.z:.511g.A.': Aix A r,-sjqfwgtvi gn- I gg -, A .uw 15 :'ig,ri2Q ff. 'Z-1: ' 'v Q I I. :.g:H.,,.L R1. 5- ,v SA Y Y V ,l's..:.'y r1...g ' MARX MQDONA LD E-.,g,,g,,1,5f,q.,. ' , i.- '1'11:P' A S 11..- ?frff'x 'i231.32A1, ' ' '-'v'b,,2 , L - :.fsa'f,:+s-., X -. .. mx. Q'l'f3'2i4'?f'fif ' 'Q' Iv ww A-'J 'Y-'1 A ,. . 'V' -3- 1f2.p:'dM'53't-: ,f L' ' ' 553' 2 Y - . . , Q ' 'afw1.'-1,121 LORL'1'1A MCDONALD :,,yf:.,f,.f.3if-g.A:55 .i'wfl'f lQL3f Gif ll! ' U.: X. rigfzr 4 w13F'fxikt'2:l Q- - ':5 f..i2:-'I.'v - A- A ,.,,'i1igfff.??li'7 fi? W- ' - 'fP?2'f:55-?D52 1' f ' - 1 Q . 'mi-'.--'-Q 5'-' . . wi-. :LED LX'1LIT E, 1 4 f ' A ,. ' . Qs' H ., f P 1 , 'Z-, 15 ff? , . , ,pe13fg,f4u'IVJ' J , riqvfej-Sa -1 A 5--Aj!-56, 2 fin- ,L ..AL.,...,..-, .U -H Paste J w MARIAN CECELIA O'KEEFE ELBERT ALLEN TAYLOR Phi Alpha Delta' HARRY R. PALMER JOHN COTTER STOLLER Delta, Them Phi WILLIAM RANDALL SMART SARAH LUCYLE TURNER ARTHUR ROSE THOMPSON SMITH FRANKLIN BRANDOM Phi Alpha Dvlfu JACOB PARELMAN D. FRANKLIN PARKER Phi Alpha Delta CURTIS BARBEE PERRYMAN EUGENE JACKSON RALSTON Phi Alpha Delia GUY ROSSWELL RIDGE WILLIAM OSCAR ROBINSON FREDERICK SICKLES RILEY Phi Alpha Delta M YER MORDECAI RICH Page 5-1 WILLIAM RANDALL SMART JAY RICHARD SWETNAM ROY E. SMITH LEO ANTHONY SWOBODA Phi Alpha Delta WILLIAM MCBRIDE SHAY Phi Alpha Delta RALPH W. SYMPSON ARTHUR STEINMEYER. Deceased. NELL SPEECE IVAN F. SWEENY Phi Alpha Delta IOHN COTTER STOLLER Della Theta Plzi CLARK EDWARD TUCKER Phz Alpha Delia LYLE MILFORD TURNER EUGENE AUGUSTINE TROXELL ARTHUR ROSS THOMPSON ELBERT ALLEN TAYLOR SARAH LUCYLE TURNER Page EDWARD M. TRACEWELL Phi Alpha Delta ROY LEO VICKREY Phi Alpha Delta JAMES LEO WRIGHT WILLIAM A. WALLINOV EUGENE GEORGE WETZELL FREDERICK ROBERT WHITE VIRGIL D. WOOD GOULD HAROLD WARREN FR SHME CLA HAROLD E. MARSHALL ....... .............. STEVE SLAUGHTER ...... LENA B. RUDDY ...... IRWIN LANDRUM .... F. M. ROBERTS .... j5,x'iT5 V54 D . 125 .Q , , N f 25 ,, 2 W E L yi 1 ORA .W A E . h m f . fl x Y! I , .ntl 1 5 ..4... ...Zig SS OFFICERS .President . . . . Vice-President . . . . . . . . .Secretary . . . . . . . . . .Tfeasurer . . . .Sergeant at Arms Page 57 , X , ,.f., N, Freshmen Class Roll Adams, Miss Sallie Ann Adams, Sam Wesley Alexander, Lonnie Joab Allvine, Fred Charles Anderson, Willard Coe Ashley, Schuyler Austin, Robert Walter Barnes, James Harold Baucke, Cyril Grant Beeman, Dean Henley Becker, John Adam Bergman, Clarence Grant Berrie, Robert Brown Berry, Francis Bieg, Russell James Bloom, Otis Webster Bradley, Earl Bomar, Thomas Jefferson Brannock, William Arnold Bredehoeft, Ray Lynn Britt, Charles Love Brown, Baxter Charles Budd, James Calvin Buck, Melvin Eli Burris, Harvey Benton Byrum, Paul R. Capron, Harold Clay Carmean, James Henry Carpenter, Pierson Paul Clark, Milton Joseph Coffey, Mark Combs, James Harding Cooper, Robert Traeasur Costello, Denny Corbett, Joseph Francis Crain, Harry I. Crall, Donald Harmon Crawford, Richard Raymon Damon, Eugene Dedo, Herschel Frederick Dehoney, James Lavelle Dietrich, Carl Clyde Downey, Hugh Brunt Dwyer, Maurice Howard Dyer, Mrs. Pauline Edna Dyer, Ben Webber Edsell, Selby Guinn Esterly, Robert Franklin Evans, Miss Violet M. Evans, Berenice Lee Evans, Russell Ferrenburg, George Lee Pnfzc' 58 d Fischer, Nathan Fligg, Kenneth Irving Fontaine, Jess Turner Franklin, Clarence Charles Gallagher, Hugh Martin Gardner, Cornelius Jarboe Gardner, Thomas Adrian George, Befauford James Goldberg, Harry Bernard Gordon, George Logan, Jr. Grant, Howard Williams Gussman, Harry Carpenter Hammett, Aubrey Rutterford Hamilton, Royal Edward Harrington, William Casey, Jr Hedrick, William Raymond Hetherington, James Harold Herring, Norman Hodges, Leslie James Hoiles, Lucien Stephen Horton, Jack Marvin Hulseman, Giles Daniel Hyatt, Cecil Wade Inzerillo, Frank, Jr. Jaquin, Nester Marius Jenkins, John Stansilas Jensen, Miss Marie Johnson, Carl Lorentz Joyce, Jack Keating, John Patrick Keir, James F. Kenagy, Aubrey Sylvester Kitchen, Francis Andrew Kline, David Charles Konomos, Mike Demetrius Krummel, Robert L. Landrum, Irwin Cartwright Lasson, Joseph Ritchie Lea, Gilbert Chrisman Leahy, William Joseph Lebrecht, Alphonse Lechtman, Miss Cyna Miriam Leith, Milton Branham Leverich, Arden Allen Long, Henry Lumley, Leslie Robert McArthur, Charles Edward McDonald, Joe Stephen McShane, Bernard Charles Malone, Ned Brown Manning, F1'ank A. Mansell, Miss Agnes May Markopoulos, George Marr, Miss Elsie Duncan Marshall, Harold Edward Massa, Tony Miermaster, Milton Alfred Miller, Lee Thomas Morris, Albert Victor Moreland, Paul L. Moritz, Jesse Irl Murray, William James Myers, Mrs. Josephine R. Nall, James Barnes, Jr. Nolen, Ralph Waldo O'Donnell, John Vincent O'Reilly, Miss Mary Paddock, Edward Everett, Jr. Pagett, Francis M. Peterson, Gustav Adolph Pickett, William Dorr Pilcher, James Calvin Pope, Miss Bess Powell, Levi Osborne Presley, Lawrence Hendrich Raimo, Frank Joseph Redmond, Mary Reynolds, Wade LeRoy Rich, Isadore Richter, Clarence Henry Rheem, Ross Herschel Roberts, Fred Moore Robertson, Silas Charles Rolfe, Francis Edward Rose, Charles Chapman Ross, Ronald Monro Ruddy, Miss Lena B. Scott, Walter R. Seyster, Miss Nellie Shalet, Paul Shutts, William Monroe Simmons, Harold Joseph Simpson, Charles Foster Singer, Watson Sisk, Everett Lester Slaughter, Stephen Olin Smart, Miss Alice Smith, Edmond Byrnes Southard, Raymond Dean Stanley, Arthur J., Jr. Stanley, George Bowman States, Louis Florselle Sterling, George Edward Sullivan, James R. Taylor, Richard Blackburn Thomas, Roscoe Richard . Thomason, Neal Osman Thorpe, Kenneth Marshall Tipton, Edwin Horace Tourtelot, Dale Francis Tourtelot, Roy Dean Walker, George Lemon, Jr Wallace, Paul Gauker Watts, Donald Gordon Wheeler, William Wallace Welden, Arthur Abel Whittaker, Charles Evans, Jr Wier, Miss Beatrice Wolfley, Drosey Murl Woodard, Harold Stephen Wright, William Earl XJ l Page 60 LONNIE JOEB ALEXANDER SALLIE ANN ADAMS HARVEY BENTON BURRUS THOMAS JEFFERSON BOMAR Phi Alpha Delta WILLIAM ARNOLD BRANNOCK JOHN FRANKLIN BOTERMAN Phi Alpha Della Class of 1922 JAMES CALVIN BUDD JAMES HAROLD BARNES FRANCIS BERRY MELVIN ELI BUCK JOHN ADAM BECKER. ROBERT TRAEASUR COOPER EUGENE DAMON HUGH BRUNT DOWNEY Delta Theta Phi SELBY GUINN EDSELL VIOLET M. EVANS c. f , , I. .. 5 'f 2 ? . A A Tjg ' g- ' N .1-.-247.123, ' N .. ,.,..,. 1 V -:4y,g,,m,fw-- .- ,rx . wrrziw , . , fmffti' 'V ' . 'PF J. .3 3 -X, Jamie? 412 - R SV- x - f' 51323- .L.::L.?9. 9Z3E1: ,'s' L. 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A If .f ' g2,jfff1gfj - 4. , 0 - ' fav!!- I 1 Pima- 6' 15, E3..fff Paze 66 WATSON SINGER EVERETT LESTER SISK EDMOND BYRNES SMITH EDWIN HORACE TIPTON ROSCOE RICHARD THOMAS BEATRICE WEIR WILLIAM WALLACE WHEELER DROSEY MURL WOLFLEY aiu,-1 S9 , 6 .3 1,333 aim- ' ' Q .Vs A ' A i .Q ,, ' i W O 'gi A ls .Q .a J H Benton Chapter FLOWER-RED CARNATION COLORS-PURPLE AND PUBLICATION---PHI ALPHA DELTA QUARTERLY CHAPTER ROLL GOLD v Z1 Benson VVashburn University Garland Arkansas University Benton Kansas City School of Law Huzhes Denver University Brewer John B. Stetson University Jay Geo. Washintzton University Blackstone Chicago Kent. Col. of Law Jefferson University of Virtzinia Calhoun Yale University -Kent University of Idaho Campbell University of Michixzan Lawson University of Missouri Capen Illinois Wesleyan Univ, Livingston Columbia University Chase Cincinnati Law School Mclleynolds University of Tennessee Clay University of Kentucky Magruder University of Illinois Corliss University of North Dakota Marshall University of Chicano Dunbar University of Washinxzton Rapallo New York University Fuller Northwestern University Reese University ot' Nebraska Green University of Kansas Ross University of So. Calif. Gunter University of Colorado Ryan University of Wisconsin Hamlin University of Maine Staples Washington Lee University Hammond University of Iowa Story De Pauw University Harlan University of Oklahoma Taft Georgetown University Hay Western Reserve University Temple University of California Holmes Leland Stanford Jr. University Webster Chicago Law School Cole Drake University Williams University of Oreizon McKinley Ohio State University Ruffin University of North Carolina Lurton Vanderbilt University HONORARY MEMBERS Hon. VValler VV. Graves Hon. Oliver H. Dean Hon. Sanford Ii. Ladd Hon. Thomas J. Set-horn Hun. James M. Johnson Hon. Ewing C. Bland l ItA'l'RES IN FACULTATE Hon, Oliver H. Dean John B. Pew Hon. Sanford B, Ladd Thomas A. Costolow John B. Gaze Hun, James M. Johnson Samuel 0. Harfxus Ludwiek Graves OFFICERS OF BENTON CHAPTER 1920-'21 1921-'22 Harvey D. Taylor .... .,....... J ustice Frederick C. Kendall .,,. ....... J ustlce -Iames H. Anderson .... .... V iee-Justice Denard Hicks .....,.,. .... V ice-Justice Reuben J. Shay ....., ..... ' Freasurer Ray G. Cowan ....... . ..... Treasurer Wesley A. Cherry ,... , . ...,... Clerk Letson B Cowden .... ....... C lerk Thomas E. Walsh. .. ......... Marshall James Daleo . . ,.... .... llr Iarshall Wesley A, Cherry... ....,.,.,...,.. Auditor Ivan I . Sweeney ,.... ............ . .. ...Auditor BROTHERS IN ACTIVE CHAPTER Anderson, James H. Colt, A, J. McCarthy. Clarence M. Shay, Reuben J. Anderson, Wm. M. Cowden, Letson B. Marshall, Harold E, Swoboda, Leo. Aylward, Geo. Courtney, Frederick Middleton, Charles Stca, Harold C. Iloterman, John F. Cowan, Ray G. Medill, W. H. Sweeney, Ivan F. Bryant, iv. lsr.-n-mm, Smith lf. Imintlom, 'rhumrls M., Jr. is..pl.sm,m, 1.mm.,n G. Barrett, or-U. nm, R. J. nomar, 'thomas J. Brodie, Francis it. eh.-fry, vveslt-y A. cutter, .mmf-5 M. Daleo, James Dusky, Byron L. Etue, Peter ll. Galvin, Robert J. Halpin, Joseph G, Hicks, Denard Hunt, Lee Johnson, Sh:-rratt, Kendall, Frederick C. Klaber, Frederick W. M. McVVilliarns, Alex, B, Nall. J. B, Owen, Har!'Y 0'Dowd, Hall Ii. Parker, D. l-'. Riley, Frederick Ralston, E, J. Rheem, Ross H. Roney, Harvey Searritt, A. D, Taylor, Harvey D. Taylor, Ii. A. Tracewell, Ildward Vickrey, Roy I.. Tucker, C. E. W'alls, Irvin VVallzice, Geo. K. Walsh, Thomas E. M, I.lEN'l'ON CHAPTER PLEDGES Galvin, J. G. Mt-Shane, Bernard Stanley, Arthur J. Slaughter, Stephen 0. Sympson. Ralph W, Allvine, Fred C. Page G9 Benton Chapter The close of this school term finds Benton Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta enjoying the most successful year since its organization in Nineteen Hundred Six. The activities of the chapter during the past year have centered about the Chapter House at Independence Avenue and Wabash. Here during the past year we have entertained and played host to many guests and prominent members of the Fraternity, among whom were several of the National Officers and representatives from practically all of the different chapters of the fraternity. The fraternity house is fully occupied by resident members including some alumni of this and other chapters. With its well furnished rooms and complete and up-to-date library it furnishes an ideal home for mem- bers residing there, and a convenient and comfortable Club House for other members of the city. The many facilities of our fraternity house and particularly our din- ing room service have been the subject of much favorable commentg not only from the members themselves, but also from our many guests ever since our house was formally opened by the big house warming party held in July of last year, which was attended by a big representation not only of the bar and bench but from many other professions as well. During the past season Benton Chapter has entertained with many social events including smokers, dinners, dances and parties. Among these we recall the annual dinner dance held this year at the City Club, where about one hundred couples of the active and alumni members and their friends enjoyed a splendid dinner and an enjoyable evening of dancing. At this time we should not fail to mention the annual initiation and L. Bola Exhibition, which has become so famous among our worthy alumni. The annual Founders Day Banquet should not here escape mention. Always well attended! And, this year, more so than usual. The members present saw an entertainment which they will not soon forget and neither will they ever reveal. In passing let us mention the annual spring frolic at the Brookside Hotel where one of our most successful dances of the year was held and where occasion was afforded to bid farewell to those whom We might not have opportunity to meet again until after the vacation period has ended. The foregoing may give an inkling of the past success of Benton Chapter so let's drink to its future. May it live long and prosper always. FREDERICK C. KENDALL, Justice. I g 70 3 L.x.m.v-Gisixfx Aw, I W fQf:,MX,, . , .15 I g'f3f,'5 f:3gL.Q41 'vm V . f .uw-fy '- A ,- J' gy, .e,z,f'w ' ,C 5, ,ggzai Vllfwe' S it THETQ arfirf off -, 2. iff 0+ g a-4 52 -an 1 ,,, nu HREF? YA-I ui .E 1 AEEWY Clal lllal? 'stig- Snyder Senate KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW HONORARY MEMBERS Henry L. Jost Hardin B. Manard John I. Williamson OFFICERS OF SNYDER SENATE C. Earl Hovey ............................... ....... . Dean Paul C. Hardman .... . . .Vice-Dean Guy R. Ridge ..... .......... T ribune John C. Stoller ..... ......... E xchequer Hugh B. Downey ..... .... ll Iaster of Ritual Raymond W. Curran. . . . . .Clerk of Rolls Kenneth M. Thorpe .................................. Balliff Raymond W. Curran Hugh B. Downey George L. Gordon, Jr Paul C. Hardman C. Earl Hovey William J. Leahy ACTIVE BROTHERS IN SNYDER SENATE Milton B. Leith Guy R. Ridge John C. Stoller Kenneth M. Thorpe William J. Davis Alfred B. Richmond SENATE ROLL John Adams Boston University Harlan Benton Washington University Jefferson Brewer University of Kansas Lee Bryan Creighton University Lurton Chase Ohio State University McKinley Christiancy University of Michigan Marshal Cole Drake University Mitchell Cooley Detroit College of Law Pitney Day Western Reserve University Ramsey Deady University of Oregon Ranney Field University of So. Calif. Snyder Finch Cornell University Warvelle Fuller Fordham University Wayne Gibson University of Pittsburgh VVhite Holmes Dickinson University Wigmore Hosmer University of Detroit Von Sam Houston University of Texas FLOWER-WHITE CARNATION Palle 72 University of South Dak. Richmond College University of Virginia Chattanooga Col. of Law J. Marshall School of Law Ohio Northern University University of Minnesota New Jersey Law School St. Paul College of Law Cleveland Law School Kansas City School of Law De Paul University Atlanta Law School Georgetown University Northwestern University Moschzisker University of Pennsylvania COLORS-WHITE AND GREEN I E3 f Snyder Senate Snyder Senate's activities within the past semester will scarcely be forgotten by its members throughout the years to follow. At the roll call in September, only five members remained in the fra- ternities' active chapter. But thanks to the loyalty of those five brothers, Snyder Senate can proudly boast of its achievements during the past nine months. Seven new members have been added to the active list this year, bringing the present membership up to twelve. Large comfortable rooms in the Arlington Building have been provided by the Alumni Chapter. The quarters are conveniently located, spacious for all occasions, and as cozy as will be found. The weekly luncheons each Thursday at the University Club have been attended with increasing enthusiasm. The active members are thus brought in touch with the alumni brothers each week, resulting in a closer association with men now in the active practice, thereby surrounding the new men with the proper environment looking toward the legal profession. The smokers, initiations and dances have furnished the recreation. March 19, 1921, was a big day for Snyder Senate. Starting early in the afternoon an initiation was held which could be unparalleled. In fact every letter of the word initiation was there in full force. The day's program was concluded with the Annual Founders' Day Banquet at the Hotel Muehlebach. Speeches were had by different brothers. It seems altogether appropriate that the closing words of Brother Henry L. Jost's message should be made a part of these annals, which were, in part, as fo lows: So, after all, there are only three real things in life-Love, Truth and Fun. Love to make us associable, Truth to keep us pure, and Fun to keep us young. Delta Theta Phi and Snyder Senate thereof, certainly carry these three assets with them, and through these mediums are enjoying all that a fraternity could put forth. More power to you Snyder Senate, and may the Year 1922 see achieve- ments at this time only dreamed of. GUY R. RIDGE, Tribune. Palze 74 Kappa Beta Pi Legal Sorority FLOWER-YELLOW ROSE COLORS-TURQUOISE BLUE AND GOLD Open Motto: There is a woman at the head of all great things? Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Laniba Mu Nu Xi Omicron Pi Rho Sigma CHAPTER ROLL Chicago Kent College of Law Northwestern University Washington College of Law De Paul University Chicago University John Marshall College of Law Texas University Kansas City School of Law University of California Yale University University of Detroit Detroit College of Law George Washington University University of Michigan Washington University Cornell University University of Iowa Boston University ACTIVE MEMBERS THETA CHAPTER Hazel Baldwin Anthony Leonore Simpson Annette Moore Tillie Jane Hairgrove Harriet P. Kirby Gertrude M. Williams Margaret DeWitt Harriet P. Kirby.. Elizabeth Watson. Myrtle May Smith. . . Louise Schutte .. Margaret Clements Ruth E. Patton Elizabeth Watson Irene Canterbury Page Myrtle May Smith Louise Schutte Gladys Hammack Margaret Clements OFFICERS ...........Dean ...Associate Dean . . . . . . . .Registrar Chancellor . Marshal Ruth E. Patton .... Chapter Pi. Kappa Beta Pi Legal Sorority . Kappa Beta Pi Legal Sorority was organized twelve years ago by a small group of girls, students in Chicago-Kent College of Law. At the formation of the Sorority, night schools were not eligible, but as a result of the boosting given the Kansas City School of Law by Mr. Bret Robert- son while attending Northwestern University, our school was given the in- timation that a petition would be accepted. As a result Theta CKansas Cityj Chapter was installed January 2, 1917. Hazel Baldwin Anthony '16, Leonore Simpson '17, Annette Moore '17 and Tillie Hairgrove '14, were the charter members. The following October Hazel Baldwin and Leonore Simpson attended the National Con- vention held in Chicago in order to strengthen our ties with the Sorority by personal contact. Since then the Chapter has acquired ten new mem- bers which we think is an excellent showing considering the small number of girls who take the degree and are admitted to practice. At the National Convention in Washington, D. C., in 1919 Leonore Simpson was elected Grand Dean and presided over the Convention the following year in Chicago. Theta Chapter has extended an invitation to the Grand Chapter to hold the Annual Convention in Kansas City, Septem- ber 16-17, 1921. Theta Chapter has responded to all School activities and will always be loyal to her Alma Mater. Pg' 76 S, Last Will and Testament of the 1921 Class of the Kansas City School of Law Realizing full well the vagaries of life and the disposition of those who are to follow, we, the 1921 Class of the Kansas City School of Law, being of sound mind, memory and capable of understanding, yet being ever mindful of that fact that the time for departure is well nigh upon us, do hereby make, publish and declare the following to be our last will and testament: FIRST. We give and bequeath to the present freshman class and the freshman classes to come our sincerest sympathies, believing that 'ere the time comes for their departure from the honored halls of this School, they will be sorely in need of our said sympathies. SECOND. To the present junior class we would give and bequeath a terrible shock in order that we might deprive them of their exuberant egoism, but we fear to do so knowing them to be so egoistic that they would not know when they were shocked, more especially so, since they are the last juniors for the next two years. THIRD. To the present classes and to the future classes we give and bequeath pleasant, though now remote, memories of the place around the corner fDe Baun'sJ. FOURTH. To our beloved instructors, one and all, we give and bequeath our fondest hopes for their achievement in the law and trust that some day when they have attained, that they in turn will distribute the many valuable lessons and pre- cepts which they must have learned from us, FIFTH. To those worthy souls whom our executors shall choose by a competitive examination based upon grades, we give and bequeath two choice rear seats close by the door, their position rendering them inexpressibly effective in effecting a hasty departure, invaluable to those heading south. SIXTH: To our beloved Elmer N. Powell, we give and bequeath our tattered and torn purses, and the tuition receipts therein contained. SEVENTH. To our beloved instructor, Oliver H. Dean, we give and bequeath our Big Ben Alarm Clock, set at the hour of 9:00 p. m. EIGHTH. To our beloved instructor, Thomas Costolow, we give and bequeath, and direct our executors to purchase a copy of The last few minutes, or Crowd it all in somehow. NINTH. To our beloved Dean Ellison, we give and bequeath the last six bottles of our stock of Hair Tonic, but we direct that our executors shall choose for him bottles marked less than one-half of one per cent. TENTI-I. To Judge James M. Johnson, our beloved instructor and kind friend, we give and bequeath our favorite copy of the 4th Edition of the Ford Joke Book or Twice Told Tales. ELEVENTH. To the women who will come after us to this school, we give and bequeath the following advice: Be certain you have a mirror in your purse, else your hat will be side-tilted and your nose be a-shine, for mirror the school boasts not. Be advised. We hereby constitute and appoint David P. Dabbs and John B. Gage to be the executors of this, our last will and testament, and further direct that they shall be required to give a good and sufficient bond or security for the proper discharge of their duties. IN TESTIMONY WI-IEREOF, we have hereunto subscribed our name and affixed our 1921 CLASS OF THE K. C. S. OF L. Signed, sealed, published and declared by the above named testators, as and for. their last will 'and testament in the presence of us, who at their request, in their presence, and in the presence of each other, have hereunto subscribed our names JOHNNY D. LAWSON, TOMMY M. COOLEY. seal this 18th day of May, 1921. as witnesses. SUSAN MANDEL, '21, Attorney. Page 78 J .19 ws' I X - 1 - . l ' Q 1' Q: ' L' if ' V' s 4 .1 ' 1 ' V? : ai l ' il: 'fhYLo'K The Sixteenth Annual Banquet, Hotel Muehlebach, February 22, 1921 Toastmaster ........................................ .... 'z . . . .Peter Richard Etue Tell me lhy company and I will tell thee what thou art. -Cervantes. Sparks of Idealism ..................................... Harold C. Marshall, '24 Women and The Law .... .... M iss Marie Jensen, '24 Public Opinion ...... ............. . Denard Hicks, '22 'A ? ? 'l ..... Raymond Warren Curran, '22 Ross H. Rheem I Thomas Bomar Vocal Selection-The Kansas City School of Law Quartette l Eg3vgidSiFTraCewe11 L Paul E. Bindley Washington's Ideals , . . .... Rufus Bell Burrus, '21 Our Present Problems ....................l.............. William J, Coonrod, '21 Here you would know and enjoy what posterity will say of Washington Address- George Washington ................ .......... H on. Francis H. Trimble Presiding Judge of the Kansas Court of Appeals Presentation by Alumni of Painting of the late Hon. William P. Borland- John W. Patrick, Artist, by Hon. Henry L. Jost of '99, on behalf of Alumni Acceptance by Hon. James M. Johnson, former member of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, on behalf of the Faculty and School. To live in hearts 'we leave behind is not to die. --Campbell From a New View Point .....,............................. Judge Samuel A. Dew Presentation of Picture of Graduating Class of 1920, by Raymond W. Moore, '20 Acceptance on Behalf of the Faculty- Hon. Oliver H, Dean, President of the Kansas City School of Law. Pate 79 Nothing at Some Length fBy Louise Schutte, 'ZIJ When they asked me to write some poetry or a love story for the Pandex and secured my promise, given in an unguarded momentg while wondering when, if ever, Mr. Dean was going to give the exam on Corporation, and hoping with both hands it would mostly be if ever, I realized at once the honor but not till just now the responsibility. My fountain pen is full of ink, my brain full of oozie, and the white paper stares blankly and questionly into my even more blank and questioning face. However now is a good time to show the advantage of my law training which should enable me to say nothing at some length. Most of our quizzcrs will concede that this is one fault in the list to which I can truthfully answer 'tnot guilty and at this late hour it would not be fitting to cast even a slight doubt on their keen judg- ment. My heart was never so hard, nor my nerve so weak. After all perhaps I am entitled to a little talk for it is still rather unusual for a girl to study law and her conclusions about it might decide some other girl who is hesitating, undecided to take the step. It has not been dry and tiresome, as eve1'yone who wished to encourage me assured me it would be, but vital and interest- ing and satisfies that natural human craving to see the wheels go round as our study of legislative methods shows us and we see the results in the innumerable cases we read. More and more girls realize what a factor such a study is for the broad mind that is so necessary to the modern woman, and surely if anything could make the sex that now relies on instinct take to logic it would be law, for an attorney must see many sides to each case he takes, including the sordid tiresome side of necessary recompense, which, as a necessary evil we are taught to dispose of as soon as the case, like the historic rabbit, is caught. Our instructors are all lawyers of renown and it is a great privilege to receive the benefit of their wisdom and advice, so generously given, that the coming gen- eration of lawyers may profit by the knowledge which the extensive study and ex- perience of these men qualifies them to instill into us, and by examples to inspire in us their own high ideals. And if at times half the class has left at fifteen minutes to nine in order to catch the nine o'clock Leavenworth car, we may be forgiven now, as we will not be able to do it next year. The relation with my fellow students has been one of unalloyed pleasure. They have shared apples, candy and exam papers in time of need with a pleasing liberality that will be remembered long after the candy and apples are consumed and the exams mercifully forgotten. Each year of our associations has had its own fresh and different, but always enjoyable experiences. The first year we met often to discuss ice cream and the League of Nations with surprising impartiality and to plan for moot courts to develop our minds. The second year the little class was all but swamped under an avalanche of heroes returned from France and other places, and We listened, while envying their marvelous imaginations to their moving tales of accidents by air and flood, and of French girls, to whom they nobly recited the constitution on moonlight evenings while not capturing towns that were never on any map. This last year we have settled into a comfortable friendship which has been entirely satisfactory though terror of the Bar exam has been near and frightful at tinies. It has been a busy three years and the time now seems far distant, when I entered Law School so diffidently, feeling that a diploma would mean that I would be as clever as a fiction lawyer in the Saturday Evening Post, and although with achievement comes the usual realization that nothing epoch making has been accom- plished, yet there have been many experiences that I would not like to have missed and in the future it will be wonderful to point to eminent legislators and judges and say I knew them when they went to the Kansas City School of Law. Page 80 The Class of 1922 We the students of the Junior Class in order to establish justice and promote the general welfare of our most noble institution, came into be- ing as a disorganized gang of freshmen in Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen soon after the great conflict For Democracy. Of course we also came with the idea of improving ourselves somewhat as we went along and we have done all of these things, yes even more. Justice has been established. There are no more boss elections in our school because the class of Nine- teen Hundred and Twenty-Two does not approve of such methods. Our most noble institution The Kansas City School of Law has been helped by our presence which brings with it upon proper request and oft times demand of the Treasurer a certain amount of tuition which is most wel- come after the dark and gloomy days of the war which took away so many students not only from our own but from every other law school. We have made most prodigious strides toward a knowledge of the Law and are not quite There but are drawing nearer. We have already passed one or two landmarks. Dabbs in Blackstone and Leacy in Everything are the two most important. We were all glad when these barriers had been surmounted. All of the precedings is a mere matter of recital and not binding on anyone. It may or may not interest you. Of this we are powerless to determine for we were ordered to write it by the faculty, for the faculty, but you can plainly see by a careful and diligent examination and inspec- tion that it is not Hof the faculty. Perhaps it will not be amiss to tell how we made The Kansas City School of Law safe for Democracy. We came in as freshmen, unbossed, uncorrupted and unled and we are still disorganized. We elected officers in 1919 as peacefully and placidly and with as little commotion as the organization of the Czhecko-Slovak Republic. All subsequent elections have been of greater success. Early in our history we gave the women of our ranks equal political rights with the men. This has done much to purify our elections which are said to resemble very much a Quaker meet- ing in which every one has a voice. The women also have equal privileges in all other matters pertinent to the make up of a law student, includ- ing, when Judge Reynolds is not looking, smoking in the class room if they care to do so. Equality is equity is our slogan. The election in Nineteen Hundred and Nineteen was a success so far as clean politics were concerned but our chief executive Lynn Farrar, soon became overworked by the tremendous duties imposed upon him and when last heard of he was going East on Twelfth shouting, Give me Liberty or give me Death. We have since learned that he is still at liberty. P. Hardman, true to his name, was not so easily dislodged as president of vice or more properly Vice-President. He remained and lived to see himself the President of the class during the second half of the first regime. He was supplanted as Vice-President by Ingraham who, a Scot to the core, promises to rival his fellow countryman Mr. Carnegie in the steel industry but in the steel in- dustry only, for Ingraham has little or no use for books, he getting the most of his knowledge by the absorption method. F. C. Kendall as Treas- urer, Miss Marion O'Keefe as Secretary, Clark Tucker as Sergeant-at-Arms stood high in the minds of the multitude and were permitted to hold office during the entire first year. During the second regime there was some evidence of a reign of terror but it did not develop into anything alarming. The revolutionary element Page 81 threatened to contest the election of Papa Harry Owens as President. They also questioned the first assistant who was also elected Vice-President but they were unable to overcome George's reputation for clean politics. Why they attacked the Chancellor of the Exchequer Denard Hicks, is still a mys- tery unless it was because of pure jealousy. Mr. Hicks was already an officer of the Court and a trusted servant of the governor, being a notary public. The attack on Miss McDonnell as Secretary was one of the most preposterous moves the Bolshevists made and it goes to show that Bol- shevism has no semblance of the ancient chivalry which has been ac- corded womankind throughout the ages. But if women must enter politics they must abide by the results and take the consequences as they may come for Equality is Equity. The attack on Hoops our official door- man was probably well founded but we will not divulge the reason, how- ever. It would not be proper to do so here as Politics are cruel. At the next and final election for the Junior year there was, more than ever be- for, a fear of a reign of terror but the class chose wisely and carefully the officers who are now at the helm. They are all well known to every one, not only in their class but in the whole Law School as well. They are: George Aylward, President 3 R. G. Cowan, Vice-Presidentg D. Franklin fPonziJ Parker, Treasurer, Miss Mary McDonnell, Secretary and Edward Mandeville Tracewell, Sergeant-at-Arms. As to what will be our policy in 1922 we will not say here. It is not our purpose to prophesy or to foretell, we are simply to record a small portion of past events. We will say this, however, that the class of Nine- teen Twenty-Two will be the largest, most capable and trustworthy ag- gregation that has ever marched forth from any institution in search of clients upon whom to practice and utilize the knowledge gained by con- stant application and diligent effort in the mysteries, intricacies and in- consistencies of the relation of man to his fellovvman and his creator the Law. Page S2 FRESI-IMEN Here comes another ten dollars, shouted by the mass of churning upper-classmen, and in thru the door of the Freshman Class room would shoot another embryo member of the Kansas City School of Law. It was the evening of September 20, 1920, the opening night of the school and the new students were being subjected to the annual method of introduc- tion applied for the benefit of the Freshmen by the upper-classmen. The largest class in the history of the school finally settled down to hear its first lecture by Judge Johnson, who in answer to the repeated cries of the upper-classmen massed outside of the door to tell a story judge, announced that it was his intention to go thru the lectures this year and not take up the time in telling stories, and, forthwith proceeded to tell a joke to illustrate the reason for his decision not to tell jokes. Suffice to say that the judge endeared himself in the hearts of the mem- bers of the Freshman Class, as he has done in all the preceding classes that have been lectured to, by him, and will always be remembered as a master of English, a thorough student of the law, a wonderful dispenser of wit and a very entertaining and instructive lecturer, with all. Composed of individuals, with as wide a variety of temperaments and lines of activity as could possibly be gathered together in a group of two hundred, this year's Freshman Class has been and is acknowledged by all to be the brightest, the brainest, the most sincere, the most straight- forward and the greatest class in the history of the school. What war- rants this assertion? Why, every lecturer has taken pains to inform the class of its possession of these sterling qualities, the preponderance of evidence would estop the upper-classmen from denying these too evident facts and, if it were not for the overwhelming modesty of the Freshmen, they themselves could advance the most forceful and conclusive arguments of any, to substantiate the foregoing claims. Certain it is, that the lecturers always found the class members in a receptive and earnest mood. Never has it been known to occur, that any student would leave before the lecture was over, never has a student arrived at a quiz period without being fully prepared, never has one student ever attempted to answer roll- call for another and never has a single member of the Freshman Class ditched school in order to go to a dance, a show or a political meeting. The only holiday on the school calendar until Christmas being Thanks- giving day, a large number of our class were forced to take a voluntary vacation either on Wednesday or Friday night in order to mitigate their disappointment of Thanksgiving coming on a Thursday, which it did, by chance this year. Christmas found the members spending a great deal of their time in studying, not trying to catch up in any subjects, of course, for it has been already stated that the members of this year's class were all prompt and prepared at all class quizzes. The lectures of our Ex-Mayor, Henry Jost, were a source of keen delight to the entire class. Henry increased our respect for Blackstone and added to our desire to study his commentaries while he was hammer- ing criminal law at us in condensed quantities. The Ex-Mayor's ability to quote Blackstone, whenever and wherever necessary, to reach into a Page83 recess of his brain and pull forth Blackstone definitions and rules was a source of constant wonderment. Lecturer Elmer Powell showed the type of a real follower of the legal profession and managed to squeeze in, during his lectures on Domestic Relations, many ethical and moral principles for the honest-hearted and right-intentioned barrister to follow. Jack Gage who lectured on Sales shot over his ten week's of lectures to his Freshmen listeners who would listen sometimes with awe at those seven and eight minutes sentences that he would unwind. Close check discloses the fact, however, that Jack never failed to untangle his sentence and the ninety first box car would be coupled onto the locomotive that started the pull. By this time the members of the class had accumulated enough law, either by absorption or by application, to warrant their occupying the place of oracle on all legal questions in their respective places of business, home surroundings and among their unlegal or illegal friends. This state is always attained shortly after the beginning of a course of study, and comes just after the student can give a rather hazy but sufficient defini- tion of what he is studying and just before he reaches the state where he realizes that he knows practically nothing about what he is studying. This condition, however, is unescapable, it is as inexorable as fate, it comes to all, just like the mumps and the measles and should be welcomed with open arms by the recipient when it strikes him and enjoyed to the limit while it remains with him. The awakening comes only too soon and oft- times too abrupt. About six weeks after the opening of school it was suddenly decided by the members of the class to hold an election. The session was a hot ninety minute affair, rife with oratory, political stratagem and close bal- Ioting and ended with a choice of the class officers for the year. As usual, several of the Irish took an active part in the electioneering and there were several clashes between the Democratic and the Anti-Bossers. By a par- liamentary trick Cclaimed by the Democrats to be steam-roller politics, etc.J, the Anti-Bosses managed to slip in their candidate. Several of the class distinguished themselves in this election as politicians of the first water. Roberts, managed to forget his duties of fathering the jitneys long enongh to raise a rumpus in his particular corner. Whittaker, fresh from K. U., reeled off a line of flowered campaign talk that would do justice to an angel. Long proved himself a real campaign general. The event that puts the Kansas City School of Law before the eyes of the legal minds of Kansas City, more than any one thing is the annual banquet, on the evening of the anniversary of Washington's birthday. This year's affair was given at the Muehlebach Hotel and Kansas City's lawyers and judges turned out enforce. More than fifty per cent of the law students were in attendance, the members of the Freshman Class rallying with Vim. Miss Ruth Jensen, the only woman speaker of the evening made the Freshmen feel proud that she was a member of our class with her admirable talk on Woman as a Lawyer. The writer was the other representative of the Freshman class and as he did not have to dodge any plates or water bottles and few left the room when he arose to talk fprobably because he was the first on the programl, it was voted that the Freshmen had a successful representation at the banquet. The last three lecturers of the year were greatly enjoyed by the class. Judge Middlebrook in addition to dishing our huge quantities of Kent, Paze B4 slipped in a lot of English and American legal history. John Pew showed his love for the law school when he insisted upon getting out of a con- valescent's bed in order to deliver a couple of his lectures. His faultless flow of English, clothing his legal logic and explanations made it easy for the most restless to listen to Torts on Wednesday evenings. Then Berger with his vigorous delivery and his easy companionship with supreme court cases on Agency rounded out the Week with a 100 per cent bang. A brief of the Freshman year would not be complete without refer- ence to our four capable quiz masters, Leacy, Costolow, Graves and Dabbs. To say that the quizzes were entertaining is putting it mild finstructive is impliedj. The quizz masters all had an inimical way of bringing up little cracks, here and there during the quizzes, that not only clarified their points but relieved the tedium and boredom of a classroom. Of all, we will remember Dabbs the most for his humor, the dry humor of a typical Missouri country town lawyer. Some of his sayings are almost epigrama- tical, one of which was his famous uThe good Lord knows what a woman or a jury will do. Leacy never liked anything better than a good argu- ment and the sessions would sometimes become almost lurid with heat from the flow of words in the atmosphere. Looking back over the year, there is not a Freshman who can not truthfully say that it has been a highly interesting, instructive and en- joyable time. Many a humorous incident will flash back in the memory that will cause a chuckle or two, many an admonition by one of the lec- turers or quizz masters will have been indelibly imprinted in the brain, many a friendship that will last thru the oncoming years, will have been started and to the most of us will come the satisfaction that after all, we have acquired a rather good foundation stone upon which our legal struc- ture of the future shall rest. HAROLD E. MARSHALL. 2:35 it f f' X is Page S5 WHY THE SCHOOL? fBy R. T. Cooper, 19245 After quite a number of years experience in employments and busi- ness for and with others, on the Pacific Coast, it has now been my good fortune to indulge a desire of many years standing by entering a course at the KANSAS CITY LAW SCHOOL Qnightsj. At the threshold of the course, one feature of the school challenges at- tention and has caused more contemplation than the law itself, why this school? Here is a school, a night school by virtue of necessity, because all of the faculty are constantly employed during the day time in the active pursuit of their profession. In the general schooling of ordinary business experience, the prevalent rule along skilled orders and business aggregations seems to be to dis- courage rather than to foster the learning of those professions on the part of the present exponents, from various reasons, prominent among which appears the attitude, first: UI want my boy to do better than fol- lowing in my wake, second, a desire to reserve the benefit of the occupa- tion to the present incumbents by not teaching or developing others by whom wages might be lowered thro reducing the demand in ratio to the increased supply, or, the newer edition of performers might even develop a greater degree of efficiency than the teacher, so the motive in the school of experience in ordinary business relations seems to be self-preserva- tion by a doctrine of prevention of competition by restriction, applied to the rules of acquisition of the profession as well as by actual performance. But here, is an apparent paradox, a body of experienced, active prac- titioners, some ripe in years and others who still have a bright recollec- tion of their own school days, engaged in teaching all who care to come to master the profession by which this very corps of instructors are earn- ing their own livelihoodg the theory of financial emolument is at once un- tenable because scarcely a college in the realm could afford to tender a pay roll sufficient to event tempt these men from their active practiceg second, they evidence too much pleasure in their occupation to consider such an offer if madeg third, the school was actually run at a loss for a good many years and although it is now reversed in that respect, yet, how can these busy lawyers and judges find the time to leave their active pressing duties to be on hand each night regardless of all other considera- tions of business and social activities for the purpose of equipping a small army of men and women each year to become skilled in their own pro- fession? I am informed that the Kansas City Law School is one of the forty per cent of law schools which did not suspend during the late war, while sixty per cent of schools of law were suspended in the United States, a glowing tribute to the devotion of the instructors and an illustration of one of the traits of the student-body which helps to account for the high percentage of successful and useful lawyers produced by this school. It would ill-become amember of the class of 1924 to indulge such a rash presumption- as to think any of these men might fear an assault upon their own professional citadel by any of these embryo legal aspirantsg their Page 86 positions are already too secureg their ability and experience too firmly established, but at the same time some of these ablest instructors have incidentally remarked before the class of certain 1'ebuffs they have ex- perienced in active practice at the hands of some of their former studentsg yet, far from expressing umbrage or animosity they have seemed to relish the skill and ability developed by members of a former class even though evidenced by their own reverses and apparently appreciate the other's skill and sharpen their own determination to delve deeper and take on more of the characteristics of Gibralter, i. e., impregnability. ' LAW, we are told signifies a rule of action, and is applied indis- criminately to all kinds of action whether animate or inanimate, rational or ir-rational CBlackstone B. 1, p. 381. And under this general definition is the subdivision called Municipal Law, properly defined to be a rule of civil conduct prescribed by the Supreme power of the State, commanding what is right and prohibiting what is wrong Cibid p. 443. At the first blush this definition strikes the beginner as an extravagant statement, but as he begins to scan the bulging volumes of the Statutes of Missouri 1919 numbering 13890, the Missouri Appeal Reports 190 volumes of about 700 pages each, the Mis- souri Supreme Court Report nearly 300 volumes of 600 to 800 pages, the constantly increasing budget of City Ordinances, steps into the law lib- rary and receives a superficial impression of the U. S. Reports and in imagination flits across to the House of Lords and gazes awe struck upon the printed embodiment of the English procedure, the conviction is forced home that Blackstone's definition was pretty near the mark. It is contended that a knowledge of the law would eliminate trans- gression as experience abundantly proves that acts in derogation of all law both human and Divine are committed regardless of laws already well known and understood and with a wanton indifference of consequences, but there is a large percentage of infractions of law unintentionally com- mitted and in ignorance of the law for which the penalty must be paid be- cause uignorance of the law excuses no man, and every man is presumed to know the law in his own state, but this presumption is not a correct statement of the factsg however, a knowledge of the law would undoubted- ly avoid a vast volume of the present litigation by enabling the law-abiding citizens to shun the pitfalls and mistakes into which they now are precipi- tated as for example: If the present series of traffic ordinances in one of our modern cities should be at once put into operation in a city of some new country where such laws had not been before, the police and courts would be submerged by an avalanche of violations committed by good and law-abiding citizens harboring no intention of wrong-doing, simply because they were unacquainted with the laws and their purposesg while in our modern cities where the same law is the outgrowth of traffic and the fa- miliarity of the people therewith in fractions of the law are reduced to a minimum, so, as the time goes by if the great body offthe people could come to a knowledge of the law, its genesis and purposes, doubtless a great bulk of the present litigation would be avoided, and as the citizens pro- gress in learning and developing so in direct ratio the nation. Speaking as a citizen, it is generally more or less hazily understood that the laws are made and enforced, as a matter of course, but a com- Parle 87 prehension of the methods and impressions upon the average mind may be summed up in a suggestion of technicality and contention over fine points on which the results may be Won or lostg the legal profession con- sidered fine men and good citizens or otherwise according as the individ- ual's experience at law may have been pleasant and profitable or to the contrary. But beginning to look from within, out, even the beginner soon has a different comprehension and estimation of the laws, and law- yers take on a different aspect, the vision now portrays malefactors se- questered and criminals punished by the agents of the law as enforced by the lawyers, the rights of the innocent and oppressed vindicated and restored by the same law, put into operation by the activities of the sarne lawyers and decrees of the judges, and where a weak spot is found in the law it is remedied by legislation, but here again, legislation is and must be, guided by the judgment and learning of those versed in law and the errors of the inexperienced law-makers detected and corrected or at least their application in a wrong direction prevented by the same lawyers and judges until the court houses instead of seeming places of fear, trembling and uneasiness, become the citadels of justice where the vindication of right and correction of wrong is the fruit of a splendid avocation wherein monetary consideration is a secondary one and every Right has found its remedy, The essence of freedom consists in the supremacy of the law over personal will, whether it be the will of the one, the few, or the many, has been riveted in the minds of the class by our Maxim Specialist: Order is no less the law of human governments than of the Divine government, and individual convenience must be subordinated to it 1Cooley on Torts, p. 1211. The difference between Red Russia and the United States is the measure of the law in effect in the two countries, the laws in effect are the results of the wishes of sufficient of the people to obtain them and the degree of order represents and is the result of the will of the gov- erning or controlling power. The difference between human and divine governments may perhaps be measured in those respects by pretty much the same rule. In Russia, the dominating power got possession of the people in the country, who are now submitting to it with greater or less degree of willingness or resistance. In the United States, the people are desirous of a different kind and degree of control also representing the will of the great majority of the people who have attained to and are enjoy- ing a greater degree of adherence to law and order even to the subjection of the will of the individual or the few to laws of a high caliber and the principle holds good by history and present experience the higher and better the standard of the laws to which the people develop and adhere, so in a direct ratio are the people raised from degredation, misery and crime and ignorance and approach the ideals We are taught as being heavenlyg in fact the difference between the future mecca of the Christian world and the other domain usually mentioned in terms describing thermal de- grees of a high altitude, is the difference in the government prevailing in the two places of abode, and the beings who gravitate to the latter or elevate themselves to the former do so by adherence to the laws prevailing in the place to which they finally congregate where conditions prevail to which their inclinations and development have drawn them. While the laws and governments of the people have risen contem- poraneously with the rise of nominal christianity in the world and so, Page B8 in a measure, the laws have been improved and developed under the civil- ized and christianized people and government, these higher and nobler ex- pressions of law and their system of development and enforcement may be termed the out-growth of the Divine law referred to by Blackstone as ap- plied to and finding expression through the human government on the earth, yet ecclesiastical governments are powerless to enforce their laws be they ever so good and the embodiment of beneficial principles, it there- fore falls upon the LAW and the interpreters and enforcers of that law to govern this world. A stewardship of justice, equity and right in the government of the world under principles emanating from Divinity itself, for after all else is said and done armies have wrought havoc or in justice defended the right as the case may be, back again, swing all the issues, to the supremacy of the law according to the ideals of the people, its in- terpretation and application by its ministers, the lawyers. So, while it is not given to us to know the modus operandi of the future world, its systems, courts and forms of actions, and while ecclesias- ticism as representing more or less accurately the Divine idealism of gov- ernment is powerless to govern by enforcement of its principles or man- dates, and is limited to raising the desires of the people for the better and higher things, and to a rejection of the exemplifiers of those principles incompatible with its tenets and standards, to the law, the lawyers and the judges, this power has been delegated in the government of the world, a calling possessing the dual essence of righteousness combined with justice and the power of their attainment, a truly honorable profession, worthy of the best and highest ideals possible of achievement by the fraternity, and upon those to whom this responsibility falls rests the burden of judging righteous judgments, which will not need reversal in the court of last appeal the Judge of all the earth. Why the school? The answer, then, is found in the attributes of nobility, liberality, liberty and justice embodied in a profession allied to that force which finds satisfaction in imparting to others that which to itself has been found to be the thing of greatest value. Q , b Page 89 Honorary and Associate Members of the Senior Class Generally lectures on Private Corporations do not create the outside interest that the course has this spring. Several ladies, who are not members of the class, have been attending. The interest of Mrs. Alice Dean Green was easily understood, she being the daughter of the lecturer. Mrs. Van Valkenburgh, Miss Ridenour and Miss Simpson evidently had more than a passing interest. On the evening of Mr. Dean's last lecture, Mr. Powell being in the chair, Mrs. Ragan moved to make these ladies hon- orary members of the Senior Class. This motion was most enthusias- tically seconded by Miss Rosenberger, Mr. Etue and Mr. Kimbrell and was carried. With appropriate formality Mr. Dean conferred the degree of H. A. on the ladies-but Miss Ridenour was not satisfied with one H. A., and suggested that another be added-thus producing a new combination of H. A. H. A. Members of the Senior Class will keep secret the wierd mean- ing of these letters. After the expression of appreciation and esteem of the class for Mr. Dean and his fine course of lectures, came a surprise for him. On behalf of the class, Mr. Etue in a few well chosen words, presented Mr. Dean with a beautiful brief case. In accepting the gift, Mr. Dean said he was just as well pleased as if the class had given him a farm. He probably realized the financial resources of the class and was glad it had not gone in debt for a farm. The singing of the Broadway Quartette was heartily encored and they generously gave several numbers. Thus closed the last and only party of the Senior Class-and now we are wondering if Mr. Dean will write the book on Private Corporations, which it was suggested he should write. To Mr. Ladd Not to be outclassed by the Senior Class '21, and in exactly the same spirit of high appreciation, the Juniors, '21, also got together and purchased a handsome portfolio as a token of their affection and appre- ciation of Honorable Sanford B. Ladd. A special meeting and somewhat formal program was arranged at the presentation exercises. President Dean made one of his strong and happy addresses, together with members of the Class, while the quartette, con- ductd by Mr. Paul E. Bindley, were up to their usual standard in the fine music rendered by them in honor of this occasion. President Dean kindly arranged to have present the honor 'tassociate members who were admitted to the Senior Class a few weeks prior, and these distinguished ladies gave additional inspiration to the affair. It was a fine thing, a fitting thing for the Juniors and the Seniors to thus manifest their great admiration and affection for these distinguished, learned members of the faculty. Their marked appreciation of the thoughtful kindness of the class members, of whom they a1'e both so fond, made the special hono1's shown them more than worth while. Pane 90 You Never Can Tellw tBy Lena B. Ruddy, 19247 For heaven's sake, Betty, what's the matter? You've been sitting over there all hunched up gazing off in space for over five minutes. Might as well 'fess up and ease your conscience. I saw you strolling off the campus today with Paul----- Wrong again, broke in Betty. I'm not thinking about Paul or anyone else right now. I'm worried about the formal next Week. iiWOF1'1Qd?yy asked Jane in a tone in which mirth and surprise were each strugging for supremacy. Yes, worried, responded Betty, and as she spoke quickly shifted her glance from Jane's face to a soft mass of fluffy, glistening cloth carefully spread out on, the bed-her new party dress which had only just arrived from the MOd1St6yS. You see, she continued, for three years now I have worn bouquets, like all the other girls', furnished by the local florist. They are pretty I know, but somehow next week I want orchids, lilies of-the-valley, violets, etc., to set that off and she designated her dress with a nod of her head. If Edward Milbrook weren't so busy at home taking care of old Mrs. Thomas' aches and Mrs. Edgerton's croupy youngsters he might have time to come up for the danceg but he says it's impossible right now. He always chooses a corsage exactly apropos to the occasion, yet, oh, so dif- ferent, Betty dreamily added. 'tWell, if that's what you are worried about, Betty Crawford, I think you would be ashamed, put in Jane. UI know no one ever sends lovelier flowers than Jim and he gets them right here too, she haughtily con- tinued as though glad of an opportunity to defend Jim. There, there, dear, I wasn't poking fun at Jim's or any one else's flowers, quickly put in Betty. I merely want some from the city, and she hesitatingly went on wrinkling her forehead meditatively and kicking off a pump, t'if you'll only help me a little I have a plan to get some. Have I your promise ? I don't know, Betty, answered Jane shaking her head. Once or twice your schemes have come so near bringing dire disaster to us both that I can't promise until I know what you mean to do. Well, I only want you to wire Edward that I've appendicitisf' ex- plained Betty, and that I'm to be operated on next Tuesday-that's the day of the dance you know-and I'll bet you that banana split you owe me that my flowers will be forthcoming. Will you do it ? Oh, Betty, I'm too superstitious to do that. Just suppose you would get sickg and, Went on Jane in a convincing tone, you couldn't wear Edwa1'd's flowers when you are going with Paul. 'Tm not going with Paul, quickly retorted the other. You're not going with Paul! Then whom are you going with ? Please don't ask me that as I want to surprise everyone, pleaded Betty. Only just send the telegram for me. There, that's a sweet girl, coaxed Betty getting up, crossing the room, and putting her arms around Jane who was seated at the writing desk. Just help me this one time and I promise never, never to ask you to take part in one of my schemes again. In fact, I intend after this stunt is over to act the part of a Senior even if I never hope to feel more than a Freshman. l . U Betty's voice died out and there was a long silence, only this time it was Jane who sat gazing into space. P H 91 Jane Cunnington was Betty's truest friendg they had been playmate, chum and schoolmate during the full twenty-three years of their lives. Yet the principle that unlikes attract each otherl' proved no exception in this instance. Jane was a tall, slender girl with auburn hair and olive skin, full of fun, popular and a possessor of a mind so brilliant that it was with- out much effort that she reaped a full harvest of prizes during her uni- versity career. In fact, some professors jokingly hinted that Jane fur- nished brains for both girls. Betty, on the other hand, was a merry, vivacious, whirlwind coed, with black wavy hair, dark eyes, a complexion that rivaled the snow, and feet that always danced and tripped but never walked. Her somewhat proud turn was offset by her friendly voice. She was fond of sports, if not of studies, and in her Sophomore year had been voted the most popular and beautiful girl in the University. Indeed, her popularity might be likened to that of an orchid among a group of debutantes. Another difference between the two was that Jane early in her Fresh- man year met Jim McElrod, and a friendship between the two sprang up which soon ripened into love, for Jane's engagement was no secret as she had been pinned since late in her Junior year. Betty was quite the antithesis of her chum is this respect. She was the ideal of the girls, the inspiration of the football players, and the source of much enmity among the boys in general. Yet, despite all this attention, she kept her heart under control and never seemed to be more than momentarily infatuated with any one of them. Hence, it was somewhat of a surprise to her sorority sisters when, after Betty's return in the fall of this, her senior year, from three to four letters weekly bearing the postmark of a western city and addressed to her in the same masculine handwriting began to arrive. After much di- rect and cross-examining, Betty admitted that her correspondent's name was Edward Milbrook 5 that he was a young doctor in C---, who had graduated from Harvard two years beforeg that she had met him a few summers before at her aunt's in C where she always spent most of her vacations. She neither admitted nor denied her engagement. Well, you'll do it, won't you ? once more questioned Betty. Yes, reluctantly promised Jane, but only on one condition-that after this prank is over and your whim satisfied you will never again have 'Exitus acta probat' for your motto. Will you promise ? I'll promise you anything you ask now that you've agreed to help me get my flowers, cried Betty, delightedly. I just hope nothing goes wrong and that you don't sure enough get sick, hesitatingly added Jane. Oh, I haven't a doubt or fear in the world, Betty quickly assured her beaming with the smile of an optimist who is born, not made. Let's see, this is Thursday. If you wire Saturday, the flowers can't arrive much before Tuesday, went on Betty planning the details with her customary care. But Betty, exclaimed Jane, had you thought that a bouquet for a sick financee will not be a corsage ? Oh, yes, I'd thought of that, but any beautiful bunch of flowers can easily be arranged in corsage fashion by skillful hands such as you have, my dear. Only let the flowers arrive, added Betty with eyes raised heavenward as if in prayer, and we'll make them suitable to grace a danc- ing frock instead of using them to brighten a sick room only to wither among the smell of ether. ik PF HF 2? PF Page 92 Saturday the following message was flashed over the wires to the little town of C----, a suburb of Chicago: Edward Milbrook, CQ1, Ill., Betty seriously ill with appendicitis. To be operated on Tuesday. Her chum, Jane Cunnington. FF Pk elf ek HF Monday evening after school when Jane opened the door of her room she was stunned for the moment by the gorgeous and exquisite box of flowers which lay open on the bed and around which Betty was dancing and laughing, stopping occasionally to bury her face in the mass of blos- soms, as tickled as a child with her first doll that opens and shuts its eyes. 'tThey've come, they've come, she cried, and they are lovelier than any ever saw. Come on in, Miss Jane. And grabbing the box and pushing it under her friend's nose, she continued, Now doesn't that one tiny sniff compensate you for your part in the prank? Jane didn't answer. She admired the flowers extravagantly many times during the evening, but she wore a perplexed look. Fortunately, Betty was so engrossed in her dreams of the next evening that she failed to notice Jane's uneasiness. Just before going to sleep that night Jane once more curiously in- quired, Betty, who is your company for tomorrow night ? Tut, tut, reprimanded Betty, 'tThat I cannot tell. Only, she added after a pause, it's not Paul. By the way, went on Jane as though oblivious of Betty's evasion, fate seems to be with you, for the drop in the temperature last night caught the florist unprepared, and Jim says the boys are not sure they'll be able to get any posies at all for tomorrow evening. So you'll doubtless be spared the task of trumping up a plausible excuse for wearing another man's flowersf' That hadn't worried me in the least, chuckled Betty, as she said Good night. it ak ak ak gk Betty Cunnington, you are always pretty, but tonight you are un- usually beautifulf' cried Jane in a tone full of adoration such as is born only of a continuous and genuine friendship as existed between these two irls. g Nor was Jane's exclamation unfounded for, as Betty stood before the long mirror, there was reflected a beautiful picture of natural feminine charm and youth such as some are never permitted to see at all Kas no artist's brush could accurately reproduce the visionj but such as see, can never forget. l There's Maiette on the stairs now. I guess the ring was for one of us, said Betty. h C 'tYes, Misses, both you all's company's done arrived, broke. in Maiette, as she suddenly poked her black face in the door, and having delivered her message, as quickly withdrew. Q After an instinctive tuck of the hair, pat of the nose, and a final glance in the mirror, both girls started downstairs, Betty slightly in advance. As the curtain into the drawing room was folded back, two gentlemen Page 93 arose. The girls stopped short on the threshold for, while dear old faithful Jim was there, the other was a stranger. A startled Oh escaped from between Jane's lips as she quickly glanced at Betty, who was already half way across the 1'oom with out- stretched hand. How do you do, Edward, she nonchalantly, as far as surprise was concerned, asked, but with a voice filled with delight. Evidently the young man's shock bereft him of his voice for he only stood and gazed as one seeing a hallucination. Once more Betty said, i'How do you do, Edward, only this time in a whimsical manner. The-, then you're not sick, Betty ? stammered the tall, dark haired stranger still overcome with surprise. No, indeed, responded Betty with every dimple visible. Then Why that tlegram which has worried me so that I could not sleep or eat until I came to see for myself? Why, laughed Betty coquetishly, UI simply had to get you here some way as I made up my mind days ago to put you on parade tonight. 5. .I ng: OJKXI 'vig' 5 Ri! 1' .... X? . 61225, ,' 1 .ul I29! gr l,,- e g ,V A sheriff went out to levy on the contents of a house. The inventory began in the attic and ended in the cellar. When the dining room was reached the tally ran like this: One dining-room table, oakg one set chairs fsixl, oak: two bottles whiskey, full. Then the word full was struck out and replaced by empty, and the inventory went on in a hand that straggled and lurched across the page until it closed with the words: One revolving doormatf' A letter artist received a red hot note which consumed him with rage, but here is his reply: Sir-My stenographer, being a lady, cannot transcribe what I think of you. I, being a gentleman, cannot think of it. But you being neither, will under- stand what I mean. -Life. THE SILENT DRAMA. I The Talkative One: They say she is paid four times as much for acting in the pictures as she got on the stage. The Interested One: It would take more than that to induce some girls to give up talking: MATED-AND CHECKMATED. Bachelor fchirpilyj: Wei, old man, how's everything? Benedick Lgloomilyjs Oh she's all right. THE BREACH. Haven't seen you with Linda lately. Haven't parted, have you? To true, my boy. Two thou. and costs. WILLING TO CHANCE IT. Jill: You kissed me when you went away, Jackg but I was quite a kid then. Am I too big to kiss now? Jack: Oh, I dunnog I've kissed bigger. SPOILT. The Bore: Yes, I am always thinking of your happiness. I called yesterday to see you when you were out. I The Victim: Yes, but you go and spoil it by calling today when I am in. CONTEMPT OF COURT. The law is a sort of hocus pocus science that smiles in yer face while it picks yer pocket and the glorious uncertainty of it is of more use to its professors than the justice of it, Page 95 Judge Johnson: t'Mr. W. M. Anderson, what is a lucid interval? Bill: That's when a fellow that is insane a1n't insane, Mr. Jost to Middleton: lf I draw a knife on you and it's a piece of paper is that an assault? Sufferer from insomnia suddenly jumping to his feet: 'Tm not prepared this morning, Judge. Mr. Dabbs: If I should take charge of my brother's legal affairs would that be a gratuitous service? Kendall. 'Alf he was your brother-in-law. Nall: An agent who has two principals has no principle. Pew: How would you interpret the law which forbade a layman to lay hands on a priest, if the layman hit him with a gun? Tracewell: In that case I think hands would include arms and the layman would fall within the law. OUT INDEPENDENCE AVENUE. I asked a friend of mine the other day how he could afford to stay away from the Phi Alpha Delta meetings. He told me he saved money by so doing. I said, Howls that? Do you pay the chairman of the executive committee a nickel for a permanent leave of absence? He said, UNO, I figure my dope this way: It's worth a quarter to escape, so that deducting the nickel I pay the executive committee I am twenty cents ahead on every meeting! CLASS YELL LAW. Torts and contracts, administration, Sales and bailmcnts, and taxation, Trespass. trover. waste, replevin, Bar ExamfDgnation! ,.., TED BRYANT'S LOVE CODE. When a woman is sulky and won't speak-Exiter. If she gets too excited-AController. If she talks too much -Interrupter. If her ideas and yours do not coincide-Converter. If she is willing to come half wayiMe!er. If she comes all the wayflleceiver. If she wants to go further-Conductor. If she wants to go all the wayfllispatcher. If she proves you did her wronpz-Cumpensater. If she Hoes up in the air-Condenser. lf she wants chocolates -Feeder. If she will permit you-Kisser. If she wants to dance-Jazz With Her. Ten-year Mary saw her' mother Dolled all up-skirt a la sport. Mama, when will I be grown up ' And can wear my dresses short? 1 rmmw sf chime, munn I can shake my shoulders, I can shake my knees, I'm a free-born American, I shake what I please. Page 96 Have you anything to say before leaving the stand? asked the judge, after pronouncing a death sentence upon a negro murderer. Yes, suh, jedi-ze, replied the prisoner. I wants to say right here dat dis is gonna be a lesson to me. HIS SECOND SIGHT. The Romantic She: 'Alt was a case of love at first sight with him. The Material He: No, it wasn't. He didn't know she had money till the second time he met her. Love may be blind, but don't take chances and come home with a long silk stocking in your pocket. Dear Editor: What's your idea of a fine sight. -LOTTA BULL. I suppose you think I'll say hosiery, but guess again. Dear Doctor Parker: What are the three great plagues of the world? My expert diagnosis reveals that the three greatest are: Water on the knee, liquor on the hip and woman on the brain. LATEST BALLAD. We will now sing: The Liveryman's Sweet Daughter: All But Me Knew Her. DOWN WHERE THE MONEY IS. Ross Rheem: I take a lot of interest in my work. A girl may drive a coach, Or even a motor car, BUT THE GIRL WHO RIDES A-HORSEBACK Is stretching things too far. THE DYING HOBO. QAS Recited by Rube Shay in Excelsior Springs.J 'Twas dawn by a western water tank, One cold November dayg There in an open boxcar, A dying hobo lay. His partner stood beside him, With a sadly drooping head, Listening to the last words That the dying hobo said. Good-by old pal, I'm going To a land where all is bright, Where handouts grow in the bushes, And you can sleep out every night. The dying hobo's head dropped back, And as he sang his last refrain, His partner stole his shoes andlsocks And grabbed an eastbound train. If you want to see an Honest to John riot, attend a Freshman class election- Rough stuff is right. Page 97 5 Mr. Dean: 'AIS there anything that you can't hold a cor- poration for'Z - Miss Schutte: Breach of promise, l ii.. N 'I r. from U . . . lent: I want to get a divorce from my husband. I Harvey Taylor: What are your charges '? yy Client: 'AMy charges? Good gracious! I thought I'd have to pay you. 56' Has anyone seen D. Victoria Hicks Sometimes known as sixty-six. - -From the French by Impuissance. WW? YUM g GLEE BLUE 3. THE ATHLETIC GLEE CLUB. Chief Athlete ............................ Harold C. Stoa At the Plano .............,............ Ross H. Rheem Vocal ........................................................ Paul E. Bindley Thomas J. Bomar Edward M. Tracewell There was a young chicken named Rose Who wore the most beautiful hose. They set the men staring, But she wasn't caring, For that's why she wore them, I s'pose. WHAT EVERY WOMAN OUGHT TO KNOW. iFrom the Davenport Democrat and Leaderj Rev. Mr. Rowlands gave his address following the supper hour, and about 75 women of the congregation were present to hear him. His subject was: The Kind of Service Men Can Render to the Church and to the World. OH, MY DEAR, YOU SHOULD HAVE SEEN HIM! fFrom the Hampton Iowa, Chroniclej The thieves took everything else he had in the room. Mr. Ferris borrowed a pair of Hants from the housemaid while he went out to a store and secured a pair of shoes, soc s, etc. Mr. Gostolowz Translate Ignorantia legis neminem excusatf' John Boterman: Ignorance of legs excuses no man. Page 98 OUR ENGLISH FRIENDS. - She Lafter her first inoculationbz I don't think I'll ever go again. I feel ter- ribly donc up! He: Nonsense-you look as fresh as paint. IN RE THE INSPIRED STENOG. h I dictated the well-known phrase at: law or in equity, and the I. S. transcribed it, At law or iniquity. Did she miss it very much 'I-La Salle. A good man who has gone wrong is in reality a bad man who has just been found out. Balzac said: Woman is a creature between man and the angels. How true, if it were not for her all men would have an easy road to heaven. Powder is the dust the gods have given women wherewith to blind the eyes of men, All men are not homeless, but some are home less than others, Man is often blind to virtue but never to beauty. The frail young thing who is too tired to run an errand for mother can wear out the huskiest man on the dance floor. Adam: 'tI'm going out to pluck a suit, my dear. Eve: I don't care, A-dam. WHY? Can't Leacy leave off the Bully Con in his talk before he starts a lecture? Can't we sit on the back row for Moochers' Heavenj during Ellison's lecture? Can't Sweeny stop asking questions? Can't Dabbs stay awake during a lecture? Can't Hicks use the big words he tries to use correctly? Can't we shut the windows during Gage's lectures? . I Can't Aylward ask a coherent question, bearing on something material? Can't lawyers run the world? Dingy Marshall is going to sue a member of the Senior Class for alienation-of affections. Well, we all told Anderson what he was getting into, but he took the risk of the employment, so to say. Announcing the Marriage of RUFUS BURRUS On or About June 15, 1921 Page 99 CORRECT THESE AND YOU CAN ANSWER EDISON'S QUESTIONAIRE. If Brandom and Ralston would put on black hose If Palmer and Stoller would get their hair mussed up If Fred Klaber didn't look so sleepy If Miss O'Keefe would buy tobacco If Denard Hicks would get fat If Pete Etue would get thin If Backstrom got married every night If George Wallace ever knew If Tracewell went out with the same girl twice If Harvey Taylor intended to marry the girl If Boterman would get enough QU If Aylward would be still If Cowan's name were lVilliam Grapejuice Bryan If Tom Bomar would keep his mouth shut If Boterman would never cut If Tommy Walsh would keep on the water wagon If Jimmy Anderson wouldn't have his eyebrows plucked If Rube Shay wouldn't hang crepe Cat the startj If Miss O'Keefe and Taylor weren't always together If Lindsay Johnson would quit making wise cracks If the Melching brothers would get hard boiled If Courtney wasn't Napoleon's lieutenant If we knew what happened to Ross Rheem's twenty-two dollars If Sherratt Johnson didn't know his eggs If Ted Bryant was a woman hater If Marshall wasn't a Republican If Miss Redmond wasn't such a vamp If Miss Ruddy wasn't so stubborn If Nall and Capper were friends If Middleton had taken his wop friends to the dance If Jimmy Daleo wasn't in with Cameron Orr If Violet Evans was resistible If Watson Singer was a senior If Miss Jensen would only give us some encouragement If George Barrett would lay off the women If Paddock were a section hand LINGO OF THE LINGERIE. She was a fair-haired, fluffy little thing, who had taken a position as saleswoman in a department store. A few days later she met a boy friend and both stopped to have a little chat. How do you like your job ? inquired the boy friend. t'Oh, I like it very much, said the fluffy one. Only, they shift me about too much. At twelve o'clock I'm in hats, at three I'm in dresses, at four I'm in lingerie, at six I'm in stockings, and- I'll look you up tomorrow at eight, said he. Page 100 INSURANCE OF EVERY KIND GEORGE T. LONG CClass of 19203 Third Floor DELMAIN BUILDING Phones: Main 0544, Victor 9828 Ninth and Main Abstracts, Title Insurance, Escrows Abstracts made for property in Jackson and Clay Coun- ties, Missourig Wyandotte County, Kansas, which include Kansas City, Mo., Kansas City, Kans., Argentine, Rosedale, Liberty, Independence, Mo. Kansas City Title 85 Trust Company New York Life Building Assets Over S9S0,000 Kansas City, Missouri COMPLIMENTS OF BOB McGRAIL To My Many Friends of THE KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF LAW MCGRAIL SAY IT WITH FLOWERS B'?MEP5'i?6'i3?EMv'iE'ii5ii88i9. SCARRITT BLDG- GRANBEBAVE. The Commonwealth National Bank KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI Capital S250,000.00 Surplus S750,000.00 OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS G. M. SMITH, Chairman L. C. SMITH, President W. H. Avery, W. M. Hall, H. J. Coerver, J. T. Franey- Bc-sse Avery Co. Hall Estate. Cash' Ass't. Cashier. R. J. Potts, G. M. Smith, Jr. Chas S Alves, Pres.,W.,1-I. lVlcCrum.A vice-President, Investments. P rl fI'r11StCD. Dlamvnd C2501 C W, 1-1 wauei-, Fletcher cowherd, c E. Rieker, w. L.. Lacy, Capitalist, Real Estate k Lo 1' ncial Agent. Capitalist. A. L. Sh -man, J C. Swith. K. C Sk'4t C . Swith KL Henry. Law Books Nothing But Law Books Any Law Book Vernon Law Book Company PUBLISHERS AND SELLERS Kansas City, Missouri Over 4600 Cases Have Been Omitted From the Official State Reports oi Missouri Since 1915 .mivgg N making an examination of the decisions of the courts of last resort of Missouri to determine the J present state of the law on any given proposition, you would not be satisfied to confine your search to sets of reports containing only 40 per cent of the current de- cisions. This is exactly what you would be doing if you used the Missouri Supreme and Appeals Reports in your search. All of These 4600 Cases lEquivalent to 55 Volumes of State Reportsj are published in full in the Missouri Edition of the Southwestern The Missouri Edition covers ALL the decisions of the Missouri Supreme Court and Courts of Appeals since 1886. It occupies less than one-third the shelf room required for the official state reports. It makes current cases available promptly through the advance sheets of the Southwestern Reporter. It costs about three-fourths the price of the state re- ports and also includes the omitted cases not found in the state reports. Write to us for prices and terms of payment West Publishing Company SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA Accurate information As to Daily Business Transactions in Kansas City is Furnished by The Dail Re ord tEstablished 18881 Complete daily reports of the courts of Jackson County, also all conveyances of real estate. Official newspaper of Kansas City, Missouri. Carries 95 per cent of the legal no- tices published in this city and county. We furnish lists of deeds of trust nearing maturity also reports showing credit standing of any firm or individual. Published Every Day Except Sundays Home Telephone Main 3437 J N Qs Q X XX X Q S Sx X . X if fe Q sees P . . M , ' X X..X . .. --A- Y A B is 3 Q M ,xg, r -X-h Nm. X1 gi - - Q: ,x,,L , N ,xL. X S ' r wf1X,i3W-if Ei 'N X f H in I as M hh 4 hs .C N Qi Eleventh and McGee Streets Maker of PHOTOGRAPHS That Please H H, x mm X ' J W - , J mfw e J P - wr!! N AMF, ,lf l inac: r' 1 ,f V 1. , V, ,B :I -NIMH -'WEP ,'11?H:I7::: ft- as 4 .1 1' rj f Un f X W,JFflEEE-EeEUaE '+-a L vm if a ware J MIM, lil! 51122 Q, 555313, fwfr gm .- 1 RL, ' ' - :W Y WNV 'ff ' 'imma ,.f' - -fl-,ffiqsj ill!lgff, ' l i.2!,'lll9lll2?,'l I 1' El H tg r :1!1f:Eu1e,,,5 L M - , ,WV F' l i it ?IV Eleventh Street Scene Showing Location of od! Studio This Studio makes any style or size Photographs. If you have any kind of work in this line donft overlook this firm. HENRY MOORE, Photographer Eleventh Sz McGee Sts. Kansas City, Mo. Home Phone Main 8815 Bell Phone Main 4531 Send your Orders of Publication from the Independence Division of the Circuit Court TO The Jackson Examiner Independence, Missouri Rates-For Orders of Publication and Commissioner's Sales, fifty cents an inch an insertion. Four times is suf- ficient. Divorce-Ordinary Divorce Publications take a straight rate of 55.00 including affidavit. Accommodation-If you will mail your petition to us and in- clude docket fee, we will file for you and return re- ceipt showing the number of the case for your office docket. Telephone-Our telephone number is 6-J on the Home, and number 6 on the Bell. Home phone, no toll charge. Examiner Printing Company Independence, Missouri We print a daily paper The Independence Examiner Trustee's Sales must run twenty times in a daily paper. We charge two cents a line for each insertion. Send Your Legal Publications to- The Sentinel The oldest legal paper in Jackson County out- side of Kansas City, and you will be assured prompt service and satis- faction. Write New Sentinel in your publication. Over half a century old, but so up-to-date it is always new. Sentinel Publishing Co Independence, Missouri .lohn C. Bovard Commercial Printer Law Briefs a Specialty ligsli. 65?- tri Home Phone 722-24 Baltimore Ave. Main 2107 Kansas City, Missouri Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name Name ....... Name ....... Name ....... Autographs .........Address....... .........Address....... .........Address....... .........Address....... .........Address....,.. .........Address,...... .........Address....... .........Address....... .........Address........ .........Address....... .........Address........ .........Address........ .........Address........ .........Address........ .........Address........ .........Address........ .........Address........ .........Address........ .........Address........ .....,,..Address........ Page 109 Name ....... ......... Name ....... ......... Name ....... ......... Name ....... ......... Address. Address. Address. Address Name ....... ......... Name ....... ......... Name ....... ......... Name ....... ........ 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Suggestions in the Kansas City School of Law - Pandex Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) collection:

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