Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH)

 - Class of 1941

Page 1 of 104

 

Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 104 of the 1941 volume:

.155 - -- l - -,.,-5--ff' fl? -- :gg ',3g?f 'f ' 4 42144 -1 ' --- . W' 4 '- 1'? f iii, f 74df':?i ' .-. grlfff niggr 1 . if-:-J' fx 1 ,Al- ' F' V I h N'-!'7:,,1,, if- JN is .,ElZEl,iWlM1nWLw 1xWm ff- -1 1' 'r-5 Jig El.gi'f' , , ia .5 I.. Y r A Z-,i M :rg J- lwlivtjlfrici -Q ga i I ' T-'Q ' lj .F UV 9' W 1f.P'5 QYIQEQQQQ-,yug-3, li? f 2 - 1 - - mfQ52Umifllilbliilliillififlliiiiifliiill--33'f l - A- 5 ' g ilwwllli' r.'222j?S'2vrp'i!BT.1fm'mmmff.?E2Si---ffligfii' -1 Y Ml sgif.-.Aa-12 '2JE1EL1qr.e ' 'Ng .: vfy ,X ljf i all Kb- .iv ' ut, 'g 2' ,i 1-FP f'1:.. k TV , . E' L' EYE 5 Q 'JY--:iifmQimiginliuiffgf 4- ,gif-,, 4, X, -:J-2 -1- lllll2lilllulIlLai.A.-55, T' ---- --,gg - , Q 12' II X. f H- i X a-maF11iiHis--- wmnrn' , I' 1., M gm nllnn,nnnQ1llI1 Q i i i ' ,Eff- n -I 8' '4fL.':...f24f A -X - i A , 5 T' Qi i A1 i' ,Ku 1 -fa M X QL 'K' 'H' iiifdh 0'5 ,X .X ' 'ax x Original Hospital Building on Fourth St. Founded in 1891 THE LAMP published by the Class of 19411 of The Miami Valley Hospital LOUISE CLARK, Ellitor-in-chief SARAH LEE BANTA, Business Manager The light from the lamp of courage and hope Guides humanity on its way. Though the troubles of earth are of ponderous scope Our faith will dividends pay. Feed the lamp with the oil of wisdom And never let it die. For tomorrow's trials may test the Christian So lift the lamp up high. 2 - Mrs. E. F. Merker Contents Preface Class of 1941 Dedicatiml Under Classmen In Memorilfm Departments iiilliilgstrauon Campus Life Our Doctors Alumnae Preface HE RECENT years have seen the insidious progress of war. A steady stream of death and destruction has gradually displaced the principles of peace. In spite of chaos, doubt and danger, man must always endeavor to sustain life, promote health and help his friends who need his care. Therefore it is with sincere satisfaction that we present an advancement of a more humane nature -the progress of a hospital. The Class of 1941 has compiled material for this publication to present the developments of the past ten years. To give the best care and service both the Hospital and the School of Nursing have advanced in many ways. Science and the medical profession find it imperative that they be the first pedestrians on the road of progress. For this reason we have endeavored in The Lamp to give an account of the various activities, the new improvements, both in equipment and technique, and the new departments which have been established. We are greatly indebted to the various members of the Alumnae, our friends and subscribers without whose unfailing interest The Lamp could not have been published. The graciousness and kindness of the personnel of the various hospital departments in consenting to the use of their materials for photographic purposes, is greatly appre- ciated. The articles submitted by their directors make it possible to present a more accurate account of the latest developments in each branch of the hospital. THE STAFF or THE LAMP or 1941 Dedication E. R. CREW, M.D. Dr. E. R. Crew-friend, counselor and guide-devoted to his calling-successful in his development of this hospital- our lender for twenty-seven years. In pleasant recognition we dedicate The Lamp of 194-l. 5 + ' 1 IN MEMORIAM CLINTON D. Fira, M.D., F.A.C.P. HE NURSES of The Miami Valley Hospital have lost a devoted friend and teacher in the untimely passing of Dr. Clinton Durham Fife. For the past twenty years, patients, nurses and physicians of this hospital have sought his help and counsel. Doctor Fife spent his early years in Wilmington, Ohio. He was graduated from Hiram College, and in 1921 received the degree of Doctor of Medicine from The Western Reserve University. Imme- diately thereafter hc assumed the responsibilities of intcrneship in The Miami Valley Hospital. His sound medical judgment, devotion to duty and calm personality soon won the admiration of those with whom he came in contact. In his chosen field of Internal Medicine he carefully studied the problems of his patients. His helpful advice won for him many warm friends especially among the student nurses who frequently called upon him to care for them. As a teacher in The School of Nursing he lectured for many years on the subject of communicable diseases and he took great delight in stimulating the interest of the students in his classes. He was a member of the Montgomery County, Ohio State and American Medical Associations. His qualifications as an internist led to his election as a Fellow of The American College of Physicians. During the last decade he served as a Senior Attending Physician on the staff of The Miami Valley Hospital. This institution mourns his loss and will long remember his faithful service. - 6 as l ADMINISTRATION One of the most inspiring by-products coming from the multiplicity' of duties falling into the lap of a hospital administrator, is the knowledge that not only are patients of the present genera- tion being cared for but likewise that a continu- ing provision is being made through educational channels for perpetuation and constant improve- ment of hospital care for the future. Publication of The Lamp marks another ten year milestone in this fight for life and edu- cation. In retrospect, our work has been success- ful-in introspect, we must give all that we can in our individual ways to make the next decade even more successful. SL- 8 n ALBERT H. SCHEUJT, Administrator DR. E. R. CREW Superintendent of THE MIAMI VALLEY HOSPITAL from 1915 to 1941 V , . , , .. , ig' AM i A Miss VERNICE M. SWENSON Acting Director of School of Nursing Miss Louise SCI-IROEDER, Director School of Nursing from l928 to 1940 LASS OF 1941, I congratulate you on your very fine publication. I know graduates of this school will appreciate their copies of The Lampf' During the past three years, I have learned to know each of you well and have enjoyed my associations with you. After you graduate, I hope many of you will remain on as general staff nurses in your own hospital. I hope some of you will prepare for administrative and teaching positions. The nursing profession needs nurses who have preparation in all fields. My best wishes to each of you. 4- 9 + Board of Trustees Chas. F. Kettering, VV. A. Chryst William Mathews Carlton W. Smith Honorary President Mrs. P. S. Church Benedict Olch, M.D. Mrs. Morris E. Stern F. L. Canby, Pres. Robert Cowden, Treas. Phil. Porter, D.D. Joseph Thal E. D. Smith, V. Pres. Mrs. Chas. Craighead Wallace Prugh, M.D. Hazen C. l'Verner, D.D. Irvin Bieser Col. E. A. Deeds Harvey A. Requarth Mrs. Roger Woodhull W. Blackburn, M.D. Hugh I. Evans, D.D. David Rike lX'Irs. H. C. Carnell, A. B. Brower, M.D. Chas. M, Kelso Chas. Seasholes, D.D. Honorary Member Horner Cassel, M.D. Fred Kohnle Albert H. Scheidt, Sec. Nursing School Council Dr. H. F. Koppe, Mr. F. L. Canby, Dr. R. K. Finley, lVIiss V. Swenson, Dr. W. B. Taggart, Mr. A. H. Scheidt, Dr. H, D. Cassell Mrs, L. F, Medley, Mrs. Roger Woodhull, fAbsentj ? 10 +P Mlss FLORENCE YOUNG, A Assistant Director Department of Nursing Miss FLORENCE SAYRE, Director of Student Health Miss MARY ELPHA SINE, Hospital Hostess 4- 1 1 +- Back row: M. DEERHAKE, M. SCHUERM B. BARKER B. CASEY M. DEERI-IAICE A, DEMOTTE A. DENNEY M. FRANZ M. GANGER E. GORDON AN N R L. A. L. F. ffwvq.. , A. KRUEGER. Sitting: L. KEEVER, B. CASEY, W. WEEKS F SAYRE Supervisors GRILLOT I'IALLER KEEVER KRUEGER REM PP SAYRE Back row : M. GANGER, E. SHAW, A. DEMOTTE, S. SCHNEIDER, M. ZIMINIERMAN, N. GRILLOT Sitting: E. GORDON, P. ST.xEHLrN, M. FRANZ, A. DENNEY. L. SCHNEIDER M. SCHUERMAN E. SHAW M. SIFFERMAN P. STAEI-ILIN M. SWEENEY W. WEEKS M. ZIMMERMAN , 8 w D , X ' at w ,---- N... Q..,.,- - ' 'ff' ur. .48 +- 12 -F ,s I. When we think of money in connection with a hospital, we frequently think of it only in terms ol patients' bills, pay checks ? ? - and donations. Behind the scenes of a modern hospital of this size a limited number of persons are responsible for collections, accounting and the disbursing of nearly three quarters of a million dollars. Intelligent Hnancial administration contributes materially although indirectly to the welfare of each patient in the hospital since it is only through intelligent Financial administration that the dollar can be stretched out to provide the utmost in service and facilities for the patient. Although the business department is one of those which are behind the scenes, it represents a very integral part of any well organized institution. 4- 1 3 -I: Progress of School of Nursing in Past Ten Years 1932-The former surgical dressing room was renovated into gymnasium and auditorium. Metabolism Diet Kitchen and the Formula room were completed, giving better opportunities for teaching 'student nurses. 1933-Regular class periods in supervision and administration for head nurses were inaugurated by Miss Ethel Odigard. The state examination average in each nursing subject was raised IOWJ, which meant that an Ohio accredited school must accept students in the upper third of their High School class. 1934s-F or the first time thirty-eight graduate nurses were employed for the nursing care of patients and four graduates were added to the operating room staff. A tuition rate of S180 was required for the three year course of training. 1935-The number of graduate nurses doing general duty was increased to sixty-five, almost a 50W increase over the past year. A diabetic supervisor was appointed. An eight-hour duty schedule was established for private duty nurses in all Dayton hospitals. 1936-Fifteen graduate nurses were added to the general staff of the hospital. The Nightingale Chorus was discontinued and a program of physical education one night each week for the student body was substituted. 1937-Vocational conferences on nursing were given by our faculty members in 31 high schools in Dayton and surrounding towns, 1938-Third year students were given the opportunity to afliliate with Children's Hospital in Cincinnati for a period of four months. A course in Sociology was added to the curriculum. Several changes in the teaching schedule were made necessary by the affiliation in Pediatrics. The doll exhibit, representing important figures in nursing history, was presented as a gift to the school by the class of 1938. The project was under the supervision of Miss Ruth Baldwin. 1939-With the opening of the new Children's Department here, the pediatric affiliation was ter- minated in October, 1939. Forty-seven students had the advantage of this experience in Cincinnati. An extension course from the University of Cincinnati was given in ward teaching and ward administration, All head 'nurses along with many general duty staff nurses attended. An open shelf of reference books for graduates and student nurses was placed on each station. d.The Nightingale Chorus of sixty students was reorganized, with Mr. Gustav Herlan as musical 1r6Ct0I'. 1940-The School of Nursing Council was formed in April, 1940. The membership of the council consists of men and women who represent the educational, social, and civic interests of the community. Objectives of this council are- a. To study the needs of the school as an educational institution. b. To appoint to the Board of Trustees, the Director of the School of Nursing, the faculty members, and to make such recommendations as are appropriate. c. To follow and develop the policies of the Board of Trustees and to consider all questions, discussions, and activities which relate to the School of Nursing or are referred to it by the faculty and others. An extension course in Comparative Nursing Procedures was given by the University of Cincinnati for graduate nurses. The School of Nursing library was catalogued according to standard classihcation. The preclinical period for student nurses was lengthened from sixteen to twenty-four weeks, thereby initiating the students more gradually into the nursing responsibilities. Reorganization of the material of several courses in the curriculum was necessary in conjunction with the lengthened preclinical period A new supervisory program was initiated with the appointment of two clinical supervisors, one assigned to each building, Seven administrative supervisors were promoted from the head nurse group and from the general staff. Through this system each day supervisor has sixty to eighty patients under her supervision 5 each evening supervisor has about one hundred patients. These administrative supervisors serve as a direct contact between the doctors and the nursing office, and afford general supervision for both student and graduate nurse personnel. L 14 st FACULTY Miss TOBIATHA VVILSONJ Director of Clinical Teaching, Main Building Miss MIRIAM RAY, Director of Education Miss MINNETTA SCHAEFER Director of Clinical Teaching, New Building MRS, GRETCI'IEN KIN KEL, Nursing Arts Instructor MRS. MILDRED Lowlas, Physical Education Director MRS. BERNICE RAMSEY, Assist. .Nursing Arts Instructor SL- 17 -? I' Y N0 ii .Z R 3 ,, ,F U ., lk. 1 . fflsay-:f,.f Back row: R. MOLINDER, L. MEDLEY, M. SINNOTT. Sitting: K. JORDAN, E. HURY, D. KULLBERG, R. VERNON A Head Nurses G, BINKLEY B, HAGAN L. MEDLEY D. BOSLAUGI-I ' E. HURY R. MOLINDER M, BRUMBAUGH K. JORDAN M. N1xoN D. EICI-I D. KULLBERG M. SINNOTT A. GROFF M. IVIARTIN R. VERNON Back raw: D. BOSLAUGI-I, A. GROFF, M. BRUMBAUGH. Sitting: M. MARTIN, D. Elcr-1, M. Nxxox, G. BINKLEY. if 12 1 P55 . V f x fir' V-A-if-f . 1 OUR DOCTORS 2-1:2-????????vve-??????????????????'-r????e-??xvFFri?F2-?????????'e?T???????????'f?? l l STAFF OF THE MIAMI VALLEY HOSPITAL-ACTIVE SERVICES Surgery-Sr. R. K. Finley, M.D., F.A.C.S. Harry R. Huston, M.D., F.A.C.S. A. T. Bowers, M.D., F.A.C.S. R. C. Austin, M.D., F.A.C.S. Surgery-jr. N. E. Leyda, M.D. M. T. Hoerner, M.D., F.A.C.S. H. H. Wagner, M.D. C. Marclis, M.D. E. F. Damstra, M.D. Medicine-Sr. W. B. Bryant, M.D., F.A.C.P. Benedict Olch, M.D., F.A.C.P. W, E, Prugh, M.D. H. D. Cassel, M, D., F.A.C.P. Medicine-71: E. McCall Smith, M.D. R. O. Cass, M.D. W. L. Slagle, M.D. R. W. Tapper, M.D. C. R, Wine, M.D. H. F. Koppe, M.D. R. M. Craig, M.D. Obstetrics-Sr. F. C. Rounds, M.D. Gordon Erbaugh, M.D. W. A. Rickets, M.D., F.A.C.S. C. C. Borden, M.D. Obstetrics-jr. M. E. Block, M.D. Charles Mumma, M.D. P. K. Champion, M.D. H. J. Staton, M.D. R. D. Dooley, M.D. E. W. Smith, M.D. Paul Troup, M.D. ii R. C, Doan, M.D. A. Hirsheimer, M.D. A. D. Cook, M.D. W. Gregg, M.D.4Hi Byron Stuhlman, M.D. R. B. Jacobs, M.D. Pediatrics-Sr. W. B. Taggart, M.D. T. F. Humphrey, M.D. R. D. Hostetter, M D. C. C. Payne, M.D. Pediatrics--fr. F. V. Riche, M.D. D. R. Bieser, M.D. C. A. Hueneke, M.D. E. R. Werner, M.D. C. E. Clark, M.D. C. L. Fraas, M.D. Proctology-Sr. R. E. Pumphrey Anaesthesia-Sr. R. F. Corwin, M.D., F.A.S.A. J. D. Spaid, M.D., F.A.S.A. Paul Yordy, M.D., F.A.S.A. Dermatology-Sr. R. C. Sheridan, M.D. Dermatology-jr. H. H. Nieman, M.D. Lar, Branch. Esoplz.-Sr. J, D. Fouts, M.D., F.A.C.S. Rob't Boswell, M.D. Opthalnzology-Sr. A. M. Culler, M.D., F.A.C.S. E. R. Thomas, M.D. P. H. Kilbourne, M.D. Ophtlzalmology-71. Homer Howell, M.D. Orthopedics-S1'. H. L. Brumbaugh, M.D. H. R. Stockwell, M.D. Jerome Hartman, M.D., F.A.A.O.S. Orthopedics-fi: William Clark, M.D. Otolaryngology-Sr. J. O. Beavis, M.D., F.A.C.S. A. W. McCally, M.D. Robit Boswell, INID. Otolaryngology-j'1'. Orville Layman, M.D. B. C. Must, M.D. Neu1'0.fuTge7'y-Sr. R. D. Arn, M.D., F.A.C.S. N eurosur get y-fr. Walter Reiling, M.D. Urology-Sr. L. G. Kauffman, M.D. M. W. Coleman, M.D., F.A.C.S. U rolo g y-jr. L. B, I-Iurless, M.D. R. E, Tyvand, M.D.iiW Dental Staff-Sr. F. W. Cockerill, D.D.S. E. S. Dye, D.D.S. W. B. McBain, D.D.S. E. B. Tizzard, D.D.S. S. E. Kay, D.D.S. fAnaesthesiaJ Dental Stajj'-711 H. V. Gieringer, D.D.S. R. E. Huber, D.D.S. L. F. Patterson, D.D.S. CCNSULTING SERVICES Allergy-Sr. G. C. Grout, M.D. Cardiology-Sr. A. B. Brower, M.D., F.A.C.P. Cardiology-fr. A.F. Kuhl, M.D. Gast1'o-Enterology-Sr. Everett Shank, M.D. Metabolic Diseases-Sr. T. P. Sharkey, M.D., F.A.C.P. Neuropsychiatry-Sr. E. C. Fischbein, M.D. J. L. Sagebiel, M.D. Neuropsyehiatry-711 C. G. Floridis, M.D.'x ' B. F. Suffron, M.D. H. R. Campbell, M.D. Diagnostic Laboratories W. W. Simpson, M.S., M.D., F.A.C.P., F.A.S.C.P., Dir. INT. M. Costing, M.D., F.A.S.C.P., Associate Dir. Radiology-Sr. Radium Therajiy J. T. McGreer, M.D. H. W. Burnett, M.D. N. J. Birkbeck, M.D. Su1'gery+S1'. E. R. Arn, M.D., F.A.C.S. Tubereulosix-Sr. W. C. Breidenbach, M.D. Urology-Sr. C, A. Coleman, M.D., F.A.C.S. HONORARY STAFF C. S. Smith, M.D., F.A.C.S. Curtiss Ginn, M.D., F.A.C.S. H. H. Herman, M.D., F.A.C.S. Clarke Sullivan, M.D. A. H. Dunham, M.D. W. G. Clagett, M.D. W. J. Blackburn, M.D., F.A.C.S. H. V. Dutrow, M.D., F.A.C.S.Me H, B, Harris, M.D., F.A.C.S. Rome Webster, M.D. Howard Webster, M.D. T. H. Dickinson, M.D. J. C. VValker, M.D. P. L. Gunkel, M.D. W. H. Delscamp, M.D. 'WOn leave for Military Duty Residents R. Lehman, M.D. G. Martin, M.D. R. Slabaugh, M.D. Reed Prugh, M.D. I nternes W, B. Ayres, M.D. H. Breman, M.D. E. W. Browne, M.D. R. S. Hamm, M.D. C. Rust, M.D. Jos. Schaeffer, M.D. IN. Smyres, M.D. R. Strauch, M.D. R. E. Zipf, M.D. 41 ,An ,. , - ,345-g'2..l'tT,fepfi ' y gfqff .. Si , . . .wg f if .ii A wwf Q: .- fffff 2 33g5,?1259Q'f 5 5 gfifiw Y if if R Q Q 55? E Q ' ' ' if W 2 2 + YQ J 2 W3 . it E x .::.4.- sew , . H H Q I I J V612 I ' Rf. 5 .wif -' its f . , 'f 512. R .-5: :I :Eli 'E R N . hfw s. . . 5 -1 v Pk S mcg,-f , 3 , .. ., ,. A t.,. ... .5 f . -' .1 lie. . S - ,i ' ' Ci ' 3:1-: ' ff +1 DR. W. SMYRES DR. E. W. BROWNE DR. Jos. SCI-IAEFFER DR. H. BREMAN DR. R. STRAUCH DR. C. RUST 4' -F DR, YV, B. AYRES DR. R. E. ZIPF DR. R. S. HAMM ?E CLASS OF 1941 HER cap, the insignia of her school and of her profession-always beauti- ful in its signifcance to the nurse who wears it. CLASS OFFICERS: President-Georgia Esther Insley Vice Prexident-Sarah Lee Banta Secretary-Margery E. Clark Treasurer-Mary Elizabeth Morefield COUNCIL MEMBERS: Mary Hester Grubbs Betty Jane Ruth -:-E::-::fiSf::E'Ef 'Ea.I:I4:-:-' , we F . . Lg X, 3 if N5 f . , .. 1 T-V M ,ul -I ,L , M . if tra A- I :gt fi gf, , , 9 ' , if Sarah Lee Banta 3 A .:.,: ,rf-f E5E Y . , . ., ,L New A ig ,ny . . 5 , it , H7 We ,an Mildred L. Bassett 4 24 -te r.,,,,,,,,, ,. I N' , 1 .Q , f Erma Brown Joan Brunner . is My ww- V Qs fr 1 I A W 3-w f 2 mg f , H if 1 V A fi E325 W V ' 4- '9 If2f?a.,.Z9 X E ' 4 f f, Fi -4 A 4 ' ' I ' if .Y 1 idwkgfr Mo .. r nr ' Melva Burkholder Elaine Castle f 1 , V 1 Louise Clark Margery Clark ,r .,....,. F . ,. , H W is 1,152 - ..,. , H ,,, 31.1352 iii? A3 :55: :'5:ar' :: '. L If ' mu I IA ff 4 X, 0 Q O Edna Curtner Ila Ruth Curtner 2 'Y X f am . . ,bw 5 Q Betty K. Buettncr fuss L VH M 35.3, me -U, 5K QW It , ,,., Ha V I 5 X, 'M wx: ' ' '.Y???? 5. saggfeva 'A-Sm .pu a - . +- f ' . W. k,1,f,iv WR M2 my M .LM r 25 3 4 i W . XA 'M X., 3 X' W .. . Esther A. Detling 4-256 lsgggggg, 5 ,f 'E B Egg E ir if? L , L. H- H 5 gl 5 m nm fry au ,was .gsm ex: EMEA A 2:7 in QNX, Miriam B. Dickerson me w is W ' am -- ibm ,LA gal ,vu-1-1 Helen Fennell Virginia Geiger Ruth E. Getter - w 71' V - . :.: -'-' ie - .E Xl Ba ,QAM ....... . -Q H ss w W 1 wc-rf: 2:1 :: ff ' 14 Sm in W .-.-.-. gm ii . w , , M - - . if -t if 553 I -' ESM . WE - - a I Eg W E ,Q Q. H 1 A 4 Us M M 1 1 Q , n B m Y , .: - - 5-5 as - I ,Y 5- 5 W E me , - wc:-,'l. - gf '-e H - N 5 Q wi w sf I 5 E H if Q : :Q: ,.. ff X E Q H A 5 -:-: ' I, if-X Q. if L - f Q H H Mgm 'xnij V -guns-is Y'-4 ill? fx H fm3'l'E E- -1-4 va E , if Q H - ra A W ,,.A . . 5 ,HM , E f Q5 E Y T a ., H 5 e , A X 5 f ' E E ,B A 1 . is , S E i . F I , L53 ,E - ,V ,- i f A vi Lorna Doebereiner Clara E. Fleming A H if .WS 31,-tg Z'HHB 9 ms ix sm Hman .W if XX EXE' uma Q . E552 ? 5 . '?3lfi.S,,iQii'Q U-fs -Ewa-W. , eimiff Evelyn Gerdes 'kiwi -FW .ze Pm 'ss gl do mmf: Hzmgggg 'g was WW xksinmx QE M Kms Qjllk 1535! Q me Q Q - 1 . -221 : .,f-.-Sai-I ,. Q - ww .-,. 4 :::.- . 1 are is 3355? E55 sis ,Q :.: : ::' .- Y' ffa-.:i: Y if 1 gg ,ii . ::..., bw- . . E , :.:: by .,.,.. E . V , Y Wg S :.: ' 'em V-' , gg H 2- gw M A g I ,g 44935 -.-.-.-.-.., U -. 3 5 . F nz- '-3 1 H wi ,fm W ,T .,.: ,iz :,.:,.. I- . ,.:,:,. - M- - Q S4 ' - - Eg Q Q E A -1 K- N- 'ma-mf: --K j .N n ss , is -- 2 -s ., . , - e is Sewi- 5-an -V3-fy Eqemr-2-z X 3:- :-5 -:Uni -'vw H, -W ie-Q-is -1 -Q new -1-1 ,mfwxmsgg-n,h -in L mnmzniv W xi .meme s if 4 vw--gf w ul 7 mage.-win Doris Jane Granzow 4' 2 6 +5 rs is Betty Felter '1' FAui'u7F1 fl KNGWLEDGE: 39b'?ifl0U I xl- :l3llXl'il33'iQ Mary Hester Grubbs 5'TT '- ' - - 212-s'r: :':ffAf--KW X v iff N at -W :v -K 1 2 ,af , if A w in l W f' U Rr! i E E k M M wav I '1f e'i 0 Mildred Hagerty Miriam Harbaugh Rita Lee Harper ,. xv x . . L' gs fe! ie. ' y f -- ,, --i A E1 ' nm? ' 5 :J I- A Q1 , Q ' V gg .- C , A ff' C' ffl- ' Doroth Ho in -1. , :,, 1 rf g Mary Helen Hitchens Y PP S ri lkvf .'.',:-ll. m 1+ :IJlrxH3S-e Betty J. Houser Betty J. Hostetler Georgia Esther Insley Marjorie Jenkins Genevieve Johnson e 27 -2 .. .V . I M ill. x x . wi Mary Jeanette Kerr .Q ,gi . :lj KNQWLEDG aox-kan E UO ' kfklii H xl- 3IJl,lNH3S,,5f ,, ,.. . kxxi .9 Donna Knowles Christine Lake Lillie M. Marker we ,fi : f- Q ffm. 1 aww-M M - .wg .-1 5 .i ,li 5 X'f'9m,,,. X' m .5 X, N Q. -fa., fl -5- Q fy 4 , Q . f -L.: , 1 ' . fy 'x If '--1 M . M M ff . if - 1 ,,, H-M2 Ti if . 4 ' if M ii A fri' 39 ,, Martha J. Martindale Mary M. Massie 4-28+ -' '1 M G2 '.'mmWwvf?g.'3.'ggy- 4 ? Z fl' l ' if S fl . jf! 5 o Irma Kapffcnstein ... - x' f Q if X I , Frieda Littler 4 fy-. if , .Ni .. Francis L. Markus ?'f.zT7f:' . fT ' 11 J? iid... f ,Mi .ffflife :- ,1 -3 3 Q M '51 .- W as . .. B ' 223599 . . . 4 . I :lf ,wg A ,, .V - 1 ,Z '..., ' SE 7 SE, , 3.12 Dorothy L. McDonald ' 5 o ,M Elizabeth Mcrker .. .,., ' xga f 4 , ' 1 B N B 3 Av - L A . f .lf X 6 V5 Betty Ann Nevison -X - FE-'M '-'V'-fr,:.V:::.f::.':g:: :.g. I X ,:.:- dis: ' -' 3319 - J' FW' .:.5,,T:ESIf ' , : ,- iw-,Quiz , ,.:.55f5::::: . X ,V :-: JK . .- -1 . 'Q 5. Shaw Q 'I M Bi X10 V r f N Y, z il ,a ' 3 . . , as - 1 , ,K 5 V' 0 . . ' ii Q -1 , ,Q Mariellen Reinhart . r N. O Q Phyllis Lee Rogers 1 fa 1 ,W-v,f X-,7 '..5 igigflf ' ' 2 5234 9 Q li Q3 we -f ffm 1 I KN . L. Evelyn Moehring Mary E. Morefield Q ll.. ., if 1 ses sms A. m ,- K2 -+1 fe 1, a my as Q i w X --1 X N, Y 1. x We R xx 0 . 2' A , we 'Q ive Dorothy Poff ., QE ....., ' j im-wwf 1-f'? 3i?i' ' fsiff X, .-Z: L 1 .y J HX A ,, , i A -.nf M9 2, Garnet Reams M if .X 'ul ,ls 5 Kiki m.. Betty Jane Ruth 4- 29 -ff- y e l as 3 R 0 Mary K. Schmidt I 5 Egfr? ': F M I Q tsl Y ..... A . W if , Q-ami N 'S H K x H H -.:.:.:.:5: , -A 'Z Age. na .-1- , is . wi 5 B ffii ,E is ' is -5 gg is 84555: . amy H ., Q ., -' w 'Ed :-: ' , ., w an- 2 ll -fwfeik -' M ' - ' '- ,Q H '31 age' 1 ts .L Mg uezsmrm if :::.3j,: , :.:,. W 'X H L V3 .... 5 K f. L ,Z A 5 :Q25:', 5: .I E 2.1, is - ' is ::g'-' ' - Sa w X :iw ,- X . V, I 1 fl L- f lie! - Q-91'w:l vfsswrzx W3 It-Q ,X Qifl f f 1 or K Q K ' v Q . ' SWE' . Margaret Seitz nm si wi R K H SS U 3 w, ff 4. 1 ,5 - Wavelene Smith if Q Ellen Sparks . .,.. .,.. W 1 5 ', 'f 5 ::::a:a...-2225 Q- fv - a,sggiaE:':' S5I'f. 2 r:5zs::-- ss 2 l . W 3 H 'K 5 . iw Q ' if-15. .N . M .E E 3 -:W P I a ,i ., - 'I ii.-ai: . 1 H V if f - -' 1 U X 'sf M J - , :, as ' TQ 1 H I 1 +1 gs W or 53. 1-H ,, ,mwfii ,MQ .,l -1 rn is :J-,w , 355-f em QQ, 3,5 M 5-sggig., femvvgwit gsmQMia'fif WW N Wim, , Wwe M, we V Tlx v mem- -K 3ffmA:I9fMg, M1558 at f1mJl5sHi1l3f ' 5 Lf1'E Jayne Trowbridge iiim, f?i'w'Swi'z' na- Wwx, EERE T nm mx-x ms EMS-L erm mi .fists sewn- vol 5815 U Ruth Louise Short . TH 3 .-.QIIEE :::':.? 15 S Q L R -E 'L wg G ' X Q r W! ls xx lf 25 H W 2 M3 il E w se Ki 5 H ' B ws E ii 1 3 H : ':'E':-ai- .... X' H v IL LF ' 'fi ::'f:5:E:'?:if':1..:a5'5:'. E:2i.'Z3:':- '. U EV 2: . . , ' W . I L 2 gk . '::1f:E:I..:f5f . M ' f .34 ' : : . 4- Same s K X A Q 2 LL ,a 5- Q Q A W W if Q4 2 fn . ., .1 H A Q E I M Nw we-Q T f is Q? . ggfiifgie ?5Q?e2z.E,2g Y -. ,f . X i :Z X Ellen Louise Spahr layman lm ia . ,.g . VW is dlzgegiwi Wim, In KSQQTHS-5 5 555525 - 52292 P52 of war is 7 ,Q mizax L-' .4 9 K Zi .M . ., nh : fi U ' E. 'b .fa . ' 'W if Q.. 5. ..:. ,E , w .1 , f, X, , Y Jeanne Taylor J :Ziff . :zr 5 - riwtffw ' -L !!!.:.:I:f,, I QQ 'iii 'V MSM W 'L M 5 :T EEETQTQIQTQQE- :ESQ - 'J 1 5: 15 :yr-1 1 , E ,A 1 iii sl 4 L xl Q 55 f Q FS if 1.51 at A Q ill E . T KA .... ,....,, L . ..,.,,.f if ..:.:,.,.. ...., , . in ,,e,E ..,.V .:.- , y UQ ff E L 22 5' W sg? , - wr QHESW-R lima? 32335 E 5 . ' s 3 an Qi 3 gym Y ,::: -:- 1-sm-. ,- 1 V: E Q ga W . Q 'gi f Q if Et, , -294 X 5,5 . - ..:. - W U E .1 W U Qi H W. w . , rw , H' . 4 . I M A -if 2 . X' Q Z J ' 5 S 2 t 5 it Dorothy Evelyn Smith fTJFAi7i1aW --l fll- A- S 1512.3 ., -ij E gm' 3531 at SOIIXHBS-ig, mn - - : M-ag: ::: Eze: .- Y E E- 1i:fQE:E2,g4-:'E5-:-3:-: 1 -A V- !:::,f::, Hg, :.::, znalilffx i .,., . ,Y H WM E W ' ' L lg Wm RE le wgm. T UWA .M :'f - Mwgyf' W 'fag' Kwan. . .mf ::.- ggi. . kgs' E353 ughvw if.-Q it 131.1 It -1-.mi,f:.g-3 M L may H-.,m-at is :L ,H un-. , EH-B1'.21!' 'Pillai -Ck? W- in M , Us. Q M .Li eg eg. X554 1' it--' f is - H-Meg. wi Q54 K 1, . - nseffl.. gmfw.: a , -imc.: Opal Wick Marie Loretta Zimmer 4+ 30 -be Reminiscing o-Moimow NIGHT we graduate ! Our white uniforms hang crisp and starched awaiting that long-anticipated event. It seems such a long time ago that we met as strangers in the library, waiting to have our rooms assigned to us. What a thrill it was to become a student nurse, to have those important capped Seniors talk with us and call us their little sisters. Shall we ever forget the party the first night we came? Then followed initiation night and the awful odor of guaiacol and ether. As we all remember, we got the works thoroughly. Realities of classwork became inevitable. Down to earth we came to realize that nurses did more than wear white uniforms. They must study, read endless references and learn to use their hands. Anatomy and the imposing, mocking skeleton, we had to challenge. Too, we must never forget the tender care we lavished on our unappreciative Chase doll. Through a never ending stream of humble tasks we waded, wondering and doubting if we'd ever become nurses. Slightly encouraged we blossomed Hnally into our uniforms. How much more professional we seemed, even though we were without caps and bibs. But, would the uniforms ever shrink and look appealing! Our first Christmas and the thrill of being allowed to take part in the early morning caroling made us realize how priceless was this school tradition, Ever more closely we came to be a part of the big family here at the nurses' home. The capping exercise was an unforgettably beautiful ceremony. As with trembling hands we received our lighted candles each hoped and hoped again her cap would not be the one to fall off during this sacred ceremony! With this our tasks had just begun, now our days rushed by, and we entertained for the first time as an organized class at the Valentine party. Each day became a part of the mosaic which was to be our Freshman year :-bright days when some one called us an angel of mercy, or told us how nicely we had made his bed :--dark days with low Materia Medica grades, broken thermometers, and unsigned-for late leaves. VVhat a quandry we were in! Vacation so eagerly looked-forward-to that first year came, and like a Hash was gone. VVe were Juniors at last, but then, just to be a Senior! Seniors always seemed to have a lot of time, never had to run errands and certainly never were seen doing much studying! On we plodded, studying Communicable Diseases, worrying over Obstetrics and pondering over Pathology. Could any student be as busy as a Junior? The ever present threat to our anemic bank account was the Junior-Senior Farewell, Hot dogs, pop corn, shoe polish, and shoestrings were urged upon the faculty and student body. At last came the harvest of our sales' efforts :-we had enough money to entertain the Seniors! Commencement for the class of 1940 found us marching as poor unnoticed juniors while the Seniors in snowy caps and uniforms marched confidently along to that glorious, triumphant proces- sional. Next year, next year for us we hoped! Next year so far away with classes, exams, and duty hours, still to come! Now, as we reminisce, we know that to our eager hearts the time since that night a year ago, really has not been long. Our vacation, our fall hay ride, the traditional rite of decorating the Christmas tree, the dance, parties and final exams-all have materialized with relentless finality. In our bouquet of student memories, one unopened bud is yet to become a full-bloom rose-tomorrow, graduation. 4+ 3 1 Q? F X Class Will . . E THE CLASS or 1941, being of sound mind f?J with no evident neurological symptoms, yet realizing the uncertainties of life, do hereby make our last will and testament. To the Junior Class we leave our first row in chapel, hoping they will till it faithfully and with great dignity, also two pads of scrap paper on which to figure out monthly case reports. Along with these we leave our three-bar chevronts with the understanding that they rip them off carefully and sew them on with a lazy-daisy stitch. glndividuallbequests arc, to-wit, as follows, to be carefully administered by Miss Florence Sayre, executrix of this estate, with the admonition that she take her responsibility seriously in conveying these cherished possessions of the oustersized. As class treasurer, Mary Morefield wills to the Junior Class any small change left after the Senior liabilities are paid. Ellzabeth Merker gives her bed on E station to anyone who will promise to keep it warm. Frances Markus.bequeaths.her old tees and golf balls to Miss Swenson and Miss Shaw, providing they use them to make a hole ln one. Miriam Harbaugh regretfully relinquishes her love of floor duty on maternity to Louise Johnson. Good-hearted Louise Clark gives her student aprons to Alvina Bonnoront. Mildred Basset and Dorothy Hopping bestow thelr place on the piano bench to Mary Evans. Frieda Littler unselfishly contributes the proceeds from her book, Care of Complexions that Conquer to the class treasury. Joan Brunner leaves Doug's place on the window seat to Phyllis Doggett and her steady. To Jean Pennington goes Ruth Getter's innocent look. Evelyn Moehring gives her late leaves to Mildred Tufts, while Garnet Reams makes a very special bequest to Miss Sophie Schneider-namely her night duty sign. Mary Kerr and Donna Knowles leave their first aid book to Mrs. Ramsey for future library filing. Rita Harper passes on her quiet ways to Elaine Storer. Margery Clark leaves her giggle to Ruth Coblentz, while Clara Flemming bequeaths to the School Library her entire Youth's Correspondence Course in Love Making. This volume should be carefully per-used at odd moments. Melva Burkholderls smile goes to Bettie Kiesewetter, while Sarah Lee Banta leaves her feminine gift of gab to Myrtis Van Fleet. Christine Lake bestows her honeyed accent to Margaret Sapp. With a forgiving personality, Doris Granzow leaves her dog-eared cook book to the dietetic department. Mary Zimmer, fearing you may be late for chapel, passes on her duty of official alarm clock to Martha Cochran. In this solemn moment, Betty Houser agrees to contribute her sneeze to anyone who can do it. Waveline Smith and Erma Brown bequeath their double room to Ruth Legant and Elaine Miller. Ellen Sparks leaves to Children's Ward her ever-present string of safety pins, while Betty Ruth leaves her coke machine job to anyone who can go to Snyder building and back again successfully. Realizing that this bequest should not selfishly be confined to one individual, Genevieve Johnson leaves her ability to become engaged and disengaged to anyone who can arrange it. Due to the fact that she plans to study for State Board, Mariellen Rhinehart bequeaths her well used recording of Intermezzo,' to Jeanne Carey. Georgia Insely's success as president goes to Betty Ann Miller, while Dorothy Smith's last-minute rush goes to Mary Lou McGown. In the era of changing styles, Lillie Marker bequeaths to Miss Wilson her page-boy hair-do, while Lorna Doebereiner after seriously thinking it over leaves her curling iron to the hospital barber. Dorothy MacDonald leaves her hay fever problem to the Research department. Esther Detling after some consideration leaves her daily blush to Erma Lovett, while her room-mate, Phyllis Rogers, bequeaths her collection of cologne to be used to cover the odor of disinfectant in the Communicable Disease department. The fancy empty bottles she bestows upon the Drug Room. Dorothy Poff, as a parting gesture, leaves a hardly-used jar of shoe cleaner to Marianna Gress. Ellen Spahr's sweetness is left to Marianna Moll. Opal Wick offers her six well-used jokes to anyone who can revive them, while Irma Kapffenstein turns over all her worries to Mary Catherine Smith. Mildred Hagerty leaves one of her red-hair bows to Helen Doehring, while Ruth Short bestows a dozen wads of last year's gum U94-OJ to Beatrice Baird. ' Mary Katherine Schmidt understandingly leaves her medicated corn plasters Cfrom the drug roomj to the V.N.A. girls. Jayne Trowbridge and Jeannie Taylor, realizing they must now put away childish things, bequeath their menagerie to the carpentershop with the stipulation that the animals be kept stuffed with plenty of sawdust. To Jean Hunter goes Margaret Seitz's wide-awake look in class, while the Curtner sisters, ambition is passed on to the Rosebaum twins. Betty Felter's meekness is bequeathed to Betty Oberlies. Mariam Dickerson, believing that zippers are here to stay, leaves to Helen Dickson her two uniform buttons. Mary Helen Hitchens, mindful of her own thick crowning glory, bequeaths to Marianna Rhorer her share of stock in the Wonder Hair Grower Corporation. Betty Hostet- tler, after much indecision, has definitely decided she will bequeath any of her worldly possessions except Bill. Martha Martingdale leaves her Nightingale voice to Julia Johnson. Out of the kindness of their hearts Betty Buettner and Betty Nevison bequeath their reference notes on P.A. to next year's Senior Class believing that every little bit helps. Evelyn Gerdes and Mary Hester Grubbs leave their reduction diet to Reba Bevan. Mary Massie leaves her haircut money to the Junior class treasury, while Elaine Cassel leaves her love of monkey wrenches and tools to any nurse who has a similar interest in mechanics. Margery Jenkins, Helen Fennell and Virginia Geiger leave next year's group of internes to the tender mercy of June Swope and other Juniors after September 1. To the Board of Trustees we leave all funeral expenses, namely the sad rights of graduation. In the presence of assembled witnesses we hereby do declare this to be our last will and testament, signed this first day of May in the year of sulfapyradine and sulfathiazole, nineteen hundred and forty-one, in the presence of the following witnesses to-wit and half-wit: MR. HERPES Zosrnn Miss ETHYL ALCOHOL MRS. JAMES METRAZOL MISS KATHERINE HEPARIN THE CLASS OF 1941 Prophecy DEAR DIARY: Why did I ever consent to do it? To find out the names and present addresses of the 1941 graduates has really been a task. Little did I realize when appointed by the Alumnae what a gigantic undertaking it would be. Sixty- two graduates and only about seven working at old M.V.H. The rest as scattered to the four winds as the proverbial peas in the pod. But, thinking over my whole trip, it has been lots of fun playing Sherlock Holmes in search of the lost members of the class of '4-1. Realizing how far my search has carried me, I'vc resolved to keep an account of the high points of my journey so the Alumnae committee for The Lamp address section won't think I've wasted my time. It certainly was swell of Sarah Lee Banta to give me a few pointers on some of the girls. Even though she is night supervisor, she certainly does get around a lot. Thought Garnet Reams might help me locate a few of the girls, but she is so busy experimenting with test-tube guinea pigs she didn't have time to talk with me. Notice that the editor of the 1951 Lamp has a note of encouragement from Louise Clark. Clark has been contributing quite a few articles to the American journal of Nursing lately. What a surprise to learn that Mary Morefield is in Canada working with the Queen's Nurses. That last letter Esther Detling had from her was filled with tales of her experiences with the French Canadians. Wonder how Greenville Hospital ever got along before Esther became Superintendent. I believe Melva Burkholder works in the Receiving Department there. Dear Diary, I was never so surprised in my life as when I saw Dorothy McDonald across the aisle on the Lake Erie limited. To think she has been a train stewardess for seven years. Told me she had spent the summer in Michigan with Donna Knowles and her family. Said Virginia Geiger was teaching first aid classes to the Girl Scout troop near Kalamazoo. Went through the Nurse Mode plant at Detroit on my journey and had tea with Lillie Marker. Really, it's remarkable how much oomphf she's added to nurses' uniforms since she resumed her designing. Mildred Ha.gerty's picture hung on the wall, in one of those streamlined uniforms. It seems she does all the uniform modeling for Lillie's big concern. Went horseback riding with Doebereiner on her hours off. Really, she enjoys her work in Pediatrics at Henry Ford Hospital. Told me Betty Houscr is planning to come there next month. She was anxious to know how soon Mariellen Rhinehart would finish her internship at M.V.H. I just had to tell her how grown up Mariellen was. After all, wearing oxford glasses and speaking of allergy so fluently is a far cry from the old Mariellen and her recording of Intermezzo. My last night in Buffalo was really a welcome rest for me. Reading Notes on Nuts, a book on how to entertain at a reasonable cost, by Lady Frances Markus Cottonfox, brought back old memories of the tea parties those Seniors used to have. Often we envied them their few classes while we crammed O. B. and Orthopedics. But our day did come and here I am, an old graduate, traveling about the country looking for unaccounted-for nurses. Joan Brunner was staying at the Plaza, where I stopped on my way to Boston. Really felt I'd struck pay dirt' when I talked with her. Getting about as she does, she certainly meets a lot of old friends. Told me Ruth Short was conducting an experiment on ultra violet ray and its effect on measles in children. Dorothy Poff and Ellen Spahr came north from Kentucky to attend the National Public Health convention in New York City. Ellen was planning to show pictures of her work in the mountain districts. Chris Lake has been appointed State Health Supervisor in Kentucky and Mary Schmidt has been acting as her part-time secretary so she might help send her son through college. ' Incidentally, Margery Clark has been working at Vassar as College Nurse. Tells me it's regrettable how little those girls care about diet. Says she certainly has a time keeping them on reduction diets. Well, Miriam Harbaugh should collaborate with Marge. After all, specializing in Dietetics, after completing nurses' training, certainly is an accomplishment. Joan told me Helen Fennell still lives in Tipp City. Had a letter from her saying she has been appointed treasurer of City Humane Society. Well, I did think Dorothy Hopping would get back from California for Home Coming, but I suppose her duties are rather confining. Don't suppose Ruth Curtncr and Waveline Smith will manage a furlough either, since the Navy is having many new maneuvers. Wonder if Edna Curtner ever did make any money from her Nurse's Hand Cream. It certainly is well advertised and if Evelyn Moehring endorses it the housewives of America certainly will use it. After all, Evelyn Moehring's column is read daily by thousands of women. Don't understand how she finds time to write and raise a family. I almost forgot to get that special tape for Genevieve Johnson while at the Medical Center. Her work in the eye department keeps her so busy that she hasn't been East for three years. Well, one does make sacrifices. Betty Ruth still has to take call in Patterson, even if she is married. Mary Massie in Isolation has done a marvelous piece of work. New plastic furniture, synthetic washable drapes, and walls painted in soft pastel tints certainly has made Isolation into a new world. The article in the Hospital Review gives both Massie and Irma Kapffenstein entire credit for the plan. Irma studied the effect from the psychiatric angle. Dorothy Smith tells me the Mental retreat where she is employed as supervisor is very fascinating. Opal Wick has full charge of occupational therapy there. Mary Helen Hitchens drives out once in a while and helps instruct the patients. You know she always was a whiz at crocheting rugs. My goodness, here I am nearly home. Georgia Insley will never believe I actually did some sleuthing to find out about her classmates. I wonder if I'll be too late to hear that lecture Betty Felter was scheduled to give the last day of Homecoming. I suppose flying about as an army wife is very fascinating. I'm anxious to sec if she's changed much. Really was surprised to learn that Mary Hester Grubb's husband has been appointed Ambassador to Russia. I hear Jenkins is still in South America, It was only five years ago I stood at the dock and saw her and her husband sail off for that rubber plantation. And to think that Mildred Basset is clear around the world in Shanghai with her missionary cousin. Their work certainly will be fascinating. Well, Dear Diary, at last I'll clamp on my hat, gather up my magazines and make through the Union Station crowd and then home. Oh, this panda-why did I ever buy it for Joyce Kaye, Trowbridge's daughter? Seems like I've really been gone a while, but it will be good to hear Frieda Littler tell about her troubles as head nurse on J., to have Jeannie Taylor dash down the hall in her i'lopDy' houseslippers to find out what I had good to eat on my trip. I mustn't forget to give Doris Granzow that new recipe I got from the cook in the French Village in New Orleans. I suppose Betty Beuttncr could stop there when she goes off duty at the V.N.A. Anyway, it's good to be home again, back where the girls still wear the blue and white student uniform. Even hearing the IO P. M. bell will seem like hearing the voice of an old friend. Well, Elizabeth Merker will be waiting supper. She promised that all her children will be in bed so we can hash over this trip. se- 33 -F School Hymn We may not climb the heav'nly steeps To bring the Lord Christ down ,' In vain we search the lowest deeps, For Him no depths can drown. But warm, sweet, tender, even yet A present help is He,' And faith has still its Olivet, And love its Galilee. The healing of His seamless dress Is by our beds of pain ,' We touch him in lifejs throng and press And we are whole again. O Lord and Master of us all ,' Whate'er our name or sign, ' We own thy sway, we hear thy call, We test our lives by Thine. -J. G. WHITTIER +34-e if QA 2.- if The Florence Nightingale Pledge I solemnly pledge myself before God and in the presence of this assembly to pass my life in purity and to practice my profession faithfully. I will abstain from whatever is deleterious and mischievous, and will not take or knowingly administer any harmful drug. I will do all in my power to elevate the standard of my pro- fession and will hold in conjidence all personal matters committed to my keeping, and all family ajairs coming to my knowledge in the practice of my calling. With loyalty will I endeavor to aid the physician in his work and devote myself to the welfare of those committed to my care. An Interpretation s gg I :-,. QCD 1 I i, .,,.,. mg Earn 3IJinH3bive E have wrought this insignia of our school out of fine gold, which to us represents true womanhood. i In recognition of the eternal truth that it is not given to man to create, but only to discover and develop, we have sought to express our consciousness that we have not put into the woman any vital thing, but rather have drawn forth only what was latent in her being, In other words, out of the precious metal of womanhood we have labored to produce the nurse. Therefore, we have not stamped into the gold but have wrought out of it our symbol of nursehood. Our Insignia is a Perfect Square, the sides of which represent four elemental qualifica- cations of a nurse. The First Side of the Square is Knowledge. To this we give a two-fold interpretation: first, knowledge of self, without which no one can be strong to meet the exigencies of life, and second, knowledge of her profession. The Second Side of the Square is Faith: expressing her belief in God, humanity and herself. This faith becomes stable through, if indeed it does not emerge from, her knowledge of herself, because through the latter she interprets both God and her fellow- being, From her knowledge of herself and of her profession, coupled with her faith in God, humanity and self, she gathers courage, without which her life as a nurse would be utterly impossible. Therefore, The Third Side of the Square is Courage. Out of knowledge, faith and courage, service comes forth as a plant in fertile soil. Service is the ideal reality of a nurse's life. It is essentially altruistic. It is a warm, vigorous, pulsating thing, It bespeaks life. It stands in sharp contrast to the idea of sacrifice, which for ages has been inseparably associated in the public mind with our profession. But sacrifice suggests death and, at best, expresses something austere and cheerless. Indeed, its original significance was expiation or renunciation in the hope of personal gain. In contrast to service, therefore, it is even cold and selfish, Therefore, have we chosen Service as The Base of Our Square. In the center of this square is found a Grecian lamp with steady flame, expressing watchfulness. To this also we have given a two-fold interpretation: first, watchfulness unto self, that the nurse's life shall not belie her ideals, and second, vigilance over the well-being of her patients. Until now, each of you has, consciously or unconsciously, lived within the protection of your school, which has been not less your guardian than your teacher. From hence, we send you forth as a mariner on an untried sea, with a fervent prayer that, through all the perils of doubt, perplexity and terrible responsibility which you must encounter, this medal may be your compass and your guiding star. Therefore, fastening this symbol of honor and trust upon your breast, we enjoin you to bear forever your share in the maintenance of its lofty ideal, thereby proving the words of the C ' ' ,Q poet, 'The Ideal is the Real. -'v 3 6 'ke gg.: -.1 .,'x f ' -.MJ ? A ,:. -:5:,.g' , N a ,A ,A - Vq ii: Qi 'W' 3 ?'fQm:l:.-U7 - L' - Quite V: , .q...::.:- .HH ,.l' .'.'Q Wi i'Ei',',L?. .1 ii . K 7y. ff f 1, X, 7' .QVM - Mn 'X , , 1 . . ':.:fs,l-L. as IL ,Af M A 5, . Y -...... - . .f' fa -A W ' -:Q .- A .i::z1.. ..... -x L- , if ' u . tg f ,gin ,M - vs. 3 Q M N M., E4 f, ' . ,gV L. , 71 , 1: fa 'W T.1l'33N?',s- 'Hx ,. W ' 1 5, A AT?-1 1 in Q 3.1- ifmt 515229 ,'..ag'Eixsls.E4a : '-M i5 ii mr W -i , -V ...f 3, 3 J' s J .av -L' 'L K tg . A4 MC, . 4 'lx 5 Nga, 4 I ' .32 .Ti-it ,' Q ' E 343' 'a 1 4? , 1- 5' ffl' W .. ' :tif If 22. . 3 Q Mk ,, in av, 4 V gig? W 'ma ,Wi 3 A an-.rg V ft? wg A ww' Oh, poor probie . . . Tired feet ! . . . A date or public reception? . . . Filling that anemic bank account . . . First day in surgery , . . How weary! . . . Ready for a day's work . . . The dough earners for the Sr. Class . . . She lighted her little sister's candle . . . THE BIG MOMENT. 4- 38 4' 1 UNDERCLASSMEN Back row, and side: E. MILLER, M. TUFTS, M. MCGOWN, E. STORER, M. SMITH, M. RORER, D. WILLIS, B. A. MILLER, B. COPELAND, J. LONGSTRETH, H. YONKERS, R. BEVAN, H. DIXON, M. A. MOLL. Third row: A. BoNNo- RONT, M. COGHRAN, R. LEGANT, P. DOGGETT, M. SAPP, B. BAIRD, B. KIESEWETTER, J. PENNIINGTON. Second row: M. Fox, J. JOHNSON, R. COBLENTZ, J. FLETCHER, J. HUNTER, M. GRESS, J. CAREY, L. JOHNSON. First row: E. LOVETT, H. DOEHRING, M, EVANS, M. Roe, S. ST. Joi-INS, E. SMALL, J. Sworn, R. ROSEBAUM fabsent, C. ROSEBAUM, B. OBERLIESJ. Second Year Students Embarrassing Moments OCKED AWAY in the subconscious mind of every student nurse are numerous embarrassing moments. Just imagine going through nursing school and never being embarrassed! Almost any second year student can tell you just how improbable that would be. Miss Evans offers this experience as proof that she is going to give greater thought to improving her vocabulary in the future. While scrubbed in the G. U. room doing an examination, Miss Evans heard the doctor say, marked trabeculationf, describing, of course, his findings, Miss Evans believed that he had asked for some unusual instrument and, being very anxious to fulfill his slightest wish, she asked her circulating nurse to run and get the marked trabeculationf' Miss Baird explains that her most embarrassing moment occurred when she tried to rush to pharmacology class and lost her coveted cap in a mud puddle in front of the nurses' home. She states that it is a feeling one will never forget, especially when one is already five minutes late for class. No one knows more about blushing in class than does Miss McGown. Greatly embarrassed was she when she sneezed in communicable disease class. The quiet of the lecture hour was disrupted entirely as one of her uniform buttons bounced loudly across the floor in the direction of the lecturer. Not only embarrassed, but also rudely awakened from-that drowsy sensation that all night nurses experience during the day, was Miss -i. After coming off night duty very tired and sleepy, she accidentally set her alarm one hour early. Then not only did she awaken one hour earlier than was necessary, but she also walked into the classroom and took her place with the assembled group before she opened her eyes enough to realize that it was Head Nurses' meeting instead of the class on Introduction to Medical Science. Poor Miss l-, she'll have to wait a few years to attend the Head Nurses' meetings. First Year Students Impressions of Capping T WAS an ordinary night to most people except perhaps, that the wind was whistling around corners and the temperature was dropping rapidly. However, to the first year students of The Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing it was a very special night. Tonight we were to be capped! Capped! We had been looking forward to it for months and now at last the time had arrived. To some people a cap has no significance, but to us in the nursing profession it is ol' priceless value. On February 17, 1941, as a class we realized more than ever before, how much nursing meant to us. We were anxious to take on the additional responsibilities that went with our caps. We felt that after having been capped we become more a part of the hospital. Now we have taken the first big step toward our distant goal-the graduate nurse. We realize that before us lie many trials, but we have within us a burning ambition and while that is present, it will be impossible to daunt us. Bark row: M. NIILLER, D. BLAIR, M. WALKER, M. GREIST, A. MILLER, M. RAMBO, A. PRATER. Side row: M. O,BRlEN, B. PHENICE, E. KEISWETTER, R. ARNOLD, N. PIUFFER, J. BALMER. Third row: A. YODER, L. SoLoMoN- SON, C. GRANT, J. KITE, M. GAGYI, B. IYIERTZ, F. ROUTSONG. Second row: H. Coox, J. LAMHERT, D. SHOEMAKER, K. MILHOLLAND, R. TRAYLOR, M. YOUNG, A. WATKINS. First row: I. CORNELIUS, D. MILLER, W. WIGGENHORN, J. GRUNER, T. DREW, C. RUBY. .. ... 44 w w w w 2 N' Vx M ,i , E K. .. ,L fs .3,.,5 ,,1,5, jj :., - , if - 4, 'Ugg' M ' .. 2 N I 4 Q '-:f- - .x... I ,E . k fa ww' f QS 4: . , , ji . . , , ' , , ljm if Qx im k: .- 1354 'H' , gy ' Qfe'f i . DEPARTMENTS V. SIAIOCKNEY M. PETERSON F. BUROKER CABINET Department of Fever Therapy I-IYSICIANS will some day recognize fever as a friend rather than an enemy of mankind. These words were spoken about 1890 by Doctor William H. Welch, a renowned pathologist of the Johns Hopkins University. This day has come to pass. In 1918 Doctor Julius Wagner jauregg, a Viennese psychiatrist, announced that artificially induced fever, following malaria inoculation, was capable of overcoming the disastrous effects of that form of syphilis of the brain, commonly called general paralysis of the insane. Other investigators learned that the injection of the organisms causing rat bite and relapsing fever produced similar results. The use of heteroproteins, vaccines, and chemical substances, if a febrile response was induced, were also capable of producing beneficial results. It became more apparent that the simple production of fever was the important if not the only factor in accomplish- ingsimilar therapeutic results with such a wide variety of feverrproducing agencies. . The question arose as to whether a way could be found to produce the fever without the accompany- ing disease. This question aroused the interest of many investigators to develop a physical method of administering therapeutic fever. Doctor Clarence A. Neyman, of Chicago, satisfactorily produced fever with long wave diathermy. At the same time, Doctor Cash King, of Memphis, Tennessee, was conducting investigations with similar methods of inducing artificial fever. Hot baths, radiant heat cabinets, and various other devices became popular for fever production. . The work in this institution began in November, 1931. 'Prior to that time, Doctor Willis R. Whitney, director of research at General Electric Laboratories, had made the observation that men working around the short wave generators developed an elevation in body temperature. Doctor Whitney had carried out considerable studies in this field, particularly in the research work associated with Admiral Byrd's polar expeditions. Under the sponsorship of Doctor Charles F. Kettering, the project was Q 44 -to launched in this institution, directed by Doctor Walter M. Simpson, Doctor Fred Kislig Cdied February 7, l933j, and Doctor Paul deKruif. Doctor Paul deKruif had stimulated interest in this field following his visit abroad with Doctor Julius Wagner Jauregg, his observations having been published in his book, Men Against Death. The short-wave apparatus, called the radiotherm, was made by the General Electric Research Laboratories and sent to this institution for investigative purposes. Although an artificial fever could be induced by this means, it soon became apparent that this method was not without considerable hazard because of the tendency of the short waves to become concentrated in drops of sweat, which accumulated on the skin surfaces, producing burning of the skin. The idea was then conceived of placing the patient in an air-conditioned cabinet for the purpose of dissipating the perspiration as fast it was formed. The radiotherm combined with the air-conditioned cabinet was then utilized for the induction of artificial fever. Maintenance of the fever thus produced was accomplished by placing the patient in hot packs. In May, 1933, it was learned by accident that the body temperature could be elevated and maintained with the air-conditioned cabinet alone without the use of the high frequency currents. When the cabinet fulhlled the requirement of a safe and satisfactory method for the administration of artificial fever, eighty cabinets were built by the Frigidaire Division, General Motors Corporation, and distributed to twenty-six research centers for the purpose of widening the scope of investigation. Since this time innumerable changes in cabinet construction and details of technic have occurred with the result that it is now possible to elevate the bodyis temperature to any desired level with cabinet temperatures not exceeding 1150 Fahrenheit, in contrast to 1700 Fahrenheit temperatures of former years, by the simple expedient of increasing the moisture content I relative humidityj of the air within the cabinet. Two years ago, the Liebel -Flarsheim Company, of Cincinnati, was licensed by Frigidaire Division, General Motors Corporation, to build the cabinet, which was given the name Hypertherm, This development has continued under the direction of Edwin C, Sittler, formerly associated with the General Motors Research Corporation, who is in charge of this project at the Liebel-Flarsheim Company. This apparatus is sold at a reasonable cost only to qualified institutions approved by the American Medical Association, with the stated provision that the physicians and nurses who are engaged in the work must receive adequate preliminary training, at an approved institution. During the past two years, one or more Hypertherms have been installed in qualified hospitals each week. The increased demands for training personnel have stimulated the necessity for an organized training course which will be put into effect this next year. In addition to the cabinet research and personnel training, many other problems have been studied in the department. Extensive serologic studies have been carried out with the collaboration and cooperation of Doctor Reuben L. Kahn, University Hospital, Ann Arbor, Michigan. To Doctor Kahn we owe a debt of gratitude for his kind and untiring services in the development of the broader understanding of the serologic tests. Considerable investigative work has been done in the fields of bacteriology, hema- tology, and chemotherapy which have been beneficial not only to the department itself, but also of value to the general stafl' of the hospital and physicians of this community. - On January 1, 1940, the department of fever therapy research was divided into the department of research, still under the auspices of the Kettering Institute for Medical Research, and the division of fever therapy which became 3 unit gf the hospital, During this past year, the interest in this work has continued to increase until, at the present time, the present physical facilities are being 'F' 'V Q I I L utilized to their fullest capacity, The depart- Zu. mental staff, which consisted of one nurse- technician in 1931, now consists of five nurse-technicians whose complete rapport with the patient must be established if the treatment is to be successful. The success of the treatment depends upon their patience, skill, and alertness. It has often been said that a department will grow or shrink, depending upon the ingenuity and interest of the nurse-technician. The department is under the guidance of Doctor Walter M. Simpson, director, Doctor I-I. Worley Kendell, associate director, and Doctor Donald L. Rose, research associate. I + 46 -F The Diagnostic Laboratories and the Kettering Institute for Medical Research WALTER M. SIMPSON, M. D. HE REMARKABLE development of the Diagnostic Labora- tories of The Miami Valley Hospital during the past decade may best be described by comparing the volume of work performed in 1930 with that accomplished in 1940. During 1930 a total of 42,74-6 laboratory tests were done. In 1940 the total had grown to 78,071. This increase of 83 per cent in volume of work- is proportionately much greater than the 20 per cent increase in the number of patients admitted to the hospital during that period. The only conclusion to be drawn from these statistics is that physicians of this community have become fully aware of the great advantages of making full use of the diagnostic facilities and the skilled personnel available to them and to their patients. This fortunate situation is reflected in the more prompt arrival at an accurate diagnosis and in the earlier administration of rational therapy. Q The motto of the Diagnostic Laboratories is: The Welfare of the Patient is the First Considera- tion. This motto is painted in large letters on the walls of both the central laboratory and the interns' laboratory. The high esprit de corps of the laboratory workers is a reflection of the implica- tions of this motto. , In addition to providing the physicians of this community with the highest quality of laboratory diagnostic service, an intensive program of medical research has gone steadily forward. Thanks to the generosity and active collaboration of Doctor Charles F. Kettering, remarkable progress has been made in the investigative work in the Held of artificial fever therapy, since the Kettering Institute for Medical Research was established in 1931. Twenty-six medical research institutions in this country, in England and in Belgium are collaborating with the Kettering Institute for Medical Research in this research program. Scores of physicians and nurses from hospitals in this country and abroad have come to The Miami Valley Hospital for training in this work. Doctor Melvin Oosting, Associate Director. of the Diagnostic Laboratories, is engaged in important researches on tularemia and on trichinosis. Doctor H. Worley Kendell, Associate Director of the Ket- tering Institute for Medical Research, and Doctor Donald L. Rose, Research Associate, have collabo- rated with the Director, Doctor Walter M. Simpson, in research studies of far-reaching importance in the control of syphilis, gonococcic infections, undulant fever, rheumatic fever, Sydenham's chorea, certain diseases of the eye and certain forms of arthritis. The Director and his associates have continued the clinical, immunologic and pathologic studies on tularemia and brucellosis fundulant feverj, begun in 1927. For these studies the laboratory workers have received the Gold Medal of the American Medical Association and the Gold Medal of the American Society of Clinical Pathologists. . Another important function of the Department is to conduct Clinico-Pathologic Conferences at regular intervals. Interest in these conferences has grown steadily. The large attendance provides evidence of their continued appeal to the physicians of this community as a means of keeping abreast of medical progress. 4+ 11-7 'F The Miami Valley Hospital Department of X-ray JOHN T. MGGREER, M. D. A -RAY AS a diagnostic and therapeutic procedure is an accepted medical practice. It is hard to realize that this ray was unknown until 1895, when Professor Roentgen discovered a ray which passed through various substances which are opaque to ordinary light. As early as 1896 physicians began experimenting with x-rays as a therapeutic measure. The importance of x-ray in the care of the sick and injured was recognized early by the attending staff of this hospital. Just ten years after this amazing discovery, the first x-ray equipment was installed under the direction of Doctor W. H. Delscamp, one of the pioneer roentgenologists in America. The unit was placed in the Patterson Surgery building. As the hospital grew and the value of x-rays in medicine became better understood the department was moved to larger quarters in the basement of the same building. New and improved equipment was added at that time. With the completion of the New Surgical Building in 1925 the x-ray department was again moved. The new space included leaded walls for the protection of personnel, an especially designed dark room for the processing of Hlms, fluoroscopic and radiographic equipment was purchased, A well-planned therapy room was included for the future installation of such equipment. Under the able direction of Doctor Delscamp, with the assistance of Miss Mabel Sweetnam, the volume of work in the department increased rapidly. As a result Doctor Delscamp found it increas- ingly diH'icult to meet the demands of his downtown office and those of the hospitalg therefore in August, 1939, Doctor John T. McGreer was appointed full time director of the department. This last year the need of again enlarging the department was recognized by the attending staff and the board of directors. As a result new equipment was installed throughout the department. An important addition was the deep x-ray therapy unit, the space for it having been provided Fifteen years before. The work of the department is not confined to hospitalized patients, but extends to doctors and out- patients for treatment and diagnosis. The department at present includes the director, and four technicians. J' 48 -L- f Transfusion Sterilizing , astric suction . . . Sweet oblivion Oosting s g B. mask . . . Consultatio n...B.L. Wagga: fs M: i., i agile'-. A iw 1 MW .,-- -W7 i iizifilgr 12. . . . . P ' , 1 xxanaw-ss---Q 17 .ii X-favax., - . , :.1 f A1 'J' , 2657 1 as s sw - , W K- --'si - sax .. .. ,,,M. V . . f W M M 1 , 54... E oqsfai--8, ,gig - . ,WW a-is K assi? 15 X Maternity Rocknss ! The following article leads one over the road of progress which has been tred by our Obstetrical division in the last ten years. In 1931 the Booby Hatchu was taken over by the Isolation Department as a room and the stair- way leading to it was closed. In 1932 the 10-bed ward on Maternity III was remodeled into smaller wards: a four-bed ward, two three-bed wards and one two-bed ward, These wards have proved to be very popular and the white screened unit of the large ward is gone. During this same year, there was only a 41.296 occu- pancy, proof that the depression had also affected the obstetrical division. In 1935 radio reception was made available to all the private .rooms and private wards. This innovation afforded great pleasure to the patients. Seven rooms on Maternity III and the two end rooms on both floors, which were completely redecorated in soft pastel shades with matching drapes, are most attractive. In 1936 the work of refinishing and redecorating the rooms of the Maternity department was completed. H Later the Infant Respirator was purchased and has proved valuable, Air-conditioning facilities for the nursery in summer were installed. - 1938 brought the untimely death of Dr, G. C. Gilfellin, who was a friend in the truest sense. In the last year a type of violet ray light has been installed in both nurseries for the purpose of lessening the possibility of infection. These burn day and night. ' The general trend has been toward the hospitalization of the obstetrical patient. This brings the daily census average up to approximately 8521 occupancy for 1940. This is also shown by the follow- ing increase of births: 1900, 28 births, 1910, 118 birthsg 1920, 725,births3 1930, 1,325 births, 1940, 1,410 births. r 50 are Communicable Disease Department ANY s'rEPs FORWARD have been taken in the care of com- municable diseases over the scheme of things a number of years ago, when the pest-house was the official recipient of cases of this type. Present philosophy indicates that rather than denying full hospital privileges for patients suffering from a communicable disease with other complications, it is most desirable to give attention to the medical or surgical complications existent in the patient under a method of treatment and nursing care wherein the danger of cross infection is reduced to a minimum. Hospitals, generally, still continue the practice of not accepting a majority of the cases falling into the communicable disease classifica- tion, unless the patient needs medical or surgical care beyond that indicated by the communicable disease itself. The function of this department. constantly operating under the shadow of cross infection, demands perfected techniques in the giving of rapid, thorough and complete treatment and care to the patients hospitalized. Concentration of communicable diseases in one department has no doubt been a contributing factor, although not the most important, in the reduction of the mortality rate in cases such as meningitis, diphtheria and the like. Because of its importance, all students receive four weeks experience in the communicable disease division. Since many of the patients with communicable diseases are children, the students are routinely given sixteen weeks experience in the children's department before being taught communi- cable disease nursing. Formal teaching in communicable disease nursing consists of a fifty hour course taught by various members of the medical and nursing instructional staff. The most recent major development in the car of communicable disease cases and one which has caught the public fancy is the invention of the 'espirator, commonly called the Iron Lung, which is used in cases where normal breathing of the patient has temporarily ceased. The precision with which such a unit puts into practical use certain scientific theories to reconstruct in a mechanical way the individual's physical method of breathing is extremely dramatic. H 'Gr tx-'ET ii-MI-af, M... 12 :L- ff 'i'f,-fd ' QXZFWKE V EB. .f i 555,221 tg me K 53355 I flftifkiiii 5.555 Drug Room ITH THE development in medicine, an ever increasing importance has become attached to the existence within the modern hospital of a well staffed and a well supplied drug room. Services of the drug department are available to all patients in the hospital. One of the most intensive stocks of drugs of any hospital this size is carried in the drug room in the interest of expected drug service. At the present time the drug department likewise manufactures a number of the preparations and medications used throughout the institution. Its present personnel includes four pharmacists and two general assistants. Drug orders are routinely filled once each day and the services of the pharmacists are available the rest of the day for special orders. Emergency service is likewise available for the hours when the drug room is not oflicially open. A+ 52 n .1 ' ' ...EZ , - ,gMW... Hessen- -j 9 g gangs 2 5 ,Q 2 - 'f-:i U .. - r ..:,,.: MM .1 gr T. A' ,tp 1 F Q3 ,. H, , he - Ziff ' xg are ' -1 sw, si fi Vitae' 'E .2 ,L . . rite, 1 im . :.:-:-. F' ' . fe lis K gf- ---- 1. L- X5 , gi li- , if' ' 'mi-1-A elm gag:-I-I-sg! W :t is ' 5 . . . ..... : Y :'1- ,,.. 1 :::::.:.I Children? Department HE PROGRESS made in our children's department during the past ten years has been consistent with our aims for the welfare and protection of the child. Our most vital aim being to recognize the right of the child : to health protection, to the care of specialists, and to effective hospital treatment. The child is no longer considered merely a miniature replica of the adult but is regarded as an individual with a personality as his most precious right. With these qualities and rights of the child in mind, changes in our children's department were brought about to fashion an environment that would provide more favorable conditions for the efficient care and needs of the sick child. In 1933 the children's ward, then known as Twin Star Ward, was divided into cubicles and decorated with attractive curtains. October 1, 1938, opened our student affiliation at Children's Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio. During this same year plans for the remodeling of the former G Station into a children's ward were designed and work was started. January, 1939, we dedicated our new children's division. The patient bed capacity was increased from 18 to 30. Because of this, during the first year of functioning, there was a 15W increase of patient days. This new division provides well lighted wards with glass cubicle units, running water in each ward, furniture and equipment purposely designed for the child. The division also provides a room especially regulated and equipped with heated incubators for the highly specialized care of premature infants. Because of the improvements in this department the students' clinical field has also been increased. Our student affiliation with Children's Hospital was then terminated October 1, 1939, 47 students having had the advantage of a four months term of training at that institution. At present the student gets a well rounded program in Pediatric nursing including, sixty hours of classroom lecture and demonstrations, a sixteen week period of ward experiences, four weeks of which is devoted to care of crippled children in the Whitmore building, ten days experience in the milk formula laboratory, one week experience and observation in the Fever Therapy Department and approximately ten hours in Occupational Therapy. lNith this expansion and growth of our children's department as a start, we will aim to serve the community by ever recognizing and planning for the needs of the child. 4+ 53 A W3 4-54 Physical Therapy HE PHYSICAL THERAPY DEPARTMENT of The Miami Valley Hospital was opened in Whitmore Building, February, 1926. The primary purpose of the department was the treatment of children in Whitmore Building. In 1934 an increase of Physical Therapy work made it necessary to open an additional unit in the Main Building. This unit is now located on E Station. The equipment of the department as a whole includes: 1. Mechanotherapy 2. Heliotherapy 3. Hydrotherapy Short Wave Machines faj Alpine Lamps Hubbard Tank fbi Elliott Treatment Regulators fbi Kromayer Lamp fbj Whirlpools fcj Sinusoidal Machine fcj Infra-Red Lamps I Qdj Pavaex Unit fdj Radiant Heat Lamps fej Articulator Massage and exercise is given in connection with other types of treatments. From 1928 to 1941, twelve technicians have taken training in the department, seven of these have been graduates of The Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing. In 1928, The American Registry of Physical Therapy was organized, which in 1935 was approved by the American Medical Association and since that time all technicians in the department have been registered. A - 4 The work has increased steadily over a period of fifteen years. More modern equipment has been installed and the Medical Profession as a whole has accepted the value of Physical Therapy treatments as an aid to surgery and medicine. During the year of 1940, 14,148 treatments were given in the department, Almost 50fk of all treatments given were short wave treatments. This form of therapy has become very valuable in the past five years in the treatment of pneumonia, post-operative pains and numerous other conditions. Two-thirds of all treatments are bedside treatments. The other third consists of either out-patients or patients in the hospital who are ambulatory. No treatments are given by the department except those ordered by the Physician. Since 1931 student nurses have been taught massage by the Physical Therapy Department. In 1941 the schedule of the nurses was changed to allow massage to be taught in the last part of the third year in place of the first year. It was decided that the graduate on private duty would have more opportunity to'use massage than the student. The splendid co-operation of the Staff of Physicians attending The Miami Valley Hospital has been one of the reasons for the growth and success of this department. Occupational Therapy Employment is essential to human happiness. Galen 172 A.D. GCUPATIONAL TI-IERAPY is any activity, mental or physical, definitely prescribed and guided for the distinct purpose of hastening recovery from disease or injury. The occupational therapy department of The Miami Valley Hospital was established in 1930 by the Dayton Junior League. Three work rooms, an ofiice, and storeroom in the basement of the Whitmore Building were equipped by many individual gifts from the members of the Junior League. All operating expenses have been paid by the Junior League, The department is under the guidance of the Occupa- tional Therapy Advisory Board consisting of several staff doctors and a numberof interested laymen. Many young women of Dayton have given valuable hours of service in the department under the guid- ance of the director. There are now thirty active and trained volunteers serving in the department. The purpose is to expedite the recovery of any patient as ordered by his physician. Many times a patient whose mind has been diverted by a pleasant activity finds he nolonger counts the hours till his release from the hospital. As a result he may be released sooner than he expected. Often a patient is able to see possibilities of full recovery from limited motion of a knee, hip or elbow after he performs one of the varied occupations shown him in the work-shop. This curative aspect of the work is very closely allied to physical therapy and is most effective when it follows directly the treatment in that department. as .lu . 5 E 2553, 5' 4 S Hg, M712 Q X , x Eye Department YE NURSING as a special nursing service was first established in August, 1939, following the appointment of a full time eye supervisor, Miss Bernice Casey. With the increased specialization in ophthalmology, the specialists felt the need of anurse with post-graduate experience in eye nursing to organize and supervise a special program of nursing care for these patients. Eye nursing was first offered as an elective service to student nurses in April, 1940. Experience in post-operative care of eye cases, special treatments and procedures used in eye conditions has contributed much toward making the student nurse more aware of the importance of intelligent and thorough eye nursing. The growth of this field is indicated by an increase of one hundred and fifty percent in the number of cases treated in the past four years. Diabetic Department DIOPATHIC! To physicians this word seemed to cling to diabetes. As early as two years before Columbus discovered America, Paracelusus recorded certain urinary characteristics of this disease. By 1889 the pancreas was definitely known to control the sugar metabolism. Still people continued to starve, lose weight and finally die. It was not until 1921 when Banting and Best discovered Isletin that a treatment other than the starvation diet could be used to control diabetes. There followed many years of experimenting until today we have protamine zinc insulin, zinc insulin crystals and regular insulin. The diabetic education of a diabetic patient is essential. One of the medical staff members became interested in the treatment of this disease and in 1934 established the diabetic department. In July, 1935, Miss Martha Werner was appointed diabetic supervisor after she had post-graduate experience in diabetic nursing. The department now consists of two diabetic nurses with post-graduate experience and astudent nurse. Since diabetes is a metabolic disease, diet plays an important role in its control. The dietetic department, in cooperation with the diabetic supervisors, plans and serves all meals and teaches diet therapy to diabetic patients. Orthopedic Department IVE PERCENT of all patients admitted to The Miami Valley Hospital in 1940 were orthopedic cases. Due to the large number of orthopedic cases and the large amount of mechanical equipment involved in the treatment of such cases, an orthopedic supervisor became necessary. In July, 1940, an orthopedic supervisor was appointed to assist the orthopedic surgeons, to organize and supervise a program of nursing care for these patients, and to establish a central supply room for the mechanical equipment. One of the newest mechanical devices added to this department is the Albee-Comper table which is used in applying body casts. Orthopedics is not a special service to be practiced only on the orthopedic ward but its principles should be applied to general nursing. Students receive orthopedics as a service to gain a specialized knowledge and skill in the nursing care of such patients but they are expected to apply these principles to the prevention of crippling conditions on all patients. We are fortunate to have a separate building, Whitmore, for the care of state, public, and private crippled children. The bed capacity is twenty-eightg divided into three wards, one for boys, one for girls and one for cleft palate cases. 4- 57 +A I -4- 5 8 +P' L The Department of Nutrition I-IE DEPARTMENT of Nutrition is honored to contribute to The Lamp through a review of pleasant relations with the entire student body during the past ten years. The first year student continues, as during the previous decade, to receive basic knowledge and practice in nutrition and cookery. However, a fifteen hour course in lectures, in addition to thirty hours of laboratory, have been revised to eighteen hours of lecture, as well as thirty-two hours of laboratory. Ten additional problem hours for the entire class provide the opportunity for each nurse to compute her own nutritional requirements, to observe exhibits 3 to study results in experimental animal feeding, and to make cost studies. Following the basic course as outlined, diet therapy is begun in the third quarter of the first year and is continued into the second year. Diet therapy is not taught as a separate course but is an in- tegral part of the Medical and Surgical Nursing course. The instruction in diet therapy presents dietary management of the medical or surgical condition coincident with the material presented by the physician, surgeon, or nurse instructor. Students have a period of six weeks diet therapy practice. These nurses are assigned to specific patients for whom diet therapy is a dominant requirement. Con- ferences concerning every phase of such patient,s progress are an important part of this period. Following service, charting is done by student nurses under the ward dietitian's supervision. Food values oH'ered to, and taken by, the patient are included in the patient's record. Practice in cooking and weighing foods for metabolic patients is accomplished by individual assign- ment. The major part of food for metabolic patients is prepared by hospital cooks in order to utilize the regular menu insofar as possible, which definitely establishes the corrective diet as a modification of the normal diet. Electrically heated, insulated food conveyors meet the requirements of this situation. Addi- tional equipment including scales completes the portable metabolic unit. . Lectures are contributed by the Pediatric dietitian to the Courses in Pediatrics, and Obstetrical Nurs- ing. Other lectures totaling fifteen hours are contributed by the staff dietitians to the course entitled Nursing and Health Service In The F amilyf' An hour during the Professional Adjustments Course is devoted to a presentation of ideas and methods for carrying out teas and parties. Food Service for other informal entertaining is suggested. Modern food conveyors have replaced the former trucks which required re-heating of food in steam tables in the serving pantries. The new type food service allows closer supervision by dietitians from the time these conveyors leave the main kitchen until they are returned after each meal. Dietitians carry responsibility of the tray service in all divisions of the hospital. The range of supervision for teaching student nurses is thereby extended. To meet the requirements of a broader curriculum and an increased service, the Department of Nutrition has increased its staff by two. At present, there are two administrative dietitians, one post- operative, and one pediatric and obstetric, in addition to the two ward dietitians. The ward dietitians teach nutrition in classes for diabetic patients, and teach in diet therapy situations. The dietitians' par- ticipation in experiments within the dietary department, and in research carried on by staff physicians, is significant of the place of nutrition in modern medicine. In conclusion, the dietitians wish to congratulate the student body for their splendid activities and advancements in their profession, May we extend, also, our best wishes for a brilliant future. 4- 59 as The Early History of The Miami Valley Hospital N THE LATE 1880's and early l890's, the Rev. Carl Mueller was the pastor of the Third Street German Lutheran Church of Dayton. He had succeeded to this position from his fatheris pastorate. He was a fine, big, upstanding man, who spoke English fluently but with a decided German accent. His picture still hangs in the corridor in the old hospital. Rev. Mueller made many trips to Germany and became interested in the German Protestant Deaconess movement. He succeeded in interesting the German-American population in starting such a movement in Dayton. At that time the Germans in Dayton numbered some 40,000, quite a large percentage of the people. They were rather clannish and lived for the most part in the southeastern part of town, the sector bounded by East Third Street, South Brown and Wayne Avenue. In 1892, a brick building was rented on West Fourth Street between Jefferson and St. Clair Streets. Six Deacon- nesses were brought from Germany headed by a Baroness, whose name I have forgotten. None of these women could speak the language of the country to which they came. As I remember the capacity of the little hospital was not above 20 patients, but it was popular from the start. I say popular in a very limited sense, as hospitals were primarily for the indigent sick, and no one who could possibly be cared for at home would enter their walls unless the illness were S0 grave that the end seemed inevitable. Much Of the Surgery gf the time, even of the major type, was performed at home in an improvised operating room, with the dining room or kitchen table as the most essential furnishing. An impasse arose. The Homeopathic School at this time was at the zenith of its existence. Whatever its merits, a large number of the wealthy people of the town were adherents of the sect, so when it came to selecting a Staff for the new hospital, it was found that Oil and Water would not mix. To the Regulars, sometimes called Allopaths, who for the most part, would not even consult with a Homeopath, a Cgmmon or mixed Staff was unthinkable. After much controversy, the architect was instructed to design a. central administration building of three Hoors, the first floor for administrative purposes, the second for the Superintendent, and the third for the private patients of the wealthier class. I might mention in passing that the mggt expensive room in the hospital was 33.00 per day. On either side of this building was to be a two story Wing-an exact duplicate in every detail, even down to two operating suites. The East wing to belong to the Regular Staff exclusively, the West tg the Homeopaths. And so the building was erected and opened with much ceremony in October, 1894, A sober and realistic survey of the cost of maintaining two entirely separate hospitals under the same roof led to a readjustment of this part of the program-the patients Of both schools were put in the same wards and but one sct of operating rooms was ever used. In 1895, it was decided to establish an internship, and again a compromise was made, to the effect that since there could be but one, he was to serve the members of both Staffs Materia Medica, and Therapeutics being barred from the competitive examination. Fate or Fortune threw this appointment my way, and on the first of May, 1895, I entered upon rny duties, the only interne between Columbus and Cincinnati. At my entrance on the scene, there were 28 Deaconesses enrolled in various capacities. By this time half of the number had been brought from Germany and the remaining half recruited from the membership of German Luthern Churches scattered over a wide area of the country, The hospital routine was quite different from that of today. First a heavy breakfast at 6, then chapel with much vociferous singing and off to the wars, I mean wards. Down on their knees went the Nurse-Deaconesses, a pail of water beside them, a scrub brush in one hand, a big bar of soap in the other-every inch of the floors to be gone ovcr. Next the patients were scrubbed and this duty being over, then breakfast was served. A patient might die with his soul unclean but never his body. Five meals a day for the nursing corps plus an occasional Snack at bedtime, They were a noble, self-sacrihcing group of women, a true Sisterhood. Most of them were past their first youth and the costumes they wore added nothing to their appearance. A dice box cap of white, perched on the top of their head kept in place with wide starched strings tied in a big bow beneath the chin. An ankle length dress of blue denim or gingham, the front part covered by a white bib aprong in summer white cotton stockings and carpet slippers, in winter red woolen knit stockings completed their toilet. A red flannel petticoat with black stripes was in evidence during the floor scrubbing. In spite of the auspicious start, in a few years the Germans became homesick and departed. The home recruits dwindled away one by one, the life of sacrifice and abnegation did not appeal to the American girls of German parentage, so that by the latter part of the year 1899 there were but three Deaconesses and three private patients left in the hospital g how many were remaining in the wards, I do not remember, but they must have been very few owing to the fact that not enough personnel was left to care for them. Since the hospital was originally organized with a religious motif or background, the constitution of the Society prescribed that the majority of the Board of the Trustees must be clergymen, but at this crisis, a medical man-- Dr. George Goodhue, who has but recently passed to his well deserved rest, stepped to the front. He was a strong and able man. Under his leadership, sufficient funds were raised to reorganize the hospital. This was completed early in the year 1900. The name was changed to that of The Miami Valley Hospital and it was decided to organize a training school for nurses that would be among the best of the standards of that time. Miss Ella Phillips Crandall was engaged as the head of the Training School with Miss Lillian Clayton as her assistant. Both were graduates of Blockley Hospital of Philadelphia. We were most fortunate in our selection, as they were both young women of high ideals, boundless energy and great organizing ability. 'lghe three Deaconesses who remained constituted the first Sophomore class of the school and were the first gra uates. A new superintendent was secured, who, while he was a clergyman, did not reside in the building and the reorganized institution was on its way to the successful school it has now become. Cunrrss G1NN, M. D. + 60 ee' CAMPUS LIFE APPED Fms SNOW C L ad gn , JQ.f.V-fn T . ,vw FROZEN BEAUTY .,,.1 ,- .v-. - -mg., 1 ' 1 '-'-,Av :.f-a-'a,5,. 'a'a.-e.f...w'+1-:y'--H-::-:-3,,-:-a--a-:---S--m-:-3E:,-:- , --if F'-fr ' .E'1I Z? -L' ZE'i:-:-:,a:.::v'1 4, 'Q-j5E'j1Qg-'acl : - .4 , . . , M. .E ...Q ...-.... . P. 1- . Ve. , W s ' vm: ,.. 3,1-,L ,-mgI.,--,A-me-.3-,E-.5,,,. A .M ' 1 -G15 - , f H5 5' ,J f 'I' ::i'.'fw,-.-Q32-.-,4:iL'EEd2-f,.5f.-If--f . W ' 4 ' I-Y 1: I, 'A , ' ' ::g.f -p,g.,.::1g:: Q,,.q, 13- 5 THE HOUSE OF MEMORIES 1- 611- -P- VVI-IITE HOUSE ON THE HILL 4' 65 'P ,- ww., my if , ' x. , N . M U3s'! nw-f'-.wgf 'Q fw m 49' . . A, JW m,....ML,Qgm.U , V .bag be '- 35535755 T Wa '?'1f -'E Mmm mx . ,S 4 -41 :kgiamilw A. in A ,4 .af .df wwf 'TI ,xt Hfkx M sglwl, 1 R V m,!..'? grit' WLXQ4 KVM' . ' WA -W:,Wf ,., 7Q5- i f f l , Ap 5 A , . vm J 257- W Hr, M, , , I-ZQAQM 5, fwmfg 1 ,E 'Z .I 3 ,say ,z - .Mya ,IEW .mst H 21: i. WV: I N. 4 L TBM hw: F L3 3 1 -if 1: .QJ1-'3 7- 'Q fs N155 'ff 'l Q - M 5? W' 'P hifi - F 2- LQQ T - Q QL , -5 JUST BEYOND 4' 66 f? MQW sw muff Km E mm . 5 E E E A x u 1 mm' EH mmm:--MM-M L .E-NME Si-Y,1!- F fifsgn--fi Sli, iT Kffff. -rn . 1 . mm nfgifgg mm- U.. M. mb: n -' x-- 4 an - M., X w Y : f Ax- if -A Sf PERSPECTIVE +67 The Nightingale Chorus To NURSES - - Will you ever forget that word, Quiet? Do not sing on duty, do not sing-night nurses sleepingg do not sing-study hourg Sh-h-h - - - In every group there are those who enjoy singing, some with talent and others who just sing for their own pleasure. i In 1928 The Nightingale Chorus, under the direction of Leslie Diehl, was organized. After a lapse of interest for two years in favor of physical education, the chorus was reorganized in 1939, under the baton of Mr. Gustav Herlan, through the efforts of the members of the Class of 1941. In October, 1940, Mrs, Fannie Belle Routsong became the director. Membership in the chorus, which meets every Monday evening, is optional for students. ' The primary purpose of the group, which is made up of thirty-two student nurses, is to provide a means of expression in song for those who find little other opportunity for singing. Q68 To Recreational and Physical Education - EVERY Thursday evening the sound of laughter and a bouncing ball resounds throughout the gym. A program of recreational and physical education under the direction of Mrs. Mildred Lowes is being enjoyed by the Hrst year students. These activities are optional for second and third year students. During the winter the program consists of folk dancing, volley ball, baseball, kickball, bowling, calis- thenics, games and relays, all of which can be played in the gymnasium. With spring comes new recrea- tional advantages such as hikes, picnics, and all types of outdoor games. From this class has grown the Womenis Athletic Association of The Miami Valley Hospital. This organization will strive to develop a large and well-rounded program of recreational activities for students. A Student Council ' Noi: EVERY MONTH student representatives of each class don their most dignified manner and prepare to discuss the problems of the students with the director of the school. The council serves as a direct communication between student and faculty which fosters better understanding. The supervision of student activities, traditions and customs of our school falls to this group. New ideas are discussed and given careful thought prior to their acceptance. A sense of social responsibility on the student's part is developed and in so doing helps to maintain the highest standards of the school. ' Q ' 4-W 70 A The Lampv Staff Back Row-G. INSLEY, E, GERDES, MISS SWENSON, MISS SAYRE, M. K. SCHMIDTQ I First row-M. HARBAUGI'I, E. MERIQER, S. L. BANTA, L. CLARK, C, LAKE, G. REAMES 5 LOUISE CLARK, Editor-in-chief GEORGIA INSLEY, Assistant Editor SARAH LEE BANTA, Business Manager GARNET REAMES, Assistant Business Manager ELIZABETH MERKER, Art Editor EVELYN GERDES, Write-up Editor CHRISTINE LAKE, Photography Editor MIRIAM HARBAUGH, Campus Editor MARY KATPIERINE SCI-IMIDT, Stenographer Miss SAYRE, Adviser MISS SwENsoN, Adviser MRS. MEDLEY, Alumnae Adviser MRs. GRILLOT, Alumnae Adviser +71+P MR. MCKANDLES Photographer ,..n1 ,W .- W if in ' 1 Q1 7- Caller for Miss Smith . . . Chow time-at last Quarzmtined-shucks . . . Soothing to what! . Silence- ' genus at work . . . Nobody home . . 4' 72 + Ten o'clock click 15- iq fo' f H ' Graduates bowling . . . Miss Siebenthaler . . . Mrs. Grimes Earl . . .Tom . . .joe H ing and Charlie . . . Mr. Channel Mr. Ewing . . . opp WILL YOU EVER FORGET- What is a German goiter? . . . The Lish family . . . The rush for the dining room after psychiatry class . . . DIVERTICULUM! . . . Schmidt and her corns'. . . Who's little fellefs and the airplane crash . . . That profitable M- game at Lilly's , . . Seven babies in one night on maternity . . . A certain second year student who, when asked to do gloves, said that she could put up only three cases as all the rest were for the right hand . . , Those live foot girls in call gowns . . . That mysterious little black bag? . . . YVanted: A good definition of epididymus . . . Have you observed . . . How many stair steps leading to the basement? How many doors in the corridor leading to the class room? . . . Surgical dressing classes . . . Vanishing blue . . , A certain green probie eagerly answering hair- brush to the instructor's question What materials do you need for an anemata? . . . Puss in bold handwriting. . .Student proudly showing a baby He looks justlike you ! . . .flt was the visiting ministerj . . . 'What prexie absent-mindedly emptied a tub of water in the trash can? . . . A certain probie when asked to get the thermometers from patients in 10-bed pulled them all out and handed them to the nurse without reading them! . , , Girls-two in particular-there is a screen in that window . . . Get back in bed. Be with you in a few minutes. That first time you operated the elevator in main build- ing? . . . Who hollered Harry when she got locked in the bathroom at five till seven one morning? OUR SONG-,41 Tune: Johnny's so long at the fair Oh dear, what can the matter be? VVe ean't get dietetics, We canit get our Anatomy. We can't get our ethics, l'Ve,re not smart as we ought to be. Because they act like emetics. And so we are on our way out. And so we are on our way out. Can't get drugs and solutions, We can't get our chemistry. We can't draw the right conclusions. Bases! Acids! Salts! Mystery! So we're ending this revolution. We just ainit what we used to be. And so we are one our way out. And so we are on our way out. We can't get our hygiene. We can't get our Nursing, And we can't learn our ensymes. In spite of all our rehearsing. So we need an anodyne So, Dad, please-some reimbursing And so we are on our way out. Cause we are on our way out. We weren't expecting a test. But we got a beautiful test. VVe did our best! We flunked the test. And so we are on our way out. Good old surgical dressings Miss WALN- She pulled us tlzroughn 4' 74 +A The members of the Class of '41 wish to express their apprecia- tion to Miss Waln for her untiring effort, kindness, and advice. is 66 This vm' That HOSPITAL SONGS Thanks for the Buggy Ride when the nurse wheels you to your bed. Let me call you Sweetheart when you forget a nurse's name. I wanna go where you go when the patient next to you goes home. Always when a nurse asks you how long you expect to stay. VVish I had a Little Drink when you are out of water. But you Forgot to Remember when the nurse forgot your backrub. Show me the Way to go Home when youlre blue. it SPARE THAT Laundry spare this uniform Make not a single tear just remove the mercurochrome But leave the buttons there. This covered me last week I have but one more to wear For the life of it I speak Please handle it with care. CURE FOR SCANDAL One cake of good nature , One ounce of herb called mind your own busi- ness , One ounce of charity for others , Two or three sprigs of keep your tongue between your teeth , Simmer together in a vessel called circumspec- tion for a short time and it will be fit for use. UNIFORM 'Twas my own clumsy hand That sewed those buttons on Don't tear the collar band For then the uniform is gone. I want to find the pockets there And all the seams without a break For again this garment I must wear So please be careful for my sake. ODE TO NURSES If you can please the Sisters and the Doctors, The superintendents and patients, too 3 The patient's family and the senior nurses, 'Twould seem that you had quite enough to do. If you can please the Czarines of the pantry, The Napoleons who massage and bathe the halls, And yell at you for not walking on the ceiling, Or smile when you have lost your beaux phone call. If you can please the interns and the house doctors, And hold your tongue when the buck they try to pass, Or when chamber maids and elevator workers Think your day is lost without their sass. I f you can stay your tears when in the drug room, They ask for whom and why you want your wares, Send you back prompto for perscriptionsg Make you climb what seems a million stairs. A+ If you survive two months in the O. R. With Tie my gownn or 'gHand me this or that , The wild excitement of the doctors scolding, Still don't give up and leave your training flat. If you don't swear the night you've got a heavy, And are informed it's you to relieve. If you still stick when lying tongues seem rampant, ' That those in charge seem disposed to believe. If you can glide past Tom at nearly day break, Sign the book and make it look like ten o'clock, If you can fool the Sisters and the nurses, When you go hatless for a walk around the block. If you can keep your head when bells around you Are ringing till you don't know what to do, If you can keep your heart when handsome interns Are losing their's and blaming it on you. If now that you have finished training, You can look on this life as mild, V Yours is the earth, But I'm here to tell you, You'll not be a nurse-youlll be a saint, my child. 4. 'r END OF A NURSE,S DAY S Seven ojclock 5 and the nurse's work Was done for another dayg She heaved a sort of tired sigh And put the charts away. Then sat for a moment and bowed her head Over the little white desk 5 ' I wonder, said she to herself, After all, Am I really doing my best? Perhaps I could have begun the day With a brighter and cheerier smile, , And answered the bells with a 'right away, ' Instead of an 'after a whilef And I might have listened with sweeter grace To the story of 6's woes ,' She may be sujering more, perhaps, More than anyone knows. Poems And I might have refrained from the half way frown, Although I was busy then, When that frail little boy with sad blue eyes, Kept ringing again and again. A nd I might have spoken a kindlier word To that heart of that restless boy, And stopped a moment to help him find The part of his missing toy. . Or perhaps the patient in 1.8.4 'fust needed a gentler touch. There are lots of things I might have done, And it wouldn't have taken much. She sighed again and brushed a tear, Then whispered-praying low: O. God. how can You accept this day When it has been lacking so ?', And God looked-He heard the sigh - And saw the shining tearg And sent His Angel Messenger To whisper in her ear-. Perhaps you could have done better today, But as the Omnipotent One Seeing your faults, doesn't forget The beautiful things you've done. He knows, little nurse, you love your work In this big house of sorrowg So gladly forgives the lacks of today For you will do better tomorrow? And the nurse looked up with the tenderest smile, Tomorrow I'll make it right, Then added a note in the Order Book, Be good to them tonight. Margaret A. Reed. HER CHOICE There are many trades to choose from, And lucrative careers, too, But she chose one of self-denial, With character strong and true. She adjusts the rumpled pillow And cools the fevered browg She cheers the old and feeble, True to her spoken vow. She's there when life is ushered in, Also, when it departsg Shels the angel of the suffering, Endeared to human hearts. God's gift to the lonely and stricken is she To the oppressed and helpless as well, She's a blessing in the guise of a nurse As rich and poor will tell. God bless this girl with choice so noble As she embarks life's ship of mercy For untold pain and sorrow she'll ease This angel on earthfthe Nurse. Mrs. E. F. Merker. ONE SCARBELLY TO ANOTHER Think of all the fun we'll have When we get together. MVN waste no time on politics, 'Weyll mention not the weather. Nor- will we talk about our friends Or cuss our damned relations. Wifll just compare our scars and rave About our operations. No more we'll be compelled to sit A And mutely nod and listen While others boast and brag about Their organs that are missin' 5 For each of us can prove we've had A major operation. And so we'll pull our shirt-tails up And join the conversation. George Doyle Antrim. 'AN ODE TO OUR NURSES IVho is it. dressed in spotless white, Patrols the station both day and night And watches for our signal light? , OUR NURSES. Who starts your day with the small bath tub, And gives your carcass a needed scrub, Then peps you up with a good back rub? OUR NURSES. Who grabs the thermometer with authority bold And under your tongue you have to hold That little glass tube till the tale is told? OUR NURSES. Who is it gives our arm a twist And sinks her fingers in our wrist, So our pulsation she can list? OUR NURSES. Who is it grabs the old bed pan, All hooded over like the Ku Klux Klan, And protects her nose as best she can? OUR NURSES. Who knows the answers, Tes and No, When her patient dies where they will go, Who grabs the Bo ys thatls got the dough? OUR NURSES. Who is it when Doc begins to sass, Swallows it all like a meek little lass, But feels like saying Tau kiss my-foot ? OUR NURSE. W. A. Shoemake. ALUMNAE V5 J ,gf AW L',4fsf-W' 2 W4gkFf Back row: V. LONG, C. MYERS, W. PAULUS, R. KINZELER, M. CROWELL, D. MEYER, M. BARRY, G. CORWIN, V D. DAVIS, P. CORWIN. Sixth row: fdid not finishj B. BRANDT, . WHYTE, B. DETRICK, M. MORRIS, G. THOMPSON, F. BUROKER, M. THOMAS. Fifth row: K. BLAND, M. SIEGEL, N. COTTERMAN, E. FRAZIER, C. MINNIGK. IDid not finishj Fourth row: E. DRULEY, C. EADLER, C. OGLEVEE, N. ANDERSON, A. LANDIS, H. REUSCH. Third row: D. CLARK, V. HARTER, E. GARRISON, M. RIEGEL, H. GLANDON. Second row: E. MURRAY, K. FLYNN, T. CAIN, E. BAKER, B. MARKER, E. LONG. Front row: A. BRIXNER, M. BISSELL, M. GARFIELD, P. BOSIER, L. HENDERSON, M. WONNER, R. DAUGHERTY, D. MITCHELL, A. REEDER. Class of 1932 Class of 1933 Back row: J. ENZOR, M. ARENS, M. TURNER, R. HUGHES, K. BOOTH, K. MALONE, L. BRYANT, L. MCMICHAEL, J. DEARMOND, D. SHAMBAUGH. Sixth row: M. MILLER, J. RITENOUR, I. LOVETT, M. FRAZIER, L. KEEVER, O. SCHNEIDER, M. ROSTORFER, S. EBY, V. MARSPIALL, D. BOSKEN, B. CALLEY. Fifth row: E. KINDER, B. HETZLER, P. SCHUSTER, A. MGGEE. Fourth row: O. CARTWRIGI-IT, E. BISHOP, W. SGHWYTZER, M. BEACHLER, A. LOHNES. Third row: C. MoRGAN,A. SMITH,L. PUTTERBAUGH, E. ENGLEHART, R. LENHART, D. HEITZ. Second row: J. BISHOP, W. CLARK, A. CROWELL, P. COLE, V. LIGHT, R. HERRING, R. BERRY. Front row: L. HEILMANN, F. WRIGIiT, G. KENDALL, G. WADDLE, F. CLINE, N. CRAIG, M. PENCE, H. JAMES, A. BARKALOW. .Q . C? H78+ ' -4 TW 'M.'Mf-HEL-w'i . - - I. 'LII-2?--fa-Q...-i?39'-'Ig - - .,-X. - . - ..- - M-.--aff-,,,0za:M - . -MM. - , -,. M .. M- .... M .. -L Q I...I . -1 :xg-. M M 5:7 '- M A .. . .. .S-if WHT---+9 --ral , ,III II,I. III- I. . . .. - II II .. .II,, I I I-II II -w.I..II.I.9I-.5 IME M - . ff ii . . M A M 'WE --:-N L. K.: 1-if--M-----M M .ex--vm , I L- 5 I ,, M II, . I I , ... .- M -. ., ,,...I5I.I -M I -w -.-3 ,, ,I ., III - J M UM S 1 : ww-uw . -A' - .. M M- -. , , 1- .7 - . ' !, -w 1 -- --H 2 ----: - .. M -1- 2-1. M -f .1 1952- - 2 --F A' .iM H' if if .1 -:- Q.. --. - ' M - - 1 A -2 - - I- - , -M - 3 . M- -1 .mg 5 iw? 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K III S, . ., X qs If 4,5-II II IC.:-, M 3 - , . I II -I .....:-:3,II - .. , - .. Q., E E I wr- ' 0, G ' , 'M 'fn J .2 5 ' . 1: I-E5.' . M' ' N ' . W EWQIEBEQEA Muyhbe-f I if I M I I I I ,..-I II, IIIII-mga, 5 B E B S8 ' Ki , 'A ' ' 4 . :5: , ww ' I S8 R4 na H . ...lily -I , . Ig - I M - ,I , ' I ,. 3. as 2, 'J -!.-E.E Q...E.:2:f:I: ' -M. M g, - . N f ' .. an f. M QI HI . . I, - I . I V II III . . ffl M ,--3' 555253 H 2- - , '--MM-.s-M- -:F--f-Q 1- MM.. E .X - ,,. .- , .I - 1 1- f I . M Q .fs --gh. ss? W MI .NI I N-gg, -M I,-if . - M -----M -M II ' 9-fu, W-2-M Ig -III iiiggcqpf -wgfgfg II IIM.,,,.wI ,N II I II-I II . III -II W, , fL,3,,,.,- . .gsm wig. .1 M -Q, a ,I .Q Q., I w..,7- ,,-af -- 5 .:.- . M ,. - x M -- 52 -M -Y -P 2,2-2 - . . - , - I. - --.M 2 W ' -M ' A - up -, - ' ' -' -A .. . , gg, M II I W 1 M., I H -- I-W- . . . - . mg .. 1 .g:,- E , I ,ISI .- I-I I 5 II III . I ,..,I. . . I .I I ,IL-E Q II-5. III - ' - ' 53, . ' II - - - . --gg - M . . M - MA M .- - - M -Mw- . .,... I IIII I 555 III I IB .. - f- - . M . .ww .W-45' -M' fa, -4, A I -1 . X , - . , Iva -.5eL1II,G,,v1 1-Ygsfgk -M -- - I LW - A ,K M,- -. 5 eg If 1W.,,M ,I I -:II qw M -Q N ' Aiiacnw - N 5 M W was I .1 - Th -L I' Wh, :M ..,.:- 1---., x, 5--M 5'ff,,g.- nw M -1 I M - W A QQ? z.n,...-- I . II -r . - 5 - H I . .. .. H - - E A I I . m E .X 5 B - - -1: 1 If -:Par Q ' W mf M H H E F' E 3, --ff f H W mf- W2 E ,I .. . .. , .. . , . - .- ...,... H 1, ya n I, II I . - my .- I - -. .,.,:., X B E hw A Q K, M K in - Q' .. . 'Q -M 5 M QI: .-.,...-:-- , ':2:':.M : H E s ggmz H 1 A -Q. ' if 5 ' i :' - - ' M Xi 1 -A .Q -if M ' F'-W ' gf J M A -' v . girl - -ff . . - --5 is 1 5-5-S. III E II I I X . . . I III. II I- III II IIIII5-iggg I. II SIEQEIIZL-Q 5,3 ...W - I- 5 9 - ,. - 'mn Tj wg -. QM-Mwcfw-:'?2EA53'Mf'fi F122-MMA? II ' fx -. . . 45 ,P A nk Q Q -14 ,-L,--11? W M: N Mm L W? .- M -M --. IM U A- g fs, QS.,-,ZM4 is Mefmxzfsi M 'SH M MH M HM -1. M.. ,, - -I.. I -.- ,..,5M-5,--M . L .. I M M W E W E --3 -'rn 'far'- fm M' M fm sr-'A - if-. N ww M 'S -M M A -'Fn?ML a f -- A M ' ' 'I -3 -MII' jg?--g,r'I'gIIf,::-2.-'M-' -M - M -- MM ' A . II ,.,.,,.I,..,, I IW II I I . W w M - 4 - . ' 'Q ' M ' ' 1 1- Aa'MA-MAg-gingIg'xI5 -.- ' -- M- A..- ,. is-E Bass E -msg' '55 .Q riff ' In H -,QM-Q-M3-. ,- I' H If a II an as-I5 II--IImIII- J I I ...5.. E M E My M ss M H JT ' - I - I. .:...' -. AI: ... - L' -: ff II II II IIE III .II . ,I II -...II-. I , .... H M - H H H E Ig -X H E W ss a as , M H H Is H 5 f M . -I MII-gm - X ss -ws- -'F - ' fin?-' HEM- a x A H EIIIIIIII ,... II 'MMKL?5Eg.-EI . ' LM I I . I .-ur. .II I-Q N-.1 - .. IIIII I.?II W II I I ..-. U f ,L . X- . '35-If. - M N - gg . 3 . III-EI . - - . M . ' I E A' ' 00 I -. :gh My I- -MM. .- I H . . ' ' -. H II E II Q I 1- .. . EE s B SS Il . . , U H 5 E SS N :5:...I -- M Q:-.H .B H v 'pf' . . 2 .Jr-. .- PM -1 E - Q M7 - M' X -E sa w- . -w . ,. x E SS ,,, Q 55 1-:'..-fr '-w-:--I .- - . P ? M- . WM- L H - . . is I M -- -- IRPH5 my M I. II ZIII4. ...L -. QEMYL-' -. 42. - A -M M 1. , .A M F---H gig I - - , - W ...Q f Im. I -. wr-Q ii J 'M -J ' ', ' 2' v : H II III X. IIE-3 IKE MII I- It . I N IIIII ., NI? I IIII I II .Y nm wx is fix E'-M' - . :J W . E me s5n,fM,L. - Q . - 5 mm,-.ex wus,-. . H M H-mi-1 - I- -'I H E 2 -r ' 2. . .' H -X .II , ., I is ew EI P1 x W ., . Q. . Ss S. H H ' . ' . EBV W- ms nw B-1 - - E L- , - . ,4- .. B III an II E H, . I I 'G - - . , y IIIRMB I I I if-J I E III W E Qi as f . ' ' II -I . H R-II 5 M ,-. MM.-gh I.- -1. E H ww ,Q-,,, E In -SI H .9 -I,-PE wo, -.BM-QM:--2--wg.,-nvV',, MW .M ,I -E Hg I., - M, , -...-M4 , .- M, M. ----,-M----.,. M.Mf,.-v,fM-.ff,gw,m.H. .,- ,I Q ,- ' N H M? wiki.-'., Q 2 -K W, Hz 1:-S5- QM 'A i'MM 5-, '1-'1 - Mg -',.H1,,.H55.i-5-g..gI.5,-?,.M-g. .Wg-ww -II mx EH ,QSEMQMFM IYI Ili. , A-. 1 , M w n my ss W3 -4. 79 +- Back row: A. YOUNG, R. WRIGHT, M. CHESTNUT, E. FORLINES, M. BRUMEAUG1-I. Third row: L. BARTLETT, K. JORDAN, T. JACOBS, M. HARTER, A. RANEY. Second row: E. STRAHLER, B. PATRICK, L. WUICHET, H. NELSON, N. BROWN, D. SMITH. Front row: A. JULIEN, C. SMITH, T. HARTER, M. CRAWFORD, J. FRANKE, N. MOORE, L. GURKLIES, D. BATTsoN. Class of 1936 Class of 1937 Back row: M. LEAs, E. BROWER, J. KELLER, M. WEISS, N. DAWLEY, B. CHATTERTON. Third row: A. SIPLE, H. WOODDELL, D. ENGLE, M. NIXON, A. CAPSTICK, Second row: H. LANDIS, M. GANGER, B. RATCHFORD, I. HARNISH, M. REMPENTHAL, M. AILES. Front Row: E. BESHORE, N. GILBERT, E. THORPE, C. MONBECK, I. YEAKLEY, E. CAST. -+ 80 + Back row: E. JOHNSON, E. FLARIDA, L. TURPIN, J. SINKS, H. PFEIFFER, A. NUTT, R. PRICE. Third row: R. STRUNK, K. KLINGER, K. MUMFORD, R. WEHR, M. SABINS, R. DECK, G. WEAVER. Second row: R. KNASEL, A. SRLADDEN, R. VAN PELT, J. BUICK, E. FOUGHTY, J. Pon TEUS, G. RAMPENTHAL. First raw: E. HAINES, M. GORRILL, P. SHROYER, M. BATES, K. MYERS, L. OGLEVEE, M. OLT, M. BRUMBAUGH. Class of 1933 Class of 1939 Back row: R. LANTz, M. Cox, M. PIECATHORN, D. PARKER, E. HURY, R. VERNON, M. BAINES. Third raw: M. H. BAUER, R. Cox, H. HARPER, K. Sl-IAWLER, F. DEATON, E. FISHWICK, S. SMELSER. Second row: G. MACK, M. BRIGHT, M. E. SI-IULTZ, M. MILLER, M. DEERHARE, P. SINK, L. SGHERER, fDid not finixhj, B. ELLIS. First row: B. BAKER, F. MILLER, F. KANTNIEIQ, D. GUINSLER, D. HECKLIAN, H. MUSSELMAN, E. HARSHBARGER. N Q ,-.. El- L or 1 I - - I N 'gifs I ' - A J IM Baok row: M. WILLIAMS, J. WEAVER. Fourth row: D. MILLER, R. GOUGE, V. HALE, E. HOLSINGER, R. ECKERT. Thzrd row: L. PIERCE, R. DENNIS, D. MURPHY, B. WARNER, M. L. TAYLOR, W. YOUNG, E.. HOWELL. Second row: R. FAUCETT, A. DEMOTTE, M. THUM, B. WARRICK, R. SPITLER, A. VANWAGNER, A. SEAGRAVES. Front row: H. REEVES, E. RosEBooM, M. MAYS, M. MCKNIGHT, N. JAY, G. BINKLEY, M. CAPSTICK. Class of 1940 Alumnae-Life Members T1-IE ANNUAL meeting of The Miami Valley Hospital Alumnae Association was held January 7, 1941. At this meeting it was a great pleasure and privilege to present a life membership to thirty-two members of our association : Arn, Mina Wannegat .... 1913 Burtanger, Helen ,...... 191 1 Clark, Bess ............. 1912 Crauder, Dona ......... 1911 Cunningham, Edith .,... 1915 Delscamp, Sarah Hopkins. 1910 DeHaven, Maude Baker. . 1914- Dingledine, Margaret . . . 1914 Ewing, Mayme Armstrong. 1912 Gearhart, Bessie ........ 1907 Gengnagel, Laura ....... 1912 Githens, Lillian ......... Gordon, Ruanna ........ Hartman, Laura ........ Haviland, Lewise ......, .1903 Judd, Ella Lemon ...... Kautz, Ada Adams ...... Donahue, Sister Lucinda. McNeil, Maude Shirar Brannon, Mary Maxwell. Miller, Effie Raymond. . . Moore, Jeannette ....... fr 82 +2 1906 1913 1912 1915 1915 1915 1909 1911 1902 1911 Ozias, Edith Smith ...... Praetorius, Emma ..... Rowe, Lavenia .... Siebenthaler, Nora ..... Sine, Mary Elpha ...... Smythe, Maude , . . Somers, Catherine ..,.. Scott, Mary Chiles ....... Welth, Nina ........... Zimmerman, Mildred 1915 .1907 1911 .1910 .1906 1909 .1913 1904 1903 1913 LILLIAN S, CLAYTON ELLA PHILLIPS CRANDALL The Alumnae Speaks THE PAST of our Alumnae Association is indissolubly linked with the names of Ella Phillips Crandall and Lillian S. Clayton, the two women who labored so indefatigably and so constructively in organizing our Nursing School and the Alumnae. They were the good angels who mothered these infant organizations, nursing them with jealous tenderness and watchfulness during the difficult transition period when the hospital passed from the order to the modern institution and the nursing from the Sisterhood to the profession. Miss Crandall was a graduate of old Blockley Hospital, Philadelphia, and came to Miami Valley in the year 1898 while it was still under the control of Pastor Carl Mueller and the Deaconess Sisters. Her duties as Superintendent and the reorganization work were very strenuous and required both mental and physical application of a very trying nature. One less capable and devoted could hardly have survived the many diiiiculties she encountered. That she did emerge victorious is proof of the excellence of the woman, Miss Crandall possessed the perceptive faculty of being able to read and evaluate people and soon surrounded herself with a staff of high attainments and ideals. if 83 +P' As her Assistant she brought to the hospital Lillian Clayton, who was also a Blockley graduate. Miss Clayton took charge of the Infant Training School, acting both as teacher and as supervisor of this work. Miss Clayton was, in her quiet way, a pillar of strength, brilliant, yet unassuming 5 to know her. was to love, honor and respect her. I am sure that every pioneer graduate of the school will join almost reverently in this tribute to Miss Clayton. The words of the poet more adequately describe her than can my feeble eH'ort: g'She was the perfect woman nobly planned. No task was ever too small or unworthy for her capable hands, her ear was always open to the discouragements and trials of even a poor little probie, and her room was almost a shrine where solace could usually be found for all ills. But what of today! Our Alumnae is no longer a struggling infant, as this year marks its thirty-eighth birthday. It has waxed strong and is a bulwark in our midst, and even though the very hospital walls themselves be destroyed, it will still live on, as the spirit of an institution is represented in those who have gone before, in those who bear the heat of the day 5 and will be present in those who follow. True lives and good works do not stop in their growth, but expand and reach out into new fields unending and remote. We are only a small part of what we create. When our brief day is spent, others take our place and carry on. This is the law of life. Each nurse as she leaves the hospital becomes a spoke in the wheel, with her Alumnae as the hub encircling all her activities. It becomes the link which binds her to her Alma Mater. Through future years her training and experience will open new and magical doors to her and the fountain of joy and satisfaction in her work will bubble forth. It is inevitable that each nurse must share in the impulses of her time. Her training and her opportunities are the tools with which she works and they may be made to serve her purpose well, making possible the realization of her aspirations, her hopes, and her desires. Higher things remain to be done than have yet been accomplished in our profession and they who seek diligently will Find the means of accomplishment. The Lamp always significant of light, is represented in our Alumnae 3 may it always burn brightly for this Class of 194-l. LILLIAN DALE Girl-1ENs Class of 1906 In 1929, the Alumnae established The Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing Alumnae Scholar- ship Fund. Each year one member of the graduating class who stands high in scholarship, leadership, and in service receives this gift. Those who have received these scholarships are: Bonnie Mumford- ,29g Lima Hormell-'30 fnot usedj used by Alice Raneyg,36g Mildred Wallace-'31, Thealka Belle Cain-'32, Verna Light-'33 g Rosa Baldwin-'34, Milda Ruth-'35 fnot usedj 3 Ruby Wright -'36g Janet Keller-'37 3 Mildred Brumbaugh-'38, Marjorie Bright-'39 5 Ruth Gouge-'40. '84 'P Class of 1900- NICHTERN, ANNA PETERS, ALICE fHORNl 419 Harrison St., Alexandria, Ind. SEYFERT, KATHERINE Class of 1902- BACHELOR, PEARL MAY KGREERJ R. R. No. 7, Dayton, Ohio EDGINGTON, LYRA ETHELYN 422 S. High St., Hillsboro, Ohio EMERICK, CARRIE LUCETTA fHELMIGJ fDeceasedj METCALFE, LINDSAY D. KBRIENJ 650 W. Big Bend Rd. Webster Grove, Mo. RAYMOND, EFFIE E. fMILLERl 8305 Jackson St. Vinita Pk., St. Louis, Mo. ROOT, MARY ALICE fMCDIARM1Dl 1450 Peachtree Rd., Atlanta, Ga. Class of 1903- ARMSTRONC, EMILY E. KRIEGELJ fDecea.vedj GARBPIR, DELLA MAE 136 Foyard St., Biloxi, Miss. HESSE, ADA E. fDecea.redj LEMMON, ELLA VIRGE KJUDDD Box 124, New Carlisle, Ohio MEREDITH, ADDIE fMARSHALLJ 111 N. Main St., Camden, Ohio MONTEITH, HELEN B. 136 Jackson St., West Hamilton, Ontario, Canada SHELLABARGER, ALMINA KGARBERJ R. R. No. 1, Biloxi, Miss. WEITH, NINA MAUDE 132 Salem Ave., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1904- BOYCE, IDA MAY fSchOol Nursel Toronto, Canada BROWN, MARY R. fGOODHUEJ 1970 Wilbur Ave. Pacific Beach, Cal. SCOTT, MAMIE CHILES 425 Wallace Ave. Covington, Kentucky STOCKSTILL, MARY IIELEN 947 Ferndale Ave., Dayton, Ohio WEAD, CARRIE BELLE fD86Ed.l'8Ll1 Class of 1905'- PARKER, MARGARET R. fDeceasedj Graduate List ROST, BERTHA ROSE fWARDENl fDecea5edj SCOTT, ELIZABETH I. CCI-IANDLERQ State Hosp., Blackport, Idaho STEWART, ERMA ISABELf.Df?C6l152llj STEWART, NELLIE MARY KDeceasedj VALIQUETTE, EMMA M. PT. Good Samaritan, Dayton, Ohio Class of 1906- ABEL, KATHERINE COTT, Cooperstown, N. Y. GITHENS. LILLIAN DALE Supt., Stillwater Sanatorium Dayton, Ohio RITCHEY, ANNA M. fMURRAYl 1324 Laurel Ave., St. Louis, Mo. SINE, MARY ELPHA 1114 Arbor Ave. Dayton, Ohio STUDEBAKER, NANCY EVA QSHELTONJ fDeceaxedj Class of 1907- ADAMS, I'IARRIETT R. fMILLERl 2210 Eldred Ave., Lakewood, O. GAISER, FREDA KATHERINE 45 Hawthorne St., Perry, N. Y. GEARHART, BESSIE S. 871 W. Riverview Ave., Dayton, O. JONES, EMMA C. KMEYERSJ 220 N. Monroe St. Hartford City, Ind. PRAETORIUS, EMMA CATHERINE 102 Corona Ave., Dayton, Ohio SCHELL, MARY E. fDecea.vedj WITTLER, MELISSA Supt., Covina Hospital Covina, Cal. Class of1903- ARNOLD, GRACE KCREASAPB 2901 Piedmont Ave., Berkeley, Cal. BRIDGE, HELEN L. KPOHLOMANJ 2202 W. 3rd St., Med. Sq. Los Angeles, Cal. FLEMING, ELIZABETH fHOOVERJ R. R. No. 4, Eaton, Ohio MOORE, CARA V. fBERGDALJ 100 Mithoff, Columbus, Ohio SMITH, MABEL fROBERTSONl 7120 Ranchita Ave., Van Nuys, Cal. Class of 1909- FUDCE, BERT!-IA fPADDOCKJ R. R. No. 4, Eaton, Ohio RUSSELL, ANTOINETTE Montana SHIRAR, MAUDE E. KMCNEILD R. R. No. 2, Sidney, Ohio SMYTI-IE, MAUDE 2300 E. 3rd St., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1910- HOPKINS, SARA E. KDELSCAMPD 126 lN'Iahrt Ave. fOakwoodj Dayton, Ohio IIUBER, CLARA MARIA KLARSON, fDeceaIea'j MERRILL, GRACE MILTIMORE Pittsford, Vermont PENNY, DORA fMORROWj R. R. No. 9, Box 55, Mt. Healthy, Cincinnati, Ohio SIEBENTHALER, NORA GRACE 6 Hill St., Dayton, Ohio TERRELL, HARRIET I. fGR1MESJ Box 301, Merkel, Texas Class of 1911- BENNER, EDNA QOLSEND t 928 Ireland Ave., Muskegon, Mich BURTANGER, HELEN LOUISE Vet. Fac., Greenway Station Tucson, Ariz. CRAUDER, DONA, 107 Stockton Ave. Southern Hills, Dayton, Ohio GILES, LAURA FLOR. KBROWERJ 121 Park Ave. fOakwoodJ Dayton, Ohio GREGG, RUBY 49 Passwood Ave., Dayton, Ohio LIERMAN, EDNA IDA CMAURER7 Concho, Oklahoma MAXWELL, MARY S. fBRANNONJ 48 S. Terry St., Dayton, Ohio MILTENBERGER, MARY JANE KLORENZEQ 1720 Cherry Ave., Los Angeles, Cal. MOORE, ,IEANNETTE Cor. Oak and Alberta, Dayton, O. PROBASCO, MIRIAM KDeceasedj ROWE, LAVENIA 15 N. Willow Grove Ave., Dayton, Ohio SCHULTZ, NELLIE M. fs!-IOEMAKERJ Trenton, Ohio SENSEMAN, MARY I. CM. DJ fHARRlSJ 107 E. Main St., Monticello, Ill. SI-IAFFER, ALVERNA CDOLANJ 1220 S, Olive St., Los Angeles, Cal Class of1912- ARMSTRONG, MAYME J. fEWlNGJ 320 Middle St., Dayton, Ohio BOUGHMAN, ANNA fDecea.sedj CLARK, BEss 2403 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio CROVEN, GLENNA L. fKISLlGD 25 Arnold Pl., Apt. B 7, Dayton, O. CURRY, LILAH L. QWANDALLD 105 S. East St., Condersport, Pa. FLAGG, FLORENCE ELIZABETH CLEIBIGD 727 Keowee St., Dayton, Ohio GENGNAGEL, LAURA E. 3 Illinois Ave., Dayton, Ohio GIBBONS, MARY EDITH fDecea.sedj HARTMAN, LAURA MATILDA 453 Aliven Drive, Dayton, Ohio LAUTENSLAGER, ISAEEL fRoEERTsoNj 1121 Allucca St., Coral Gables, Fla. LoNG, OLIVE M. fSANDO, 222 S. Main St., West Milton, Ohio MEYERS, ELIZABETH MARIE Long Beach, California RIDDLE, MARY ETTA CWOLFD fD6C80.1'6dJ SPELLMAN, FERN fBASKIN5 844 Merriman Road, Akron, Ohio WESTFALL, MAUDE L. KSTEWARTJ 1573 Sunset Ave., Springfield, Ohio Class of 1913.- BURKET, BLANGHE 1003 W. Oak St., Union City, Ind. CAMPBELL, Lois RUTH 520 N. Madriver St. ' Bellefontaine, Ohio Fox, EVANGELINE fTYSONJ 2533 Andros Ave. Cocoanut Grove Sta., Miami, Fla. GORDON, RAUANNA S. lV.N.A.j Municipal Bldg., Dayton, O. HALL, ETTA QPEARSONJ fDeceasedj JOHNSON, GLENNA 347 Elmhurst, Res. Park, Dayton, O. KEY, LAURA M. KCAMPBELLJ 819 N. Main St., Sidney, Ohio SMITLEY, BEssIE QVALENTINEJ 239 Brier Cliff Road, Dayton, O. SoMERs, CATHERINE RUTH 2623 E. 2nd St., Dayton, Ohio STRDUP, MYRTLE E. CCoxJ K Deceased j VAN TILBURG, RUTH ANN fJACOBSJ 1308 Grand Ave., Dayton, Ohio WANNAGAT, MINNA CARNJ 429 Ridgewood Ave. Oakwood, Dayton, Ohio l ZIMMERMAN, MILDRED fM.V.H.l Virginia Ave., Germantown, Ohio GRADUATE LIST - CONTINUED Class of 1914- BAKER, MAUDE ESTELLA fDEHAVEND 1103 Fairview Ave., Dayton, Ohio DAvIEs, MAUDE EVELYN DINGLEDINE, MARGARET 335 N. Roberts Blvd., Dayton, O. ELY, MAUDE L. CSI-IOCKLETONQ 11819 Goshan Ave. Los Angeles, Cal. HOFFMAN, NINA fSNYDER, 2534 Catalpa Drive, Dayton, Ohio ROBINSON, MARY fDeceasedj SHUEY, FLORENCE MARY fKERNS, 721 Ludwig St., Rock Spring, Wyo. SMITH, MAUD fRAGANJ 8 Irving Ave., Albany, New York WEBER, MARJORIE KBUETTNERI 1102 Grafton Ave., Dayton, Ohio WDLFE, GRACE I. cSTEVENSJ 207 E. Gurnnett Ave., Savannah, Ga WRIGHT, ADA FUCHS Fremont, Ohio Class of 1915- ADAMS, ADA CAROLYN KKAUTZJ 810 Ferndale Ave., Dayton, Ohio BOYER, MARIE G. CSMITHJ 3 N. Roberts Blvd., Dayton, Ohio BROWN, HILDA fAULL5 R. R. No. 1, Box 525, Dayton, Ohio CUATT, VERNIEZ ELLEN QREYNARDJ fDecea.redj CUNNINGHAM, EDITH L. 9 Illinois Ave., Apt. 36, Dayton, O. DONAHUE, CATHERINE KSISTER LUCINDAQ St. Michael Hosp., Newark, N. Y. GAOBEL, GERTRUDE I. CWILCOXD 622 Carlisle Ave., Dayton, Ohio HASKELL, ESTHER KGIELEJ R. R. No. 7, David Road Dayton, Ohio HAVILAND, LEwIsE M. 524W Hickory St., Dayton, Ohio HERR, MARGARET E. fPRATT, 1209 W. lst St., Grand Island, Neb. IIUSTON, BERTHA KHULBERTD LUDY, SUSAN E. fHAVILAND, R. R. No. 1, Eaton, Ohio SAGER, RUTH LUCILE KCOLERQ 6023 Robinson Rd., Cincinnati, O. SLARP, OTELLA Veterans Hospital, Lexington, Ky. SMITH, EDITH P. KOZIASJ 40 Sandhurst Drive, Dayton, Ohio Class of 1916- CORWIN, JEAN S. fSCHIEBLE, 245 Corona Ave., Dayton, Ohio DEBDRD, MAEEL VIOLA Dade County Hospital, Miami, Fla. ENGLE, ADA G. fHARDIND R. R. No. 1, Brookville, Ohio EVER, MILDRED E. CBLUMJ 3634 Kingsley St., Oakland, Cal. FELTER, BESSIE G. KGUNCKELJ 1262 Peters Ave., Troy, Ohio HARTZELL, HELEN 337 W. Second St., Dayton, Ohio HINDSLEY, LOTTIE fGlBBONS, Celina, Ohio MooRE, NANNIE H. CBO!-IL, 129 E. Main St., Hillsboro, O. MURR, ELIZABETH QCAMPBELLB 2157 Salem Ave., Dayton, Ohio MYERS, LUCILE MARIE QHUGHESJ 1220 Amhurst Place, Dayton, O. NORCKAUER, BEATRICE G. Xenia, Ohio SHARRITTS, LAURA LUCETTA fKIRKJ 513 Mound Ave., Miamisburg, O. SNYDER, ALMA 225 N. Ludlow St., Dayton, O. THOMAS, CHARLOTTE 33 Bryden Road, Dayton, Ohio Class of 1917- APPLE, EVELYN MARY 32M Warder St., Dayton, Ohio BARNHART, ADA KNORTHWAY, 26 Laura Ave., Dayton, Ohio BARNHART, BERNICE M. 133 Virginia Ave., Dayton, Ohio BELL, CLARA EZRA KGILLOND 1906 E. 105 St., Apt. 9, Cleveland, Ohio BLAGG, Lols C. KKERN, 155 Hudson Ave., Dayton, Ohio DENNEY, ALMA G. M.V.H., Dayton, Ohio DEWOLF, PHYLLIS 236 Knecht Drive, Dayton, Ohio DYE, LEILA MAUDE fCity Nursej Piqua, Ohio ELY, MAEELLE G. 38 Shaw Ave., Dayton, Ohio FITTS, MARY E. QTROUPJ Cor. 6th and Buckeye Miamisburg, Ohio GRAHAM, CARRIE E. 6111 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio GREENWALD, FLORENCE M. 2600 E. Fifth St., Dayton, Ohio HoUsToN, LEONA 1 13 Illinois Ave., Dayton, Ohio KAUTZ, ELEANOR fGRUE, I Deceased 1 KINNEY, CARRIE G. fSTUTSMANJ 3414 E. First St., Long Beach, Cal. MANCHESTER,VIOLA D.fMANSURJ 1208 Raleigh Rd., Dayton, Ohio MOHR, MARIE S. KDHEINJ 1613 Rutledge, Madison, Wisconsin MOSIMAN, IDA MATILDA Armco Hospital, Middletown, O. PRITCHARD, RUTH E. fLOGESl 2065 Rustic Rd., Dayton, Ohio SMILEY, ADA ESTELLA 518 Oak St., Dayton, Ohio VAIL, ELIZABETH C. QBURNETTJ 238 Greenmount Blvd., Dayton, O. WALL, ALMA MARIE KPFUHLJ 329 Stonemill Rd., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1918- BARRETT, RUTH CHARLOTTA 1408 Grand Ave., Dayton, Ohio CLARK, LUCILE CSMITHJ 226 Cleveland Ave., Hamilton, O. ELLIS AGNES 336W Forest Ave., Dayton, Ohio FOLKERTH, ANNA HAZEL fLAYl 10349 Wilseg Ave., Tujunga, Cal. FOSTER, AMBER cPADANl 410 Rubicon Rd., Dayton, Ohio FULTON, KATHRYN MARGARET 140 Harvard Ave., Elyria, Ohio HETZLER, DORIS MIRIAM Germantown, Ohio HUTCHINSON, EDITH A. CLAUGHLIND 256 E. Gunkle St., Germantown, O. MARS HALL, CAROLINE fDILL, 240 W. Grand Ave., Springfield, O. OUTLAND, GARNETTE L. CMCLAUGHLINJ 1053 Arizona Ave. Santa Monica, Cal. PETTIT, GOLDIE MAE fFOSTERJ Wakefield, Ohio RooERs, MARTHA B. fCOMPTONJ 1634 2nd St., Gulfport, Miss. STEWART, MARJORIE C. CSCHUERMANJ 7 Union Ave., Dayton, Ohio TAYLOR, EDNA MAY QHARRIGANJ 21 S. Willow Grove Ave., Dayton, O. WEST, MINETTA M. CSMITI-Il 2810 7th St., Meridian, Miss. Class of 1919- BARGER, MARY ESTHER 228 Allen St., Franklin, Ohio FENNELL, MARY H. fHUSTONl R. R. No. 7, Lenox Rd., Dayton, O. FORRER, MONICA IRENE 3905 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio JACOBI, CLARA I. QMCLANE, Clay, West Virginia LIGHTHISER, EDITH M. KJOHNSOND 520 S. Monroe St., Xenia, Ohio MCCRACREN, GRACE CATHERINE KHUDSONJ fDecea:edj PULTZ, EDNA M. fWALKERl 409 Forest Ave., Dayton, Ohio RINEHART, MAUDE fCLENDENlNJ 43 Ridge Ave., Dayton, Ohio ROADEFER, MARY L. fMALLOYl 129 E.Siebentha1erAve.,Dayton, O. GRADUATE LIST - CONTINUED SMITH, HAZEL QBAKBRD 2529 Catalpa Drive, Dayton, O. STEPHENSON, BERTHA E. 225 N. Ludlow St., Dayton, Ohio SWIGART, ROSALPE M. fMORRISl 1742 Durham Ave. Bond Hill, Cincinnati, Ohio TACKELSoN, HELEN E. 701 Five Oaks Ave., Dayton, O. WEBER, CATHERINE M. KLAHMANH R. R. No. 1, Miamisburg, Ohio WILKEN, FAITH IoNE Ax 2867 Shafer Blvd., Dayton, Ohio WOLEE, CORA E. QSPERRYJ 2214 S. 77th St., W. Allis, Wis. Class of 1920- ALBAUGI-I, NELLIE M. fDEMERRITTJ Veterans Hosp., Sunmount, N. Y. COSNER, VIOLA lN'1AE-QARNQUESTJ 1184 Orange St., St. Paul, Minn. DETRICK, DONNA FAY 6709 State Sr. Hunnington Park, Cal. FoRsYTHE, CHARLOTTE M. fCARTERl Bellefontaine, Ohio FRAHN, ANNA MARIE 453 Allwyn Drive, Dayton, Ohio GIBBONS, KATHERINE CLARK Waynesville, Ohio GRAWALL, MYRTLE E. fKESLlNGl 608 Washington St., Dayton, O. HADDIX, MARY OPAL KEMBERTONJ 2121 North St., Bouedu, Col. HAWRER, MARY ETTA 454 Quitman St., Dayton, Ohio HINDSLEY, IDA E. KWHITMOREJ 277 E. Milford Ave., Dayton, O. KEEVER, PAULINE L. KDecea.redj KLAIBER, ANNA MARIE QROSSJ 59 N. lst St., Miamisburg, Ohio MARKEY BARBARA RUTH KMILLERJ R. R. No. 3, West Alexandria, Ohio LKIILLAR, ANNIE C. 304 Linder Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. MILLER, MARY RUTH fMOLINDERl M.V.H., Dayton, Ohio MILLER, MARGARET V. fBRUGLERl 236 Sandalwood Dr., Dayton, O. O,CONNOR, JANE E. fMCHENRYl 1134 C, 17th St., Santa Monica, Cal. RUSSELL, LURA F. QPROBSTH R. R. No. 7, Dayton, Ohio SAYLOR, IDA V. fDecea.vedj STARBUCK, LENA LEo'rA QROYQ 1584 Safford Ave., Fresno, Cal. STEWART, ETHEL KHOFFERBERTJ 3225 Ridge Ave., Dayton, Ohio SWAEB, BESSFE Amer. Red Cross, Jessamine Co. C. H., Nicholasville, Ky. WARTNG, MARY SMYTH IDeceasedj 1+ 87 at WELLBAUM, QUITO BECK QWESTJ Phillipsburg, Ohio WHITE, GRACE M. KBURROWSJ 7403 Kentucky Ave. Dearborn, Mich. WOLF, OLIVE CATHARPNE fHANSONl Lawrenceville Rd., Princetown, N. Y. f Class of 1921- AVERA, DoRoTHEA R. KBELTD 2028 Springmond Ave., Dayton, Ohio BAUER, ELSIE R. CMCKIMJ 3063 Hull Ave., New York City BEANBLOSSOM, IvA M. KLUNDEJ 48 Pasadena Ave., Highland Pk., Detroit, Mich. BELT, AMANDA E. McClellan Hospital, Xenia, Ohio BURTON, LOUELLA fPETERSONl cfo Karstens-Patterson Nebraska City, Neb. DAVIDSON, RUTH KSUTERMEISTERJ 71 W. Norman Ave., Dayton, Ohio DEARTH, HAzEL MAY 27 S. 9th St. Presbyterian Hosp., Newark, N. J. GABLER, FLORENCE HELEN 912 Alberta Ave., Dayton, Ohio HILDEBRAND, EMMA M. CHOHMD 70 E. Hillcrest Ave., Dayton, Ohio HOPKINS, RUTH V.fFURNASl 3525 Vermont Dr., Dayton, O. LOUIS, MARGARET E. fKUNKAl 638 Wellmeier Ave., Dayton, Ohio MCDERMOLT, BESSIIE S. fKREBSl 337 Johnson St., Dayton, Ohio MILLER, ADA E. 16 W. 15th St., Franklin, Ohio MILLS, FLORA S. KLIGHTENERQ Hedgewood Farm, Clayton, Ohio NEWELL, MARIE H. fWILLlAMSONl 3714- E. 4th St., Dayton, Ohio RALLS, HELEN MAY Out of Door School, Sarasota, Fla. RINCK, MARY F. CPAULLINJ 431 N. Galloway St., Xenia, O. STODDARD, REBECCA L. fFULLWOODD 89 Cold Spring Rd. Santa Barbara, Cal. STCNEBRAKER, MARIETTA KCARTERJ 1232 Alta Ave., Louisville, Ky. TURNER, MABELLE L. KVELZYD 1409 Phillips Ave., Dayton, Ohio YOUNG, FERNE CECIL 1332 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio ZILE, EDITH C. fCOMPTONJ 2435 Auburn Ave., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1922- BRUGGEMAN, MARGARET KLECHLITERD 49 Park Drive, Dayton, Ohio DITTMER, IDA M. QCROSSLEYJ 3525 E. 2nd St., Dayton, Ohio DUERR, LOUISE EDNA KSIPPJ 1925 Oakridge Dr., Dayton, Ohio FILBERT, CATHARINE A. KMUMMA - I 5323 Sylvester St., Philadelphia, Pa. FINLEY, LILLIAN B. QMEDLEYJ 36 E. McPhearson St., Dayton, O. FOLKERTH, RUTH B. fCRESSJ 24 W. Parkwood Dr., Dayton, Ohio LINS, l5'IARGARET L. CFRAASJ 2116 Auburn Ave., Dayton, Ohio MCCLELLAN, CHARLOTTE fMIDDLETONJ 625 Ridgedale Rd., Dayton, O. MESSENGER, LOUIS G. KGALBREATHJ 601 Irving Ave., Dayton, O. MULLENDORE, ADA CLARK KDeceasedj SCHUDER, SARAH R. KMACKJ 464 Campbell, River Rouge, Mich. SCI-IUTZ, MINNIE 16 Ashley Ave., Dayton, Ohio PENN, MABELL R. KAPTJ 205 Illinois Ave., Dayton, Ohio SHUE, HELEN E. 817 17th St., Santa Monica, Cal. VVOOLLEY. SOPHIA E. fHECHTj Box 126, Coral Gables, Florida ZILE, ALMA E. KKOPPEJ 118 Wisteria Drive, Dayton, Ohio Class of 1923- BANKER, RUTH EVA fHARTJ 2017 Mayfair Rd., Dayton, Ohio BUSH, ELIZABETH M. fGILLMANJ R. R. No. 5, Sidney, Ohio HANSELMANN, EVA ADELINE 434 Grand Ave., Apt. 48, Dayton, O. KISTLER, RUTH L. KHEINRICKSJ 182 Edgar Ave., Dayton, Ohio MEALS, RUTH DOROTHY 1909 E. 3rd St., Dayton, Ohio MOORE. MARY LEONA fHAASJ R. R. No. 1, Clayton, Ohio WOOLLEY, HESTER KHECHTJ 422 Giralda Ave. Coral Gables, Miami, Fla. Class of 19241 ANDERSON, MARY M. QMUNGERJ 526 N. South St., Wilmington, O. BOOTH, LORNA ANN J. fROGGEJ 27 S. 9th Sr. Presbyterian Hosp., Newark, N. J. BREYVER. GRACE IONA Centerville, Ohio BRUGLER, ESTHER G. KHALDMENJ 1923 5th Ave., Seattle, Wash. BRUMBAUOH, MARY IRENE fKAUFFhKANJ 70 Patterson Rd., Oakwood Dayton, Ohio GRADUATE LIST -- CONTINUED CRAMPTON, GEORGIA E. QSELBYJ 215 Siebenthaler Ave., Dayton, O. GRETH, MAUDE E. KWOODRUEFJ 1958 Burroughs Dr., Dayton, O. .l'IlLL, RIYRHL A. KALBRICHTJ 110 Cedar Lawn Dr., Dayton, O. HOKE, RUBY MAE 106 Kenner Ave., Nashville, Tenn. HALLOWAY, TINA LEE KDIXONJ 1314 Colwick Dr., Dayton, Ohio JUDAY, MILDRED EDITH fFENDERJ 3942 Riverside Dr., Dayton, O. KELLER, CARRINNE A. CSACHETTJ R. R. No. 1, Waynesville, Ohio KOONS, MARY ELIZABETH KDeceasez1'j LIDECAP, ONDA MAE CBEACHLERJ 750 E. Buckeye, Miamisburg, Ohio MILLER, VERNA MARY fELLIOTTJ 2745 Dwight Ave., Dayton, Ohio MITCIIELL, ALICE ELIZABETH 547 N. Williams St., Dayton, O. MITCHELL, MARTHA E. KKEATORJ 32 Narragansett Ave. Ossing, N. Y. PRESLEY, IRENE fCOLEMANJ 1220 Oakwood Ave., Dayton, Ohio SHAMBAUCH, IDA G. fHENDERSONJ 1143 Epworth Ave., Dayton, O. SHOUP, VERNA IRENE fDRAYERJ 5000 Zenith Ave. Minneapolis, Minn. SMITH, MARY L. QSCOTTJ S. Merrill St., Fortville, Indiana SMITH, RUTH M. KDUFFETTJ 3127 Mapledale Ave., Cleveland, O. STOLTZ, MARTHA T. 301 Royal Ave., Richmond, Va. STUART, IvALU G. QBROWNJ 526 Kenwood Ave., Dayton, Ohio WAGNER, DOROTHY IRENE KSHAWJ 534 Shoop Ave., Dayton, Ohio WOODS, CARROLL QSINEJ 715 Alberta Ave., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1925-, ADDLEMAN, CLARA EDITH 1408 Grand Ave., Dayton, Ohio BAILEY, DONNA MAE fBELTONJ 40 Ashley St., Dayton, Ohio BARNES, RUBY LEILA 27 S. 9th St. Presbyterian Hosp., Newark, N. J. BAUMGARDNER, MARTHA E. KSWEENEYJ 1010 Croyden Dr., Dayton, O. BOYER, MARGARET E. KMCCORMICKJ R. R. No. 1, Huntsville, Ohio BELT. FLORENCE fBROWNJ 502 Prospect Ave., West Grove, Pa. BICE, HELEN LOUISE 193 Talmeidge Rd., Akron, Ohio BISSELL, LAURA C. KPRETZINGERJ fDeceasedj if 88 -F BOONE, ALICE fMORRANVILLEJ 172 N. Portage Dr., Akron, Ohio BROWN, NORLIA PEARL 813 S. Ludlow St., Dayton, Ohio CARMo'NY, ANNA RUTH KTHOMASJ 1739 Hanna Ave., Melvindale, Mich. COLLINS, MARY IRENE CSMALLJ R. R. No. 1, Lewistown, Ohio COOK, DOROTHY F. KBROWNJ 112 E. Kendall Ave., Corona, Cal. CORDONNIER,RUTH M. QMETZGERJ 114 Ridge Ave., Dayton, Ohio DAVIDSON, MERLE fHARRISJ 68 Linden Ave., Dayton, Ohio EPP, MATILDA K. fGARRISONJ 408 Eastern Ave., Connersville, Ind. GARRINCER, LELIA M. fBLACKJ 115 College St., Dayton, Ohio GEIGER, RUTH FLORENCE KCASSJ 98 Patterson Rd., Dayton, Ohio GIBSON, MABEL INICE fGARRETTJ R. R. No. 2, New Lebanon, Ohio HAMON, HELEN M. fKOKENGEJ 348 Brooklyn Ave., Dayton, Ohio HAMBURGER, HELEN M. fNOBLEJ 201 Forest Ave., Montgomery, Ala. LEWIS, JANICE ARVILLA 2334 Parkland Ave., Dayton, Ohio NOLAN, CLARA HELEN fCRAMERJ 435 Brookside Dr., Dayton, Ohio NORDQUEST, IDA KZINKJ 1454 Wogar Ave., Lakewood, Ohio PENTECOST, CLARA MAE IPRAHLJ 75 W. lst St., Mansfield, Ohio PEQUIoNoT,COLETTE E. KHUENEKEJ 2518 Shroyer Rd., Dayton, Ohio REICHARD, EDITH FAY Veterans Adm. Facility, Oteen, North Carolina ROSS, RUTH MAE CLEEJ 66 Euclid Ave., Westwood, N. J. SACKETT, RUTH M. KMCCLUREJ Waynesville, Ohio SAUER, ALICE IONA fDeceasedj SILER, MARY FERNE KOSBORNEJ 406 W. Hudson Ave., Dayton, O. TABLER, FIRMONDA M. KMCGILLJ 100 Edgar Ave., Dayton, Ohio THROM, GRACE M. KSHOCKJ 403 Delaware Ave., Dayton, O. WILKEN, LYDIA CATH. fWOLFEJ R. R. No. 2, Miamisburg, O. ZEBRING, MARY E. KSCHLAFMANJ Far Hills Ave., Dayton, O. Class of 1926- BARTI-I, ARDELLA L. fCLENCI-IJ cfo Hudson Bay Co. Minnki, Ontario, Canada BEAN, OPAL FRANCES KSTRAYERJ Bellefontaine, Ohio BERCER, MARY EDITH CLENHERTJ 103 E. George St., Arcanum, O. BUTCHER, LUCILLE K. fHARRISJ Virginia Ave., Troy, Ohio GRADUATE LIST - CONTINUED CHRISTMAN, LILLIAN R. KSAUNDERSJ R. R. NO. 1, Box 447, Dayton, O. DILL, MARY L. KHURLESSJ 1516 Olmstead Dr., Dayton, Ohio ESHEAUGH, MAUDE MARIE CBESTJ 637 N. King Ave., Xenia, Ohio fM.V.H.j HAWTHORNE, BERNICE CGOODJ 118 Bryant Ave., Franklin, Ohio I-IILDEERAND, LENA M. QSCHMITTJ 242 Wiltshire Blvd., Dayton, Ohio HOOKE, DORIS EDITH fNEWTONJ 221 Salem Ave., Dayton, Ohio HOUOK, GLADYS M. QHUESAIANJ 815 Chestnut Ave., Sidney, Ohio HULL, RUTH E. 648 E. High St., Springlield, O. IRWIN, MARY E. QHOFFEREERTI-IJ 4236 N. Main St., Dayton, O. LAKER, ESTHER MARGARET 434 Grand Ave., Apt. 35, Dayton, O. LITTLE, MARION E. QBECKJ 2812 Dwight Ave., Dayton, O. MEYERS, WILHELMINA MAY KBRUSMANJ Vandalia, Ohio MOBERLY, GRACE HALEYON fBRENTJ Box 316, Iota, Louisiana MILLER, IDA C. IDeceasedj MILLER, LEONA HELEN fGOLLJ 618 Washington St., Dayton, Ohio MILLER, MARY Stillwater Sanitorium, Dayton, O. PRATT, ALICE QWRIGI-ITJ 914 Sunnyview, Dayton, Ohio SHOWERS, MARY JANET QFLAGKJ 1757 Wildwood Rd., Toledo, Ohio SIPE, CLARA ELLEN CWHITED 908 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio SOUTH, EDNA MARY fKECKJ Glenn Rd., Dayton, Ohio STEVENS, GRACE MARIE R. R. NO. 1, Yellow Springs, Ohio WENZEL, ELSXE M. fBARTOND Wayne and Spring, St. Marys, O. WEST, MARY E. QMECKSTROTHJ 1405 Columbus Ave., Sandusky, O. WHITED, MYRTLE M. Hwa Mei Hospital, Ningpo, China WOLF, LA DONNA 622 Linden Ave., Sidney, Ohio WOLLENHAUPT, CAROLYN 421 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1927- ALTIC, GLADYS IRENE Barney Convalescent Home Dayton, Ohio BOMEoRD,KATI-IARINE M.fPLUIvIIvIERj Vet. Fac., Jefferson Barracks, Miss. BRATTEN, MILDRED C. fMILLERJ R. R. No. 7 Cincinnati Rd., Dayton, Ohio DALRYMPLE, BLANOHE L. CGUTHRIEJ 1237 Colwick Dr., Dayton, O. DITMER, FREDA C. KFURONGJ R. R. No. 1, Laura, Ohio DORSEY, VERA L. Allen Hopital, Oberlin, Ohio DUERR, FREDA E. KMARTZJ 2810 Wayne Ave., Dayton, Ohio DUKE, GELEN C. QGRAHAMJ 430 Stonemill Rd., Dayton, Ohio FANNING, DOROTHY E. QEICHENHOFERJ 1696 King Ave., Columbus, O. GORDON, CLEMENTINE K. 211 S. Main St., Middletown, Ohio GRIFFITHS, HAZEL fRHODEJ fDeceasedj HEILAND, MARY IRWIN 258 E. Siebenthaler Ave., Dayton, O. HEPNER, MADELINE E. fHOFFMANJ 526 Monteray, Dayton, Ohio KAYLER, MARGARET E. QROBINSONJ Box 506, Coachella, Cal. KERRY, GLADYS A. QREXQ 134 Gettysburg Ave., Dayton, Ohio LAYMAN, VILA MAY QHASKINJ 161 N. Decker Ave., Dayton, Ohio MAEDER, MARGARET fULLERYJ R. R. No. 1, Box 388, Dayton, Ohio MAGEE, VIRGINIA EDNA 264 Lexington Ave., Dayton, Ohio MILLER, ELA MYRTLE KAYDELOTTJ 1204 Epworth Ave., Dayton, Ohio MILLIKIN, ERMAL D. fSNYDERJ 1502 Detzen Ave., Dayton, O. MOYER, MARX' E. fBIRJ KOFFJ 21711 Finlan Ave., St. Clair Shores, Mich. OGLESEEE ADA L. KHECKERJ 1611 Nelson Ave., Dayton, Ohio OLDFATHER, HELEN L. Farmersville, Ohio RIEL, VIOLA MAE 751 Brown St., Dayton, Ohio RODIEFER, MARTHA V. QDRIVERJ R. R. No. 2, Miamisburg, O. RUDY, TI-IELMA I. CYOSTJ R. R. No. 11, Box 167, Dayton, O. SCOFlELD,KATHERINE I. fROHMANJ Arbor Ave., Dayton, Ohio SLAGLE, ETHELYN L. QTURNERJ R. R. NO. 2, Box 265, Dayton, O. ST. JOHN, ELTA MARIE fHERMANJ 3661 Glenridge Rd., Dayton, Ohio THOMAS, CAROLINE J. KMILLSJ 2155 Caplin Ave., Detroit, Mich. UNGER, GRACE MAY QHOWELLJ 133 Laura Ave., Dayton, Ohio WILSON, DOROTHY M. cGIEREINGERJ R. R. NO. 5, Smithville Rd., Dayton, Ohio Class of1928- BROWER, MARY ELLEN fARNOLD, 15 Orchard Ave., Lebanon, Ohio BROWN, DOROTHY H. KKINGREYJ 105 Laura St., Dayton, Ohio BUCHANAN, DOROTHY MAY fFOLLMERJ . R. R. No. 1, Hamilton, Ohio BURNS, MARYBELLE KCONNELLYJ 805 N. Main, Apt. 6, Dayton, Ohio BUROKER, PAULINE fSTICKRODJ 1020 S. Main St., Bellefontaine, O. CHANEY MABEL A. 431 Leland Ave., Dayton, Ohio ELIOKER, ANNA RUTH QYOSTJ 822 Campbell St., Dayton, Ohio ELLIS, FLORABELLE QHASTINGSJ 2949 Wayland Ave., Dayton, Ohio FEITSHANS, LOUIS CLARA KCONNERJ 78 Hatfield St., Dayton, Ohio FESSLER, CLISSIE MARIE 878 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio FULTZ, FLORABELLE CMILLERJ R. R. NO. 1, Bellefontaine, Ohio GEARHART, ISKA J. fSEITZJ . 1031 Highand Ave., Dayton, Ohio GEEHART, THELMA 24 Avalon Ave., Southern Hills, Dayton, Ohio GEPHART, MARY ETTA QTHIELJ 2449 Far Hills, Dayton, Ohio GRAY, MARY NORMA KDAWLEYJ 136 N. Quentin Ave., Dayton, O. HARROD, ELVIRA MAY 243 Oak St., Dayton, Ohio HARSHMAN, RUTH CAROLYN 28 Clover St., Dayton, Ohio HENDRICKS, MARIAN GLADYS CNORMANJ 701 Goldenrod Ave., Carona, Cal. HOKE, GRACE ZIPPARAH 434 Grand Ave., Apt. 35, Dayton, O. HOWE, MIRIAN L. KPARREANTJ 1910 E. 93rd St., Cleveland, O. IRWIN, ARMINDA B. u 911 Neal Ave., Dayton, Ohio JACOBS, CLIFFORD E. QWEISENERJ 103 Pleasant Rdg., Ft. Mitchell, Ky. JAMIESON, OPAL F. QCHAFFEEJ 824 Fountain St., Troy, O. JOHNSON, ELSIE MAUDE 1320 York Ave., New York, N. Y. KISER, RUTH ELIZABETH QDUNNJ 292 S. Fisher Ave., Blackfoot, Idaho KRIMBLEEINE, LORENA E. CLEYMANJ 227 S. Henry St., Kenton, Ohio KURTZ, JEANETTE M. fGORMANJ 22 Monteray Ave., Dayton, Ohio LAGKEY, MARY ELOISE CRESSLERJ 1720 5th Ave., Northridge, Dayton, Ohio LEITER, GLENNA V. QBARNHEISERJ Horn St., Lewisburg, Ohio LEITER, JEANNIE M. fVON BERGEJ 232 Grafton Ave., Dayton, Ohio LUCAS, VIRGINIA A. KAHLEFELDJ West Alexandria, Ohio. MADDEN, ESTHER G. KEDWARDSJ 2159 Rivere Ave., Dayton, O. MAEDER, CHARLOTTE L. fCO0PERJ 2047 Parkdale Ave., Toledo, Ohio GRADUATE LIST - CONTINUED MARSHAI., FRANCES ECHO CESSEXJ 10 S. Mulberry, Troy, O. MARKER, KATHLEEN H. fFINKLERJ 2435 Lynn Ave., Dayton, Ohio MEYERS, FRANCES ELLEN Vandalia, Ohio POTTER, MARGARET P. CSPRALEYJ 104 Ferdon Rd., Dayton, Ohio PRIEST, HELEN MADOE LENYEARTD 1037 E. Main St., Troy, Ohio REES, EDITH FRANCES KGRAYBILLJ 2517 St. Charles Ave., Dayton, O. REMPP, LILLIAN G. M.V.H., Dayton, Ohio RHEIN, MAODALEN K. KLINEGANGJ R. R. No. 6, Box 134, Dayton, Ohio RIETDYR, LOUI-sE H. 2010 Eastview Ave., Dayton, Ohio RILEY, IRENE C. LYEARICKJ 713 N. Section Ave., Hannibal, Mo. ROSEBOOM, MARIE fDeceasedj Ross, SARA ISABELLE QBRUMBAUGI-IJ 268 W. Schantz Ave., Dayton, O. SAPP, MARY HELEN 27 S. Ninth St., Presbyterian Hosp., Newark, N. J. SAYRE, FLORENCE MARGARET M.V.H., Dayton, Ohio SMITI-I,MARTHA M.fBLANKENSH1PJ 105 S. 9th St., St. Louis, Mo. STEWART, EDNA C. fDAVIDSONJ 426 Shafar Blvd., Dayton, Ohio STUDY, ALICE T. fDUNNJ 344 Walton Ave., Dayton, Ohio SWIHART, ADA LEE fTURNERJ R. R., New Lexington, Ohio THOMAS, RUTH A. LCOBBUMJ 1101 Dodge Ave., Ft. Wayne, Ind. TREUTLE, GENEVIEVE M. CMARSHALLJ 2517 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio VLEREEARNE, JEAN I. QSTEWARTJ 1614 Huffman Ave., Dayton, Ohio VOGE, NAOMI ELIZABETH R. R. No. 2, West Alexandria, Ohio WILLIAMS, PAULINE V. LTSCHUDIJ 3111 Oakmont Ave., Dayton, O. WILSON, FRANCES L. CMCCORMICKJ Buifalo, New York YOST, KATHERINE ELLEN QSEITZJ 1120 Coldwick Ave., Dayton, O. YOUNG, ANNIE G. fALLENJ 922 McKaig Ave., Troy, Ohio Class of 1929- AUGSPURGER, IDA MAE fDeceasedj BAKER, MABEL VIOLA QSTAFFORDJ fDecea.tedj BARTON, MAEEL GRACE fROBERTSJ Houghton Lake, Michigan BISHOP, DOLORES E. CSCHLOSSJ 11 E. Xenia Drive, Osborn, Ohio CASEY, BERNICE MARIE M.V.H., Dayton, Ohio CLEMENTS, DOROTHY EDNA QTHOMPSONJ 654 Hardingway West, Galion, O. COBLENTZ, KATHRIN S. KDRAHMANJ 14 Chambers St., Dayton, O. DEETER, MINNIE VIOLA 537 Richard St., Dayton, Ohio EILERMAN, FLORENCE S. CTATEJ R. R. No. 3, Woodbound, ShipleyRd., Wilmington, Del. FUERST, CHARLOTTE L. fBOI-ILMANJ 1139 Arbor, Dayton, Ohio GLANDER, NINA MARGARET fL1Gl-ITJ 2670 Salem Ave., Dayton, Ohio HAMILTON, MARTHA J. LPOWELLJ New Lisheard, Ontario, Canada HENRY, VIRGINIA G. 1320 York Ave., N.Y.C., N. Y. HINKLE, THELMA MARY fWOLFJ R. R. No. 7, Dayton, Ohio LAPORTE, ELEANOR E. KFRANCOJ 145 74th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. LIEEE, EMMA J. QROSSJ 607 E. 5th St., Apt. ,1 1, Dayton, O. LINN, MATILDA 1010 S. Main St., Dayton, Ohio MCCALLIISTER, LOUISE LTRITTSCHUHJ 40 Rossford Ave., Ft. Thomas, Ky. MCGREENY, ELLA S. fDEARDOURFFJ 238 W. Main St., Greenville, Ohio MCNEAL, HELEN LOUISA QSTRODI-IESKJ Sutpin St., Middetown, Ohio MILLER, BERNICE I. LSETTLEMEYERJ R. R. NO. 1, Clayton, Ohio MOORE, REEA MYRTLE QZENGLEJ R. R. NO. 7, Box 388, Dayton, Ohio MUMFORD, BONNIE J. QJONESJ MYERS, MYRTLE IRENE 413 Salem Ave., Apt. 11, Dayton, O. OGLEEEEE, FRANCES LFRANKLINJ 519 Lowes St., Dayton, Ohio PARENT, FERN M. fKEMPD 10092 Cedarlawn Ave., Detroit, Mich. PEACOCR, GRAYCE fPALMERJ Avalon Apt., Avalon Pl., Middletown, Ohio PFOUTZ, NORMA ANNA KTOBIASJ 1920 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio PRUGI-I, KATHARYN JUANITA KKINGJ 645 Orlando Tr., Dayton, Ohio PURSELL, DOLORES 3220 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio RICHMOND, VIRGINIA fNEWMANJ 310 Redwood Ave., Dayton, Ohio SANFORD, MARGARET QHALLAMJ 2413 Ravenwood Ave., Dayton, O. SI-IILT, CECILE QDIDOTJ 224 College Park Ave., Dayton, O. SILVERS, MARTHA GENEVIEVE 120 E. Israel Street, Eaton, Ohio SMITH, AUDREY HYACINTH 2061 Cornell Rd., Cleveland, O. 90 'P STABLER, BLANCHE M. QBARKERJ 338 Brooklyn Ave., Dayton, O. STROHAVER, MARY C. KHAGERJ Broad Park Lodge, Apt. 4M, White Plains, N. Y. STUCKI-IARDT, MARY M. KFRANZJ 229 Herman Ave., Dayton, O. STUDEBAKER, JOSEPHINE H. KSHERMANJ 12728 Monica Ave., Detroit, Mich. SUTTMAN, MARTHA HELENA CDEMATTEOJ 415 Montgomery St., Miamisburg, Ohio SWIGART, RUTH ARLINE ULLERY, HELEN J. CKINGJ 436 Volusia Ave., Dayton, Ohio WATSON, ELIZABETH J. KARMSTRONGJ R. R. No. 1, Box 106, Versailles, O. WEEKS, QUO VADIS CSMITI-IJ 519 Washington Ave., Niles, Ohio WEISNER, MARY M. KBEERJ 305 Linden Blvd., Brooklyn, N. Y. WERNER, MARTHA G. R. R. N. 8, Dayton, Ohio WOOLF, FLORENCE M. CROETTERJ 314 Corona Ave., Dayton, O. YATES, WILLA LOUVERA QDUMJ 162 N. Main St., Camden, Ohio ZIZERT, MILDRED MAY KNARSEMJ 273 9th St., Newark, N. J. Class of 1930- BEANBLOSSOM, ESTI-IER LWATSONJ 214 S. Woodward Ave., Dayton, O. BERNETT, SYLVIA N. QSI-IANERJ 22 Colorado Ave., Dayton, Ohio BROSE, SYLVIA ESTELLA D 27 E .Dixon Ave., Dayton, Ohio BURNETT, MARY LOUISE LHUSTONJ 208 Valley View Dr., Dayton, O. CAMPBELL, JESSIE LMCMULLENJ 256 W. Hamilton St., W. Milton, O. CLASS, WILMA L. CJACKSONJ U. S. Navy Hospital, Guam, Cuba CROMER, MARTHA M. LTAYLORJ 164 Virginia Ave., Dayton, Ohio DOEBERSTEIN, ERMA E. 916 Kumler Ave., Dayton, Ohio DOWNS, EDNA OPAL i 107 E. Fairview Ave., Dayton, Ohio EARMAN, MILDRED GRACE QBEASONJ 4531 Elmer Ave., Dayton, Ohio EBERWEIN, VERA LOUISE 142 Wroe Ave., Dayton, Ohio FOSTER, MARY V. QEBERWEINJ 2422 Auburn Ave., Dayton, Ohio GRISE, THELMA LEOTA fHALEJ 129 Brydon Rd., Dayton, Ohio GUSTAESON, ALMA LENEA McClellan Hospital, Xenia, Ohio HARMON, PAULINE LSTAEHLTNJ 20 W. Woodbury Ave., Dayton, O. HERZOG, NAOMI MARY 919 Patterson Road, Dayton, Ohio HILL, THELMA KHAYWOODJ 2215 Shroyer Rd., Dayton, Ohio HOEWISCHER, EDA EMMA 1320 York Ave., New York City HOEWISCHER, FRANCES JENNIE Chicago, Illinois HORMELL, LIMA H. QSGHNALENBERGERJ R. R. No. 2, Greenvile, Ohio JOHNSTON, HELEN G. KSTUTENROTHJ R. R. No. 1, Germantown, Ohio KRUEGER, ALMA MARIE M.V.H., Dayton, Ohio LANNING, MARGUERITE CECKHARTJ 256 Wilson Drive, Dayton, Ohio LINS, ANNA ELIZABETH 3827 Ridge Ave., Dayton, Ohio LOWE, ESTELLA EMMA CYOUNGJ 2934 Revere Ave., Dayton, Ohio MARKER, NELLIE KGRILLOTJ 63 Chamber Ave., Dayton, Ohio MAYER, MILDRED L. QSHOEMARERJ 2424 Elsmere Ave., Dayton, Ohio MCCLAIN, GLADYS I. fHARVEYJ 11 Virginia Ave., Dayton, Ohio MCMANES, ESTHER DoLoREs 368 Alney Ave., Marion, Ohio MERCER, MARJORIE RUTH Willshire, Ohio MILLER, ESTHER IRENE R. R. No. 2, Conroy, Ohio MILLER, ESTHER M. KHUPMANJ R. R. No. 2, Greenville, Ohio GRADUATE LIST - CONTINUED TANGMAN, MARIE CTHAYERJ 836 Dow St., Dayton, Ohio TAYLOR, NELLIE VIOLA 1803 Valentine Ave., Cleveland, O. WAGNER, FLORENCE A. fKERNSJ 7 Berkley Circle, Greenhills, Cin., O. WEAVER, ALICE LUCILLE QMCGREWJ Brooklyn, New York YATES, CLARA LOUISE fCOPPJ 67 W. Bruce Ave., Dayton, Ohio YOCUM, DOROTHY EUNICE 355 Park Drive, Dayton, Ohio Class of 1931- ALLGIRE, JENNIE MAE fMANNJ 220 Oak St., Dayton, Ohio APPLE, ALICE LOUISE fKIND1GJ Farmersville, Ohio ARY, MARTHA MALISSA S. Monroe St., Xenia, Ohio BANKER, ORPHA E. fGROTTLEJ 1412 S. D. St., Richmond, Ill. BARNHART, ALICE R. fSILERJ R. R. No. 10, Dayton, Ohio BENSON, MARGARET 1320 York Ave., New York City BESCH, IQATHARINE L. fMADDENJ 713 Washington St., Dayton, O, COLTER, MADGE AIJELINE fADAMSJ R. R. No. 1, Portland, Ind. COLLILLE, MILDRED E. 129 Richmond Ave., Athens, Ohio CONKLIN, KATHRYN fBISSELLJ 420 Hoover Ave., Hamilton, O. CAPPOCK, ELEANOR A. MILLER, ISABEL E. fMAHLMEISTER'J fROTHERMELJ 1331 Oakdale Ave., Dayton, O. MITCHELL, FLOSSIE P. KDAILYJ New York City, N. Y. MURPHY, CORINNE fBUCHYJ 217 E. Water St., Greenville, Ohio PECI4, MARY MARGARET KBECKJ 119 Oxford Ave., Dayton, Ohio PETERSON, MAUDIE B. CCORNWALLJ 203 Oak St., West Falls Church,Va. 141 N. High St., Covington, O. CRAIG, DOROTHY KMCALLISTERJ McClellan Hosp., Xenia, Ohio CUMMINS, OPAL LARETTA fYANEYJ 240 Harrison Ave., Lima, Ohio CUSTENBORDER, MILDRED I. fMANNINGJ R. R. No. 2, Dayton, Ohio DEERI-TAKE, ESTHER F. KFRIERMOODJ RASH, MARY EVELYN CLIINDAMOCDJ 318 Edgar AVC-, Dayton, Ohio R. R. No. 2, Box 358, Dayton, Ohio DRIN KWATER, HELEN CHALLETTJ RILEY, MARY ELIZABETH fZEHRINGJ W. Palm Beach, Florida R. R. No. 2, Germantown, Ohio ROSEBOOM, NELLIE E. fSANDERSJ R. R. No. 2, Dayton, Ohio FoGT, HARRIETT KVAN SCOYKJ 224 Claranna Ave., Dayton, Ohio FOGT, IRENE L. RUSSELL, PRUDENCE E. CRUSSELLJ R. R. No. 1, Quincy, Ohio 34 Meyer St., Oaklands, Johannesburg, S. Africa SAMPLE, HELEN fDeceasedj SANFORD, LUCILE CRESHJ 3613 Woodbine Ave., Dayton, Ohio SCHELL, MARY LOUISE CSCHMIDTJ 941 Wayne Ave., Greenville, O. SCHURR, RUTH M. fSEITZJ 607 S. Beackhoif St.,Wapakoneta,O. STECK, LILLIAN M. fHARTWELLJ R. R. No. 3, West Alexandria, O. STORER, RUTH AGNES 638 Pingree Ave., Detroit, Michigan FRIEND, EVA RUTH QMILLERJ 248 Claranna Ave., Dayton, Ohio GRAHAM, GERALDINE M. CCOOPERJ 740 Vermont Rd., Mt. Airy Philadelphia, Pa. GUM, MADELINE D. CWELSHJ 145 Marlboro Pl., Dayton, Ohio HANGEN, ESTHER M. KREIMUELLERJ 612 Irving Ave., Dayton, Ohio HEINZ, IRMA CATHARINE 909W Grand Ave., Dayton, Ohio HOOPS, GLENNA KSTIVERSJ Center St., Box 57, Farmersville, O. 4' 91 -R HORRIGAN, MARY E. St. Elizabeth Hospital, Dayton, O. KERN, MARTHA 1025 Phila. Drive, Dayton, O. KIRRHAN, ALICE KBROOKSJ i R. R. No. 1, Yellow Springs, Ohio LAMB, EDITH Branch Hospital, Box 63, N. H., Cincinnati, Ohio LANGMAN, BUELAH LEE 233 Wroe Ave., Dayton, Ohio MCGRIFF, MERLE MALINDA 221 N. Jefferson St., Dayton, O. MIDDLETON, MIRION F. fBORLANDJ Ashley, Ohio MILLER, GENEvrEvE 128W S. Main Street, Piqua., Ohio MUMFORD, HARRIET L. CJACKSONJ 1104 N. Main St., Sidney, Ohio OUTLAND, MARY A. KCHANEYJ R. R. No. 2, Maple Park - Middletown, Ohio . PAYNE, MARGUERITE E. fTAYLORJ Homeopathic Hospital, Wash., D. C. RIFE, KATHRYN E. fBEAVER7 2348 Arlington Ave., Upper Arlington, Col., O. ROCKY, MAMIIE J. KFRECHJ 516 W. Fairview, Dayton, Ohio RUDY, JOSEPHINE P. CMILLHOUSEJ R. R. No. 2, Covington, Ohio SCHECKELHOPF, LILLIAN M. fMART1NJ R. R. No. 4, Springfiel, Ohio SMITH, HELEN fMAXEYJ 31 O.S.8tS.O. Home, Xenia, Ohio STEVENS, FRANCES RUTH QSMITHJ North Hampton, Ohio - STORCK, FRANCES E. Union Printers' Home, Colorado Springs, Colorado STUMP, HAZEL ALBERTA KSIPPJ Phillipsburg, Ohio SWARTZ, MARIAN E. fMANORJ 713 Chestnut St., Xenia, Ohio THEISS, HELEN E. fCORNTHWAITEJ 608 Millville, Hamilton, O. WALLACE, MILDRED V. Children's Hospital, Cin., Ohio WIDENER, MARJORIE E. fWEBSTERJ Xenia, Ohio WILSON, FREDA NAOMI QSWEENEYJ R. R. No. 3, New Carlisle, Ohio WINKLE, LILLIAN 27 S. 9th St. Presbyterian Hosp., Newark, N. J. WOLEP, MARY LOUISE KRUETHJ 423 Lorain Ave., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1932- ANDERSON, MIRIAM E. fMILLERJ 2108 Auburn Ave., Dayton, Ohio BAKER, EVELYN KHARDIINGJ cfo Gen. Del., Brookville, Ohio BARRY, MARJORIE BESS KFLANAGANJ R. R. No. 1, cfo Hartswood, Stomford, Conn. A BISSELL, MARGARET ANNIS 1320 York Ave., New York City BLAND, CATHERINE E. 404 Oak St., Sidney, Ohio BOSIER, PAULINE THELMA QSMITHJ 1520 Emmons Ave., Dayton, Ohio BRANDT, ELIZABETH E. KTIETIGJ 122 S. Van Buren, Rockville, Md. BRIYNER, ANGELA KMARKETJ Germantown, Ohio BUROKER, FLORENCE 232 K. St., Dayton, Ohio CAIN, THEALKA BELLE CLEHMANJ 264 Beechevold Blvd., Columbus, O. CLARK, DOROTHY EDNA fHOHENBRINKJ Cor. Hickary and Morton Dayton, Ohio CORWIN, GLADYS I. CTSCHUDIJ R. R. No. 1, Dayton, Ohio DORWIN, PAULINE KHAWKERJ 323 4th St., Apt. 3, Atlanta, Ga. COTTERMAN, NAOMI C. KBROWND 307 W. Main St., Trotwood, O. CROELL, MAGDELINE H. Piqua Memorial Hospital, Piqua, O. DAUGHERTY, RUTH ARLENE Versailles, Ohio DAVIS, DRUCILLIS fSHETTERLYJ 5814 Philadelphia Dr., Dayton, O. DETRICK, BEULAH E. 1320 York Ave., New York City DRULEY, ANNA E. QMCCASHLANDJ R. R. No. 3, Liberty, Ind. EADLER, CLARA MAE 232 K. St., Dayton, Ohio FLYNN, KATHLEEN E. KBRUMBAUGHB 642 Orlando Tr., Dayton, Ohio FRAZER, ELVA KSHELTOND 3030 E. 4th St., Dayton, Ohio GLANDON, HELEN B. QRUSOHJ 1017 N. Lafayette St. Greenville, Mich. GARRISON, ELEANOR E. KELLIOTTD 238 Klee Ave., Dayton, Ohio GATEIELD, IVIILDRED F. fMAZULAl 6412 White Ave., Cleveland, Ohio HARTER, VIRGINIA 753 Brown St., Dayton, Ohio HENDERSON, LILLIE L. KHENDERSONJ Lynchburg, Ohio KENDALL, RUTH M. fLUNDGRENl 2211 Crowley Ave. Muskegon, Mich. KINZELER, RUTH L. 771 Parkwood Drive, Cleveland, O. LANDIS, I. cLIVINGSTONl 610 Warren St., Dayton, Ohio LONG, BARBARA E. QWALTERSH 129W Fanklin St., Dayton, O. LONG, VELMA GRACE QJONESJ 3028 E. 3rd St., Dayton, Ohio GRADUATE LIST -- CONTINUED MARKER, BERTHA fBERNARD, 12 Foster St., Newton, N. J. MEYER, DOROTHY E. 1320 York Ave., New York, N. Y. MYERS, NEVA C. fSPENGERl Covington, Ohio MINNIGH, CLEONA L. fOREN, 238 Anna St., Dayton, Ohio MITCHELL, DOROTHY A. KFULTONJ R. R. No. 4, Xenia, Ohio MORRIS, MARGARET I. fJAMESl 704 Lexington Ave., Dayton, O. MURRAY, ELOISE fKREIDERl R. R. No. 4, Greenville, Ohio OGLEVEE, CHRISTINE L. 409 N. Grand East. Springfield, Ill. PAULUS, WILMA THRESA M.V.H., Dayton, Ohio REEIJER, AMBRA D. KWILLIAMSJ 26 E. Burton Ave., Dayton, Ohio REUSOH, HARRIETT C. KSMITHQ R. R. No. 11, Box 334, Yankee Rd. Dayton, Ohio RIEGEL, MILDRED IRENE KQUEEND Shoals, Ind. SIEGEL, MARGARET E. KMORRISJ Venelocia, Ohio THOMAS, MILDRED C. fSWALLOWl 58 Knecht Dr., Dayton, Ohio THOMPSON, GENEVIEVE fCORBETTl Saratoga, Wyoming. WHYTE, VIRGINIA F. fBAUMGARTNERJ 3937 lVIt. View Ave. San Bernadine, Colo. WONNER, MARY J. QEICKHOFFJ 20 Forest Glen Ave., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1933- ARENS, MARY ANNA CWITTED 2108 Salem Ave., Dayton, Ohio BARKALOW, ANNA E. fHOWARDJ R. R. No. 3, Germantown, Ohio BEAOHLER, MARIETTA M. R. R. No. 2, Brookville, Ohio BERRY, RUTH MAE QGULLEYJ 11 N. Plaza Ave., Dayton, Ohio BISHOP, EVELYN L. fMEYERl 20 Summitt St., W. Alexandria, O. BIS HOP, JEANETTE IDA fBARRJ 1110 Windsor Dr., Dayton, Ohio BOOTH, KATHERINE L. fSCOTTl 66 Cushing Ave., Dayton, Ohio BOSKEN, DOROTHEA T. fWlEDEKEl 1555 Emmons Ave., Dayton, Ohio BRYANT, LOIS W. fGRABILLD Arnold Place, Dayton, Ohio CARTWRIGHT, OMA E. Vet. Hosp., Oteen, N. Carolina CLARK, WANDA R. R. No. 2, Waynesville, Ohio COLE, MARGARET MADELINE CSMITHQ Box 442, Elmira, N. Y. 4' 92 -an COLLEY, ELIZABETH I. KBARRJ 9 Illinois Ave., Dayton, Ohio CRAIG, NELLIE MCCLOUD KDOLLD 918 Watervliet, Dayton, Ohio CROWELL, ONDA MAE 1109 Alberta St., Dayton, Ohio DEARMOND, JUANITA R. QBAUERJ 64 S. Main St., Middletown, O. EBY, SUSIE CLARA KSUGGSJ R. R. No. 4, W. Alexandria, Ohio ENGLEHART, ELSIE M. QWAGNERJ 115 E. Simpson St., Troy, O. ENZOR, IRIS MAUDE fEHLERJ R. R. No. 4, W. Alexandria, Ohio FRASER, MAXINE C. fLESANl 301 Mulberry St., Lebanon, Ohio HERRING, ROSELLA RUTH 133 N. Perry St., Dayton, Ohio HETZLER, BARBARA FRANCES 1500 Brown St., Dayton, Ohio HEILMAN N, GERTRUDE A. LBLAINEJ 441 Columbian Ave., Columbus, O. HEITZ, DOROTHY LOUISE Germantown, Ohio HOEOH, RUTH E. QFERGUSONB 507 S. Diamond St., Mansfield, O. HUGHES, RUTH MAE CWALTERD 1351 1st Ave., Dayton, Ohio JANES, HELEN E. fDENKELJ Brookville, Ohio IQENDALL, GARNETT CLENTHALJ 1708 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio KINDER, EDITH FRANCES QSAYLORD 1508 Watervliet Ave. Dayton, Ohio KLEIN, FAITH BERNIECE KFUDGEJ 124 Hawker St., Dayton, Ohio LENHART, RI-IODA, cfo Dr. Lenhart, Arcanum, O. LIGHT, VERNA E. QFREEB 317 S. Capital St., Iowa City, Iowa LOHNES, ANNA E. 173 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio LOVETT, IDA F. KEICHMEYERJ Winburn Ave., Dayton, Ohio MALONE, KATHRYN L. CHOPRINSJ R. R. NO. 3, New Carlisle, Ohio MARSHALL, VELMA F. fMCCANNJ Box 46, Minford, Ohio MARTIN, LEONA fKEEVERJ 2607 Oakridge Drive, Dayton, Ohio MCGEE, ALICE M. KMUSHRUSHD 1091 E. 12th Ave., Columbus, O. MOMIOHAEL, GERTRUDE KTROTTERD Am. Hosp., Britain Park Prewett, Basingstoke Hunts, England MILLER, MARGERY E. 64 Huffman Ave., Dayton, O. MORGAN, MAXINE fBARNETTy 2002 Victoria Ave., Dayton, O. PENCE, MYRA LOUELLA cMILLERl 17 Maple Dr., Dayton, Ohio PUTERBOUGH, MARGARET L. QPEAOOGKJ Pleasant Hill, Ohio RITENOUR, JEANETTE B. fHARNERJ 56 Drake Ave., Dayton, Ohio ROSTOREER, MARY ELIZABETH KDecea.vedj SCHNEIDER, OLIVE ROSE V. N. A., Saginaw, Michigan SCHUSTER, PHYLLIS A. QCUMMINSJ 424 Kenwood Ave., Dayton, O. SCHWYTZER, LOUISE fSCHM1DTJ 102 N. 9th St., Miamisburg, Ohio SHAMBOUOH, DOROTHY MABEL R. R., Waynesville, Ohio SMITH, ALBERTA 124 Orange Ave., Dayton, Ohio TURNER, MARY RACHEL 804 Harvard Blvd., Dayton, Ohio WADDLE, GLEN NA M. fEIDENM1LLERl 832 Dow St., Dayton, O. WAGNER, FLOANNA fWRIGHTJ Sparta, Wisconsin Class of 1934- BALDWIN, ROSA LEE fGREENl Florence, Kentucky BEACHLER, MILDRED E. QTURNERJ 1610 Shuler Ave., Hamilton, O. BOE!-IMER, RUTH fGOACHERJ 306 Jones Ave., Dayton, Ohio BROWN, GARNET RUTH KPOTTERFJ 117 Ernst Ave., Dayton, Ohio CASEY, HELEN R. QTHOMPSONJ R. R. No. 5, Dayton, Ohio ELLIS, DOROTHY P. KMITCHELLJ 3334 Hiawatha Drive, Dayton, O. Fox, CLEMENTINE KHUOERJ Paterson, N. J. GRUNER, ELIZABETH QMARSHALLJ 323 Parrott St., Dayton, Ohio GURR, BETTY QPRATI-IER1 St. Veterans Hosp., Sulphur, Okla. HALE, LAURA RUTH CSCHIERLOHJ 64 McOWen St., Dayton, Ohio HAMMOND, LOUISE 111 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio HEILLIAN, NORMA L. fDYSINGERJ Box 85 A, Tipp City, Ohio HERBERT, HELEN MIRIALI fCROFTJ 210 lst St., Piqua, Ohio HOWARD, ALICE EMMA Hotel Montery W. Palm Beach, Fla. . KINNAMAN, RUTH ELLEN 653 E. 102 St., Cleveland, Ohio KITTLE, EVELYN LOUISE CKIRKJ 341 N. Roberts Blvd., Dayton, O. LEWIS, DOROTHY E. KGIBBONSJ Piqua Memorial Hosp., Piqua, O. LONG, RUTH 1010 S. Main St., Dayton, Ohio MATHEWS, DOROTPIY IRENE fEISERMANJ St. Petersburg, Florida , MCCLURE, ALMA fI'1OFFERBERTI-IJ cfo Economy Savings 8: Loan Co., N. Lexington, O. GRADUATE LIST - CONTINUED MCNINCH, SYLVIA MAE 229 Oak St., Dayton, Ohio NIEDICK, CHARLOTTE L. fWEANTJ 4018 Woodclift Ave., Dayton, Ohio NIES, RUTH VIOLA KLAYMANJ 20250 Russell Ave., Detroit, Mich. PENCE, HELEN QDEGERJ 318 Hadley Ave., Dayton, Ohio POWERS, HELEN KATHRYN 1803 Valentine, Cleveland, Ohio PRATER, JUANITA QLINVILLEJ N. Main St., Bellefontaine, O. RIGLER, ARLETTE QSHOOKJ 133 Anna St., Dayton, Ohio Ross, EVELYN ELAINE KREESEJ 411 Sandhurst Dr., Dayton, O. SIEEMAN, MARTHA 341 Park Dr., Dayton, Ohio SETTLE, CORA MAE 129 S. Ardmore St., Dayton, O. SI-IANR, MAYNO NAOMI fROYERJ 236 Gramont Ave., Dayton, O. SHOCKNEY, VIRGINIA 301 Watervliet Ave., Dayton, Ohio SHRODER, ALICE E. CNICELYJ 2205 10th St., Dayton, Ohio SMITH, POLLY DIx CPAYNEJ 2375 Kent Blvd., N. E. Grand Rapids, Mich. STOCKER, LOTS EVELYN QSHEOHERDJ 316 Central Ave., Dayton, Ohio SUERDEICK, ELIZABETH M. 324 S. Main, Charlotte, Mich. TERRELL, FLORENCE KHOSEWICKJ Lanakila Ave., Pearl City Oahu, Hawaii THOMAS, MARY ANN fWOLFEJ 2301 Philadelphia Dr., Dayton, O. THUMA, ESTHER fMANNJ Metopia Mission, Sothern Rodesim, S. Africa WISSINGER, VERA BLANCHE 1 N. Main St., West Milton, Ohio VVRIGHT, FRANCES MARGUERITE QANDERSONJ 2744 Pine Grove Ave., Chicago, Ill. ZINSMEISTER, EDNA MARIE fZlLEJ 1320 York Ave., N. Y., N. Y. Class of 1935- BARNHART, RUTH MARIE 110 Indianola Ave., Dayton, Ohio BAUER, LOUISE M. QSCHAUBJ R. R. No. 2, Millington, N. J. CAMPBELL, ENID MILDRED 620 Town St., Columbus, Ohio CHILDRESS, MARIAN R. R. No. 1, Franklin, Ohio ELSASS, ELSIE M. KDAVISJ 2649 W. Riverview Ave., Dayton, O. FORD, HELEN 60 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio GRAY, MAEMIE EVELYN CBACHERJ 36 W. 9th Ave., Columbus, O. GROSS, THELMA 25 Lawn St., Dayton, Ohio HARR, MARY KATHRYN R. R. No. 2, West Liberty, Ohio HART, BLOSSOM KMILLERJ R. R. NO. l, Haney Rd., Dayton, O. HENDERSHOT, ALICE 715 Gondert Ave., Dayton, Ohio HERBERT, MARY M. KALLENJ 229 E. Anthony St., Celina, O. HOWELL, DOROTHY 60 Wyoming St., Dayton, O. JACKSON, MARY MILDRED Piqua, Ohio ICEMPER, FRANCES Ellis Hosp., Schenectady, N. Y. KINZIG, MARTHA JANE QGERLACHJ 1842 Suman Ave., Dayton, O. KOONTZ, MARTHA JANE QROSEJ 428 Hadley Rd., Dayton, Ohio KURZ, HELEN ANNA 2657 W. Riverview Ave.,Dayton, O. METCALE, LULER ARDES fMCCOYJ 526 35th St., Apt. 31, Oakland, Cal. METZ, WELMA ELIZABETH fWEEKSJ 1704 Tuttle Ave., Dayton, Ohio MURPHY, ARLINE M. CO'BRIENj 1252 Windsor Dr., Dayton, Ohio PORTER, MARTHA J. fCOTTERMANJ 508 Beckman St., Dayton, Ohio POSTHER, JESSIE MAY QOVERMANJ 601 Walton Ave., Dayton, Ohio RODEFFER, ELIANOR BYRON 341 Park Dr., Dayton, Ohio RUTH, MILDA ELIZABETH QBLOMEJ 1809 Patterson Rd., Dayton, Ohio SETTLEMYRE, RUTH A. CLONGEELLOWJ 2145 N. Main St., Apt. 4 Dayton, Ohio SINNOTT, HATTIE MURIEL M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio STOLTZ, RUTH MARIE Ft. Mills, Coregedor, Phill. ls. TPIEOBOLD, MARY E. fKILDOWJ 1210 So. Belmont Ave. Springfield, Ohio VICRERS, MARGARET E. KSTRUBLED 514 W. 4th St., Dayton, Ohio WILLOX, CAROLYN L. cMANNl fDeceasedj WINDHAM, FRANCES NEVADA 20 Fairground Ave., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1936- BARTLETT, LENORA CLARE QFOXJ 1432 S. 4th St., Louisville, Ky. BATTSON, DONNA fSHO0Ky Kirkland, Washington BROWN, NELLIE 35 N. Rose St., Chillicothe, Ohio BRUMBAUGH, MARY ELIZABETH 1601 W. 2nd St., Dayton, Ohio CRAWFORD, MARY LOUISE 712 Hall St., Dayton, Ohio -4+ 93 ek CHESTNUT, MORA K. KZAVAKOSJ 1825 Glenn Rd., Dayton, O. FORLINES, EDNA Jo QGORDONJ 217 Burns Ave., Dayton, Ohio FRANKE, JANET HELEN R. R. No. 5, Smith Rd., Dayton, O. GURKEIS, ALICE L. fWO0DWARDJ 712 Hall St., Dayton, Ohio HARTER, TALENE CCLARKJ 120 S. Center St., Franklin, O. HARTER, MARY ELIZABETH 753 S. Brown St., Dayton, O. JACOBS, THELMA LEE 2025 E. Riverdale Ave., Dayton, O. JORDAN, KATHRYN M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio JULIEN, ANNABEL RHEA fGILBERTJ 31 Glenwood Ave., Dayton, O. MOORE, NAOMI J. QBRZOZOWSKIJ 2606 Troy, Dayton, O. NELSON, HAzEL ALMA KSPANGLERJ 314 Morton Ave., N. Y. PATRICK, BEs SIE 1109 Alberta St., Dayton, Ohio RANEY, ALICE REBECCA Main St., Eaton, Ohio SMITH, CATHERINE CBARNESJ 142 Steele Ave., Dayton, O. SMITH, DOROTHY R .fMARIANOSJ 168 Smith St., Dayton, O. STRAHLER, ESTHER fGRICEJ 462 Watervliet Ave., Dayton, Ohio WRIGHT, RUBY fPECKJ 414 Forest Ave., Dayton, Ohio WUICHET, LOUISE Metropolitan Ins., Cin. O. YOUNG, ADELINE 918 Troy St., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1937- AILES, MARY LOUISE CSHAFFERJ 3033 Simpson Ave., Evanston, Ill. BESHORE, EMMA K. R. R. NO. l, Bradford, Ohio BROWER, ELOIS W. Alexandria, Ohio CAPSTICK, ANNA LOUISE 30 Richland Ave., Dayton, Ohio CHATTERTON, ELIZABETH K. fLAUDERMANJ 246 Heikes Ave., Dayton, O. DAWLEY, NANCY 1234 Riverview Ave., Dayton, Ohio ENGLE, DOROTHY MAE KFLESHERJ R. R. No. 6, Lockland Cincinnati, Ohio GANGER, MABEL M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio GAST, ELEANOR fMCNULTYJ 42 Wyoming Ave., Dayton, Ohio GILBERT, NAOMI H. KMOOMAWJ 132 Glencoe Ave., Dayton, Ohio HARNISH, ISABEL MAE QELSASSJ 21 Martin St., Northridge Dayton, Ohio GRADUATE LIST - CONTINUED KELLER, JANET 31 N. Harbine Ave., Dayton, Ohio LANDTS, HELEN Camp Livingston, Alexandria, La. LEAs, MARIE KATHRYN 333 Salem Ave., Dayton, Ohio MONBECK, CATHERINE L. KLIBENGOODJ Forest Ave., Dayton, O. NIXON, MILDRED DOLORES 400 Greenmount Blvd., Dayton, O. RAMPENTHAL, MARGARET KDURSTJ R. R. No. 1, Clayton, Ohio RATCHFORD, BEULAH fFAGERJ 153 Ashwood Ave., Dayton, Ohio SIPLE, ALMA C. Ft. Hamilton Hosp., Hamilton, O. THORP, EUNICE ZERELLA 30 Ashley St., Dayton, Ohio WEIss, MARGARET C. KWEISSJ Wayne Hosp., Greenville, O. WCODDELL, HAZEL 5605 Fairview Dr., Sylvania, Ohio YACKLEY, JANET A. KCYESTERJ W. Stroop Rd., Dayton, O. Class of 1938- BATES, MONALEE fARMPRIESTERJ 325 Huron Ave., Dayton, O. BRUMBAUGH, MILDRED FRANCES 165 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio BUICK, JANET QSMITHJ 416 W. Liberty St., Springlield, O. DECK, REGINA PEARL fASHWORTHJ 40 Avalon Ave., Dayton, Ohio FLARIDA, ELIZABETH fSMITHJ 4036 Walnut St., Phil. Ann. Apt., Phil., Pa. FOUGHTY, ELLEN fSCI-IAFFERJ Vandalia, Ohio GORRILL, HAZEL M. CMARSHALLJ R. R. No. 2, Broonville, Ohio HAINES, ELLEN MAHALA fHUNTJ Columbus, Ohio JOHNSTON, EILEEN CCONRADJ 71 Brookfield, Manchester, Conn. KLINGER, KATHRYN P. QMILLERJ 522 Parrot St., Dayton, Ohio KNASEL, RUTH EVELYN 60 Ashley Ave., Dayton, Ohio MUMFORD, KATHRYN CJONESJ 2nd Ave., Dayton, Ohio MYERS, KATHRYN Q 205 Shiloh Springs Rd., Dayton, O. NUTT, ALMA KMORANJ I Waynesville, Ohio OGLEVEE, LOUISE 228 Bonner St., Dayton, Ohio ' OLT, MARY CFREDERICKJ 301 Watervliet Ave., Dayton, Ohio PFEIFFER, HARRIET QBATDORFJ 153 Hebbel Ave., Osborn, Ohio PORTEUS, JEAN NORTH GATE 841 N. Tyrndall Ave., Tuscon, Ariz. i' 94- Q? PRICE, RUTHEVA KSTRIDERJ Verona, Ohio RAMPENTHAL, GWENDOLYN KPRIPERJ R. R. No. 1, Dayton, Ohio SABINS, MARTHA CLEIGHTYJ 2148 Coronett Ave., Dayton, Ohio SHROYER, PATTY Tipp City, Ohio SINRS, SARA JANE 2036 Mayfair Rd., Dayton, Ohio SKALDDEN, ANNA IRENE fSNYDERJ 228 Stonemill Rd., Dayton, Ohio STRUCK, ROSA fBECKERJ 323 Willowwood Dr., Dayton, O. TURPIN, LoIs WILMA fCOLEJ fDeceasedj VAN PELT, RUTH E. fSTOUTJ 2225 Nill Ave., Dayton, Ohio WEAVER, GAYTHEL West Liberty, Ohio WEHR, RUTH 60 Ashley St., Dayton, Ohio Class of 1939- BAKER, BETTY 1619 Durst Ave., Dayton, Ohio BAUER, MARY HELEN Paper Mill, W. Carrollton, Ohio BAYNES, MARJORIE QSCHILLINGJ General Hospital, Cincinnati, O. BRIGHT, MARJORIE Findlay Hospital, Findlay, Ohio Cox, MARY fCRAWFORDJ Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio Cox, RACHEL 413 Salem Ave., Dayton, Ohio DEATON, FRANCES R. R. No. 5, Eaton, Ohio DEETER, LOIS M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio DEERIIAKE, MILDRED R. R., New Knoxville, O. ELLIS, BILLIE JEAN QBURNSJ 2307 Philadelphia Dr., Dayton, O. FISHWICK, EDNA 3304 N. Main St., Dayton, Ohio GUINSLER, DORINE KBRINKLEJ 1l03M W. Riverview Ave. Dayton, Ohio HARPER, HELEN KSNYDERJ Ann Arbor, Michigan HARSHBARGER, ETHEL M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio HECATI-IORN, MAENO Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Indiana HECKMAN, DORIS 101 Lawn St., Dayton, Ohio HURY, ELIZABETH 241 Brooklyn Ave., Dayton, Ohio KANTNER, FLORENCE fLF.WISJ 562 Richard St., Dayton, Ohio LAN'rz RUBY KLYNCI-IJ 721 Haynes St., Dayton, Ohio MACK, GLADYS QHPLES, cfo Mrs. H. L. Hilcs, 33 Watts St., Dayton, O. MILLER, MILDRED M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio MILLER, FAITH M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio MUSSELMAN, HELEN fBRUGHMAN7 Dankirk, O. PARKER, DOROTHY 1 1 1 Bradley Lane, Dayton, Ohio SCHERER, LoUELLA 1809 Pershing Blvd., Dayton, Ohio SHAWLER, KATI-IRYN Piqua Memorial Hosp., Piqua, O. SHULTZ, MARY EMMA M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio SINIK, PAULINE fWEBBJ Seattle, Washington SLOAN, MARTHA 20 E. Burton Ave., Dayton, Ohio SMELSER, CHARLE NE Seattle, Washington VERNoN, RUTH 242 Aberdeen St., Dayton, Ohio GRADUATE LIST- CONTINUED Class of 1940- BINKLEY, GLENDOLA Crestline, Ohio CAPSTICK, MARIAN 30 Richland Ave., Dayton, Ohio DEMOTTE, AMY M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio DENNIS, RUBY fFlNNEY, cfo Erie Proving Grounds LaCarne, Ohio ECKERT, REBECCA QMEFFARDD 702 Troy St. FAUCETT, RUTH Pershing, Ind. GOUGE, RUTH M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio HALE, VERNA M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio HOLSINGER, EVELYN M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio JAY, NORMA 63 McOwen St., Dayton, Ohio MAYS, MARGARET M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio MCKNIGHT, MARIANNA fNIXONl 14 Norton St., Dayton, Ohio MILLER, DOROTHY M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio 4- 95 +- MURPHY, DONNA RUTH 551 Monteray Ave., Dayton, Ohio PIERCE, Lois Robert Blvd., Dayton, Ohio REEvEs, HELEN 206 Fountain Ave., Dayton, Ohio ROSEBOOM, EILEEN 39 N. Horton St., Dayton, Ohio SEAGRAVES, ANN 607 N. Main St., Winchester, Ind. SPITLER, RUTH Frigidaire, Dayton, Ohio TAYLOR, MARILOU 143 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio THUM, MARY KATHERINE M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio VAN WAGNER, ALICE fGATESJ Tipp City, Ohio WARNER, GLADYS Stouder Memorial Hospital Troy, Ohio WARRICK, BETTY 143 Wyoming St., Dayton, Ohio WEAVER, JOSEPHINE Fort Lauderdale, Florida WILLIAMS, MARY ELLEN M. V. H., Dayton, Ohio YOUNG, WINIFRED 918 Troy St., Dayton, Ohio 2 The Visiting Nurse Association Student Program N MAY, 1911, Miss Bishop, Superintendent of The Miami Valley Hospital Schooliof Nursing, arranged with the Board of Directors of the Flower and Fruit Mission, the organzation from which the present Visiting Nurse Association developed, to send student nurses to the Mission for a course in visiting nursing. They were Sent one at a time for a period of from three to six weeks. The contact proved valuable to the organization as well as to the student, and has continued with very few interruptions. Student afiiliation with a public health nursing agency is not designed as a specific preparation for public health nursing. It is intended rather to round out the student's nursing experience by having her meet some of the more common situations found in family health work, and by giving her practice in dealing with these situations. At present, the student program of The Visiting Nurse Association is open to groups of nine third year student nurses from the three local hospitals for a period of six weeks. Four students in each group are from The Miami Valley Hospital. The program is under the supervision of the educational director and consists of twenty-three hours of class work, and nursing in the homes. The greater part of the studentis supervision in the field is the responsibility of the staff nurse to whom she is assigned. judging from reports which the students submit at the end of the six weeks experience, they find it both interesting and valuable, while we of The Visiting Nurse Association find it stimulating to work with the students, and are anxious to give each as much theory and practice in public health nursing as is possible in a six weeks course. American Red Cross Nursing-the Answer to Todays Challenge THE AMERICAN RED CROSS NURSING SERVICE in keeping with its traditions and ideals of neutrality and humanity today challenges the nurses of our nation. Five thousand live hundred Red Cross nurses are needed immediately to render expert nursing care to the millions of young men who are being prepared to defend our democracy. Today when all our national defenses are being perfected, we must make every effort to strengthen our first line of defense-the health of our armed forces and our nation. This service is the direct responsibility of the nurses of America. The American Red Cross Nursing Service is the reserve for the Army and Navy Nurse Corps. Annie W. Goodrich expressed the sentiment of every Red Cross Nurse when she said, Speaking of war, since we pacifists can not prevent the catastrophe, we as patriots must do what we can to mitigate its horrors. Our pledge as nurses has conferred upon us certain obligations 'and duties primary of which is alleviation of suffering. Service is given not only because of duty or obligation but because of some deep seated, compelling motive in the heart of every true nurse. With the oath of allegiance ending in the solemn words 'ESO Help Me God , American nurses will respond to today's challenge by enrolling in the Red Cross Nursing Service, remembering again their Nightingale pledge, to forget self and render service to humanity. They will thus symbolize the spirit of Red Cross Nursing, Thou shalt not be afraid for the terror by night, nor for the arrow that flieth by day, nor the pestilence that walketh in darkness, nor for the destruction that wasteth at noon day. MARY HEILAND Ex, Secretary +- 97 -R Antngraphz 98 2-Xutngraphn 99 . X gil :nl -iw'n' f-if ' 12355525 EIE QQE FJ W E 4,-,-.1-l 1.1.1. Z-i-'ii' .,.,.-...-L, V, -,,. 12 -Q, . nl M 5 55 Emmmaig t, f If EEIEIHQEE1 E53 Lf f a El f ' F2 ff M , Q,-sfrr 4 y 43-L' t1fi2i?:- 'gmaiggg 6 5, The latest addztzon builtin 1925 WZ' hope to hav othe in the n ar uture 4+ 100 'F I: .J J. my K . P ,Q I J , - -.Y.,,,- - ,J ,...wq..,,.. ,T-.---...r --1 lf.: .A,. 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Suggestions in the Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) collection:

Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 73

1941, pg 73

Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 57

1941, pg 57

Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 84

1941, pg 84

Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 33

1941, pg 33

Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 8

1941, pg 8

Miami Valley Hospital School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Dayton, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 101

1941, pg 101


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