Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH)

 - Class of 1933

Page 26 of 108

 

Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 26 of 108
Page 26 of 108



Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 25
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Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 27
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Page 26 text:

The Class Prophecy of '33 In the merry month of May the Senior Class of '33 will graduate from the High School. That is, I hope that the Senior Class of '33 will graduate. And since such an illustrious group of pupils are leaving the school it seems a shame to let them go without knowing what is most likely to become of them. In such a case I shall endeavor to enlighten your slow brains as to just what shall happen to that Class. In the first place, I doubt whether you know what a great salesman Gordon Swartz is. He says that in a few years he will be running the Jerrold Store, but between you and me and a couple of gate posts I believe that he will be selling oats to hobby horses. And by the way those self same hobby horses will be ridden around by none other than Tom Weaver who desires to be a riding master. I seem to hear wedding bells in the distance for some of the members of the illustrious class. Now I wonder how Helen Oglesbee or Beatrice Katterjohn will like living on nice prosperous farms, or how Lenora Johnson will like the city? I can see Ralph Calhoun and Raymond Shipp coaching good basket ball teams and buying the teams big, black cigars after each game that they Win. They are not taking chances though, perhaps their teams won't win all the time. William Robinson Kraus on being asked what he was going to be when he got out of college, replied that he would be an old man. Won't we all! And then I see Mary Lou Black who is teaching an exclusive school for girls, telling them what they should and should not do. Mary ought to know! And also in the future I see C. L. Burkart astounding the music world with her achievements in obtaining music from those strange instruments the piano and the marimba. Just so that we do not forget the boys who get their start from Mr. Tam, I dimly see in the distance William Wolf who has, through much study and practice, won the hog calling championship of the world. And Wayne Rapp, Earl Breiden- bach, John Berry, Robert Deerwester, Ernest Sutermeister, Kyle Gordon and Walter Fry are still fighting the corn borer. To whom it may concern I wish to say that Virginia Hill is going to be a journalist, and if I am not mistaken Gerald Pfister is also inclined in that direction. And then I see those two little boys known by the names of Burt Harrison and Roxie Jones, doing a two-man vaudeville act which is laying their customers in the aisle. One look at their act and the customers are ready for the morgue. We all know what a good place the Navy is, but I doubt if any of us know as well as Mary K. Brown. So in that case all that I can say is that four years is a long time to wait. Those two hard working boys Earl Kelly and Lewis Arnett who have quite a bit of interest in the great A. and P. are slated to become Kenton's great chain store magnates. Work hard boys and some day I'll raise your pay fifty cents. I see nothing in the future but prosperity for Mary Jean Borton, Alice Weber, Marcella Predmore, Pauline Butcher, Vivian Mentzer, Edna McCormick, Marion Born and Mary Hart. Because you know P. F. Letart knows his stuff when it comes to teaching people how to type. Any business man whose wife does not understand him Page Twenty-two

Page 25 text:

1 I MARCELLA PREDMORE Fo'r the future be p'repa'red. Orchestra 1-2-3-45 Glee 1-2-3-45 Home Ec. Club 1-2 5 Com. Club 45 G. R. 1-2-3-4. EARL BREIDENBACH Let me do my work from day to day. Ag. Club 3-4. MARGARET GLOCK With the gift of talk, she is possessed. Home Ec. Club 1-2-3. Additional Seniors THEODORE DETWILER Success comes to him who waits. DONALD McCLAREN Eve'rybody's friend, Nobody's enemy. Football Mgr. 45 Basketball Mgr. 3. YE 3155555555EEE?-EEE!55'EEE!EYSEEEVE-'EEEEHEEEEEEEEEHE AVON PAYNE Here is a man. John Simpson Jr. High School 15 Mansfield Senior Hi. 25 Football 3-4. JOE WAGNER' , gf , ' Happy am I, from care I'm ffree, why a'ren't they all contented like me. , 14 MARION BoRNf Friendship is the wine of life. Page Twenty-one I ' YA



Page 27 text:

The Class Prophecy of '33 can obtain a good stenographer from that list of typists. For two other students of Mr. Letart's I can see Clyde Millisor and Harley Shrider winning fame in the International Typing Contests. And Neil Bradley, of all people, I can see operating a jewelry store in the fair city of Forest. Not only for the jewelry did Neil go to Forest. Tsk, tsk. Then too, I can see that the House of David is materially helped by the new members, Avon Payne and Joe Wagner, that is if Joe can become man enough to grow a beard. Leonard Goslee, the Sax player, and his orchestra, Jack Zingg, Harold Stewart, Lauren Holland, Thomas Cadwagan, Carl Goetz, Evelyn Chiles, Gretchen Haudens- child, foretell sad things for Rudy Valee and his orchestra. Peg Kaiser and Dot Higgins are slated to be the best women directors of the legitimate stage. When they are famous don't forget they got their start from Miss Doughton at K. H. S. William Willoughby, Philip Brielmier, Ray Shemer, Donald Martin, Clayton Kritzler and William Wilson have been destined by the gods to give their gifts to science. Let us hope that the gods were not wrong. I can see that Dot Schrenk's ambition has come true and she is an instructor in a Kindergarten. She is ably assisted by Mary Mulligan, Catherine Ault, Eleanor Baker and Margaret Glock. Ernest Pfeister, Theodore Detwiler and Carl Ewing are constantly worrying about the price of eggs. I wonder why? Perhaps it is because they are running a cream station in partnership. And who do you think is president of the Y. W. C. A.? None other than Betty Holycross. Dorothy Fitzpatrick, Mary Ellen Jacobs, Ella Jonash, Catherine Overly, Naomi Reed, Esther Sherman and Helen Marquis make their residence there while working in some other part of the city. Edna Naus is now editing one of the largest newspapers in Ohio. Her old schoolmates, Eva Shick, Mary Williams, Evelyn Culley, Dorothy McElroy, Allene Detwiler and Avonel Bryant work on her great and efficient staff. Bernard Cavin and Carlos Wilfe now have charge of a great number of chain barber shops, in which Grace Smith, Helen Owings, Pearl Marquis and Thelma Johnson work as manicurists, while Freda Kerns and Dorothy Linnington are work- ing as blonde hair specialists. Keel Bryant and Donald McC1aren are running a sports shop in partnership selling water buckets and a few other accessories. Paul Fisher came through and put a lot of boys to shame by getting good grades. I can see Paul, a prominent figure on Wall Street. with a tidy sum laid aside, from careful speculation on the Market. It is not every one that gets straight A's in bookkeeping. Now that practically every one has had his future read I think that I shall finish by saying that no matter how bright you get or where you go, some day, some place, somebody will throw you in the ground and pat you in the face with a spade. Norman Pyle Page Twenty-three

Suggestions in the Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) collection:

Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

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Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

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Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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Kenton High School - Echo Yearbook (Kenton, OH) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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