Puyallup High School - Viking Yearbook (Puyallup, WA)
- Class of 1939
Page 1 of 118
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 118 of the 1939 volume:
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'Qs 1,-5 :-'.l'i'g,'.-rs-Q --'1--w,'1'v'+Qts- -- -iiiniffi ,Q-1--1. , f ff: if--q',..',i'.,'3-L-rig, .-.,,,i.,i,gg-vs-gm-ez-'rf,2fi2f7:4xfi'3,--,iwgfnifiji-f-',-1gf-Q---7-gn-. 5.11-.gg-,---5Zf,,. r A-,gi :Mn ,vm f - '- ' - 553f1h'51 l2:--iff -..f?iiY'Q:i5Yi3i?,4?iL:E13i'4i! -Q-F31i?25,r,43,Sf'Q?5e-we--f'1f - ' ,2El--- 1:.' M' 'w.'---11-1372:41ff?.,:,' 'S'-.35'fi:ifT --5-'if-f .--ff NSY.-f1' :i v,fn2f'i-6Sf.V -9 ' M 45 vi, .Q55-5,i-,.4,L. -2,55 U,-V, -.:..,,,-4 , ,,-- ,.1Q-,W m3.,,.,,.-M.-yi, N , -xv :. f- - ,-2 -' - '- ' ' 1 2--if -1 ff- :J 'W' W,-,,--'---u A ex lihris Qfazfczim puyallup high school puyallup, washington foreword Establishing a first of its kind record, the Viking annual shows its colors with a progress serve and follows through with an 'emphasis on achievement. Through the camera, spectator fans are offered an intimate glimpse into the chronological progress of the class of '39 from the time of its inconspicuous de- but at PHS in i933 until its gala departure, diploma in hand, june 7, l939. Yearly additions to the faculty create the divisional pages with a highlighted resume' of continued development in all phases of school activities. Color, type, backgrounds, group arrangements and the senior section take bows as distinctive features. Reigning supreme as a pictorial background for this progressive theme are the new north and south wings of the old alma mater. One was 4 Aa. ..'.5, ez: mi wwwww ' , Through the arched entrance to the sewing depart rnent the camera catches housewives in the making Director Burrows develops new Katherine Cornells and john Barrymores in the Little Theatre off third floor. ' fn 5 i ,JA . ... v -12 it 3 I .L Q. Q 5 l l . 5 , 5, Y -v 1 I A 4... l f I F in 581 Win, ap.. An afternoon sun holds no lure for student carpenters as they plan and create with entirely new equipment. -, , V ' '11 ij fifkggima four library No dawdlers in this student utopia where study hall and library meet. Dinner hour practically over, the kitchen crew waits good-naturedly for straggling diners. cafeteria -ni 1'1 'F ,ne m f e Q Potential student body big shots, a group of '39ers naively contemplate the future. S TOP ROW: jackson Granholm, Douglas Kelley Dean McCurdy Frank Failor Don Phillips Iacquel n Emer Fvel n 1 , , I' i Y Yi '- Y Croeper, Marie Thanasse, jean McDermid, Kathryn Wallen, Barbara Jennings, james Brown. MIDDLE ROW: jack Wagnar, Donald Somers, Viola Moore, Shirley Smith, Mary Kathryn Ostkotte, Fern Korth, jeannette Bartholet, Marjorie Snow, Sylvia Sh ' i ' ' ort, Roger Goelzer, Cordon Messenger, Forrest Stackhouse. BOTTOM. Earl Powell, Esther Kmzie, Bobby Lundquist, Henry Perfield, Frank Hanawalt, Freda Stahl, Barbara Bartley, lim Shafer, Helen Braun, Mary Tucker, Eunice Oakes, Ray Botsforrl. Though on different pathways from here on they'll roam, For many long years, PHS was their home, Yet memories will linger of days that entwine ln the hearts of each one of the class of '39. Time took these children and wade them grow tall, And gave them the wisdom .efi 1 iued by all. Their trousers have lengtl'aea'fs-1 for they are grown men, They're wearing their dresses more modern than then. But still they are pals-even better each year, Every sorrow or joy makes their friendship more dear, And often they've struggled through many a test. They've often found minutes to laugh and to jest. Each year added knowledge, a joy or a careg Each season brought sunshine and new friendships fair. Each winter brought snow fights, each spring brought the sun When friends would go walking the campus for fun. But now they'll go walking in different ways, Remembering school as their happiest days. FRIEDA SCHEITLIN No town band or city mayor greets the I48 members of the class of '39 as they make their debut on the PHS campus in I933. Immediately after their unheralded entree, however, things begin to happen . . . On September I4 the present season ticket plan is introduced and adopted. Stu- dents agree to purchase 25 activity stamps at IO cents each during the school yearf . . Asserting their authority, the I-2 division wins the season ticket drive . . . Scarcely a month later a bond issue is passed providing funds to build the audi- torium tor the highschool, a new Maplewood school and enclose the Spinning play court . . . Genevieve McCabe and Lucille Walters, after some close battles over the radio control system, are hailed the junior high debate champions . . . Cap- turing similar honors in the declamation field are Lois McDaniels and Esther Kinzie . , . The point I, ALICE BOWEN system tor earning letters in girls' athletics is adopted on October I6 . . . Girl Scout troops, under the leadership of Mrs. Merrill jones, organize October 23. Mary Ann jacobs is appointed leader of the Narcissus patrol . . . The Honorable Wesley Lloyd, representative to the national government, speaks at an assembly November I7 . . . As an individual achievement, Helen Braun wins a WCTU essay contest . . . PHS pigskinners tie Buckley for third place in the Puget Sound League . . . Three days later Pop Logan adds a seven-pound baby boy to his family budget . . . In March the board of control decides the Hi-Lite editor and business manager will not receive customary letters . . . Coach Iiggs Dahlberg and the Letterman's club rule out the awarding of minor letters . . . Vacation arrives as the cinder stompers annex their four- teenth consecutive district championship. ' MARION CATRON Mathematics Mathematics Commercial Arithmetic Manual Training I Algebra Commercial Arithmetic i junior Business Trairiinv ROBERT O. LOGAN Bookkeeping Track Coach EVELYN HAYNES Commercial Law WILLIAM MATTHEWS PERCY HARADER Secretary Commercial Geography Civics Chemistry to Cafeteria Manager Museum MARGERY MCCULLOCH Geometry Mr. Hansen Vocational Counsellor U. S. History English HAROLD SCOTT Manual Training English Latin 115 HILDA SKREEN English GLADYS SORENSON Public Speaking Art ,qui FLOYBELLE THEDFORD Secretary to Mr. Hanawalt SEVEN eight SGTS ision div I-5 G th rive, cket d Ti Fl SO gh sea hi e junior th winning By aky sh with 7 ber ptem Se Son Pl-l enter graders nth V6 Se nl: .92 Tu uw 'o C N .o no .C 4-' .E C .Q ff .Z 'U 4-' .E o Q. L .90 L VJ fU .C rm 3 o L .C 4-' 3 o O '4- rw 'T' as .C l- pace.. ng the t c searchi ge GUST f O days W fe tter a steps. A OT tering to fa and NCES l4 salesman, leads pressure gh heitlin, hi Sc Bill Sl. 'fe COT1 concert ticket sale he T 85 G hom much at an G! CD E beco QV ms, th 'le FOO O GVSI'-I'el'T1 hose T find to an -4-' GJ 1 .E 4-' CD ss- O il YU U1 Tu 4- O -A-1 FU E 2 tn U1 YU 'U cu .C -6-1 C. OJ ss Eleanor l-lans S C. O an .O O U N .C -0-1 3 M Rh U7 Mi ce of BH guid GJ I -+- nlors, under S9 2 2 .C 4- C GJ D CD in GJ .C +- Q GJ 'O 'U ru GJ .C +- N4- O DD C I L. 4- LD x. -+- CD .C +- ched 3 YS Having successfully aj .1 x. 3 I C FU fi 'U C FU .C U o 'S Ps 1. GJ 0.0 x. m 2 LD LD 3 veland, Cle ss Mariam S eir th Y tr will 95' th GH r, wh CJ .o E cu -I-4 cn QJ U7 4-' x GJ C no C -4- G! fu Ps T. GJ UD TU GJ CD C m VJ L QJ 'U G3 x. UD TP cv E O qu cu .C -I-1 cv .C -I-4 cv .2 on V7 on 5 Zi- U CU ui LJ C fU X- 3 LD V7 'P 56- sel in W VO YS G th As foothold on the eighth grade step. clubs demanding the r closest attention. boys' and girls' glee Th W C penny serenoclers . f- fff i gg mmwwf ,A ,, ,M With a gay song in their hearts and even gayer tunes on their lips, these junior high songbirds display amazing melodious talent under the guiding hand and voice of Miss Ruth Clark. The 96 nightingales, 69 girls and 27 boys, chirp their do-re-me's to the accompan- iment of Eleanor Lindstrom's ivory tickling. Last year the baby prima donnas practiced after school in study hall. This year the groups meet separately lvlonday, Wednesday and Friday, and Tuesday and Thursday after- noon in the new music room. In November the girls effectively warble their way into the good graces of the student body and present a second curtain call per- , .s formance March 4. During the Yuletide season The Big Brown Bear, john Peel and Lullaby are put aside for beloved Christmas carols. Both sen- ior and junior high students neglect school books and lessons to listen to the soft and dulcet tones when the clubs tour the halls caroling peace and goodwill, At several PTA meetings parents and teach- ers hear special arrangements of super special tunes when the Girls' glee club appears in black skirts and white blouses. As the main event of the season, they add that extra touch to the annual Spring Concert. . C if C, ' jg :,, SQ A I , , ,T 5' . Q 3, H i t kg rw , - .- .- . 4 , ., J A ,JSF I .-'i Q A. 1 ,X Q fi - EU L...i. , I954 Mayor Floyd Chase formally dedicates the Viking field to the spirit of friendliness and good sports- manship, September 28, just before the Auburn- Puyallup football game . . . Faculty members not returning this year are Miss Regina Cooper, Miss Florence Meader and Miss Mabel Schaefer. Re- placing them are Ruby Shackelford, Robert B. Burrows and assistant coach Al Dahlberg . . . Miss Ruth Robertson takes over Mrs, Estelle Cunning- ham's school nursing duties . . . While the new Maplewood school is being built, 225 students and four teachers sojourn under the high school roof . . . For the first time in the history of the junior high girls' glee club, four part music is studied . , . ln order to build up the school band for the future, free lessons are offered to beginners by j. Franklin Peters who begins plans for a junior high band . . . French club members hold a meeting in September to draw up a constitution . . . Superintendent Han- awalt releases first complete information on the auditorium which is to house l,35O opera chairs, l,OOO of these are to be one the main floor and 350 on the balcony. Construction begins in Novem- ber when the large steel girders arrive from the east coast . . . Assistant principal Ray Warren institutes a vocational plan for Boys' club assem- blies . . . At the annual Turkey Day battle the Vikings take the measure of their ancient rivals. RUTH ROBERTSON, School Nurse, testing'the eye of a student, patient, with the opthalmic telebin- ocular machine. the Sumner Spartans, for the sixth consecutive time, eking out a narrow 7-O victory. . . Consisting of 35 girls taking shorthand and typing, the Seq retarial club is formed in December. The organizl ation plans to learn office methods while studying dictaphones, adding machines and mimeograph: . . The high school library receives a full set or Nations of the World in 32 volumes . . . Vikinj Ladies order bright blue sweaters with white chen' ille emblems to wear on usher duty . . . Containing the names of all the girls who have been Viking Ladies at PHS, a scroll is hung in the committee room . . . To study every phase of theatre an produce dramatic productions, the Playmakers clu forms in january under the direction of Robert B Burrows, dramatic coach . . . Two l896 edition: of The High School Exponent are presented tc PHS by Dr. Ray Morse . . . Purposing to keep in formed on current events in France and Spain anc to develop an interest in their languages, the For eign Language club is organized . . . Proceeds o a benefit entertainment by the Elks are turned ove to Miss Ruth Robertson to clothe needy schoo children . . . To raise money for musical instru- ments the glee clubs, band and orchestra present a concert in the gym December l-4 . . . Harold Scott manual training teacher, is seriously injured wher his tractor overturns on him. Mead Murray, forme, teacher, substitutes for the remaining six week: . . . The twelfth annual spring concert is given Ma lO . . . Pop Logan's tracksters win the Puget Soun south end elimination meet . . . At a general meet- ing May 7 Marvin Atkins is elected junior higl' presidentg Earl Powell, vice presidentg and Dav jackson, yell leader . . . The Puyallup junior hig track team becomes the proud possessor of a silvei trophy when it emerges victorious from the relay. carnival May ll. ROBERT B. BURROWS AL DAHLBERG Dramatics Science, Health and English Guidance Algebra Athletic Coach urels . . . . . . la . , 2gf.z5e:izd aizzisigsfifrail:122zeilfie.LZi Ami? 323 A fo im discuss problems with advisers Miss Marjorie l-logan, Miss May Engbret Orlgma mo enum OCISS' da C awe S ga ns pu IC recogm 'On W en son, Mr Pre are George Stean, jean Stout, Charles Huttercl, George Barry and Bill puppets for display in the Spring art exhibit Emerson' On April ll dramatic students portray a comic mystery play The To the 1-lO division go loads of 'lblossoms from Broadway for they Devil Stone in the annual tournament held here this year Coaching l ob debote demons GVGI' Starting ott with a bang, V938 debate t runs a high temperature among teachers and ' iunior high. Pvt a preiiminary ' iect the senior high 'men- if students in meeting the advisers se debate question as the subiect tor argu ' ' Resoived: That the United States ' with C-reat Britain. ' ' e Bowen, tation. rm an aiiiance ot Miss Nic 'mousiy shouid to Under the supervision debate coach, tirst period rooms unani id tryouts in November betore the two ' es are chosen trom each o 'nai representativ ' i aves ioyce Fearnq and Siyter, ivision i Ciass eiimination e Biii Burdue, i-6g Frances Bunn and Ray i-'lp iane Bader and Charies ifiutterd, i-S, Lauretta Rogers and ierry Miihoiiand, i-93 ta Benton and Donaid Knitten, i-iO. bate weighing heaviiy earn- and Rober , With the matter ot de i on their minds, the contestants prepare estiy and then wade into the initiai torensic December 8. in this tirst ciash ot the 've i-6 wins trom the ictorious i FQ I.. r Q ig. meet season the attirmati negative i-7, and the negative i-9 is v over the attirmative i-8. Chairmen for the skirmishes are Leonard awyer and Betty Pxngei, whiie senior high teachers ruie supreme as iudges. idonorabie iudges, worthy opponents, and triends' ieiziw iviii,i-ioLLANp and LAURETYA ROGERS. in the next word battie on ianu- ary il, the invincibie attirmative i-9 team deteats the i-i0 squad and ciashes again on ianuary Zi with the X-6 arguers. By virtue ot i this win, Lauretta Rogers and ierry idi , irdi Miihoiiand become undeteated eighth grade champions. lsdd Two teams, Ruth Bracicman and Betty Reid, Noveiia Cochran and Biiiy Scott, try out tor treshman de- Q bate ianuary 30. Swapping team mates, Noveiia and Ruth emerge S trom a tinai tray with the eighth grade champions on February i6 d'i and are haiied aii-iunior high ,ir,,i, champs. 1 COACH BOWEN demonstrates debate tech- nique for champions NOVELLA COCHRAN , and Run-i Biznciovinu. ,gg .i Q .kg is E f .Tweiye eighth grade students stage a dra- the atmosphere grows coid and eerie, Hattie matic contest within a contest when they itxfiaxine Coiberg, ieanne Poweiii tears the compete tor parts in The Deyii Stone Cast. worst. Her teeiings are shared by tim iBiii One,aC-K Comedy Anne Couxtef Mar, Behafn who. ifnfnediatexy abSCOndS. is up tens iiteraiiy oozes with mystery and becomes 'YO Tam! Wm LOOYWGSU UOYC5 LOUQYWYG3 .YO Puyaiiup's entry in the iunior High Drama Ufifavex the WYSYGVY and restore P9355 32-am' Fesfivax gpm ti. Purposing to interest the .iunior high stu- Riyairy runs high among the contenders up demxi. m dgamaiic p'OC3UC '0f'5 and pubiig to the iast minute when coach May Engbret- Spea mgt t 9 One'aCt V av recent Y repxace son announces her tinai decision. dedamahofq m me xeague Schooxg' . . . Competing with Buckiey, Enumciaw and xosxe qeamfe Thomas, ,ms Pemn 'S fm Sumner, the Puyaiiup cast pertorms betore an adventure-craving giri ot titteen who .sprains Unbiased Xudge for Cmdsm rather than Cups her ankie on f ot aii days f her birthday. of rnedaxs. When Eiwood iilidgeway Cioud, Lioyd Nor- Taking charge ot the committees are Mrs. ieni deiivers a package to her containing the Maude iacobs, pubiicityg Betty Waiiace and Deyii Stone, an eyenttui evening begins. PeariWiiiiams, costumesg Ciarence Diii, iight- Eiien, the younger sister, ii4atherine Hermans, ing, ieanne Eatough, student director, Laur- Dorothy Sandersoni experiences spine-ting- etta Rogers, book hoiderg George Barry and iing thriiis and teeth-chattering chiiis whiie Ridgeway Cioud, sound ettects, iunior high one queer happening toiiows another. Pts band, music, and Giris' ciub, ushers. s, Hermans, Behan, Looney Norien. Seated: Coiberg Perry, Sanderson, Longmire, Cioud. oweii, Thoma Standing: P the deyii ' stone y cosobo chomps f . On: FU BACK: Hygashi, Emerson, Lundrigan, Mulkins, johnson, Quinlan, F. Bruce. FRONT: Nix, Calligan, Hoover, C. Bruce, Rodvelt, Takeuchi, Coach Catron. Sweeping through the South End for an- other decisive championship, Coach Marion Catron and his Viking Babes do it again, cap- turing the fifth south end crown in six years. Classified was the most skillful Baby Viking hoop squad to date, they score 206 points to their opponents' l l6. Eighteen straight wins include 6 confer- ence victories: Enumclaw, 3l to l6g Sumner, 32 to l6g Buckley, 43 to l2, Enumclaw, 28 to 93 Buckley, 35 to l l 3 and Sumner, 35 to 25. The only dark cloud on the Babes bright horizon is a loss to Renton February 26, when playing for the championship of Puget Sound. Holding the lead until the last minute, they lose by two points, 24-26, when the Papooses shove in a few sensationals. After sweeping clean the intramural class basketball and grabbing the crown, they lose a final casaba thriller to the senior high second team by a one-point margin. Creating the all-champ personnel of the junior high squad are: Galen Hoover and Harold Rodvelt, forwards, Gail Bruce, center, and Bill Calligan and Yukio Takeuchi, guards. Running up a total of 68 points in the six conference Gail Bruce, holdover from last year's squad. is the individual scoring leader and outstanding player. Bill Calligan, tricky and elusive dribbler, is another hold- over. Letterwinners besides the starting five are Claude Nlulkins, Eugene Quinlan and Marion Lundrigan, while Nix manages the cham- pion squad. jiqngw l955 With an enrollment of 7l7 students, an increase of 25 over last year, PHS classroom doors reoper. September 6 . . . Six teachers leaving the staff are Miss janet Ware, Miss Verne Hannah, Miss Marie Rafn and Miss Ruby Shackelford . . . Replacing weekly vocation lectures, Hi-Life reporters inter- view prominent business men of Puyallup on possi- bilities of their professions . . . The National Youth Administration for boys and girls l6 years or age or over is established at PHS . . . Lloyd Baisinger and Esther Kinzie are chosen junior high glee club presidents . . . Miss Maret Duthie, Miss Marvel Green, Miss Ruth jacobson, Miss Emma Bell Stad- den, Miss Gertrude Butler, Miss Gvvendolene Frater, and Mrs. Maude jacobs are added to the faculty ... ln the third quarter of the Baby Viking game at Sumner October l7, Marvin Atkins breaks his leg. Other members of the team are McQueed, Gratzer, Minchau, Raymond, Durga, Kelley and Fahey . . . in appreciation of music furnished at a ceremony at the Viking field, the Modern Woodmen of America present ZO dollars to the band . . . After a year without the Spanish club, Miss Maret Duthie begins a practicality trial . , . Betty Gerstmann, Freda Stahl and Esther Kinzie win high Camp Fire honors at the Council Fire . . . F. L, Brouillet takes the place of jud Herron, junior high janitor . . . Mr. Percy Haracler's chemistry students perform ex- periments before Puyallup clubs . . . During the November Book Week 25 junior high students under the direction of Miss Gladys Sorenson display a project at the library . . . ln response to an in- vitation from KVI, the all-school cast of Big Hearted Herbert presents a half-hour broadcast . . . To give students training and experience in playing modern rhythm, I. Franklin Peters organ- izes the Band Dance Band . . . ln order to create ,,. 'TIE' GERTRUDE BUTLER GVVENDOLENE FRATER Librarian Typing Shorthand a more active interest in the organization, the Girls' club cabinet publishes a paper concerning the work of the cabinet and other club units . , . With six victories and one tie, the Vikings win the foot- ball league championship. Future champs of PHS, the Baby Vikings finish second in their league . . . Helen Braun and Henry Perfield win the junior high debate championship, while Frank Hanawalt becomes oratory champ . . . Because of impaired vision, Miss Duthie abandons her work and journeys to California . . . Mrs. Ruth Williams Cummins takes over foreign language and girl athletic coach- ing duties. . . For the first time since the l927 fire, the Glee club gives an operetta. Only members of the Glee club are eligible for parts . , . PHS debate teams take second place at an invitational forensic meet at CPS . . . ln February the school offers a TB test to the student body . . . Mrs. Maude jacobs directs the harmonica band . . . The tennis team captures second place in the conference . . . Two typing students win second place at Seattle. K., Kg 5 ,vs kr A Maroon drapes lend that imperial touch to the ornate front of the auditorium. ...qi v J.f RUTH IACOBSON Social Science MRS. MAUDE IACOBS English Science, Health and Guidance tiftee T5 O w an 3 C P U.: m ru C+' - .Q 'Q U -2 n..E CD Em U w C Q :E 33 O -. o , U49 w C Q ,mm 3:0 b -0 '-Cl O Ei Jn 5? 2 'Y' Lt-rg 6 845 CC O Cm U70 OX 'H- SE' + m W O Q .- C..C O41 CU m - L .133-gg GJ . Nm 3 P m --.. 2 m EQJCQ- 'U C5850 GJ C Q L.: u C m F: 0.2022 UD CE -Ccocu C Dow Ln -- LLIILL 5 'UH'-L'.9'5.c 'U 'C UCL-J-F J: Bmw? 'E - qlljgu 'E 'mn L w . m Silgifffgzi 4-'-.QW 2.':m3'5CE9 .-CDL O q- -CJCTFQEES: 3 -2 E 2 S-313 TD fs.?F2'fLElO C.E:-+.fagD4?,Fg q,OLQ,m... who-svn? x. CDG! L ND w Q. m 3 fr 393 -CE F- : Q. 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SEN' o 3 Q' .COO :CDU 53:95 3.29 W nn sig -3.53 +-QE C3 mm Q6 Em 12 E B 3 fv 3 'U m E .E no L 'El fi .E 3 TJ 1 .5 -l Q25 3.20 5,1 g '.? m if-6 .C up m 0.30, EQ' .2 4? 4522, C.: , 'V 'U E m 2 .M'-uw u 0 m mbx. x.CD'Q LDW4 L 75 1523 34- Df m-E 'EEF ru'Fn rE C: C.Q Sa? -CE U m O.: KJ u E m C O C3 essdent I' ep I Calligan, vlc Bi entg id er Puariea, pres E O IE ll! L. GJ U LC N- o I JP 'U GJ CD C 'mn c I. l- N E CD ': fl! 2 ll? .Q 2 PN .Q m PN JE Q. dis several of L0 vo- lo: O E CD .C 4-f GJ x. K5 ly Scott, yell leader. 5 'U C G! easurerg y-tr ecretar Poe, s CD .4 fU E UI 2 CD .c UI U7 G5 U. no .E 3 GJ V1 QJ .c 4-1 6 4-1 U .91 o L. Q. GJ U7 CD L -I-I on I: 5 c GJ E 2 ca. Q. 5 U7 6 L CD E .92 J 1 H. 1rx',,,sy1.- NA., , A l3-O defeat at the hands of the Fife Merchants opens the Baby Vikings' football season September 29 in a scrappy game dur- ing which they repeatedly fail to penetrate enemy territory. Playing host to the heavy Highline Pirates on October 6, the Babes take a second l3-O defeat. , Although fumbles lose the Babes several yards during the first half of their next week's game, the Sumner Spartans never pass Puyal- lup's 35 yard line and the fighting team holds them to a scoreless tie. On November 3 the heavier and larger Highline team outclasses the Babes again on their own field 27-O. Coach Allan Burke proudly points out that most of the lettermen are seventh and eighth graders. During the l938 season the complete line is composed of underclassmen while the backfield are upperclassmen. Outstanding players are Marion Lundrigan, tackleg Gail Bruce, halfbackg and Bill Calligan, quarter- back. Of the ll freshmen lettermen moving onto senior high benches, Gail Bruce, halfback, and Yukio Takeuchi, fullback, display super- ior ability. Seventh grade lettermen are Frank La- Crosse, Richard Haynes, Bob Redford, Marion Lundrigan and Dick Porenta, Eighth graders capturing similar awards are Art Kolowinski, Benny Emerson,iFloyd Bruce, Eugene Quinlan, Dick Penhale, and Donald Kniffen lmanagerl. Freshmen lettermen are Bob Heil, Homer Puariea, Ronald Poe, Dick Rave, Donald Poe, George Hazen, joe Kowalski, Gail Bruce. Byron Busick, Bill Calligan and Yukio Takeuchi. l junior gridsters BOTTOM, kneeling: D, Poe, B. Busick, Samuel, Hazen, Kowalski, Quinlan, Calligan, Lundrigan. BOTTOM, standing: Pevenage, Puariea, Heil, Porenta, Takeuchi. SECOND ROW: R. Poe, Haynes, Redford, Kolowinski, Rave, Emerson, G. Bruce, Busick, Mr. Burke. KNEELING: Kniffen, Wilmott, Anderson. STANDlNG: Emerson, Van Meter, Penhale, Milholland, Bernard. ' .Q M ,,qr- tr-an ff' QQ 'f...f ,,,.,ff' TOP: Bob Redford, Gail Bruce, Mr. Hartung, john Uno, Warren Dickenson, Frank LaCrosse, Cleave McWillis, l-larold Miller, Ben Emerson, jack Pennington, jack Orr, Marion Lundrigan, Dave Wischemann, Paul Nix. eighteen As the project of the year, junior high board of control dives into the activity pond with an em- phatic splash and authorizes the publication of an conduct handbook by the Boys' and Girls' clubs. lncluded in the contents of this all-absorbing book are manners for moderns in the cafeteria, classroom and other much frequented public places. The idea is an original take-off on a booklet published by the james Madison junior high school in Seattle. Creating a minor ripple, the board excuses students from first period classes in March to participate in a ten minute locker clean-up drive. Margaret McKechnie stresses the clean-up idea the year around by keeping atspecial locker com- mittee on their toes. President Gail Bruce leads discussions in the committee room during monthly Thursday morning meetings, assisted by vice president Eddie Preston, yell leader Bud l-leassler and secretary jean Stout. Once a month the group meets with the senior board to discuss the latest hows and whys. Passing laws on student conduct, selling season ticket stamps and granting debate, football, bas- ketball and track letters are the general duties falling under the board's supervision. Few PHS violators escape the vigi- lant eyes of the junior patrol members who are elected in all first period classes in junior high early in Septem- ber. Recognizable by their purple and gold jP emblems, the proud possessors of' the aforementioned exterminate hall nuisances with a vengeance. Down to the office go stray books, lost um- brellas and second offenders, into waste baskets goes waste paper and prestol the student body slate and halls remain immaculate. Meetings are not neglected by these minions of the law who close forgotten locker doors and inspect them regularly., Early morning finds them keeping stu- dents quiet and below first floor, even between classes they good-naturedly direct conduct. Combining sports and duty they carry their supervision onto the Viking field where they tactfully keep small boys off the playing field while keeping one eye on the fence. Under the direction of Philip Stucky the junior patrol began five years ago as a service organization much re- sembling the senior Viking Knights. Recently Don Hartung succeeded Mr. Stucky as leader E 1 E i t Tommy Edwards, jerry l SEATED: jean Stout, Charles ,iv 'Z' STANDING: lack Morrisson, Charles Hufferd, Wayne Adams, Ruth Brackman, Karen Mahaffie. SEATED: Betty Mason, Mr. Catron, Miss lacobson, Melba Lemon, Shirley Neiman. leaders porley Faris, Margaret Eaton, Ramona Spencer, Ruth Brackman, Ruth Forbes, Gail Bruce, Charles Todd, Robert Modeland. Bonita Hoppell, janet Ham, Margaret Mcliechnie, Eugene Quinlan. Beginning their activities after ap- pointing gift, clean up, smoking and program committees, the Boys' club sponsors a cooperative no smoking campaign. Under the supervision of Marion Catron they also stress the organizatidn's aim with a be-in-at- least-one-activity slogan. Collaborating with the Girls' club they help publish a booklet of conduct, choosing Virginia Hansen and lack Morrisson editing chairmen. At the firstof a series of assemblies based on charm, the Girls' club fea- tures colorful costumes and native music. Adviser Ruth lacobson and ZOO girls turn out to support the Novem- ber mixer, the club's only social event. With the senior girls they deftly sprinkle good will and Thanksgiving President - Betty Mason, lack Morrisson Vice President - Shirley Neiman, Wayne Adams Sec,-Treas. - lvlelba Lemon, Charles l-lufferd Yell Leader: - - - Karen Mahaffie nineteen l 6 Eighteen violins, three cellos and a piano comprise the potential orchestra that greets Miss Ruth Clark as she takes over the baton from Miss Margaret Tanner in September. During the course ot a month the personnel increases to 30, and out ot instrument cases come assorted flutes, clarinets, oboes, cornets, mellaphones, sousaphones and drums. Uniformed in black and white they break into the ranks ot recognition with Indian Dance and ldyll at a November assembly. Accepted ardently by the student body, the reappear tor a second curtain call in March. Kenneth Fevvins, who ordinarily presses valves on the mellaphone, enters the Musical Competition Festival held here March 4 and captures an excellent rating as a French hornerf' Eleanor Lindstrom tosses aside the clarinet and takes a similar rating in the piano section. Betty Wrigley sticks to her violin and also brings home an excellent'l title. Inspired by the plans ot Miss Clark, the orchestra contributes that certain string at the annual spring concert. twenty l QA N -f 'rvaffmgi A l Fifty one black and white garbed, enthus- iastic band members add pep, punch and pur- pose to the junior high musical world under the magic baton control of bandmaster Verne jennings. Organized for the first time under j, Frank- lin Peters last year, the band quickly doubles its personnel and instrumental assortment, jus- tifiably boasting of 15 clarinets, I4 trumpets, l l drums, three batons, two mellaphones and french horns, and one flue, alto horn, oboe and bass. Forming a select group, Kenneth Fewins, Charles Aylen, Paul Cerstmann, Bill Scott, Richard l-larader and Noble Skoog furnish rhythm at the first junior high Boys' club meeting, Leader jennings joins in the talen display October 6 and entertains the student body with a violin solo. After occupying the, spotlight as parent- teacher programs and junior high basketball games, the entire band, sharing honors with senior high, concentrates on sweet notes for the spring concert first nightersf' Refusing to be outdone by their big broth- ers, they join the spring Daffodil marching parade as a separate musical unit. i ,Af Qs fi l -rf i956- At what principal Harry Hansen terms the most successful season ticket drive in PHS history the class of '39 carries away the honors with a 28.5 per cent gain over their quota . . . An entirely new type of report cards is introduced by vice principal Ray Warren. They are divided into two parts and come out every ten weeks, replacing the customary six-week progress reports . . . Members of the Girls' club refuse to be distressed by cuts or unex- pected runs and install a first aid and sewing kit in the rest room . . . Five new teachers take up work at the high school, four of them filling posi- tions vacated by Coach jiggs Dahlberg, Phillip Stucky, Elizabeth Buss and Mrs. Ruth Williams Cummins . . . Planning for the remaining two years, sophomore class advisers Marvel Green, Emmabell Stadden and Ray Warren give each class member a personal interview regarding his course of study . . . in appreciation of the work done by the team, the coaching staff and football players are taken to the Washington-Minnesota game at the University sta- dium . . . Improvements are the completely equip- ped bookkeeping desks and the installation of 280 lockers on first floor, senior high. The new lockers are assigned to football, basketball and track men, eliminating the necessity of their going above first floor after practice . . . junior high Girls' club cab- inet holds a special meeting to revise the point system . . . Miss Stadden is elected chairman of the girls' advisers for the Puget Sound League at Girls' League conclave at Highline . . . Puyallup's high ' school band opens the general session of the Washington Educational Association at jason Lee Intermediate school in Tacoma . . . Under Miss Harriet Rosenzweig's su- pervision the Hi-Life is completely revamped and features a new headline syste3r.f:r complete sport page and a junior high section . . . Two points .instead of the previous g . A :iff ALLAN BURKE Mathematics Science Health and Guidance Social Sciences 1 RICHARD COOK DON HARTUNG Botany Algebra, Solid Geometry Zoology Physics, Assistant Coach twenty-two 7 five are given to the captains of the girls' athletic teams . . . jun-ior Patrol members receive purple and gold emblems . . . A new plan of service for using the museum goes into effect and allows all pupils as well as townspeople to use the museum at will . . . Sponsored by the Hi-Y club, the local section of the Northwest Older Boys' conference is held in Puyallup, December 4, 5, 6 . . . Franklin Peters and Marg-aret Tanner purchase new'instru- ments for the band and orchestra with SOO dollars appropriated by the school board . . . All Around Girls' club, a branch of the YWCA, is organized by Mrs. George Cole and Mrs. Hayden . A distinct advance in playmaking comes during the Cat and the Canary, the first time more than one set is used in a play . . . Modern steel lathes, guarded emery stones and a power drill are purchased for the manual training building . . . The matinee of Comedy of Errors marks the first visit of the Washington State Theatre to PHS . . . Viking griders gain undisputed.possession of third place in the final standings of the Puget Sound League by their win over Renton. The game breaks a three way tie for third position with Renton and Buckley, leaving the Vikings sole possessors . . . With a mem- bership of l8 students, the newly organized archery club progresses under the leadership of Frank Man- ning . . . Through lack of a stage with which to work, the Puppeteers' club is indefinitely discon- tinued . . . journalists of PHS are granted a charter by Quill and Scroll, an international honor society for high school journalists. The charter gives Miss Rosenzweig the right to organize a local chapter. . . . . La Tertulia, Spanish club, organizes under i Miss Rosenzweig . . . An assembly committee of students and faculty of PHS visits other high schools to observe assembly conduct . . . During February charter members form a Girls' Athletic Association to interest more girls in athletics . . . A project is outlined to widen the parking in the high school block . . . j. F. Peters introduces drum majoring, baton twirling classes . . . Puyallup Hi-Y sponsors its first Hi-jimg, May I2 . . . Golfers con- clude their first season of golf play in second place on March Z6 . . . ln April the junior and senior music divisions hold separate concerts for the first tiTT1e. ,Q 43 ' s 4- nv .-.., Tac-' 'F 1 HARRIET ROSENZWEI French, journalism Spanish,. English HELEN LUFT English, Science, Health and Guidance QD .C 4- U1 4-' GJ L. Q. 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C Q 2550 9 -4-EOE 4' E tam 8 -P -C0 'ob 'U C 353-QE Q 3 O E: Q Q, Ex..2CIJ L mob 1 41 mag? 02 8 CD Oomm U -C D0 Q-OD W 4- '- ' mND.tU I Q 0+-O-O G3 an '5:Cg E0 mx 411 -Sf m . CQJO- 4.4 czfwmgfm 0.52 'O no c1155 g .E C . Eixggiwg Q, QD w3lS?S5 .Eff CDET1.: +06 EB fe, c lgw Stevenson is bored with it all, but Litton, Mankertz and Fay just can't keep their As sixth period rolls around ten formerly recog- nizable students crawl into huge striped denim coveralls, plaster disreputable hats upon their heads and become official stage crew members. On the generally unseen work of this equally in- visible crew, hangs the responsibility for the scenic success of auditorium productions. Besides contributing their much-in-demand time to school plays and assemblies, they dash around for the good of all civic programs presented at the school. lnto the category of most difficult falls the Christmas 'Pageant Bob Wright and Bernard, after expertly daubing paint on the scenery, make room for Bob Steven- son who lowers the lights from the loft and juggles them around with Weldon Rau until the color, intensity and direction meet with adviser Harold 'Scott's approval. Meanwhile Warren, Richard and Earl set up the scenery and Robert Lit- ton arranges the curtains. Bob Fay ap- pears everywhere at once supplying ma- terials while Donna Lewis adds nec- essary feminine touches. Weldon scrambles buttons and levers to flood the stage with purple, green, and red hues, creating effective spots and shadows. eyes off those alluring sweepers. VL, Round and round the ham- mer goes, Where it stops only Donna knows, 'Cause Palmer and Wright are busy. Mr. Scott poses prettily the birdie, as Powell pc out production plans Westbo and Rau. Adviser - A - - Harold Scott Stage Manager - Warren Westbo Assistant Manager - Richard Palmer Floor Manager - - Earl Powell Chief Electrician - Weldon Rau Assistant Electrician - Bob Stevenson Scenic Artist - - Robert Wright Assistant Artist - Bernard ,Mankertz Curtain Manager - Robert Litton Storage Manager - Bob Fay Drapery Mistress Donna Lewis twenty-four il, Us STAFF Adviser - - Gladys Sorenson Chairman - - Martin Reiter Assistant - - - lean Todd ac, 1- MEMBERS l Lois Martin Barbara jennings jean Van Meter Shirley Reynolds Marcia Frost Frank Failor Marie Banks Beitty Ann Hovies X STANDING: BANKS, VAN METER, REYNOLDS, REITER, FROST, HOVIES. ' SEATED: CLARK, BABNICK, BERGLOFF, ROHLMAN, MATTA. back stage crews Subjects entitled how to become a Spoiled debutante in IS minutes, a jpampered widow in 30, or an under- jworld derelict in an hour are studied land practiced by the skillful hand crew in Miss Sorenson's make-up studio every Tuesday. Results are put before the public eye in the all- school, junior, senior and Yuletide productions, the spring operetta and one-act plays. These l8 physiognomy sculptors apply hollows to plump cheeks, wrinkles to smooth brows and grey hairkto blonde locks with a practiced flourish, Grease paint and moustache glue are just a matter of course, for upon every student actor perfofming in the auditorium they plant their official Hsmearfi Securely enmeshed in white bibs, the crew frown and scowl for proper facial expressions as they practice transformations upon each other. Eleanor Reynolds Ruth Anderson Marie jones Betty Luckow Helen Krippaehne Charlene Rohlman Iris l-lelen jones Ona Clark STANDING: TODD, LUCKOW, MISS SORENSON, jONES, IENNINGS. SEATED: FAILOR, ANDERSON, REYNOLDS, KRIPPAEHNE. lwefllv'-six cabinet lacobs K Babnick, Peters, Edwards l STANDlNC: Veach, L. Emerson, Anderson, , . SEATED: Wallen, lvliss Beck, Rhyner, S. Hendrickson, Kinzie, Hanavva t f orts motion pictures and musical numbers, a new d Presenting a varied program o sp , bers get off to a peppy start as Boys' club lea ers. h Leaders' Conference on thi group of cabinet mem th masculine viewpoint at t e ' king, cliques, clubs an Earl Powell represents e UW campus in November and picks up invaluable tips on smo recreations. Conclusively establishing the fact that it pays to get acquainted, Marvin Atkins, ' ' etary, flash well-known smiles at the student body president, and Shigeo Takeuchiusecr k nd tie for laurels as friendliest senior boys. ictures of famous athletes for during l li-Wee a Royal Brougham of the Seattle Pl paints memory p ' ' the sport realm at an assembly lanuary 5. ' ' ' Tin Can Shuffle the boys as he recalls experiences in ' re Thanksgiving baskets, the boys loin in the When the girls prepa and solve the delivery situation. ' ' the desert study hall before Christmas vacation and Catching the festivity fever, y ' ones and hang cedar branches in the halls. d the possibility of an unfavor- paint signs, gild pine c Realizing the importance of the smoking situation an binet appoints four members from each class to draw ' ' ' ns the committee able reflection on the school, the ca ' s. With adviser lclarry Starbird leading discussio , ' l' able solution is unanimously up a set of regulation argues and debates for nearly two months until an app ic accepted. After receiving full approval from the school board in December, the rules, accompanied by a map of the smoking zone, drawn by Bernard Nlankertz, are published ' ' h bo s during a special assembly. Continuing to function as a ' bserved and presented to senior hig y uncil the committee sees that all regulations are o . ' mittees are Bob Amey, welfare, Bill Spen- undsg smoking co , Acting as chairmen of other Boys club com cer, entertainments, Henry Perfield, publicity, Wally Parmeter, building and gro lim Picha, get acquainted, and Frank lflanawalt, speakers. eat-wwmr 41 the Girls' club stages an . V, Getting into the swing of things with ties and hair ribbons, annupl mixer for the sophomore and new girls on September 29 using a boy dates gir rT1Otl . The next month the cabinet dons a more business-like mood and purposes to further development by inter-school activity reports. Following a league officer conference October 22 at PHS, the girls entertain their guests with a luncheon and tour through the new wings. Kathryn Wallen, president, and Miss Mary Beck, adviser, attend the High School Leaders' Gonference at the University of Washington November 3, 4, 5, where the discuss cliques and money making plans. Sporting black and red name tags, the entire student body ioins in Hi Week which is concluded in a new manner when classes select their friendliest boy and girl. Doris Anderson and Marianne lacobs as dance and food chairmen shuffle tin cans, cranberries, celery and otherassorted foodstuffs contributed by the students, in l2 Thanksgiving baskets for needy Puyallup families. As personality is the subiect of the year, assembly speakers demonstrate as well as discuss that indefinable requisite. hm.-5 Adding a touch of feminine mid-winter fancy, 'iMinnie, the life-size model, comes into actuality in the manual training department and models typical made-over dresses for school girls in the sewing room display case. To swell the treasury, red, gray and blue pencils announcing the basketball schedule arrive from the East and are sold for a nickel. Entertained by the Girls' club, the senior girls attended a tea given in their honor in the cafeteria March 6. Purposing to acquaint the girls with tea etiquette, Miss Hilda Skreen and Mrs. Kay Logan pour while Lola Emerson acts as general chairman. A a grand finale, the girls sponsor a Tolo week in March, treating their masculine , after school skates, paper chases and candy pulls s moments to hamburger lunches h Parrneter, Spencer, Hanawalt Amey S-TANDlNG: Pic a, ' ' cl Atkins, Takeuchi, SEATED. Perfiel , concloves twenty-eight ,l N ll Voice, volume and versatility, controlled by the slightest waver of band master jenning's baton, send PHS skyrocketing to musical fame. After furnishing assorted sweet, spirited and expressive notes for auditorium produc- tions, the orchestra climaxes a gala year when it provides accompaniment for the spring operetta, Hollywood Extra, on March 24. Consisting of regular glee club members, the Capella choir, a chorus without accom- paniment, is formed during second semester. Three meetings weekly keep the 68 members busy practicing low, high and medium notes. When the operetta is in the offing, the chorus QQ: takes a united bow for all singing parts are selected from its ranks. On December l2 the girls catch the holiday spirit and serenade with carols at a local Womens' club, During the year they demon- strate vocal prowess at Girls' club assemblies, Forming a boys' quartet, Don Phillips, George Cole, Ray Botsford and Martin Went- worth give the Masons a trill thrill December 5. Forty-nine band members start the year with a campaign for dark blue suits complete with gold stripes, Sam Brown belts and Pershing hats. After their initial, full-uni- formed appearance at the Thanksgiving game, , A, , ' , , , ' l,,,lf . . 111 if Irrr i t 1 '-ff' ,gy KV i ,-- , ta- W- X r. 1 if lflf as 'P :fl Q25 I-A 'V A 'K 1 N , 'Q i ' lf' , l i 4, i ttrrr it X , W Kg , 4 .. L F K L Q - W . ,Q Q W gg it T ' ? f if a of if P is ii if jg T 2 v .. X S , Q , K izr 1 :,, K 1 Q. , . 5 Q l V r I - r 4 1 f l ,QP , f-'tiki X i- 'i mQe P' l strc! Please rl J Q l jf' ' ' I' l! ,X . -' '4 X 1. 'ffvs-a.,,.,WA, , V. L they present a benefit band concert December 2 and raise l8O dollars to supplement the 300 dollars alloted by the school. Coming as an unsolicited and very much welcomed dona- tion, the American Legion presents 25 dollars toward the fund. Several hundred students descend upon PHS March 4 to attend the first Northwestern Washington Music Meet ever to be held here. Soloists stage the all-day contests in four divisions--voice, piano, strings and brass and woodwind. The judges award excellent ratings to al- most all of the PHS entrants. Representing- the old alma mater are Ruth Munsen, 0 Dave judd, tenor, Marjorie Wentworth, piano, Martin Reiter, trombone, and Ray Botsford, violin. Ed johnson, recognized as a superior clarinetist, achieves the highest honor. By winning this place, he is entitled to go to the national contest, which is held in Portland in May. After making their debut at the concert, the nonette warbles sweetly for the Masons December 5 and lends a rhythmic touch to Mrs. l-loyt's Christmas pageant December 14. Nonetters are Ruth Munsen, Mignonette Stean, Betty Cerstmann, jessie McQueed, Vera Keller, Mildred Peterman, Myrtle Kludt, Betty Kendall and Marjorie Kendall. ,. L F ' v lllllulj 0 i n e . e T S hi-y boys f 4 ' : tis 5 iii.. .gg 'I' 'f .f1,'. .',--1..- 1, , 2' ,... l . .,A, if C5 lfll-Y Upholding their organization aims, the lfli-Y boys create, maintain and extend high stand- ards of Christian character vvith a clean speech, scholarship, athletics and living slogan. This year Mr. George Cole, YMCA adviser, ' ' Dr. David lL,ll'l i5 O Langdon. At the annual Older Boys' Conference in Tacoma December 9, lO and ll, lO6 boys from Pierce, Thurston, Mason and Grays l-'lar- bor counties make the meet a lively affair. Members of the Puyallup club contribute ideas on the theme, Helping Youth to Build Life. ver the good ship Hi-Y to BOYS Honoring their mothers, the group gives a mother and son banquet lanuary l8. Miss Mary Beck, as main speaker, explains good citizenship. To help pay for their share of the movie projector which the local YMCA purchases, the boys sponsor a dance at Puyallup Heights lanuary 20. After the l-lighline basketball game, March l4, they gave one of those chuck-full-of-fun skating parties. Meetings are held every Wednesday with Wally Parmeter as president, Verne Smith, vice president, and ,lim Picha, secretary- l'l'GaSUl'6l'. campfire girls ,.....--1 ,,,,....--'- V V V l.ATllNlEERS Fifteen big-eyed, wobbly-kneed Latineers iss the constitution and give pantomimes of ursery rhymes during an initiation ceremony ' h t adviser Frieda Scheitlin s ome. To raise funds for the purchase of pins for :he new members, the club makes cunning olen dolls in school colors and sells them to wo the student body as basketball souvenirs. ln lcharge of the money raising proiect are Lil- ' ' ' 'dent lian Walters, Winifred Robbins, presi Betty Luckow and secretary Lucille Walters. Kathryn Wallen, vice president, claims the di t' ctive only four year member title. is in When the shiny new Latineer insignias are ' ' ' 3 handed out by Miss Scheitlin on February , 25 members advertise their knowledge of Latin with the shield shaped lamp of know- ledge identifications. Annual pictures create another financial angle, so armed with sweets, these versatile Latineers hold up the senior play audience with a candy sale. Meetings are held on the. second and fourth Tuesdays of each month in Miss Scheitlins f' t sumed room where foreign languages irs as maior proportions for a maiority of the mem- i- W- bers. Dividing their attentions between social ffairs and business discussions, the group a plan a pot luck dinner and study old world CUSTOYTWS. CAMPFlRE Two hundred members, l0 guardians, a board of sponsors and a committee of awards are the active proof of how an organization can develop in nine years. For the first time since Camp Fire was organized in Puyallup in l930, two high school students become guardians of younger girls when Betty C-ertstmann and Esther Kinzie lead the seventh and sixth grade Camp Fire babes. All meetings are held at the cottage on West Pioneer avenue. Cirls of every nationality celebrate the or- ganization's birthday in March by working on activities, which, when completed, entitle the girls to the Birthday Honor. This year's theme for the honor is Pxmericanism and during the special month the girls go to the Seattle Cirand Council Fire to participate with 2,000 members. They also celebrate with a radio broadcast andfseveral exhibits. ' C and Council Fires During the year two r are held in Puyallup with many girls receiving ranks. At the May Council Fire ranks in Social d h' are awarded to Betty C-erstmann, Lea ers ip Freda Stahl and Esther Kinzie. This is the first occasion that the greatest and highest 'l Fire rank is awarded at a Puyallup Counci . Furnishing ample opportunities for fun and f l' C m Wah cahub located at the YMCA ro ic, a p - camp on Lake Tapps creates the setting for h ,. weiner roasts and get-toget ers. Tl Q tri-l girls TRI-L Proudly acclaiming themselves the largest girls' organization in the school, the Tri-L girls on December 23 sponsor an alumni dance in the Civic Auditorium. New to Tri-L is a board of sponsors, the Puyallup junior Women's club, with Mrs. Paul Welzel officiating as adviser. Dividing their interest between style and craft, they hold a craft club once a month. Presentation of new pins occurs at the Tri-L assembly December 9 and during February, eight delegates attend the mid-winter con- ference in Seattle. President - - - Lois Martin Vice President - Kathryn Wallen Secretary - Virginia Hendrick Treasurer - - Marjorie Snmnv Song Leader - Marianne jacfibs GIRL RESERVES Creating a furor in the halls with huge red bows and lipsticked insignias on their fore- heads, lO new members pledge allegiance to the Girl Reserves after a gleeful initiation at Grayland Park. Vivian Geller is the active leader who takes the adviser's chair from Mrs. Maude lacobs. Organizing in February, these junior high girls become eligible for pins by learning the history of the organization, memorizing the code and song and doing good deeds. May Day finds the members distributing smiles and May baskets with equal abandon. President - - Mavis Krane Vice President - Betty Swanson ' Secretary-Treasurer - Marion Grant ,W A6- girl reserves TOP ROW: Emerson, Konkle, De Bon, johnson, Rhyner, Scott, Woillard, Krippaehne, Bullet, Yamaii, Kennedy, Reed, Hendrickson, Howard, Bergloff, Rohlman, Grant, Matta, Hunt. Athletic minded 'girls open the l938 sports Jlumn by replacing hiking with bicycling i teir major curriculum, Further changing I t elarls menu, they decide that only first te m asketball members and substitutes will re- aive the customary one point given tow rd a etter or chevron. Membership includ only mose who have earned at least one l t er by ttending a majority of turn-outs f four iaior sports. With the season successfully'unde way, :lviser Helen Luft presents a radio program fith Sue Hendrickson, Margaret Norman an resident Kathryn Babnick taking prominent arts. On january 3l, PHS becomes playday hos- ess to Buckley, Sumner and Enumclaw. Di- ided into color groups, the girls dance the .ambeth walk to get acquainted. ln the lenter picture Miss Luft congratulates Dor- ithy Hoss who is named as one of the three urls taking top honors in the posture parade. Activities continue the year round with ach of the 34 members taking part in autumn olleyball, winter tumbling, basketball and ing pong, and spring baseball and bicycling. Other officers are vice president, Marjorie now: secretary-treasurer, Evelyn lewettg and manager, Virginia Hendrickson. girls' f othletic TOP ROW: Walters, Thaut, Walters, Kinzie, McQueed Gerstmann, Foster, Robbins, Norman, S. Babnick, V. Hendrick- son, lewitt, K. Babnick, Snow, Hatch, Takemura, Bigelow, irtg-tt r e Sw life Beneath the eccentric portrait painted nose of old Uncle Gideon, hilarious complications arise when a sophisticated family leave the city for the Ozarks. Nine girls and six boys compose the all star cast for the All- School play which is presented Novem- ber l8. Kerosene lamps, faded wall- paper and a stone fireplace add real- ism to the mountain setting where jackson Granholm exchanges heated words with his sassiety wife Pat Kalkus. Margie Roscoe and Bill Pettit contribute heart throbs as a spoiled debutante and a village physician. Other cast members are Irene Fearn, Marie Baroyic, Pearl Donley, Stub Lemon, Myrtice Sawyer, Wilbur jolly, Earl Powell, Marie jones, Duncan Shand, Ruth Hanawalt and Sue Hend- rickson. As directors, Robert B. Bur- rows, and Quaife Dann are tops, for the matinee of New Fires draws a crowd second only to that of Tom Sawyer ! IO57 Defeated by the seniors by a bare .6 of a point the juniors take second .place in the season ticket drive . . . For the first time in recent years the band presents morning and evening concerts in the educational building at the fair grounds. Previous- ly music for Valley day has been furnished chiefly by King county schools . . . Through the courtesy of Mr. Winfield Angel student broadcasters give their initial fifteen minute program on September 30 with Miss Hilda Skreen supervising . . . First steps in the improvement of assembly conduct is taken through the assignment of permanent seats in the auditorium . Purchased by the Central avenue school district, a new school bus now brings students to Puyallup from outlying districts including Wallare road, Canyon road and Collins . . . Miss Gertrude Butler replaces Miss Marvel Green as Viking Lady adviser . . . The three other last year's teachers who have scattered are Ray Warren, Miss Minnie Gibb and Miss Marion De- Coursey . . . With a membership of 30 the junior high band for the first time becomes a separate musical organization . . . Repairs begin on the Camp Fire Hall financed by funds received from the Youth Drive . . . Engraved with the names of the boys who left Puyallup high school to enter the World War, a bronze plaque is given to the school as an Armistice Day memorial by the American Legion . . . An entire junior cast presents The Yankee King in the auditorium December lO with Warren Westbo and Patricia Edwards as Pa and Ma . . . Basketball gets under way in a new lfashion as the eight league quintets congregate in the gym for a jamboree December l4 . . . Miss Harriet Rosenzweig takes over annual editorial adviser duties . . . Cross-questioning, and entirely ldifferent form of debate for high schools is in- augurated in the Puget Sound League . . . Unde- lfeated Vikings bring home the conference cham- pionship . . . R. B. Burrows scraps the customary three-act comedy set up for five short All-School .plays . . . Actual construction of the new wings ELEANOR HANSEN MARjORlE HOGAN Reading and Literature EngliSh Spelling junior Hi-Life Adviser Penmanship begins january l7 . . . Frank Hanawalt and Margie Roscoe win first and second places in the extempore contest at CPS February I2 . . . Led by a police patrol, turkey trotters initiate track season with a three mile cross-country run . . . Hi-Y presents a movie screen to the school . . . Frank Failor is awarded a medal for the best individual acting in the one-act play contest at CPS March 26 . . . Hi- Life receives its first All-American rating from NS PA . . . Henry Perfield attends the American Red Cross International convention at San Francisco . . . PHS typists receive honorable mention at the UW typing contest . . . Logan's cindermen capture another league championship. .li .. ,N MARY BECK World History English MAY ENGBRETSON Drama Home Economics English Public Speaking VIOLA EVERSON junior Home Problems Home Relations W V . Qgkwlkurcl K-f V , 'f f3 .,....v 1 MARIE MARTlN HARRY STARBIRD English World History Sewing Sociology Economics V play com- the junior 'U C TU Q3 -I-' m .Q CD 'U E :s cv V1 3 E x L VU L :Q .rj .2 U 75 U 5 E E o LJ CD .C +- -4- O an an 2 CD .C 4- Ps .Q 'U GJ UD m L. 3 O U U7 'U 4- O C U7 x. CD 'U m L UD .:: -IJ c CD r if KD CD Z U3 :s Gl- Gl- GJ I thirty L . 1 ent I'T1 Via OUI' T forens c PS C 3i'1l'lU3 th the six attent on At close mand in VS hono OP 1' ng ki ta by column .E CD .C 4-' O 4-4 .E .4 N CD L .Q OJ. D ': 'U 4-4 CD M U 'L C O an ru GJ U3 -SIX r ngs ng and Hb re speaki DO YY! Te GX d place in OI'1 SGC kes OE' T8 Rosc Margie T. Q an 3. C CD L CD JI +- bs FU O. ,+- C fU U .E E G5 x. 'U .Q GJ E N ..C 31 3 Zo .Q E CD U3 U7 fU +- C 3 +- VT CD .C +- the form of a gold statuette. home the bacon in ber YTT OVC nN oductio pl' l-school es the al NESS ence wit When the audi the student body crowns Margaret Rhyner and pres - el' n Novemb aptur- r class representatives. C y othe BVI than juniors Ve ITIO G Se l7, they f YS S Q .1 1 FGSEVI d g r headline, and p BH boy Sl' with a friend ie dent Eddie Myers h Kalkus, Rut Pat on, Marie jones, FYI Le rts are Delbert D3 ent in OITI I' ins D -4- 'U in L.. .9 C CU ,cn G5 -CQ! U.C --+- O. U7 EE '-F5 .L-H L 'UCD g+- CUC CU Cm gm CE .CU O -cu .QE C- CE 2.3 2 'O mill QQ! .9 +- 5?- U-E C Om '-ZD. C3 mon E5 1- O .Qc ru.. 53 C O .C O +- .E 31' CD .E C -Sin bs 25 513 Dm 'CTU fl-. .Ui 'lb 'EU N45 CD+- 83 WO 0.0 D52 QU SP2 mth Em -4-'E U -:Z P 0.2 3-O. CU CD2 L CU... .Zig KS 3.9 C -1.2 'Um Ei C VU I I L N mf E'ulMa if '6 L VU E G-l, It .4-,W-x ,SEN Ln, ,Qjff CSE 'Db .wcl Nga: Q--.. L L X -oo-,. E-'EUC 45.3.2 - .,, QJCZ-U 'mmm gee- cu2,53Z l Q8 - CD an-Saw :T52-U2 CDCO QJLUJC Emii' 'PL 7 5. vc 'U Y EMA? -C Q.: E-3-9 Oggm L Q,-bd QLQLU7 E315 3- -,Q Cu-Emx U51 5563? an :Ek S231 f-we -..J FU gog-1. -fam :V-'.- 'EJEE TEMFM ELAN E0 5 ,cum :L er? 0.52 .3m E793 wil Q65 QU! mimi 3129- mvif -Uwlx Talk! CPE xi 1 522309 L.- OTJ PNQ-C 210m L -l-' E46-if W 5 'U is-. Bibg ,Q-2,2 EPE USE. -u 7-BC W5 4 cu4'm o cu rugx-C OwU C533 YU au! 46 office orbits At their first meeting the former secretarial club delves into a basket of scrambled type and christens their business organization Commercial Club, since it embodies pupils of each commercial department of PHS. Not content with creating one minor revolution, the stenogs appear in classrooms with green hair- ribbons and a lipsticked C on each cheek. Presi- dent june Mitchell explains the mystery as the first steps in a gruesome initiation of 35 new members. Kathryn Babnick, Beryl Passey and Winifred Rob- bins form a committee to take care of the greasy details. Keeping up with her fast moving crew, adviser Cwendolene Frater astonishes the 58 shorthand typing and bookkeeping protegees by playing a violin solo at a mid-year social meeting. Conclu- sively establishing the fact that all good secretar- ians are talented, Miss Evelyn Haynes plays the piano accompaniment. Furnishing more fun and frolic during the year are community sings, pot luck dinners and a weiner roast on the banks of the river. Club members enthusiastically glean book knowl- edge when Miss Margaret Utzinger, head librarian, addresses them at a bi-monthly meeting. Lawyer Leslie jochimsen and Mr. R. C. Gregory of the Puyallup bank deliver employers' viewpoints on the perfect stenographerf' emphasizing business dress and etiquette. Assisting in leadership duties of-this group are Esther Kinzie, vice president, and Lorraine Woil- lard, secretary-treasurer. Honors for the success of the cooking room Christmas party go to Lily de Rafael, Marjorie Neiman and Marilyn Root. thirty-seven t pa Kding tights QU ,wr Mr. Petttt. M tenntngs, F me desce dtvutges the ttrst r ducts the q 3 S CUK' trom t s t, th tudv hat Matthews, Mankertz, Swartz, Drftiarshner, Passev, Stackhouse, Frost, McCabe ttchett, Betters, tavcox, Tettzet, Hammermetster, Wott, Btandau, Krtppaehne, Lau httn, Braun, Schettttn, Fttzstmmons. nds upon the Paut Karshner Memortat Museum when W. P tts ortgtnation during a radto broadcast. Thts un- 'ntervtew ever to rtde the ether waves uesttontng tn the tormer ator, occurs as Kettev con Swartz Matthew , tteted recognttton ot buttdtng. Mtss Kay m's new home. uent expanston, Howard hb dtscourser on tosstts h ptece tn ra he scho e museu museum's removat and subseq Vsttors and ctasses ttnd htm a g mbers tetters and records eac t mem wxth the named asststant curator. r d rtng ttrst and tttth period when he nu , ' V1 students become Hootogvn stat Karshner, who presented the 'ng the exhtbtts tatt u ttectto n. h ws catt, 'ng Dr. rearrangx ted, the 5 the co Ptnswertng Mr. Matt e bers and atd tn a generat housecteanx . museum to the schoot, devotes much ot hts ttme to and mounting tosstts in cement. Pxtter the Udtrtv work ,ts compte sotourns to the cateterta tor a ,Karshner treat. . ' ds trom the treasury a vtstors' book ts purchased. Another tnno- htch teachers stgn when removtng artictes trom cases ' ttttc tntormatton as museum tacuttv bara Wtth vatton is tor ctass adviser. procee the prtnted torms w use. Rtchard Cook turntshes scten s are hetd once a week under the ausptces ot vtce prestdent Bar Frteda Wott. Q . Meettng easurer Xenntng T 9 St: s and tr 3 J E. Mt Whe n senior high study haiiersu return to PHS atter Christmas hoiidays, they dern iibrary in the new wings. Here, student iibrarians conspire with Miss Gertrude Butter, and entertain 50 guests at a tea. Mrs W. P. Matthews, Miss Margaret bbet in charge ot decor- her and tind a mo triend and instructor ity members they weicome . M. Karshner and Mrs. iohn Hi . Deioris Grubb, Doris Abs w Besides tacu d Mrs. W. is Anderson, mpie eibo Utzing ns er, Dr, an and retreshments are Dor 4 and ZOO new books suppiy a s are kept in a private suppties atio Dorothy Konkie. mtortabiy seating 5 , The current magazine new books and keep tabies co earch togue the i cts Nine , iai tor res . they cata oks, coi e and mater niy where cks out bo ne and room room, tor iibrarians o , in order. e hour a day on duty, each iibrarian che sheives orderiy, answers the teiepho overdue books, many ot the During her on tor those overdue, keeps the he money that is received trom d er in iunior high where s, tees takes roii. With t books are purchase . in their iibrarian care their senior position fe cent, popuiar Service with a srniie giris beg assistants and are graduaiiy promoted to rcoe Woodrutt, Gecii, Winger, Hendrickson. they act as Butter, Ma , ds, Doniey, her tones, A E. Reynoi An STANDXNG: Grubb, Archer, Abs , sen. SEATED: Root, Konkie, Davis, derson, Simon book markers ' fig TOP: Grubb, jaycox, johnson, Ostkotte, Miss Butler, Roscoe, l Woodruff. BOTTOM: Wallen, Mitchell, Kinzie, Fahey, Hendrickson. Viking Lady initiates drink from pitchers, and perform hi- larious dinner stunts while try- ing desperately to eat pie a la mode with a knife at the joint VK-VL initiation. Their new blue sweaters add a bright dash of color to the halls when president Kathryn Wallen pro- motes an investigation ofthe problem of school conduct. The group takes time off from their duties iwhich include ushering at school activities and aiding the matronl to sponsor their annual dance. lnformal pot luck dinners and parties complete the social calendar. Officers are Deloris Grubb, vice presidentg Mary Kathryn Ostkotte, secretary, Frances Fahey, treasurer, and Miss Gertrude Butler, adviser. ol: your service Sporting pins that symbolize their service organization, the Viking Knights add hall duty to play and usher duties in hopes of solving student traf- fic problems. Frank Hanawalt and Earl Powell, secretary, take honors for selecting the gold- en shield symbols. To aid the office in keeping track of li- cense plates, Richard Cook in- structs members to take down the numbers of all cars which students drive to school. Mar- vin Atkins presides over this group of, duty demons with Wally Parmeter as right hand man. 40 TOP: Powell, Mr. Cook, Phelps, Hanawalt, Humiston, Takeuchi, Picha, Fahey, jordan, Aylen, Atkins, White. BOT- TOM: Simonsen, Haugen, Parmeter, Reed. l i E 5 loren 5 Q l g. i STANDING: Kalkus, SEATED: Dawes, Six forensic squads clash for yes and no decisions on the question Resolved: That the United States should establish an alliance with Creati Britain and tie for third place in league rank, under the coaching of Miss l-lilda Skreen. Maintaining an undefeated record, Margie Roscoe and Frank Hanawalt, negatives, win from Kent, january ll, Buckley, january l83 and Sumner, February lg while Marie jones and Henry Perfield, the affirmative team, wage losing battles with Auburn, Buckley and Highline on the same dates. From the CPS tournament February ll and l2, the two squads bring home a gold cup when they capture second place honors with their cross-questioning method. Extempor- izing on The Debut Racket, Margie walks off with a gold statuette. A month later the same squads represent the Vikings in a University style debate at the UW speech conference, where Pat Kalkus and Marie jones reach the poetry finals. Supplementing the main squads are affirm- atives Helen Braun and Violet Lounhardt, l-loward Forbes and Irene Fearng negatives Pat Kalkus and Virginia Sidders, and Roberta Dawes and Bernard Mankertz. ic fighters -44-xg Morrisson, Roscoe, Hanawalt, Perfield. Braun, jones, Woodruff, Lounhardt. Perfield, Miss Skreen, Hanawalt, Roscoe and jones admire the CPS awards. E A- WHw , if 3, li ei ., l blrkiwv-...,. ' S artz, Lacey, iwsw-, 42 L SEATED. w ll eyes o f tlolocn A dark stage . . . the cadence of wind . . . eeping of rain murmurs of thunder . . . w ' ' . . a knock at the . . . flashes of lightning . door . thus is an ominous mood created for the well-plotted iunior mystery play which R bert Burrows, Quaife Dann and a cast of h'le a sliding panel o l2 present on May l2. W i ' ' f nish atmospheric effects, l and a hidden pit ur a candle light casts a fitful glare on the mura of the Aztec C-od, Tlaloc, on whom hangs the outcome of the drama. ln the living room on the Ranch de los Alamentos near the Mexican border, the clear cut diversified characters match wiles as they hunt for a lost treasure. , When the ranch owner lStuart Riggsl and his daughter llvlargie Roscoel disappear and L two masqueraders llohn Strenge, l-loward Swartzl exchange identity, a hair raising cli- max is indicated. 5 Supporting the action are lessie Bergloff, Oral Lien, Art Frost, Erma Simpson, Betty Emerson, Raymond Elliott, Delbert Lemon and Marie Barovic. Student directors are Ruth Hgus' ,g,,m,,,s, , , ' ws and associate Uanri c-..-..-- 'C e set. awalt and Pat Ka Director Burro cal arrangement of a s ag Han fb, Bauquier, de Rafael, Miss Rosenzweig, Lounhardt, Hendrickson , Ostkotte. quill ond scroll 'Nun'- njournalistic antics of Quill and Scroll warrant a grin a l d ' ' a a viser Rosenzweig. Becoming members of one of the l5OO 'll Qui and Scroll chapters existing throughout the l wor d, three journalists take oaths of office during a student body assembly in Ma . A y s medals of valor' the potential publishers receive old ' g pins and certificates signifying hours of work and inches of print in ye Hi Life as well as the maintenance of u Ppel' bracket grades. Mary Kathryn Ostkotte and Lena B ' 'l auquier, last year holdovers, congrat- ulate Lily de Rafael, Louise Hendrickson and mblems. Three projects are the aim of this hon Orary society for juniors and seniors: to advance the st d d ' an ar s of the profession, to formulate a style sheet for use in future publications and to edit a Lo Life. The high sch l oo in- chell creates its g annual gossip gabfest when it appears the night of the junior play. lnstitut president of the organization the active PHS chapter began in i937 through the instigation of Harriet R ' ' osenzweig, adviser, Quill and Scroll was founded by the University of lowa as a universal method of awarding superior work in the jounalistic field. Violet Lounhardt as they present the e ed by Homer A. Post international hoop BACK: Burr, Quinlan, Fred Strankman takes a thriller shot at the basket during the last minute of the Puyallup-Highline game. CAGERS With a nip and tuck i9 to 2l lead over the Auburn Trojans, the blue and red clad Vikings win their first away from home con- ference game since l936. Decidedly offsight in the next two thrillers, they go down before Buckley and Enumclaw onslaughts 36 to l9 and 34 to l4, but find their scoring punch on january 2O and make a wildfire run through the Sumner Spartans 'Sl to 2l. A week later the Dahlberg lads turn in their best clicking performance as they trounce Kent 27 to l4 on the home floor. Renton and Highline, stumbling blocks in the first half schedule, tuck away the Viking scalp 34 to 24 and 4l to l9. ln the opening game of the second half the Vikings meet a 3l to 26 set back from the revengeful Trojans. Unable to match height they bow to Buckley 38 to 22 and Enumclaw 32 to 2l. Too hot to handle, the improved team walks away from their Sumner rivals 37 to 23. During the last three games with a jinx sitting on the bench with Coach Al Dahlberg, the fighting Nossemen lose to Kent 43 to 37, Renton 44 to 26 and i-lighline 48 to 32. RESERVES With a one-sided 3l to ll victory, the Vikings begin a hotly contested reserve race at Auburn, january 6, but are nosed out by Buckley 27 to 25 on january lO. The next week the second stringers journey into Enum- claw territory and walk away with an easy 24 to 7 victory, holding the Tigers scoreless for almost three quarters. Continuing their victory march, they hurdle Kent 27 to l4g Renton 32 to 203 and Sumner 35 to 25. ln Highline's cheese boxl' gym the Dahl- berg hoopmen lose their second game of the year, 41 to l9. Upsetting Auburn for another 3l to ll win they begin the second half and even a previous score with Buckley by smothering them 35 to l4. Both Enumclaw and Sumner are easy victims as the Vikings, playing inspired ball, defeat them 23 to l5 and 32 to l4. Highline, the only block in the Norsemen's way, turns the boys back 27 to 32 in the last game of the season and ties the Vikings for the second half championship. FRONT: Mr. Hartung, Baisinger GSGTVSS 'QUVALT O57-ER TA KEUCH, Drotz, Wentworth, de Rafaei. fflfv N 3 .. Cook, Hemmings, Picha, Mr. Dahlberg. Q39 , NL, s ij, 1 2 Q All .1 ,aafmaf ' 9,1-up league cogers ukg.A',, ,WW, YQ., BACK: Aylen, Parks, Forbes, Snider, Quinlan, Atkins. FRONT: Mr. Hartung, Buchanan, Hanawalt, Strankman, Foster, Takeuchi, Mr. Dahlberg. ' 45 A leaders' f BACK Bucey Simonson, Barovic, Archer, Hoss, Pence, Konkle, Reynolds Veach FRONT Donley, Hammermeister, McVay, Neiman, jones, Cecil Smith Roscoe Woodruff. Adding color, form and precision to the basketball routine, eight blonde and eight brunette girls form a drill, team under the technical direction of Miss Helen Luft and Verne jennings. The sixteen vivacious mar- cherettes perform intricate drills to band music when they Hstrut their stuff in red and blue costumes at two late season games. Only sophomore and junior girls were elig- ible to join this rank of rhythm, as the team will reorganize next year for the football games. Creating a colorful climax to their short career, they lead the band through the path of gold at the daffodil festival. The prancing lassies are: Phyllis Bucey, Doris Simonson, Marie Barovic, LaVerne Archer, Dorothy Hoss, Nancy Lou Pence, Dor- othy Konkle, Shirley Reynolds, Blanche Veach, Pearl Donley, Alice l-lammermeister, Eileen McVay, Marjorie Nieman, Marie jones, Mar- guerite Cecil, Frances Smith, Margie Roscoe, and Shirley Woodruff. l952l Bringing the faculty total to 34, 5 new instruc- tors join the staff. Three fill positions held last year by Miss Margaret Tanner, j. F. Peters, and Richard Smith . . . First day enrollment records show l,O77 students attending PHS . . . Class of '39 takes first place in the ticket drive . . . Estab- lishing a premier record the i938 annual comes back from the NSPA with first class honors . , . Helen Braun and june Bullat win prizes in the school yell contest . . . Two electric sewing ma- chines are installed in the home economics depart- ment . . . Loren Ralph organizes a mimeograph staff . . . The first play day for junior high girls is held November l6 under supervision of Miss Elea- nor Hansen . . . Band makes initial appearance in uniform at the Thanksgiving game . . . American Legion Auxiliary presents the band with twenty- five dollars toward the uniform fund . . . PHS gridsters take a three way tie for fourth place in conference rank . . . Consisting of a manual train- ing, clothing and music department. the south wing opens in October . . . Completed in january, the north wing contains the cafeteria, divided study hall and library, art and journalism depart- ments and a public speaking room . . . With the opening of the cafeteria two lunch periods are observed . . . Senior class presents a play in the winter for the first time . . . First girls' drill team makes its entrance january 27 . . . Margie Roscoe lllljgj 'll mi Ill Symmetrically perfect, the south wing looms impres- sively above the tennis courts. ft W Partially shaded by giant firs, the north wing over- looks a widened parking zone. places first in the Washington State Golden jubilee Oratorical contest at CPS . . . New wings are dedicated january l7 . . . The Hi Life features a different style type and headline schedule . . . . . . More then 300 students attend the first Northwest Music Meet ever to be held in Puyallup . . . Henry Perfield takes first place honors in the American Legion Auxiliary contest . . . All alums before l9l2 hold a reunion in the cafeteria on Washington's Birthday . . . Doris Anderson is chosen daffodil attendant . . . Eighty students at- tend speech, hearing and reading clinic at PHS April l . . . l4 girls organize a knitting club with Miss Marie Martin as adviser . . . 5 students are guests of the CPS Spanish club convention, April l4 . Hi Life gets All American honors from NSPA . . . George Fortier and june Bullat win sen- ior high posture honors , . . Softball makes its de- but in PHS athletics as a minor sport . . . Marjorie Neiman receives high honors for outstanding shorthand work . . Facul- ty honors William Matth- ews who will retire from teaching this Year. RUTH CLARK Grade School Music junior High Music i , K ' 5 g MARIAM CLEVELAND QUAIFE DANN Mathematics I Aff Science Social Science Health and Guidance VERNE IENNINGS LOREN RALPH Senior High Music Typing junior High Band Commercial Arithmetic English 2 .. the boord speolcs your predecessors. Whatever you do in the world there is no surer way to success than this: Set a great purpose before you. Follow its trend. Let nothing mean or selfish enter into your soul. FRED F. DeBON Clerk I SS? I 8? 1 Z!! . '53 I :Ili DR. FREDERICK L. SCHEYER President Progress in the material things of life that does not bring one industry, ambition, a true sense of obedience and responsibility tails in that which it typities. 48 PAUL B. HANAWALT Superintendent During the past five years, the Puyallup High School has made substantial progress in its building and equip- ment program. Such an improvement is ot no avail unless a commensurate progress is achieved in the final product of this school. True progress in this old world is made only when children and students excel their par- ents and teachers. Successful living is our common goal. lt is our earnest desire and sincere hope that your achievement towards this goal will surpass all efforts of - We are made for coope ation, said Marcus Aureliu Yet in spite of all our advani in science and the arts, n tions and races have not leari ed to cooperate. Therein li the greatest challenge to edi cation. lt we can, throug education, bring about a dee and lasting cooperation b tween all peoples of the eart that will, in the truest sense the word, be progress. DR. CHARLES A. AYLEN Director ,4v- ot the helm With visions before their eyes of a blue and gold uniformed marching band, the board of control members put brain and brawn into initial plans for a band concert ticket sale drive. A total of 650 tickets are sold during a one week contest and a free box of candy bars goes to the j-2 division for having sold the most. Three hundred dollars is authorized for the uniform purchase, of which the band raises l8O dollars through the benefit concert. Feeling confident over the success of their first adventure, the group turns its attention to custo- mary duties with student body president Henry Perfield as chairman of the l9 representatives elected by first period classes. Earl Powell acts as vice president, while direct supervision comes from Principal Harry P. Hansen. From these capable hands, debaters, basketball, track, football, tennis and participants in other major activities receive letter awards plus assembly recognition. During the meetings held every Tuesday morn- ing in the committee room, rules and budgets for activities are read and passed upon, for the prin- cipal function of the board is to discuss needs and problems of the student body. Departing from traditional customs five students present a one-act play More Blessed during the alumni program which the board arranges annually. Speakers who meet with its approval are Mort Lay- cock, l894g Neil Clemans and joe Notaro '381 Erna Brenner, '35, and john Svoboda, '26. As the cafeteria is a board of control enterprise, a project entitled stimulation of eating interest is attempted. Surplus profits from the junior and senior candy counters are judiciously preserved for cafeteria needs. Secretary Virginia Hendrickson finds time to answer queries from other schools about the PHS zoning method of solving the smoking situation. There is no excuse for paper strewn halls or messy lawns when the board goes into action with a vengeance and issues a clean-up campaign ul- timatum. Work becomes play, however, when lO minutes is taken during morning classes to thor- oughly clean cluttered lockers. The Viking field also goes under an improvement campaign with the board allotting money for ma- terials. ln conjunction with this a special room for track is added to the basket room. Representatives who direct and organize all stu- dent activities this year are: Frank Failor, lrene Fearn, Shirley Woodruff, Bob Amey, james Lewis, Oral Lien, Frances Fahey, Margie Roscoe, Shigeo Takeuchi, Wally Parmeter, Howard Forbes, Deloris Grubb, LaVerne Marcoe, Ray Botsford and Art Zwisler. X1 QVO48. Q05 RESERVES Meridian 7-PHS 6 Lincoln 13-PHS O Stadium 6-PHS 7 pgs Lincoln O-PHS I4 ep 58 Meridian 13-PHS 7 XJ - Sf daumd 6-Pi-is 12 N4 i. O cf? ' X9 Y vi Q CL? 406585 0 COACH DAHLBERG V ii gridiron , second Vl Kl NC-S Bellarmine l3-PHS Lakeside O-PHS Renton l2-Pl-lS Highline O-PHS Buckley l2-PHS Kent 3l-PHS Enumclaw 34-PHS Sumner O-Pl'-lS Auburn O-PHS Sumner 7-PHS i so QQ. N O 'lf 'ff f 19 A V f 5' A44 I '7'l'4ooC6xO 6 49 if 'lf fy 49 OSC, 6? 4-O Q4 Q0 44, JfO6f9,6 ,lf O XIXQS45 04011, 40,6 C 49 O gropplers string 6 'Y acflfd? 'ipf 'O' Q0 ? C Q'e,P'77t f? 490 10 6 1? 6 04,600 4o , Q ff flfo . 60947 oo, O , Kg . Compensating for a wobbly football start the Vikings end in a furious finish with a three way tie for fourth place in the Puget Sound Conference. Noticeably weak in their initial game, the Swedes allow Bellarmine a win September 23. Reviving a week later they decisively drub the invading Lakeside team but are crippled again by Renton Indians, October 7. Intensive practice under Coaches Al Dahl- berg and Don Hartung bring results October l4 when the Norsemen crack down on the Highline Pirates, but luck reverses and they lose close games to scrappy Buckley Moun- taineers, October Zi, and speedy Kent Van- dals, October 26, Failing at giant killing, the Vikings fall be- fore a powerful Enumclaw Tiger onslaught November 4. Upholding a lO year jinx on the stubborn Sumner Spartans, the Norsemen win Novem- ber l l, then journey into enemy territory and flail the Auburn Trojans. Making a touchdown in every quarter, the gridders end their season in a blaze of glory Thanksgiving eve as they soundly trounce the Spartans again. F' Discarding PHS dramatic traditions, the criminai situation. Pts an underworid dereiict, seniors appear behind the qtootiights in the Henry Pertieid heips soive this probiem. winter. Director Robert Bf Burrows and his Furnishing a iarge amount ot comic romance associate Quaite Dann set the unusuai date are the ianky maid, Eveiyn Groeper and iaun- tor February 24 when i'l stageworthy seniors dryman Raymond Dickey. Bookhoiders are endeavor to reach their conception ot paradise Lois Martin and Heiene Foxtord. Other cast in Sidney Duvaii's piay Headed tor Eden. megibers age iisted geneath theirdpictures. d . . eorge oie han es the soun e ects an The Scene of this iamasw ,mree'aCt Com' Weidon Rau adds iighting ettects as Robert adv' pamted bv Robert XNUQN and Bernard Litton draws the curtains on a iate November Mankenz' Under the Supervision of Quawe atternoon scene created b Sbackstage com- Dann, is the iiving room ot Patricia Edwards' mmees Chairmen of xheyunseen hands are boarding house M Chicago' Warren Westbo, stage manager, Louise Lin- invoived in the intricate piot concerning thicum, ticket, iris Heien tones, programsg the interests ot six giris who room in the Robert Wright,program covergixfiariorie Snow, house are Wahnita Spencer and LaVerne Sanz- advertisingg and Raymond Dickey, properties. ing, rivai reporters. A voicano ot troubie Under the direction ot Verne iennings the descends upon their heads in the torm ot Leon senior high schooi orchestra turnishes inci- Ceorge who is the unwiiiing participant in a dentai music. 2 'W Vioiet Baker, Frank Faiior, irene Schafer, Myrtice Sawyer, iackson Cranhoim, Deioris Grubb, Leon George, iris Poweii, Mary Kathryn Ostkotte, Wahnita Spencer, La Verne ianzing. fifJW'ivvg SPENCER vAHNmx Low EMERSON F 6 .IW is fx fm S ., ...fy DEAN LEON GEORGE 'M LGU ROY' ob agam 'Tve Xost myy You won' 'Q Net me down, WRU you, S Ks? , . ggi if '-1 'gaa.,if'i . i fif K, . A .,,,,,-,,,..,:..M.M.-.A-4 iii-ww l i BAUQUIER, CLEMENTS, VAN METER, FAHEY, MISS ROSENZWEIG, EMERSON, RICCS, OSTKOTTE, SNOW Planned so that readers may get a progressive bird's eye view of the senior class history, the i939 annual goes to press as the first of the PHS Vikings to feature plastic binding, off- set print on glossy paper, lower case headlines, up to date faculty pictures, and enlarged class groups. Responsible for the origination of the progress theme are Miss Harriet Resenzweig, editorial adviser, Lena Bauquier, editor, and assistant editors Floy Pearson and Frank Hanawalt. Esther Kinzie and Mary Hunter aid in editorial work. Earl Powell supplies the photography element, ably assisted by Weldon Rau and Warren Westbo. Ruth Munsen handles the artistic requirements, and june 'Bullat adds the special features. into the hands of Dorothy Brouwer and Wyoma Peterson falls the senior section, activity lists and faculty pic- tures. Robert O. Logan, business adviser, uses red head theories in selecting his advertising managers, joe Mitchell and Lois McDaniel. Louise Linthicum and Delbert Fisher, business managers, contact group advisers. Loren Ralph, who will become the faculty business adviser next year, acts as assistant. june Mitchell, Marjorie Snow, Kath- ryn Wallen and Helen Krippaehne take over typing duties. it -fruit , , public LOUISE LINTHICUM, DELBERT FISHER, MR. RALPH ,q,..,..,,,. print , . S .63 Q Qi i I POWELL NUNSEN, MISS ROSENZWEIC, BAUQUIER, HANAWALT, PEARSON. A 5 Blossoming out in favorite Bodoni style type at mid-year, the Hi-Life confidently bids for an exclusive place in spring fashion previews. Adviser l-larriet Rosenzweig and editor Mary Kathryn Ostkotte take laurels for the selection of this more legible type accentuated with a new headline schedule. Between the usual mad rush of assigning story beats to faithful reporters and the brain-teasing task of making up the paper, Mary,Kathryn sandwiches in a visit to the journalists' conference at the UW Campus with Lily de Rafael, business staff representative. During the three-day parley, November 3, 4, 5, they pick up pointers on news sources, discuss the gossip column and suggest unique ways to write peppy copy. A Washington Association of journalism Directors is also formed during the meet. Recognition comes to PHS when Miss Rosenzweig is elected secretary-treasurer of this organization which consists of all journalism teachers and advisers in the state and proposes to improve the status of their profession. Satirically capitalizing on the upward trend of hair styles, Lena Baucjuier, special writer, receives honorable mention for feature writing in a national Quill and Scroll contest. The addition of a modern publication room makes working conditions more pleasant for hungry journalists who consume unbelievable quantities of crackers, pop corn and apples during night sessions. jim Fahey, assisted by Delmar Wortman and Cliff Merriott, pounds out reams of copy on ye Hi-Life typewriter. Other staff members are Robert Wright, artist, Lola Emer- son, advertising managerg Stuart Riggs, circulation managerg Marjorie Snow, bookkeeperg and Shirley Clements and lean Van Meter, exchange editors. f --XY' ls .54 jf, LOIS McDANlEL, MR. LOGAN, IOE MITCHELL gun 'Pon their honor these students are justly classi- fied as members of Honor Society. To become elig- ible for membership in the organization they faith- fully contribute three years of scholarship endeavor and maintain a grade point average of 9Ofk. The would-be members also participate in numerous extra-curricular activities. Having satisfied these requirements, they are formally voted in and be- come full-fledged members-if they survive the initiation. As an affiliate of the National Honor Society, the purpose of the organization in PHS is to pro- mote scholarship, leadership and citizenship. Under the capable advisership of Miss Viola Everson, the Honor Society begins its year's work when school commences in the fall. At this time the society consists of ten members who were voted in by the out-going members of the preced- ing year. Semi-monthly business meetings are held every other Tuesday noon in the cafeteria with Floy Pearson acting as president, capably assisted by Esther Kinzie, vice president, and Marie Thanasse, secretary-treasurer. ' The members vote to purchase pins this year to signify their affiliation with the National Society. As a means to this end, they sponsor a candy sale after the All-School play, New Fires, on Novem- ber l8. The funds derived from this sale purchase those little gold torches the members wear around. The money to pay for the Honor Society picture in the annual is raised by selling souvenir plywood footballs. But to the dismay of all concerned, the saw used to cut the balls is broken. Not disheart- ened by this, the members begin plans to make wooden basketballs and with the saw repaired, work is commenced. The wooden basketballs are sold to the student body who accept them en- thusiastically. As second semester begins, the group looks over the senior class for evidences of great mental ap- plication and rewards virtue with honor. On the .night of March l4, twelve new members are select- ed and subjected to the horrors of a dinner of angle-worms, snakes, charcoaled bread and alumd dusted marshmallows. l With all the dignity they can muster, these 22 Honor Society members bid adieu to the lower classmen who will follow in their footsteps. upper crust TOP: jones, McCfurdy, Hanawalt, Powell, Perfield, Reed. MIDDLE: Thanasse, Bullat, Saunders, Barbee, Absher, Worthley, Bauquier, Miss Everson. BOTTOM: Wallen, Braun, Mitchell, Stahl, McQueed, Snow, Pearson, Kinzie. . x 'E Si f g E51 F 1. jackson Granholm, Lola Emerson two crooks It is three o'clock on a rainy afternoon. The French window opens cautiously and jack- son Granholm, alias Miller the Hawk, stealth- ily slips into the library of an old Fifth avenue mansion. Before draperies without elaborate effects a cast of six gets into the mood of Two Crooks and a Lady as they participate in the third annual Drama Festival of the Puget Sound Conference lsouth endl on April 4. Puyallup plays host to the other schools and to Miss Ruth Radford of Tacoma who gives a written comment to director Robert Burrows on the one-act play. A small gold stamp box, a glass of milk, 34 diamonds and a mirror are the tools by which Doris Absher as Mrs. Sims-Vane, a helpless paralytic, outwits Miller and his ac- complice Lola Emerson, who poses as Lucille, the maid. Involved in the plot are companion Miss jones lLois Martinl and policeman Garrity lLaverne janzing, Stuart Riggsl. When lOO drama students from out of town high schools invade the University High School Drama Festival, April 29, jackson cap- tures a medal award for the most outstanding individual male performance in Class A. , i . 5 . 5 -Q ond o lody . 4 Lois Martin, George Cole, La Vern janzing fifty-sexe n E E A E 2 i Ml ,N ,, '55 01 lv . Gfjsr by '9a6,,. ICA and Jennie fo TOP: Heassler, Burks, Forbes, lohanson, Talkington, Hana- walt, Powell, Aylen, Cloud, Mauck, Kandle, Nix, Randol, Mr. Hartung, Raudebaugh, La- vinger, Looney, Borton, Miss Luft, Winslow, Bucey, Sawyer. Ostkotte, Thanasse. . n P fifty-eight Beginning the third year ot league golf, PHS enthusiasts tee oft tor the conference title April l and arrive on the Hmidseason green rating high as divot diggers. Expertly juggling brassies, mid- irons and drivers, three holdover lettermen from last year's second place team and a short ap- proach man shut out Highline, Enumclaw, Sumner and Buckley on the Highline course during the first tive-school league tournament. Continuing their joint meet walk-aways the club swingers out- match their opponents as Buckley plays host. Under the tutelage of Coach Don Hartung, medalist Vernon Burks takes low score of Bl, How- ard Forbes develops the chip shot technique, Elmer lohansen manipulates the putter and Bob Aylen calculates long drives. Frank Hanawalt, a non- letterman, plays alternate man on the squad dur- ing the tive league tournaments and two practice meets with Lincoln. W tx V, COACHES HARTUNC AND LUFT it 'Wh' 9 . O0 'QOWKX 9 Zi coo X we mu 00 Jie ut' TOP: Ham, Fahey, Foster, johnson, Dickey, Merriott, Car- penter, Baisinger, lacobs, Mr. Ralph, DeBon, Foster, johnson, Veach, Babnick, C-erstmann. di Xa rf i My - , k?xK ,Q 4 K r RQ A . 'A N. . 2 V i ' ' 4 .L ,. ,, W A Q' A fLLe Q ,L , ,1'j-,fist V W J N sims .2 f COACH RALPH 1 gk wa' ,ff ff K if Setting a new high in Viking racquet bustingn seven PHS net artists cinch the south end championship and play the north enders for the conference title, after Loren Ralph, tennis mentor, cuts the squad from 70 aspirants. , With three veterans on the team, the racquet wielders cop easy pre-season victories from Orting, Auburn, Eaton- ville and Highline, 7-6, 3-O, 4-3, 4-l 3 and 5-2. Continuing to demonstrate style and skill they sweep over Buckley four matches to one to annex their opening league game, and send the Sumner squad home scoreless. High point ot the season is reached when the well-coached netsters meet Enumclaw, twice league champions, and sustain a four to one margin. The unbeatable letterman combination ot Kathryn Bab- nick's chop stroke, Marianne jacobs' overhead smash and lennie lohnson's back court play lays away both single and double return matches with an expert flourish and sets an example for Paul Foster, Betty Cierstmann, Raymond Dickey and Lloyd Baisinger, the nonflettermen. 'Kwik fifty-'nine Axe-K ltllik! H N-X. , J re 7 f k ..,-43.1 'I r t f-wif 1 fy - it f 'S if Q ii i i 14 ' i e , , i X Q AG A sixty lL 1.a-W kw0ut,, 7 Irene, Irene, someday she'll be a movie queen, She's going off to Hollywood to be a star, it's understood. just oft the press, Hollywood Extra , a musical produc- tion of Charles Wakefield Cadman, is presented by a lav- ishly costumed, all glee club cast on March 24. With the parlor of Uncle Abner's house in Maine as the setting, the chorus harmonizes over the good luck of a Hope- town girl when the first act curtain goes up on this rapid moving- comic operetta. Irene, the center of the situation, has just won a movie contest and is being teted with a send-off party on the night she is to leave tor- spiracy and humor girl, a second rate plicate the plot. Act two takes the Hollywood extras, dressed as Algerian girls, Bedouins and foreign soldiers, stage a picturesque pre-camera rehearsal. The play ends on a high note of anticipation, with Uncle Abner saving lrene's career with his naive and hearty home- town manners. the glamour city. Love, jealousy, con- assume major proportions as a runaway actress and a mounted policeman com- place six weeks later on a studio where Dave ludd f fi O ff Vw F Q- 'x A fr ' ' 'iff y xt 5 i f,,- 1 i W l ' fy.. 'XS A , ' if 4 K if , X I Z 1 NN, 1- ll if if fl ........,s. Y Q ,ro fgtla 'Y N I .i sg. , 5 llp lfa W' 5' 4 A M ,..,,Y.., .- 3' , lr s, 'M S V A Ruth Munsen M C Uncle Abner Maynard, postmaster - Delmar Wortman , 'r'r Irene, his ward ----- - Ruth Munsen ' 's ' Bob Wilcox, in love with lrene - - - - Dave ludd it Hannah Hilltop, with Hollywood views - - Alice Eckert 'E Deborah Wilcox, Bob's sister ---- Myrtle Kludt ff, Reta Lupa, a movie star ----- Vera Keller 'Z Corporal Benson, of the Mounted Police - Don Phillips Q' Marty Williams, a chorus extra - Martin Wentworth Harold De Bunker, Rita's husband - - - Ray Dalby , N Isaac Goldenrod, a movie magnate - - Wally Parmeter N 9 a l faculty advisers at K Verne lennings ------ Musical Director K A Y Quaife Dann - - Dramatics Director Helen Luft - - - - Dancers Marie Martin - - - Costumes 8 Gladys Sorenson - - Make-up Mariam Cleveland - - Advertising Harold Scott - - - - Stage Loren Ralph - -' Tickets V -. sixty-two X ,. maftgivgn 5 a od XS X39YXi,x3t'Y a Y-503 U Kee - Us 'yflg emit as SXAWTSG diese' 'QW With l3 lettermen returning from last year's championship team and a new track room in the boys' dressing quarters, Coach -Robert O. Pop Logan's spikesters garner 35 lf6 points but bow to the more experienced Olympia team during a preseason dual meet. -Demonstrating rapid improvement and using only three lettermen, they top timbers, push weights, and sprint way ahead with 74 U6 points in a quadrangular meet April 6 with Grting, Eaton- ville and Clover Park. ' When a seven-man team participates in the UW night relays, the medley relayers come in fourth in a thriller decision .4 of a second behind second place, and Verne Smith low hurdles into nf' ni Q7 s BACK: Manager Reed, E. Smith, johnson, Przybylski, Mullen, Carlson, LaPoma, Olsen, Lyle, Hart, Haworth MIDDLE: Durga, D. Sullivan, Howell, Simonsen, Karlen, track In his usual tarzanish manner, Wally Parmeter hurls the discus the finals for another fourth place. As the conference season opens, they dust the cinders and step out in front with a 56-54 win in a dual event at Renton. Participating in the southwest Washington re- lays at Centralia, Simonsen, Atkins, Yahn and Sullivan set an all-time record of 6158.6 in the l5f3 miles medley relay. Scrapping for positions in the first Puget Sound conference relay carnival April Zl, the Pl-lS fielders give their l-lighline hosts some close rivalry and place second with Zl V2 points, On April 25 the Vikings swamp Fife during a non-conference game, netting 73 points to their opponents' 37. Snider, jordan, Berry, Kowalski, Healey, l E torpedoes S Lind Simonsen tackles the hurdles The south end qualifying meet held here lVlay 5 is a triangular battle starring Enumclaw, Buckley and Puyallup. After a thin squeeze, victory alights on the prow of the Viking ship, 63-60-l4. jim Sullivan, high point winner of the season, set a new Viking mile record, shaving the seconds to 4:43. Thirteen first, second and third place winners from this meet compete at Renton May l3 to de- fend the conference championship and place sec- ond to Highline with 31 V2 points. Sullivan ties Auburn in the high jump to set a new record of 5 feet lO3A1 inches and records a new Puget Sound mile time of 4244.8 to get his name on the Mahaffie cups f Morfisson, Wentworth, Mr. Logan. FRONT: Buchanan, Yahn Takeuchi Atkins I Sullivan C Smith Par meter, V. Smith, McQueed, Ross, Stemp, Mvers. 4 jj au 5 sixty-four top roters Floy Pearson Ferne Korth S 'f-- f.::!k ' V 9l 83 Helen Braun Amy Lee Davis W ' fi s s1s i june Bullat Earl Powell sss it Freda Stahl Marian Barbee Kathryn Wallen Esther Kinzie jessie McQueed Kermit Reed Lillian jankowiak Marjorie Snow james jones Norma Saunders Deloris Grubb Dean McCurdy Mary K. Ostkotte Clara Worthley Success is a j june Mitchell lris johnson Henry Perfield jack Stevenson Dorothy Blandau Vera Keller Sylvia johnson Doris Anderson Genevieve Yeager Mary Hunter Marie Thanasse Myrtle Kludt Marjorie Wentworth Barbara jennings ournay, not a destination Deep pink roses and svveet peas Qi 73 9173 5-5, , z3tig,:,ji W, . . .i,.,s 5 i E 4 :Y w lm- lt W Z : 23' if -Q vw .E 1 Baits' , . ,gn 'H ,,,, A, 1 Q af, iw, 90.90 90 70 N. 1 , 'r.:,,ff - ,' it ii A A A 90 533 V eo 25 M i' we ... ew' it , ,S rw 1 sf , 1 ni -wr ' it-I if in conclusion To the Members of the Senior Class: This community has given you the opportunity to gradu- ate from one of the finest high schools in the West. You have marvelled at its beauty. lt has been our task to send you out as worthy citizens of this school and this community. We have constantly stressed the ideal of being responsible to your job. We have tried to impress upon you the duty of working to the utmost of your capacity, of doing even the smallest task the best you knew how. We have pointed out the value of a good character, of clean habits, of a sound mind and body. As your teachers, we have not overlooked pointing out those traits that make living successful, an ap- preciation of the better things of life, courtesy, broadminded- ness, and good manners. Wherever you may go, whatever you may do, may you always be worthy of the finest traditions of Puyallup High School. tip Cp . ,lyk r--if -.si Q AQSR 'Old V' i-ff FRANK HANAWALT Valedictorian 97.25 With the highest grade lint average of any boy vale- torian of PHS, Frank takes E3 honors in scholastic rating. :sides capturing additional .irels in debate, extempore, say and oratorical contests, e juggles equal proportions of easures and duties in Hi-Y, iking Knights, basketball, onor Society, Boys' club cab- et, golf and annual staff. DORIS ABSHER Salutatorian 96.64 As student director of one- act plays and a member of play casts, Doris demonstrates her inimitable dramatic ability without neglecting Honor So- ciety, advertising committees or the librarian staff. HARRY P. HANSEN Principal trio 4:54 Qiliii. I xg, . 1 --.-,.,b- LENA BAUQU l ER Third Highest 96.52 Indicating journalistic ten- dencies, Lena edits the annual and a club handbook, writes for the Hi-Life and belong to Quill and Scroll. sixty-tive AWARD REQUISITES WINNER ALTERNATES and HONORABLE MENTION ENDOWER HONOR laurel reopers WALKER Scholarship 407 Character 20 Citizenship 20 Personality 20 Frank Hanawalt Kathryn Wallen Forrest Stackhouse Delbert Yahn Deloris Grubb Marjorie Snow E. M. Case in memory of E. B. Walker Names engraved on Walker Cup CPS WALKER AWARD WINNERS 54 11' Frank Hanawalt Kathryn Wallen sixty-six L IUNIOR HIGH Scholarship 40? Citizenship 20 Character 20 Personality 20 Ruth Brackman Andrew Harstad Ramona Spencer Shirley Neiman jack Morrisson Bill Calligan Class of '35 and Kiwanis Club Ten dollar bill and names on cup KARSHNER Scholarship 5 Character 2 Leadership I Self Support I Doris Absher Henry Perfield Lena Bauquier Deloris Grubb Marvin Atkins Earl Powell In honor of son Paul by Dr. and Mrs. W. M, Karshner UW scholarship of one hundred dollar and names on cup. KARSHNER AWARD WINNERS . I S I Doris Absher man Henry hosen by senior igh girls as in- Diration in high :hool. sther Kinzie Iathryn Wallen lirls' Club Jame engraved in cup WINNER laurel reopers COMMERCIAL Character 2092 Scholarship l 5 Citizenship l5 Personality l5 Leona Locken Lillian lankowiak Members of the Business and Professional Women's Club. A scholarship to the Tacoma Secretarial School WINNER SILVER VICTORY Civen to athletes who have earned six major letters in sports. Marvin Atkins Wallace Parmeter No alternate Boys' Club Receive silver victory symbol LOGAN One major letter earned in sports and all grades in upper brackets. Marvin Atkins Kathryn Babnick Virginia Hendrickson C Evelyn jewett Delbert Yahn Robert O. Logan Names engraved on trophy CPS Annual award to the student who is out- standing scholastically Frank l-lanawalt No alternate The College of Puget Sound Scholarship of S6850 a year for tour years SI VERAIICTORY AWARD LOGAN AWARD WINNERS K! yy. '-..2' Esther Kinzie Leona Locken Wallace Parmeter Marvin Atkins Kathryn Babnick sixt 4- f , f ,4 ,r 'f nv., DORIS ABSHER ROBERT AMEY DORIS ANDERSON RUTH ANDERSON C-LADYS ARCHER Tacoma, Helena, Port Angeles, Minneapolis, Frederick, Washington ' Montana Washington Minnesota Oklahoma - 'Q terrific MARVIN ATKINS ROBERT AYLEN KATHRYN BABNICK Puyallup, Sumner, Wilton, Washington Washington North Dakota S A I 'W I iit - i Names of seniors and birthplaces f fl 3 iii, May be found beneath their faces. PATRICIA BACINSKI Puyallup, Washington ' ir W X livin' gf! ,gt,ji4f VIOLET BAKER PAULINE BALDWIN Puyallup, ' Kellogg, ' Washington Idaho if, g up g. W , MARIAN BARBEE LENA BAUQUIER ROBERT BERC- ROBERT BICELOW Tacoma, Lincoln, Puyallup, Puyallup, Washington California Washington Washington sixty-eight 4..T Qu. -431 'wit A , ,,.. Q vw f DOROTHY BLANDAU RAY BOTSFORD 1AY BRAMAN HELEN BRAUN IOE BREAN Tacoma, Rupert, Puyallup, Spokane, Easton, Washington Idaho Washington Washington Pennsylvania twelfth s DOROTHY BROUWER IUNE BULLAT LEOLA CLOUD Tacoma, Tacoma, Moore, Washington Washington Montana VV., CSLDE CLOVER L,-,,.1afxTac ma, l Washington Wm-.f CLENN DANIELSON Puyallup, Washington 1'3- L -.fs ,Q . Don't jump to conclusions hastilyg Look under ads for activities. MYRTLE CONNELLY RAY DALBY Luck, Tacoma, Wisconsin Washington was li T , 1? 4'-' 1- in - ' -'ws x '31 ,Q , , rio we , ,,., , , yya gf 'Wd' AMY LEE DAVIS Lake Cle Elum, Washington RAYMOND DICKEY PATRICIA EDWARDS Halls Summit, Tacoma, Kansas Washington sixty-nine . W,,t, N....L,. ,, ,EGR 'TE' acid' gm VANITTA EDWARDS LOLA EMERSON IACQUELYN EMERY IAMES FAHEY Tacoma, Chelan, Newport, Higgens, Washington Washington Oregon Texas terrific IACK FARIS NORA FELLENBERC Grandview, Puyallup, Washington Washington PAUL FOSTER Leavenworth, Washington 'f 'V.-,., LEON GEORGE Fairfax, Washington seventy' nn, RUTH FOSTER Cashmere, Washington ELIZABETH CERSTIVIANN Puyallup, Washington L A gui! ,I K. ROGER COELZER Puyallup, Washington Kent, Washington DELBERT FISHER Palouse, Washington HELEN FOXFORD Fort Wayne, Indiana aint' IACKSON CRANHOLM Tacoma, Wash. ARTHUR CRATZER Tacoma, Washington if I - ,uijj EPER DELORIS G OWEN HAM FRANK HANAWALT , Auburn, Tacoma ington Washington Washington twelfth ARTHUR HARBER RUSSELL HART OSCAR HAUGEN Ontario, Darrell, Tacoma Canada Montana Washington DON C. HENDERSON Puyallup, Washington 5 W' 5 aff' . . V, --, . DARLENE HUFFERD Spokane, Washington VI RCI NIA HENDRICKSON Puyallup, Washington MARY HUNTER DAVID IACKSON MARIANNE IACOBS Puyallup, Tacoma, Puyallup Washington Washington Washington SP' 5 43 fi ti 1 Q-rl :L -1 LILLIAN IANKOWIAK Tacoma, Wash. EDWARD IOI-INSON Baker, Montana lx IRIS HELEN IONES Puyallup, Washington 'W7' LEONARD KANDLE Roy, Washington Scvcwly- I wo if new , H K ,M v ' EVELYN IEWETT LA VERNE BARBARA IENNINCS ELMER IOI-IANSON IANZINC Sumner, Calgary, Alberta, Puyallup, O'NeiII, Nebraska Washington Canada Washington terrific Q' SYLVIA JOHNSON American Falls, Washington Idaho IRIS IOHNSON Tacoma, ZWF? X IAMES IONES Minneapolis, Minnesota HAREO KAI I MURA Tacoma, Washington .3 if VERA KELLER DOUGLAS KELLEY MARIORY KENDALL Puyallup, Martin, Colville, Washington Washington Washington 1-qv K. ESTHER KlNZlE Puyallup, Washington GEORGIA KROY Grand Forks, North Dakota DORIS KLUDT MYRTLE KLUDT FERNE KORTH HELEN KRIPPAEHNE Tacoma, Tacoma, Yakima, Cumberland, Washington Washington Washngton Washington we H P IOHN KUPLEN VERA MAE LAW Nelson, Tacoma, Kansas Washington RSX 'Y' 'Y LOUISE LINTHICUM Weatherford, Texas BETTY LUCKOW Big Sandy, Montana LEONA LOCKEN ELIZABETH LONG Comstock, La Grange, Minnesota Indiana 'IW' 'vis GENEVIEVE MCCABE DEAN McCURDY LOIS McDANlEL Vancouver, Wapato, Auburn, Washington Washington Washington ' W, time .fweaifzsfeizri -f',- Q. V .L gi -kf-A-, at-ggmasessssiagf , ' i:.V., , L3:L i J. ,V , I ' , ALAN MCQUEED IESSIE MCQUEED LOIS MARTIN IRENA MASON ALICE MILNE California Auburn, Aberdeen, Puyallup, Clementson, California South Dakota Washington Minnesota terrific LAWRENCE MINCHAU IOE MITCHELL IUNE MITCHELL Edmonton, Lincoln, Salt Lake City, Alberta, Canada Nebraska Utah LOIS MODELAND BERNICE MONSELLE VIOLA MOORE Casper, Seattle, Thornhild, Wyoming Washington Alberta, Canada IOHN MORROW RUTH MUNSEN MARGARET NORMAN CLAIRE OLSON Tacoma, Waukeegan, Tacoma, Saskatchewan, Washington Illinois Washington Canada seventy-four A. fi ,psi I Y 5 . K VWEQE gg g ei CHARLOTTE OSTERHAUT MARY KATHRYN OSTKOTTE PERLE PARK WALLACE PARMETER BERYL PASSEY Sumner, Sumner, Walton, Ellensburg, Magrath, Washington Washington Oregon Washi ton Alberta, Canada r I X 1 4,0 twelfth i I I FLOY PEARSON RAY PEARSON IOYCE PENNINGTON Anaconda, Waco, Spokane, Montana Nebraska Washington lwafkt f HENRY PERFIELD WYOMA PETERSON EVELYN PETTIT Tacoma, Osikis, Sunnyside, Washington Minnesota Washington DON PHILLIPS RAYMOND PHILLIPS EARL POWELL IRIS POWELL Puyallup, Blockton, Tacoma, Superior, Washington Iowa Washington Wisconsin seventy-five ,..,. AUP!! THEO POWELL Magrath, Alberta, Canada WALTER RAYMOND Monroe, Washington 1, , f -,....W::zri5g,fx. ROXANNE REED Holly, Colorado GERALD RICHEN Tacoma, Washington OLGA Mitchel I, South Dakota I J M. a 1 . S i klk: W' I 'UW 'Wd' VIVIAN RANDOI. WELDON RAU ROBERT RAVE Caran, Tacoma, Tacoma, Kansas Washington Washington terrific il WW , ,1 , KERMIT REED Holly, Colorado 'lr if wrt! EDWARD REI FF Tipton, Bently, Oklahoma MARTIN REITER Alberta, Canada f .I ' : HM f rioo YF Q'fZ,'Z'If WINIFRED ROBBINS MARCELLA ROCKSTAD MORRIS ROSS Tacoma, Walcott, Puyallup, Washington North Dakota Washington DANIEL RUDD Havre, Montana IAMES SHAFER Puyallup, Washington sw QW' IOE SIENKIEWICH Tacoma, Washington .bg I VERNE SMITH Puyallup, Washington in -dw' wa' DANIEL SANDE NORMA SAUNDERS MYRTICE SAWYER IRENE SCHAFER Gig Harbor Odessa Puyallup Burr Oak Washington Washington Washington Kansas twelfth li 1- DUNCAN SHAND SYLVIA SHORT Tacoma, Tacoma, Washington Washington viii ELLING SIMONSEN CHARLES SMITH Norway Aberdeen, South Dakota MARIORIE SNOW DONALD SOMERS SUSAN SONTRA Puyallup, Stevens Point, Leavenworth, Washington Wisconsin Washington FREDA STAHL LLOYD STELTZ Puyallup, Moscow Washington GENEVIEVE STEMPI NSKI Chicago, Illinois JOHN STRATTON PHYLLIS STUERIVIER IAMES SULLIVAN Tacoma Edmonton Puyallup Washlngton Alberta Canada Washington MARIE THANASSE Puyallup, Washington . T . -, L , 1 i ei f K , S 1 ' KATHRYN WALLEN Evansville, Minnesota .45 CLARA THAUT MAXINE THOMAS lEAN TODD MARY UPTON Tacoma, Outlook, Tacoma, Portland, Washington Washington Washington Oregon twelfth OPAL WALSTON LlLLlAN WALTERS Hamon, Seattle, North Dakota Washington L it 'ik ,-uf: Sv LUCILLE WALTERS ESTHER WARNER MARlORlE WENTWORTH Seattle, Hoxie, Grand Forks, Washington Kansas North Dakota RUTH WERNER St. Paul, Minnesota WARREN WESTBO EARL WHITE RUTH WINC-ER South Prairie, Webinex, Calgary, Washington Montana Alberta, Canada Q90 PDQ LORRAINE WOILLARD FRIEDA WOLF CLARA WORTHLEY DELBERT YAHN GENEVIEVE YEAGER Seattle, Lind, Tacorna, Valentine, Tacorna, Washington Washington Washington Washington Washington El El t9TTiFC no pictures GEORGE COLE Seattle, tWeIHII'l Washington MARCELLE DuSELL Tacoma, Washington IOHN YUSKO Tacoma, E E' Washington Mingling with lower classmen, the seniors swing and sway at the Girls' Club matinee, March 15. i p I1 pics Vi Baker and Sis Spencer cast disapproving glances at masculine sit down strike. J 'ir- Pfyyw 'X 'Y 119 ge , A Awww,-.., ,.,,,.- X J.. A: Drum Major Biil Pettit leads the fourtnperiod Serenade. eighiy-gng 6. Margy Roscoe and Frances Fahey turn on the radKanc H H32 g 6. dc, Ead Whit Sched is such hard wo and Reed. Mr. Dann vs. Yahn eightyffwo Haw Hay, 3 une Buhat and Ranger M., 1 V,.. ,fx ' intricate tootwork at the tast The Drltt Team does some basketbatt game. is . X75-s Tarzan Spencer Mr. Dahtberg caught unawares as he measures the throw ot a Vitdng shot putter. ,qw-,,. Maxine and C-rubby taktng Cote in the sunshtne. I rx. ,,,,a-...- A 1 ,sag Three Smart Gifts . . . Stter, Powett, Pettkt. ewghty, .WWE U F-1-il + WN' , Waiter Raieigh Catherine Banks demonstrates the technique with Queen Elizabeth Doug Keiiey. Chnei ieads to an One good Toio iWortm n iWentworth Winsiow I so other dsome trackmen . . . GRQMY-four These han Turkey Trot Suiiivan and Ciratzer. outh moment in the Highiine game with hooting two. Art An open rn Paui Fcster s Snapped in the act. iRau, Stuerrner, Hart, McCurdyi. 's fancy Editor O in the spring a young man turns to . . . Genevieve, i poiishing Shiriey Reynoids app e the new vice prexy. WNY! ,seal- Principai Ha Pop Logan and scrutinize the dass tracksters. stkotke sips and SUUS. Q'Eh!,.f!.xe ,ff USED ghtv-si Activity Lists ......,. ...... All-School Play .... Annual Staff ..... Awa rds ......,,.. Band Basketball ,.......,... Board of Control .. index .88-l ll Boys Club Cabinet ................ Boys' Glee Club ..., Camp Fire Girls .... Commercial Club .. Debate ....,............ 4 .................. Faculty ........ 7, lO, l5, 22, Football .................,.......... Girls Girls' Girls Golf Athletic Association ...... Club Cabinet ................ Glee Club ....... ........ Hi-Life Staff ..... ......,.. Honor Roll ......... ...,.... Honor Society ,..... ........ junior Class .,..... ....,.,. junior Play ...... ........ Latineers .. ....... . Librarians ................... ........ Make-Up Committee .............. Marching Team ........... ........ Mr. Hansen's Message ............ Museum ..................... ........ One-Act,Play ..... ........... Operetta ,....... ......... Orchestra ........... .. Quill and Scroll .... ........ Salutatorian ...... School Board ....... Senior Play ........ Seniors ................ .......65 ......,48 68-80 Snapshot Section .............. Sl -85 Sophomores ...,..... Stage Crew ..... , Tennis ....... Track ....., Tri-L ............... Valedictorian ....... .......23 .......24 .......62, 63 .-.....32 .-.....65 Viking Knights ........ ....... 4 O Viking Ladies ....... Yell Leaders ..... JUNIOR Hici-I .-.....4O .......46 Award ....,.......................,. 66-67 Band ......... .....,.... 2 l Basketball .............. ......, l 4 Board of Control ....... ....... l 9 Boys' Club Officers Boys' Glee Club ..... ....... 9 Debate ................ Eighth Grade ...... Football .............. .......l2 l .-.....l7 Freshman Class ..... ....... l 6 Girl Reserves ........, ....... 3 2 Girls' Club Officers Girls' Glee Club ..,.. ....... 9 junior Patrol ...... One-Act Play ...... Orchestra ....,.... .......l8 .......l3 .......2O Seventh Grade ....... ....... 8 i The Store of mplete Satisfaction Everything for the Living Room, Bed Room and Kitchen Big City Styles and Variety at Lower Prices FRED F I SH ER, Proprietor PIONEER FUR ITURE IO9 West Pioneer I IO Second Avenue Phone 12 wifi? Qiyslfi : I229 MAIN ST. PHONE 2IO t,.tg,Lj,f 5 M Q NP' C! AQ? eighty-eight Ei SPENCER MOTO RS DODGE - PLYMOUTH MOTOR CARS DODGE TRUCKS SU MNER, WASHINGTON E. A. Spencer Puyallup Phone 3260 I IIII II I I I :I IIIIIIIIE senior activity list DORIS ABSHER Operetta lg Spring Concert I5 All School Play 25 Junior Play 25 League Play Contest5 CPS Tournament 25 Honor Roll l, 2, 35 Advertising Committee Senior Play 35 Advertising Com- mittee All-School Play 35 Christmas Play 35 Director One-Act Play 35 Property Chairman One-Act Play 25 Libraw 2, 35 Honor Society 3. Qlllllll Ill Ill lllllll llllllllg A. 5' R. BODY WORKS L. 0. ROBERTSON, Mgr. : its w. stewart Phone 3 PUYALLUP, WASH. . E!,...,... I III IIIIIIIIEI z Meooswen' DAIRY LUNCH STUART MUIR - E 2 I I2 South Meridian St. Puyallup E EnIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE ROBERT AMEY Board of Control 35 Hi-Life Staff 25 Hi-Life Circulation Manager 25 Sophomore Stunt Committee 25 Intramural Basket- ball I, 35 Baseball I5 Boys' Club Cabinet 3. DORIS ANDERSON .Sophomore Hop Decorating Committee I5 junior Usher 25 Girls' Club Treasurer I5 junior Prom Refreshment Committee 25 junior Play Publicity Committee 25 Librarian I, 2, 35 Girls' Club Cabinet 35 Publicity Committee All-School Play 35 Property Committee All-School Play 35 Honor Roll 35 Senior Play groperty Committee 35'Tri-L 35 Senior Girls' Tea Chair- man . RUTH ANDERSON Make Up I, 2, 35 Commercial Club 25 Camp Fire 3. GLADYS ARCHER I-li-Life Staff 25 Commercial Club 25 Camp Fire I5 Operetta Prompter 2, 35 Property Chairman Operetta 25 Costume Com- mittee lunior and Senior Play 2, 3. MARVIN ATKINS Class President I, 25 Senior High Boys' Club President ' 3 VK 2, President 35 Vice President Hi-Y 2' Football I, 2, 35 Inspirational Award 35 Basketball I, 2, 35 Track l, 2, 5 Class Basketball I5 Class Track I5 Gym Class Coach 25 Prom Serving Committee I5 Board of Control 25 Boys' and Girls' Handbook 25 Stunt Committee l, 25 Lette-rman's Club I, 2, 35 Smoking Committee 3. ROBERT AYLEN Basketball Manager I, 2, 35 Golf 2, 35 Orchestra l, 2, 35 Radio 35 Hi-Y 25 Boys' Club Secretary 25 Board of Control 25 Class Basketball 2, 35 Second Team Basketball I5 VK 35 Letterman's Club 3. X. S' an-x5,,, -A Ni Gs as - . .. Q. . .gun - t V NP 5 . .xx .fx C X s '. 59 . Q- 2- f 1 llllllllll Illllllllllllllllllllilllll lllllllllllllll llllllll 1- X. GAA 2, 35 Vollev Ball l, 25 35 Ba ball 5 , 35 Ping E , 5 'N S .ax ' Pong Champion 2, 35 Tumbling 21 Ba a l, 21 ' Hiking 5 5 1 l S Leader 25 Tennis l, 31 Girls' Club Cabi 5 Pla l, 2, 5 C . 31 Tri-L l, 2, 35 Commercial Cl b 21 35 u ay C e 5 E , - Committee 25 Senior PlayTicket bmzmttee 35 p etta l, 5 Q Property Committee 25 Spring Conc ' Hon oll l, 25 I ' rom 5 Perfect Attendance IO years. : X Q PATRICIA BAciNsKi R 3 ' volley Ball l, 2, 35 Basketball l, 31 Baseba l 2, 31 B, 7 Q W A Posture l, 21 Tumbling Zfxiiq Pong 5 unior Plvay roperty E X Q95 Committee 21 GAA5 Commer Club 25 r 2. XM E ' 3 VIOLET BAKER - V f- f Senior Play 35 Tri-L 35 'f aff . I ' 2 - Q BL lBBo BREAD 5 MARIAN BARBEE PTE 4. - X E' Ente are Lei ' fiooizc, F' 2,35 0 ,E 1 Societyre31 lilorgorHl3ioClln25 3? anim ,Q on T 5 N3 . X ' V bg, .M Q . IX 5? ,M .5 I LENA BAUQUIER .. X 'r Quill and Scroll 2, 35 Hi-Life lg 2, 35 Stu nd E Sw 57 I Sense Editor 25 Annual Editor 35 Honor Society 35 Honor K ,Q , 4 M: i, 25 35 Junior High office 2 - 4 aff' :. , ROBERT BERC. Qx K ' - ' 1 Served at junior Prom l5 Intramural Basketball I1 2, 5 i 21 Il' Class Baseball lg Radio Broadcasting 3. x 4 1 I ' u. DOROTHY BLANDEAU X , 'X ' Latineers l, 2, 31 Commercial Club lg Museum Staff lg I I ' - H l-lonor Roll l, 2, 3. Ib-.1 k -, -- E RAY Bo1'sroRo ' - A it 5 5 Board of Control 35 Orchestra l, 2, 35 Clee Club 35 Oper- 5 phone 4. 5 C etta' 35 Class Basketball 2, 35 Spring Concert l, 2, 35 Class Q 5 ' Mk 2: violin Trio 1- 2. .. -3 mini. -nm-.El E.-I---ii niii.nnmi-minmnn. I-iI-imnni-mn.--nn in-i-.ig 3 BON VOYAGE C F3 of fx X - : X l Wllsgn Brgs, Dan Breen Charlie Thornton : Henry Barry Carl Hardtke . . George Williams Lewie jones Dmtnbutors Pierce Leavitt W. P. Loughlin Virginia Strong QUALITY CONFECTIONS G E ,,i,1u. . .gt - ' rf' 5 xp Afikfwx E ' 5 kg -L J - 23 5 l?....... --------5 ll-A1I.d Q 1 C Dewltts Beauty Salon 42l Znd Ave. S. W. 624 SO. Trafton 52 : TACQMA - - fOr appointments eighty-nine J 0,1 '-7 c e 'jjuvcf fLu..a.-.77,4...,g,,,-if F' ' ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' ' El 5 I ' 44,1 We ff X, ltrgegs grate Bank , V I , N- Acfcfg F5 ,X L4 Jil 1 AJ J , xg- fy,-V' K x ia., I - . 1.-1,A,19, 5 W it : m fg 2 fe ,ff - Q . lf -QCZCJ'-' Q 9 Y -ff.,v1-4. ct' X - Q EMD SL Q 5 .Q 5 7 1-fvvxvl , 'A-4:74 I : A X - ral I.,-sl l I 3 6 ' f E 1 - l -,gc Il V or OMER B!AN.28F PUYALLUP - ,4,,,,,,,- 044, Q E igogd education is a-splendidffoundation upon which I I lo build ajuture. B uild fror-Q this foundation th-e practice - of consistently savingyevenra smai sung at-regy-Eur inter- vals and your future will be assured. 1 - .. .. ,. i .. .- , 2 Ei.......................................................................... ..................................................................................................-........ , f1-vu-L- ? 33' ' ,,..,.4,,4.a....,-2,JC4f mlllllllllIIlllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ sea- -e -- , , 4 J-V+ fe- G fi --4.4, g ggavevi- r' Q HELEN BRAUN P l r S : ri-L 2, g e a e , , oixehsic Meet , 1 -aug., Q Speech Tournament 3g Honor Society 33 L tineers l,r 23 Glee e 1 Club - ' Maw-U1,Ceommi , , ommercial -Q- M I 5 Club 3, Assembl hairmang Senior Announce Chairman ROM at Honor Roll 1, 2 3. L-c-.-1 fi-.-c::,L1 4.1-L r -A--f -f , los BREAN 4 I I ' U s , . a.....:f ll 1.f2ZJ?vf-4. -9 W -1-rl I ,'.:,,x 5 : I 5 E Q if ' - 5 DORTJ BROU fm E ' I ' B X: I Tri-L I, 2g Secretarial 25 Volleyball 3g Posture 25 Girls' Club Q 4 ., Xl-cj I I ,'-if , ' Yel sd ' juni Prom Decoration Qommittee 2' Usher 5 1 L ' E , g Sophomore tun lg p a , enior s u I ! Q Y -' f Q QQppi-t-tee 5 airrna , ' re 4, - E .ij 1' fd ? Q Chairman 3g Senior Class Yell Leader 3g Chairman Tea Pro- Z. ' Q gram 25 Glee Club l' Spring Concert l' Baseball 3. ..a S ' f .lvft ' .fs.4-s.J-E-- AM M W I f ,J 1uNE BULLAT : f 5 Q , Q , -'I ' 2 Cornmerdal Club 2, 3' Latneer ' ' ' ,454 ' E g a , ing Pong 3g Pos ure Contest 2g Basketball Q E 3' Shorthand test 25 Hi Life Eeporter 3g ' 'fe Staf 3 : Q-ff, .ft-526.9-'E W W 4 E f 2 PUYALLUP Lim CLOUD ' REAME , , y , 2 Jblvl- - g--f' - 2 5 Ent ed om Lincoln '37g Senior lay Costu e Committee Q 'E 3' I P a 'Commitee 356, R954 ybvkvs' Em' In Im In Ad verlising 23 Speakers' Co tee Boys' Club 2. 3 wget 1 ,L K . -14-on-Q fo-1.g.g Ag ...WW bf 6-rg' o-T SL fm? as 'P114 s -A-2' fo ?llllllll lllllll llrlullllllllllllll Illllllulll llllllllllbllllllllllll ltgrrllllllllllltlllylllllllllllllll llllllll : ag Q M32 U I s : Q!-AJP TY YSGB-IG D fax E ' -ine! ff-no G cv'- vi-4 ii -7 ip' For 52 ears Beut usines Colle e I '-.- :-:-:i. .-:: ,.-.A y . . ,. . g : . K 5 hgs,QgQg givin g. -- - 2 ' QE Egg - f.,4BTT L E. j fifb 5 ' ' ne '6'f C'5I'I'f'5f'Vf5rmaTioF'0 VEL'g j'LfL' 5' , P 'sf' I 5 G' OXSIOIFSTAD Tacoma - 937 V2 Broadway Washington I 1 a...,,..,f ,T . A-'IGH .1 s N Illll ,,,,,,,,,, . .,... . .................. . . ....................- -.. . ..............,....... .....,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,, lllll lllllllllllllll I I I I I I , Q afL egtend our best wishes to the Class 5 J' F Q E 939. May.continued success be yours, E Z TlQH.S I See Us For Your 5- C-- -5 C C., I Cr es Suit c es ries - 2 V .1 ' ' PUYALLUP VA LEY 'W' -U I 05 f- -f HARD RE COMPANY A X 5 1 FOR,l.LUB6-- - 5 5 --A-1-1-7 5 5 FREE AETERATI S ,A , : cf. 202 so. Meridian 3 Pl1OI'16 ' 3l9-333' NOl'lh E ERMAY couci-I vb ELL EL som ,..-.,... Chiu Y . 1- -,c,r.,,..J - ly .D U: CJ Elinimmmiinin-I.mimiiIiii-1mimi.iii-mimiimm um-iimiim -1-- :Q Elini-I-iiulrllllll -1-ililll-IIIIIIII-will IIIIIH--IH Ivll- I-I Ivlll 'www' IIII IME fd . MY E Ennnun iununllliinunuuuuunlnluuu :inning Basketball 35 Volleyball 35 Baseball 2, 35 Ping Po I Q Posture 2, 35 Tumbling 2, 35 Property Committee junior ' CONGRATULATIONS I fl ,Q- A4 Play 25 Costume Committee Operetta 25 Honor Latineers 2. OCERY f .f av D ol Su E Operetta 35 Radio Program 35 Clee Club 2, 35 Advertising E - 2 Committee Operet-ta 3. 6 I f 1 4 Conlecl 1rEY1:Yv, QAQQK-.-Qi, A 4 4 ig GLENN DANIELSON ' s smttaall 5 anck lg li lnterclass Basketball ' ' ' 2, 3. E , -E 5-1-rtfyssllon AMY LEE AVIS 2 f - 5 Camp Fire I, 2, 35 Library 3: Ticket Committee junior E LE E Play 35 Honor Roll 3. E 5' Hair Styling Hair Cutting RAYMOND mciczv Permanents Dramatics 2, 35 Tennis 35 Senior Play 3. 5 Ben Franklin Store phone 32 5 at ............. ....... ....... ...,.................ii Ei MARCELLE DU SELLE Tri-L 35 Latineers 25 Basketball 25 Volleyball 25 Baseball Er- ................................-H..H.........................in.....................E1 25 Posture 2. E : E CONGRATULATIONS CLASS OF '39 5 PATRICIA EDWARDS junior Prom Decoration Committee 25 junior Prom Program Q Committee 25 Junior Play 25 Senior Play 35 Girls' Club Q Portable Typewriters for High School Cabinet Art Committee Chairman 35 Annual Art Staff 3. I and College .. School supplies VANITTA EDWARDS E SO. Meridian Phone ZIZ 5 Lafineefs lr GHS' Club Tamer Revoffef 2- ninety-one - MILLER'S OFFICE SUPPLY I i' L Bm... it I . - . - ... j-E1 HUNT BROTHERS PACKING C0 Canned Fruits and Vegetables i CANNERIES CALIFORNIA: Hayward, San jose, Los Clatos, Exeter, Suisun OREGON: Salem, Albany WASHINGTON: Puyallup, Sumner Ei....... . LOLA EMERSON El' junior Stunt Committee Z, Tri-L I, 2, 3, Mothers' Tea : Chairman 2, Senior Play 3, Yell Duchess 3, Ivlimeograplt Staff 5 3, Hi-Life Ad Staff I, Hi-Life Ad Manager 2, 3, Girls' Club 5 Cabinet 3, All-School Play Property Committee I, Posture 5 Contest I, 2, 3, Posture Winner l, Basketball I, 2, junior E Play 2, Latineers 2, UW Leaders' Conference 2, junior High E Office lg Volley Ball 23 One-Act Play Contest 3, junior I Prom Program Committee 2, CAA 2, 3, Play Day 2, Mixer - Chairman 3, Tolo Week Chairman 3 jACQUELYN EM ERY Clee Club 2, junior Play Advertising Committee 2, Band : I, 2, 3, Operetta Advertising Committee 2, Tri-L 2, 3, Spring Concert I, 2, 3, Honor Roll I, Ping Pong 7, linselmll I E, Posture 3, lilwrriry 2, Oiieretlu 2, CAA S JAMES FAHEY Football I, 3, VK 3, Class Basketball 2, 3, League Basket- ball lg Hi-Life Sports Editor 3, Letterman's Club, Class Baseball l, FRANK FAILOR Class Vice Priasiclent' 3, Senior Play 3, junior Play 2, All- Scliool Play 2, Prom Decoration Committee 2, Make-Up Committee 3, CPS One-Act Play Contest 2, Costume Com- mittee I1 Costume Committee All-School Play 3, Board of 5 Control 3, Honor Roll 3, Announcement Committee 3, League Play Contest 3, Boys' Club Assembly 3. NORA FELLENBERC Commercial Club 2, 3, l3ooklioicler junior Class Play 2 DELBERT FISHER lnterclass Basketball l, 3, Class Basketball 2, Track l, - Board of Control 2, Stunt Committee l, 2, Annual Staff 3, Q Scncol Dance Band 3, Class Track l, 3, Class Baseball l. ninetyetvvo . ..... El .. .. BEST WISHES FROM KEMDS Super Service STATION NO. I 2nd and Pioneer S. W. STATION NO. 2 Sth Ave. N. Meridian .. U fwm vmxxb NYY N , H ' xix 'lx Wi R y lfggxy ,XV filxfq : ' ' Q f 'i ' ' ' ' 5 ' M 91 ' 1' ' 1 ' ' 'fg 'D N K' 9 A Q J ff5'i2T5? iw : ,QW ' v 7 X' pf -, 2 . ,fx 1 yi In ' X QWXMQH M y X My F FJ ' :WI ' N 3525 I It S 0 ' x3 ,f , v . X ,XR W yf AW f x M AME gm Emp Wg y vw y y MM Sl Aid ,QB I 'JWIJX U r f I x, Q K N Q N fg E C 5 M 'V tp' 'Cy X gy a S Y' P P E Y K J xiii., y XX' vu if N NS' ' ns urgxxqfg VJ Q1 - y X' fxx . If , , - ' ' ' ' X K P LHGH A IIJGT 2 C BY E 'xx ' A ' , ' I 2 .,,v fwgl' I ,YJ .Ay A XM I :xx 'J 5 E' K E1 ' ' FX E 121 ---------------- J ----- 3 -----'-- ----' --'-- f '- ----------'-'---- ' --'-- ----------'- 9 -- '-'------ --'-- 1 - --- -'-'--- ..----..-. . . G PM ' J EYUJVQOSTENQ p fs X w Ai ymp hiiinfi ,c :H 5 J! J man's 2, 3g Gy S D 3 ALLUP A x,,y,y ,,,5yE,, jj Enfbred fziom M f v 2 B K fb ll 2 3 B b an 5,ye?Sg3Tumbllng 2 P T 2 3 CAA 3 S Y y fL ' Fresh Fruits HELEN roxrono vegetables ' B b II 1 2 v ll yb II 2 B v tb II 2 GAA 2 , LEON GEORGE Gl'0Cel'le5 o ATPIy2Gl Clbzop tt2Rd 25 PI y 3 A ELIZABETH GERSTMANN 'if' C ICIb3Lf I3CAA23Rd3 'A' cpF123Pp1yc ns PUVSCH 'M' PpTyC TT Op 1f3BbIlI2VIly ,gy blII23Bk'rbll123PgPg23Pt 1 23T 31-4kg12clf12PryDy123 M g ph Sf ff 3 ROGER GOELZER 5 L g B K tb ll 3 - C DIMEO IACKSON GRANHOLM ' Hi-Lif 123,Al1shuPuyPpryc TT 1 5 I N. -d- E junior Ply 2 Leag Ply C T T2 3 CPS PI y T Phone 33 06 Mer' 'an 5 ment 2 3 class Track M T2 R 0 P g 2 3 s E Q ST T 3 All-School Play 3 S Ply 3 CPS F Meef 3 Hi-Y HHWX PHY 2 ty u ii., if :J f as ' .X in JJ7' f . . ' u O r ' ' QI A. 1 .I l L 'W ' i iiii . . . , , . , , , . ,L , . L , . L K 3 l v eiqhgratulate the ff! Clas f l939 onieir ,, - I 'ccomplishfrvegfs and 'l if Ai! h them sqgess in 1 ill' 'ffheir fixture activities. ids 'Y if . gr, 0 YU- wx i 9?-if f 'ff t fy 5 A' ill? i M L3 iii had L :.lf ' lf'iN 7 , , V K PUYALLUP BRANCH SEATTLE ' ' FIRST NATIONAL 5 BANK. PUYALLUP, WASHINGTON ARTHUR GRATZER Football l, 2, 35 League Basketball l, 2g l.etterman's Club 3g Track l, 2, 3. EVELYN GROEPER Orchestra l, 2g Ooeretta l, Zg Concert l, 2g Honor Roll l, 23 lunior Play Bookholder Zg Senior Class Play 3, DELORIS GRUBB Honor Roll l, 33 Class Secretary, Treasurer l, 21 Basket- ball l, 2g Library l, 2, 33 Senior Class President 3g Chair- man All-School Play Costume Committee 2g VL 2, 3g Vice President VL 3g Volley Ball 23 Board of Control 2, 35 Senior Play 35 Chairman Prom Decoration Committee 23 Stunt Com- mittee 2, 33 Baseball 33 Posture 2, OWEN HAM Smoking Committee 35 Orchestra Committee for junior Prom Z5 Chairman Sophomore l-lop l. A FRANK HANAWALT Hi-Y l, 2, 31 VK 35 Debate 2, 35 Basketball l, 2, 35 Honor Society 3g Honor Roll l, 2, 33 lunior Prom Publicity Chairman 23 lunior Play Publicity Chairman 23 Boys' Club Program Chairman 3g Golf l, Z, 31 Stunt Committee l, 3g CPS Debate 2, 33 Finals and Place Extembore CPS 23 Finals and CPS Extempore 3g University Debate 2, 33 Rarliog Chair- man Letterman's Club Committeeg Assistant Editor of Annual 33 Veterans of Foreign War Essay Contest tlfirstlj American Legion National Contest 3 iSecondi3 Washington State lub- iiiiii iiiiiii iiiiiiiii E giLffffifiL.iffT0Tfi,fiT.if,i.f.i A Q R ULATIONS We Congratulate ax C Eisii l '39 F - the Class of egifbggk gf Il ?i iqw '-itmnegllb DEAL NEAL A h- ........ E ................... E ................. 5 .......... ............. 22 pilmowe S f g GQ U i i 'gem M 5i7i Y OLDS A Rl h'HLETlC CQ, E :gm-MAin 65 ax wash. P AU-UP Cf 5 C IQEQ ZNB E L A 1 X . RUSSELL HART Class Baseball l, 2, 33 Track 33 Class Track l, 2, 3. OSCAR HAUCEN Class Track 23 Track 2, 3, Trainer 3, Football 2, 3, VK 2, 3 l-li-Y 2 DON C. HENDERSON Band l, 2, 33 Orchestra lg Glee Club 2, 33 Operetta 2, 3, V-8 Dance Band 2, President, Radio Broadcastg Brass Quartetg Spring Concert l, 2. VIRGlNlA HENDRICKSON Volleyball l, 2, 33 Basketball l, Z, 3, Posture Z, Ping Pong 2, 33 Baseball 2, 33 Operetta 23 Tri-L l, 2, 3, Secretary 33 GAA 2, 3, Athletic Manager 33 Student Body Secretary 33 Librarian 2, 33 VL 33 Latineers l, 2, 33 Minnie Chairman 33 Served at lunior Prom 2. DARLENE HUFFERD Operetta l, 23 Secretarial Club 33 Cilee Club l, Z, Camp Fire Girls l, 2, 33 Volleyball 33 Typing Contest 23 Latineers 33 Basketball 33 Spring Concert l, 2, 33 Radio Broadcasts 2, 3, Orchestra 33 Operetta Costume Committee 3 MARY HUNTER Elm... ,,..,,,,Im Congratulations CLASS OF l939 E THE HUGH B. CLARK FEED CO. E Camp Fire l, Z, 33 Annual 3, Radio Broadcast 3, Honor Phone Roll l, 2, 33 Costume Committee Operctta 3, PUYALLUP DAVID IACKSON - Basketball lg Sophomore Hop Committee lg Class Yell j Leader l, 23 Letterrnan's Club l, 2, 33 Prom Committee 2, 'mm F1 '-'- -'H I-H ---' -..l. ........................ .... -......................... ........ NEAL E. THORSEN - COSTUMES Congratulations , 1 - 2 926'V2 Broadway 923 Court C CLASS 5 Phone MAin 486l Tacoma, Wn. OF Novelties E r39 5 um-I .......-.ltr-.lm ....- I um .ml Congratulations from - QUALITY the home of the 'Berger GOODS and the 'Shake FOR PUYALLUP CAFE LESS ,,,, 35, THE ELVINS CO. Department Store Phone ru-vita X CONGRATULATIONS FROM FARIS HARDWARE 39 Puyallup, Wash. ,,,,, ug nlnetx ftixc 5511 l JU if' ff' A ll lzgw A i fl' ' f . 3 5 . V 5 T A ff if Ji ti l fl I ,I JV 51 ' Mtv ' 5 1 Q : l jyN ff af' F .ef 1 ,N f -1' 5 flf jr if J iff' A ., ' if' l' t , iff jl', if N f if ff? ,f' f 1' Eff VI .1 if 5 2 M' lr l l rs J, WE EXTEND OuR CONGRATULATIONS AND THANKS TO 1 - CLASS OF '39 If -----1-l---.--.-,-l--.----..--....--.--.-... ------.l---------.-.--.-l---.-.-.------..----.'------.-- MARIANNE IACOBS Girls' Club Cabinet 35 lunior Prom Committee 25 Sopho- more Hop Dance Committee lg Tennis Team l, 2, 35 Radio 35 Clee Club 35 Usher Z5 Operetta 35 Librarian l, 2, 35 Tri-L l, 25 35 Commercial Club Z, 35 One-Act Play Costume Chairman 25 All-Sclioot Play Costume Committee 35 junior Play Costume Chairman 25 Senior Play Costume Committee 3. I-lik EVELYN JEWETT Baseball l, 25 35 Volley Ball I5 Z5 35 Ba 5 5 ing 25 Bicycling 35 CAA 2, 3, Secretary 35 Tri-L l, 2, 3 sketbatl l 2 3 ELMER JOHANSON Basketball Second Team l5 Class Basketball l, 2, 35 Cot l, 2, 3, Class Track l. LA VERNE IANZINC Entered from Madison l-liglt, Nebraska 35 Senior Play 35 EDWARD JOHNSON Entered from Stadium 35 Solo Contest 35 Operetta 35 Bancl BMS. Club Asgemblll 39 Turn' not 3 3, Tennis 35 Clee Club 35 Honor Roll 35 School Dance Bancl BARBARA IENNINCS IRIS IOHNSON Make-Up l. 25 35 Girl Scouts I. Z, 35 Musetiiit Staff 2, 35 Band l, 2, 35 Orchestra l, Z, Solo Contest 35 Spring Con Latineers l, 2 cert l, 2, 33 Ooeretta l, 2, 3. l pwulllxl IIIIIIIQ grwlurl lillllllllllulhlllrlllllllllllllll nlulrl Q ' : 1 Congratulations tO the Congratulations CLASS OF '39 to the Class Ot i939 JOHN DOWER LUMBER CO. Everything to Build X I Y l j?flf:55'f ,.f:a1'C. 3 mill? ,S Tasty Bakery Goods Make Every Meal Better Anything SIG NESS BAKERY PHONE 470 5 5 5 Puyallup, Wash. Phone 3253 ninety-six um WHERE QUALITY AND COURTESY COUNTS E 5 MR. C1 MRS. E. l, HARTMAN I Elini!!! llllnllrm CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF '39 AUTO SUPPLIES BICYCLES RADIOS SYLVIA IOHNSON lQ Entered from American Falls High Scltool 23 Cleo Club 2, I 3, Latineers 23 33 Tri-L 33 Commercial Club 33 Volleyball . 23 Basketball 23 Ping Pong 23 Baseball 23 Golf 23 Operetta . 2, 33 CAA 23 Property Committee Operetta 33 Office 3, C:Ql'T1pllfT1el'1fS mis HELEN IONES gf Clee Club l3 32 Operetta l, 33 Spring Concert lg TrifL Conference 33 Make-UD 32 Hi-Life Ad Staff 33 Boys'3 Girls' Club Handbook 23 Senior Play Property Chairman 33 l-ligltlino Assembly 3, Operetta Costume Committee 3. IAMES IONES 1 Entered from Central lligglm Minneapolis, Minnesota 52 Commercial Club 3,.l-lonor Society 33 All-School Play Costume Incorporated Committee 33 Senior Class Play Costume Committee 33 Christmas Play Costume Committee 3. A5 41 R P HAREO KAIIMURA ,N F, Spanish Club l. 1 5 395 LEONARD KANDLE junior Play 23 Commercial Club 33 Ooeretta 2, 33 Glee Club l, 2, 3 VERA KELLER 3 Bill - Fred - Paul Oberetta l 33 Cilce Club l, 3 DOUGLAS KELLEY - Stage lg Band l3 Radio Club Z WWE! ninety-seven I' l I- We Invite You to Visit the TACOMA SECRETARIAL SCHOOL A select Commercial school located in the Medical Arts Building TACOMA DAY AND NIGHT COURSES IN Secretarial Science Stenography Office Machines Office Training FREE Employment Bureau MAIN I42I ninety-eight Ei E E lxlll llnlnlillllnliII1IIIIIIIIIllllulnlllllnllnnll :ning CONGRATULATIONS Leslie N. jochimsen Attorney at Law 207 Knight Building Phone 216 ..... gi E I .... it um Copeland Lumber Co. 425 W. Main Phone 57 . ..... it E' Illllll lllllllllhlllllthlIllllllllllllllllllllllllll IIIIVVE 5 CONGRATULATIONS ' to the Class of '39 PIONEER BAKERY HOME of : Sally Ann Bread 2 MARIORY KENDALL Glee Club I, 2, 33 Noriette 33 Operetta I. 2 33 Commer- cial Club I3 Spring Concert I, 2, 3. ESTHER KINZIE Board of Control I3 33 Honor Roll I, 2, 33 VL 33 Com- mercial Club 2, 3, Vice President 33 Latineers l, 23 33 Camp Fire I, 2, 33 Publicity Committee lunior Play 23 Property Committee lunior Play 23 Property Committee All-School Play 23 Radio 2, 33 Vice President Honor Society 33 Girls' Club Secretary 23 Vice President 33 Volleyball 2, 33 Basket- ball 23 Baseball 2, 33 GAA 33 Ping Pong 23 Posture 23 Prom Decoration Committee 23 Perfect Attendance 3 yearsg Uslier 33 lunior High Office I3 Play Day 23 33 Cliairman Property Committee One-Act Play I. DORIS KLUDT Glee Club I, 33 Operetta I, 3 MYRTLE KLUDT Clee Club I, 3, Spring Concert I3 33 Operetta I, 33 Nonette 3. FERNE KORTH Band I3 2, 33 Spring Concert I, Z, 33 All-School Play Publicity Committee 23 Operetta Publicity Committee 23 lunior Play Publicity Committee 23 Prom Ticket Committee 23 Honor Roll I, 2, 33 Dance Band 23 Operetta Costume Committee 33 Annual 33 Radio Broadcast 2, iEl E1,,,,,, ming The Little Store With a Big Variety STONE'S l0c STORE a gl num in-mi -min mini '5l 5 ' BEST wisues, GRADS When you settle down in a home of your own WE CAN HELP YOU CLEMANS FURNITURE IN C. ............. ........ E1 HELEN KRIPPAEHNE Make-Up Committee l, 2, 31 Girl Scouts 3, GAA 33 Bas- ketball 3, Volleyball Z, Ping Pong 2, Museum Staff 2, 3, Hiking 23 Costume Committee 2. IOHN KUPLEN Entered from Washington Frontenac, Kansas l93i'g intra- mural Basletball 2, Class Basketball 33 Football 3 VERA MAE LAW Glee Cluh l, 2, 3, Operetta l, Z, 3, Spring Concert l, 2 3, l-lonor Roll 3 LOUISE LINTHICUM Business Annual Manager 3, l-li-Life Ad Staff 3, Tri-L 3, Costume Chairman Operetta 23 Costume Chairman All-School Play 3g Costume Chairman Senior Play 33 Ticket Chairman Senior Play 3, Ticket Chairman Ooeretta 3 ELIZABETH LONG Entered from Waukesna, Wisconsin 3, Ticket Committee Basketball Games 3, Commercial Club 3 BETTY LUCKOW Make-Up Committee l, 2, 33 Latineers l, 2, 3, President 2, 3g Tri-L l, 2, 33 Social Chairman Tri-L 33 Usher 2g Office 3. GEN EVIEVE McCABE Announcements 2, 31 Commercial Club Z3 Museum Staff 3, TriAL 3, Radro Work 2, 3, Debate Chairman 31 Bicycling 3, mm uni: 154 El l Z CONGRATULATIONS : e..,..,-'T T, 1,7 ' in A I xn- TOTEM CHIC HOGAN Store Manager PUYALLU P E' ...... ..... , li ' El H. 0. Wilen Motors 5 BUICK - PONTlAC Sales G' Service E Phone 497 ll2 E. Pionecr E Ei. .... Erin!! lung i scuooi. SWEATERS Z E Made to Order--Our Specialty Quality Knitting Company E 934 Commerce St. Phone Mmm 658i TACOMA .....,.,lEl ninety-nine l' 4+ El ... .... .....,.1a E,1....... ......- CONC-RATU LATI ONS from Elliott Cleaners We welcome a comparison no-znd Aye., s. E. Phone 209 PUYALLUP En' lil : ' ' CONGRATULATIONS FROM ' Super Creamed Ice Cream Shop BURYL BRYAN Phone - - l49 ia.. ..,, mm annum Congratulations to the Class of '39 KNAPP'S MODERN BUSINESS COLLEGE A Superior School for Superior Students TACOIVIA, WASHINGTON Ei f-------- -'---- --'-w-- f'-'f- E1 ei ' - e el ' . e 5 COMPLHVIENTS E RALPH L. FORBES DEROLTS A SPORTING GOODS Phone 89 Bicycles - Radio and Supplies : - lO9 zna Aye.. S. W. Puyallup E 208 So. Meridian Phone ll62 5 5 la .........................,.. ,...... Q' ...... ......... ......................... ................,......... . . DEAN MCCURDY Spanish Club Vice President l, lunior Play 25 All-Scliool Play 2, String Trio l, 25 Honor Roll l, 2, 35 Honor Society 35 All-Sclwool Play Advertising Committee 35 Senior Play Advertising Committee 35 Senior Play 35 HiaY 35 Orchestra 2, 35 Operetta i5 Clee Club l. LOIS MCDANIEL Tri-L 2, 35 Commercial Club 35 Chairman Senior Play Costume Committee 35 Annual Staff 35 Honor Roll 3. ALAN MCQUEED Operetta l, 35 Clee Club l, 35 Track l, 2, 35 Latineers l, IESSIE McQUEED Honor Society 35 Honor Roll l, 2, 35 Nonette 35 Operetta l, 2, 35 Spring Concert l, 2, 35 Tri-L 2. 31 CAA 2. 35 Com- mercial Club 2, 35 Radio Broadcast 35 Playday l, 25 Basket- one hundred ball l, 25 Baseball l, 25 Volleyball l, Z, 35 SOS Club 3, Cllee Club l, Z, 35 Band Concert 3 LOIS MARTIN C-lee Club l5 Tri-L 25 TrivL President 3, Make-Up Com- mittee 2, 35 l-li-Life Reporter 35 Operetta lg Spring Con- cert l5 Tri-L Conference 25 35 Operetta Costume Commit- tee 2, 35 Hi-Lite Ad Staff 35 Senior Play Secretary 3 IRENA MASON Make-Up Committee I5 Volleyball I5 Basketball lg Base- ball l, 25 Tri-L 25 Commercial Club 2, 35 Ping Pong 25 Operetta 35 Clee Club 3. LAWRENCE MINCHAU Football l, 2, 35 Second Team Basketball 25 Intramural Basketball 2: Class Basketball l5 Class Baseball 25 Class Track l5 intramural Coach l. at 3 if J OJ I J to the Community 0 : if up Newspaper Leadership ls Built Upon Service fit ' THE PUYALLUP PRESS Published Thursday E 31.50 a Year Commercial Printing Advertising Eh.. .... ... . tEl '45 Studia: ni ht ylih' LES. 'f NUI i X A WORD to the wise is sufficient - use glareless, softly dlffused light from modern I E S. lamps f i li ff I ' i3'l'X ' PUGET I Sllllllll PIIIIIER K lIlillT Ill. J El i 3 ri iii'ii 'iiiiii'iiii' 'i'i 'iii'i 3 COMPLIMENTS OF J. C. PENNEY CO. i ii.iiiiiiii,l.i,.iriii .P,Pl.llllil.l..l,llillllirl lllll,i. 3 lOE MITCHELL Chairman Advertisinig Annual Staff 3 IUNE MITCHELL Tri-L 2, 3i Commercial Club 23 33 President 3, Usher 2, 3, VL 33 junior Prom Decoration Committee 23 junior Play Advertising Committee 23 Musemum Staff 33 Clee Club 33 Senior Announcement Committee 33 l-lorior Roll l. 2, 33 Honor Society 33 Annual Typist 33 Mimeograph Staff 31 Handbook Typist 2, LOIS MODELAND Camp Fife l, 2, 33 Latineers 33 Costume Committee lunior Play 23 Commercial Club 3. VIOLA MOORE Glee Club l3 Baseball 23 Basketball 33 Ping Pongf 3 lnlineers 3 RUTH MUNSEN Glee Club l, 23 31 Operetta l, 2, 33 Annual Art Editor 3 Cliairman Posture Committee 23 Nonette 33 Sextette l 33 Honor Roll Z MARGARET NORMAN Basketball l, 23 33 Volleyball l, 2, 33 Baseball l, Z, 33 Tumbling 33 CAA l, 23 33 Hikes 23 Clee Club l, 33 Operetta l, 33 Radio Broadcast 33 Spring Concert l, 3. one hunrlrerl one E Spring Concert l, 2, 3, Solo Contest 3, School Broadcast 2: T We 'W za ll SW M L Curl op e y S o 1 F 5 A los' Ahe, s. w. E ya up W WW 2 one 20 k E S 5 5 --.-- ---.- I 55, 2 North 0 o ' ' ' c 5 ATU ON s s M 2 y u wee' 8' eldin S E Ni sz :Se-lg? er 5 Ol' E . E Genera acksmit i I Q ' ' ' ' ' ' 5 ff A' piers ee 1 A 1-1.11 --1- - - A 1----- i f er A- h -A A- - ----1--1---1-A-- -------f------- - '-1---------------f---- . ' CRATU ions OMP T OF LEY U HOLST .l Q C ieve McGi n' I ' P, U .H. HLMAN Co. 5 . ' Variety Store 5 Electric Co. E' ' '' ' ' ' 'E' 310 S th Meridian St. I MARY KATHRYN osTKoTTE E1 El L. 2The Schroeder-Welzel Company? : 830 North Meridian Street 5 Phone l 3 E1....... ...................... ...MEI Elini--1 ------ ummII1IuI-I-in-IiIIIuII-mmm-n.mmm- -nu-I-E1 1AMEs M. BLAIR Insurance Agency Auto Finance loo 2nd Ave., s. E. Phone l299 Puyallup, Washington E1....... ....................... Ig El :nu-nunnimmm .mu mm-umu-mninIinuiuinunmuuaunnmnm mimi MY BEST wisHEs TO You NORMAN CONNELLY Doctor of Optometry 103 zoo Ave., s. E. Phone 4464 Puyallup, Washington one hundred two VL l, 2, 3, Treasurer 2, Secretary 35 Tri-L l, 2, 35 Quill and Scroll 2, 35 Hi-Life Ad Staff l, 2, Reporter 25 Editor 35 Prom Decoration Committee 25 Operetta l5 Senior Play 35 Girls' Club Cabinet l, OLGA PRZYBYLSKI VIVIAN RANDOL junior Play Property Committee 2. WELDON RAU Stage Crew l, 2, 35 Chief Electrician 2, 35 Prom Host Committee 25 Hi-Y 35 Stunt Committee l, 35 Annual Photo- graph Committee 3, ROBERT RAVE WALTER RAYMOND Intramural Basketball l, 2, 35 Board of Control 25 Senior Stunt 35 Class Basketball lg junior Prom Committee 2. KERMIT REED Entered from Idaho High School 25 League Basketball l, 35 Class Basketball 25 VK 35 Track Manager 2, 35 Honor Roll l, 2, 35 Honor Society 35 Radio Program 25 Tumbling 35 Wise Guys 3. DOXANNE REED l i kid N 'A vi 3 PM 'lfijlj . r' I 5 I r ' in ' ' i 5 I ' J lu li I .JI 2 2 ' , - ,rv yi 2 ' 'il . fe pho QA hs '-' ljj C tulations : lmive avgteti V Q ji , the if rj A I Class of '39 ' 5 f l I f3JJ E edfgao-ebmw.q M A 4.1 ghone -. jf ffqifif, .......,. NJ .. .. f .......,.i. .. it 5 I U If i ,f E Q ,rf ll 5 Beeir wisr-iss or 'il - X Fr neh Cleaners and Qix? 3 it Dyers ' J, ma BURR GREGORY rl Phone no 2 Paints and Wall Paper E Class Basketball 33 Intramural Basketball l, 23 Class 5 Baseball l3 Track l, 2. MARTIN REITER - lunior Play 23 Make-Up Committee 2, Chairman 33 All- 5 School Play 23 Latineers l3 Band Uniform Chairman 33 Q Northwest Solo Competition 3, GERALD RICHEN Football 3. WINIFRED ROBBINS Basketball l3 23 33 Volleyball l, 2, 33 l-likes 23 Posture l, E 2, 33 CAA 23 33 Ping Pong l, 2, 33 Latineers l, 2, 33 Sec- retary 23 Commercial Club 2, 33 Tri-L lg junior Play 23 5 Referee l3 Golf l3 2, 33 Sophomore Stunt Committee lj 5 lunior Stunt 23 All-School Publicity Committee 33 C-irls' E Golf Team 23 junior Prom Committee 23 Radio Broadcast 2, 2 Baseball l, 2, 33 Playday l, 23 33 Costume Committee Oper- etta 3. MARCELLA ROCKSTAD Operetta Costume Committee 2 MORRIS ROSS Class Track l, 23 33 Track 33 Turkey Trot 2, 33 Senior Class E Property Committee 33 Honor Roll 33 Intramural Basketball 5 l, 2, 3, L Best Wishes and Good Luck to l 939 DICKEY General Agen ey INSURANCE E1......... .... ............,IEl one hundred three ENUM' unusual PUYALLUP CLINIC Dr. C. I'I. Aylen - Dr. S. D. Barry 5 Dr. R. C. Morse 5 DANIEL RUDD I-li-Y 3. DANIEL SANDE Sophomore Stunt Committee lg Junior Prom Decoration Committee 2g Smoking Committee Chairman 33 Vice Presi- dent lunior Class 25 Class Basketball l. NORMA SAUNDERS Camp Fire l, 2, 33 Latineers 3g Commercial Club 3g Honor Society 3g Honor Roil I, 2, 3 MYRTICE SAWYER EIIIIIII ui... ' 'EI lunior Play 21 All-Sctioot Play 2, 3g Senior Play 35 Radio EI. .----- ...num Broadcast 33 Announcements 33 junior Prom Committee 2, - '- Basketball lg Volleyball I. 2 IRENE SHAFER 7 Radio Announcer and Skits Z3 CPS Forensic Tournament 25 5 Glee Club I, 2, 3g Operetta I, 2, 35 Spring Concert I, 2, 33 . Senior Play 33 Tri-l. l, 2, 3, I-li-Life Reporter 23 Commercial THE SMART SHOP CIUIJ 3- FOR YOUNG MEN Q IAMES SHAFER Stanley johnson Orchestra I, 2, 3. - I DUNCAN SHAND Eflmm 1 Illl HE All-School Play Z, 3. gullllllnlh nu cllulnllll IHA In llll llllllllll Milling Puyallup's Foremost Newspaper I be upallup alley rihunr ESTABLISHED I888 and ' 9 PUYALLUP SHOPPERS GUIDE PUBLISHED FRIDAY MORNINCS ir i COMMERCIAL PRINTING Finest Equipped Plant in Puyallup Valley 5 I I7 Second Avenue S. W. Phone 22 : one liundrerl four .............. ..........El 3 Rises X MODERN sasksssst I4 , m Xi? Th M P I Y A Kg EJ e ore articu ar ou r t e o . 5 ' Satisfied FurniturXFro ' A C ' PUYALLUP FUR UREXC . J Dedicated to the service of , Home t SX 300 SO. MERIDIAN ON iA X i Q 1 + . A . 1 . Q Si ifiiifffqfgfmz angst55s:5:2fxLi,.2ifgizizii ' CONGRATULATIONS Q io: SIENKIEWICH 5 ' Entered from St Martins3 Football 33 Track 3 : from ELL-INC SIMQNSEN Football l, 2, 33 All-Conference Honorable Mention 33 5 . Basketball lg Letterman's Club l3 2, 33 League Basketball 23 E FLOWER FOR ALL OCCASIONS T League Basketball Coach l, 23 Cym Class Coach l, 2. 31 Gym E 4 3 . l Class Referee l, 23 33 Class Basketball Referee l, 23 33 Class : L'benY Theater Buildmg Baseball lg Viking Soft Ball Team lj Prom Decoration Come Q 5 mittee 23 Super Varsity Basketball 23 Boys' Club Speakers' E I Committee, Tumbling 33 Class Track l, 23 Hi-Y l, 2, 31 Hi- ,,,,,,,, ....... i E Y Hi-links 23 Class Stunt l, 23 33 Spring Exhibit Worker l, ' 23 junior Play Setting Constructor 2 Eli...... ----I-H El cHAnLss SMITH 5 - Bnntl l, 23 33 Track 23 3, BEST WISHES FROM VEHNE SMITH - Band l 2 3' Track l 2 3' Hi-Y 2' Class Basketball 2' 5 Spring Concert 23 3, Y Y Y Y Y - Buster BTOWI1 Shoe sfOfe Nmnionis snow u I Tri-L l, 2, Treasurer 33 GAA 2, 3, Vice President 33 Q Puvallup- W3Sh'ngtOn Volley Ball l, 23 33 Basketball l, 2, 33 Ping Pong 33 Hiking E l 2, Play Day l, 2, 33 Honor Roll 33 Latineers l, 23 Advertising Q - Manager Senior Play 33 Baseball l, 23 33 Annual Typist 33 Q 5 Advertising Manager Operetta 33 Hi-Life Bookkeeper 3. Emma lmmmmmlg one hundred five MW- Zfeff I Cad. - -'Q,1fff--ff-' Xfc-e1,w,, ,.,,, , Qfhf' El --'-- if ---------'---- -----------'------------ --------' ' - '. 121 of ,,,,.,-,gf f- fzfea, ,f Z JE 1 ' . 4, ,L Qffdw ' fafwef J 'T 7C CoNCRATuLAT1oNs CLASS OF '39 15,2142 ff 1 go!! K. 1 if fa-,'-.,,, ig! f',f,C1,4,vl,f gf, ' Cjfflffi XLV17 ,gf f4,j pg!-W ! x' F'-Ml.- Puyallup Laundr and Dry Cleaners PHONE 222 I ------ 311111111 ........................... 11.1.1.5 DONALD SOMERS 2 E Orchestra lg Band 2, 3g Operetta l, 23 Cleo Club 33 C-ILSON PP-'NTINC SERVICE swprmg Coafefi 1, 2, ag How R011 it 23 Hi-Y 3 Printing and Mimeographing 1 - E l SUSAN SONTRA sg l 1 E Class of 23? - , 1 E Commercial Cluh 3. 3 ' X I 'K 4 E Phone 3076 Puyallbp, Wn. E L , - ' l, , . 1 : k . '. ' 1 . ,. A 1 E1......1.1.1....111.11.1.1........1.,1............ 1.111.1111...................-tlnilx Bull-x SPHQCER -3 ' ' Elm... 1.1-11101111.11.1MJ.1.1.1..i........1.1-1.11.1....f.1.-11.11111.1-1151.ga Foot ll l, 2, 3, Lettermanls Club l, 2, 31 Prom Decorating I ' 5' -A N, ' 9 Commitee 2g Hi-Y l, 25 ClasS Basketball Referee l, 2, 33 , E I 'Q 1 ' , E gy VLCe President of Boys' Clu b3g Operetta 23 League Basket- 1 ' CO'3f'pL'MEN,TSk OF 5 ball l, 2, 31 Gym Claes Coach l, 23 Class Baseball l. 21 Fool- V 'Q ' ' ' Q hall All-Conference l-lonorahle Mention 2, 31 Football Cap- ' ' Q tgih Bglviuhirvr l-ligh League Coach l, 21 Grade Cchool Referee I 'X E . Q j l. 2, 35 Clase Basketball lj Captain of League Team 2, 3, 1 E v : . . f f , , Hafs.ggg5tg,gg,gyaff - , iiifliliy riizfsgaizragil 94,151 on : 1 . , , :W 1 : J X . ' 5 , : X . Q . s ' . 1 1 . Y .1 El..-11.1.1.5 1111... ........i.............. ........q.1.1.1...1l.. Lil' . Q 'Wt - ' Ne WAHNITA SPENCER 5 I?111111111111-111111111 11unl111'1nn1:x:111 ' 1111:1111111n1L1iEI gwee Cmb Ig ODQVCHE I? Sprmg Concert I? Radio Work 21 K 5 yy 1 -' R 5. Anrouncer 2g Prom Hospitality Z5 Tri-L l, 25 Secretarial Club ' ' 8 , Q f-x 2g junior Play 2g Publicity Play Z3 Christmas Play 3g All- ' 'A 'y . X t ichhol Play Zj Student Dramalif Qecretary 33 'ienior Play 3, 1 1 Z , FREIGHT I 1 Usher 2' 90Dl10mr1rr1 HOD Mawr Committee l . '. . I .- ' ' I 315 W 1 - 2 1, , : esf Mann Phone 565 ' ' 5 1 , 1 1, E X, , 1 3 FORREST STACKHOUSE 1 h Daily Trips to Tacoma 5 .Q - Q 5 ' l 1 5 ix Glee Club 2g lunior Prom Committee 23 Property Chairman I '. he 1. , Y ' k X 1 -1 1 1 A- one hundred six 1 ' C a A 1 1 , ' 3 1 ' N K '1 ,I 1, - .1 1 I . 1 1, I 1 ' 11 1 1 ,M , N1 All-School Play 2, 35 Operetta 3g Museum 3 J I X, 1 , ,, ..f1,-4.-14. Sf4 '1 , I' 5 X, ELET.. ..... .... ............. . ...... en... ..... .milf-rf' I Q.. ..... .Q ..................... ........ I Ernest T. Mock, A. I. A. 0 Neison lghorrison, A. I. A. MOCK sl MORRISON L- y ARCHITECTS or if Perkins Building Tacoma, Washington n ' aiu! ARCHITECTS ' - ' PUYALLUP HIGH SCHOOL MAPLEWOOO SC DL j X .Q 5 SPINNINC SCHOOL Q -. fe A '-f---'--- ------'--'-'-- r '---'---- me -121 egg E1 l 3 T. THE INDEPENDENT FUEL CO. ' Puyallup's Oldest Fuel Concern Coal - Standard Burner Oils - Petroleum Briquets PHONES l4lO, 44lO II9 EAST MAIN PUYALLUP, WASHINGTON Ei ........................ ....,... .......... A rnsin sum ig ----- '-'-'---' ii Camp Fire I, 2, 3, Latineers I, 2, 3, Honor Society 31 E : 5232212132 T151 32 ?QS?fQ'FOQtgi' f1RZZlfgB,fZSESll Qi 2' CONCRATULWONS CLASS OF '39 LLOYD srzuz : - BaiojotgalglIie3+ilrwgranrLIral Basketball I, 3, Orchestra I, 2, E 53 Sl.:0 5 all Ill : BARNEY STEMP I Track I, 2, 3, Orchestra I, 2, 3g Band I, 2, Assistant Yell 5 Leader 2, Class Track I, 2, 3, League Basketball I, 2, 3. 5 GENEVIEVE STEMPINSKI El' Orchestra I, 2, 3, Spring Concert, Ooerettag Operetta Costume Committee. El IOHN STRATTON : Entered from Lincoln High School 2, Glee Club 2, 3, Radio, Operetta I, 2. PHYLLIS STUERMER : String Trio Accompanist lj Clee Club lg Spring Concert I, E 2, Ooeretta I, junior Play Advertising Committee I, 21 All- 5 School Play Property Committee 31 All-School Play Costume 2 Committee I, 2, Senior Play Property Committee 3, Prom - Decoration Committee 2, Accompanist I, 2, 3, Secretary Q Senior Class 33 Solo Contest 33 Ping Pong 2, Baseball 23 Q Volleyball Ig Tri-L 3, Latineers I, 21 Orchestra 2, Radio 2, Q 3, Honor Roll Ig Usher 2. Ei rum-i innmnirirn-ini-in iuiriwi Izumi niunri runnin unnnrimiu-iii we Store up Complete Line ot Variety Merchandise I EI lil BEST WISHES TO CLASS OF '39 COLMAN,S SERVICE II7 East Pioneer E one hundred seven l C4-,ljffl If 4 ' W C X, M5 f,..,l,5,.,,lVf-, 5ffPe'4f 1. 1ff,T ff-f if- 'f a-U'-Q' P 4. 4-4341 if f f l., .. ,..,,.,.,f,,.4f .fic . ..,f sf' 'A -' cf I l ' ll: 'll 'll 1 '94 X'f' f 'Mi' 'll 1 Q. Mlm? l f ' V! '14, , ii 'lla' 4 Qakl g I , , Lf' I f 4.1 !jf S .,, 'gif 14,1 . -,,1.ff g A ! nl 1 I , I T. . , I , 1. 4 - 'xapirfl I' ',mJm7 JlJ.l M K Mt V A f 1' X ' 51 1 f, ' . ff . ,G X, A Erin?-ig' IrniiiI-12:71-lun1-iyivilyguiigwuililgruiuiiniprf-igglguhlnvupgi WU...-.,y. .... ...mm-iummmi in--i-'Q , , CONGRAvT1UjQATlONSfl56'.THE',.f' , ,- 'P 5 X A El! f,.4r A : E 5 , 5 vi A Yfj ,E wx E f CLASS! OF '3Q . 1 A ' . 5 , ff ' if 1. - ' -f' Congratulations - 5,1 . , H SCHOOL icnociaigyi d 5 . , : ,Y E V- I .5 . 'uFred 6, ion V -al, : ,X VV wan ,461 4-af A J. L 1 rg- a ' , Best Wisheg minimum nun-ina E J V5 I , 'v 5 5 ' ' f' 'To the ' DR. E. R. - Class of DENTlST E l8V2 S. Meridian Phone l36O E E HOME Pr ---------------f----f----------------------'-----------'----'----------------'---1--f--- OF CONGRATULATIONS - BEST wisi-iss 5 ' TO THE CLASS or '39 - QUAl-'TY GOGDS DRQ IAMES THOMAS 2 DENTIST in 2 236 35, MASON si BURKS li Ei........ ........................ ....................... .. S l ' I 5 i - f puyallup, Vyashmgfon - 5 coNcRATuLATioN 2 W VW r When married buy at J - ....... ............... .....-.EI GYNNS GROCERY' bf - TX Phone 304 sos SQ. Meridian Ig E5 SULLIVAN . 55 Pl-'YallUl3 55 Ba 5 Class Basketball 15 25 Class Track I5 Track .gi 5, l 3 femanis CM, 5, 2, 35 Twkey Tm WMQ5 2, 3 X i.........-.im ...um b... ii..-..................IE ' 4-D RN Z si-no KEUCHI fax . Bousi-I TRANS : 5 5 : VK 2, 35 i- 5 oys' Club Secretary 35 Board of Con- : o overs fhaf Move ' trol 5 Track 5 ootball 35 Basketball 15 2, 35 Posture Q ,ner Z5 Gym Cla oach 25 35 Prom Decorating Commit- ' Q Local and Lon lSfar1Ce Hauling 5 leg ' Class Baskelball l5 Penlarhalon Winner l. ElHlflllllflff ''' ''' I1I11IIII1I1ffHI111I ' ' Illlf'.lE' N l - A E FQ AYDINE'TElT L E E d 15 25 35 Spri oncert I, 25 35 fi nd Con- hi .. Li E cert Commercial Club 5 useum Slaff 3 . Q:AMPBEDf- 5 -f ATTOM : M IE THANASS . -1 2 a l, 2, 35 Hospitality mmi lunior Prom 5 ...H.........r........-H... ...... ........i............ ........iE1 onor R 35 Ho cietyfff' ' e Advertising Sl 2, ' Club Ca ine 5 Library i5 25 on Ticket Fl nk N Mana 35 Orcbesir l, 2, 35 Adveriising Commlllee All- . ' 5 1 INV UR BEST FRI School P 25 35 ' Play commine 2. l 45 I -ax he C ' C e Shop CLAR AUT l E Q Q Commercial Club 2, 3 onor Roll 5 Cilee Cl ' : L. Brenner 5 l 3 S wart E. Q ng Cc 25 35 Opel la l5 5 A 25 35 Bask , im EI ba 25 Base 5 25 Volley 25 35 Pla ay l, 2. I lllllllllllllllll Ill llIIlIIllI!llIlIlIllllllillll ll! ' is one indred G -in Q ...-.A '?, . with X . Van 1 T I .. l P ,, l T uifllrti Vkfwjy 39' sq T Rl X if at f ii f if lx? l l 2 I J . i if-7 ' 1' if Qi , Q AX THC S 'lr I . J 1 ,I fuvuvf 1 I'mmummm..-mrmm nun-'HEI l junior l-liylmicel ,l 2, 33 j 'or Pr fl Yiglgra Commit- E 5 l I ,tee 'r iani2, mg Scnqol PleZWCommi ee 3 Stunt Com- ' BEST WISHES ' l l R!-rnltte Fxosture , 3 Usher I-la dboolg-1 ln ittee 2, Pro- l A Ml gram QtteefSeFnIior Fglay 35 1O2eyPixdt Play 2, Advertising M. F. . I Cxorrut HlLQI't,lrUl' y . , ,N -X' J A l i f ml Q r 3 ATTORNEY T F ' H 'I l A E I ff' im DD Jil ,fl qv: ld ' Nldske-U Committee l, 2,i3,'fGornrnercial 2, 33 Tri-l. 3g E1,....... rn... .... rx Gee ciugfi. X lr z COQAPLIMENTS or I l KATHRYN WALLEN l Girls' Club President 3, Viking Ladies l, 2, 3, Vice Presi- 'E w,..7' ,1rqUNG's APPAREL dent 3, Tri-L 2, 3, Secretary Z, Vice President 3, Latinefqs -u 5 N HQ' 1 l, 2, 3, Vice President i, 3, Honor Society 3, Uniyersixt Q ,' ?UAl-'TY CLOTHES Q Washington Leaders' Conference 3, Ping Pong 2, Vollxeiall ,EAM Iizfmnnmfnuu 2, Posture 2g junior Prom Hospitality Chairman It-Typingv' KV if ' ' gontest 23 Honor Roll l, 2,4 35 Usher l, 2, 3,Q!i??evF'residenLgk Ely-Hri---um---------1ri-31...-...... ..........Q irl Reserve 3, Annual Typist 3. rf I xi AN, Lt, : 2-. ' E ' , Q wit? r-:FRANK A. PORTER : OPAL WALSTON K T. gl- Real Estate Insurance 5 Operetta Costume Committee Z. Nix' If -iw' 5 lO5 2nd AV9- S- W- - it Ei' Frank A. Porter john E. Porter is withlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllig yoiieyisaii i, 2, 3, Baskerbaii i, 2, 3, our i, 2, 3, Baseball 2, 35 Ping Pong 23 Posture 2, junior Play Costume Committee E Z, Latinecrs Club 2, 3, Tri-L lg CAA 2, 3, Glee Club lg Q Operetta l. umm: nnnnmuuununnui-mn nrninyill E 5 COMPLIMENTS 2 E MONTGOMERY'S ia Needle Nook Cr Apparel Shop : El for : E BETTER MERCHANDISE I nm-n :mmmrnmmnnmnmnnnnuuumu mu, iuinrrnurnmmumriinnrninnuuunuuuuninnmn-nmu-mum:nm Congratulations to Class of '39 DRACOBLY Dry Goods Store 2l3 North Meridian E El E1 The Sanitary Plumbing 6' Heating Co. E. .... ..... ....r.......in-.........................nm .... .-.-r.i i 'El E Plumbing and Heating Materials and Supplies - 3l2 south Meridian street E E l-Qlimm IIIrInmmummuummmn nnum-um ri rvlr TQ DR E E 'lllll llll lllllllhlllllllIllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllll IIIIIIIE ' 3 FRANK R. MANNINC Dentist Attorney at Law K ' h I . 5 5 mg ' B dg Phone 25 io9 zna Ave. s. W. Phone so E........................... ......................ilEl E Puyallup Residence l2l5 E .r.--... .rn.in-I.rrmmnmmunmr- rirtrrrrm li-i,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,., ..., .,, .,,.,,, ,,.,,,. ......, ,El COMPLIMENTS El MODEL BARBER SHOP C, H, IOHNSON lt pays to look well jeweler : R. R. HUTCHINS : : ZOO Meridian S. W. E lO7 Znd Ave. S. W. Puyallup, Wash. ....... .. ...... . .... Ei ..... .......,. ...rig one hundred nine .llrl if T T rjfgffaafrlfitw ' I ' W i DENNIS' VALLEY DRUG 5 MEL DENNIS .. ...... Puyallup's New Druggists BOB FAlLOR 5 B nun-irq Ep uuuuln unsung Visit Puyallup's Newest J. H. BUNN Ha,dWa,e W 3'6 Noffh Me d'a'1 Bode Sz Buchanan 5. Puyallup, Washington , Plumbing - Hardware - Sporting Goods h E nlllllnlllvlll I Hlllllllll llllllllll llllllllllll llllllllll Illini JXX 5 I GK E Volleyball 2, 33 Basketball l, Z, 35 Baseball 2, 3g Ping 5' , 'Q' l D , Pong 23 Posture 2g Golf l, 2, 31 Vice President Latineers 35 ye ' Secretary-Treasurer 35 Cilee Club lg Ooeretta lg One-Act Q V I' Ulal'lOl'lS Play Property Committee 23 Junior Play Property Committee E 'Jr' J K 6 Zg Senior Play Property Committee 3g Tri-L l. l ' I -C SS ' I I ' f 1 L ' ,Q ' 0 MARioRiE WENTWORTH ' ,au K Latineers l, 2, 33 Orchestra l, 2, 33 Honor Roll 33 Perfect -xg Attendance IO yearsg Operetta l, 2, 3g Radio Broadcasts 2. K 1 35 Northwest Washington Music Festival 3, ' I Z 'J Vx? ' H RUTH WERNER T D fi' --- q se Commercial Club l, 2, 3g Latineers l. 5 'X e WARREN WEsTso Stage Crew 2, 33 Stage Manager 3g lunior Play 2g All- , School Play 25 Conference Play Contest 23 One-Act Play Con- , test at CPS 2g Band l, 23 Spring Concert l, 25 Radio Broad- Q9 , cast 25 Stunt Committee l, 33 Annual Photography Com- ' Q mittee 2g Christmas Play 3g Costume Committee Operetta lg . . Paul B. Wrlgley E Hey 3, ,Z W X g 2,5 Samuel H. Clements 5 5 5 EARL WHITE 1: E League Basketball l, 2, 33 Football lg Football Manager A35 PN. - Q 2, 35 Viking Knight 3g Letterman's Club 3. 35 t . .q....... ........... ....... N 5 35 ,BBE e hundred ten N H N , +5 , if 23 A We 1 l N BN Sig.. 1 Xfd l. ,, l -alibi! it r ffm JW If L02 if A P H 7!f7f LJ'7'5fQlCf9ffd7 '45 1 5 nr 5 5 7f f ' - f , . f , , -. , Y, X X iff 2 . l If LI f ff Q -' , 3 - f' 1 ,' , , r '- 7 P L f if 3? ,J , f f , A ilgi 5fL,7f7L,,c,.L. ,Af flair, . ff if If A?f.r.4 fl-.5-L L f' 5 f- 1,1 , ,L . , , i 'sf f 04 -I5 ,aff f 1 . ,ff ' ' -5 'ff ff? 'f 0 f! flIf ' 'A ' 'ff' if-44 'fw ffl 'fi 'ff Congratulations from . K gf 1, .Q ' 5. ,L yjgf 1 266 .f ical Za-fy-071 MV' 5' K 2 l QIJE l f CITY MEAT MARKET f , e f ,er ,Q ff if fffMfLQ4f, i 1 : ' ' 2 I f-OOC' , ' w. M. zieuef K y 5 C' Cv? ' A ' ff A 5 if f f . QUALITY Mens ff f 5, , ,f I : c , , ,- N r If f 7 E PHONE 409 its PC?- d EKL ueen Clty Frult 81 Vegetable Department it 5 ' , ,, vig A X FRED SR. DeBON FRED jR. 't'- ' i 'rt' - N PUYALLUP, WASHINGTON ', ' V' Lx! Z Q Q ff- , RUTH WINGER W nuns-mann urnnnl-nag T X P L! Volleyball I, 25 junior Play Advertising Committee 25 junior I , 3 ' If ,I Play Ticket Committee 25 All-School Play Advertising Com- - ' 5 ' TX. 'ttee 25 l-liAl.'fe Ad Staff l, 2, 35 Lbrar l, 2, 35 Trl-L l, : Engl Office 35 X All-School Play Advertising Committee 35 S H I N G T 0 N E Chairman Ooeretta Costume Committee 3 H A R D W A R E I 5 LORRAINE WOILLARD C 0 M P A N Y E Commercial Club 2, 35 Secretary 35 Basketball 2, 35 Volley- 'A,r?' ball 2, 35 Ping Pong 25 Bicycling 35 Hiking 25 Posture 2, 35 I GAA 35 junior Play 25 Play Day 35 Annual 35 Baseball 3, f ' FREDA WOLF 5 , , Athletic Goods Baseball l, 25 Girl Scout 25 Hi-Life Reporter 25 Museum Staff Treasurer 35 Honor Roll. DELTA CLARA woR1'HLEY Home w0fk5h0P ciee Club i, 2, 3, opefena 1, 2, 3, Spring concert i, 2, 3, M3Ch 'e Y Honor Roll l, 2, 35 Honor Society 3. DELBERT YAHN Football 2, 35 Track 2, 35 Lettermarfs Club 2, 35 Prom Decoration Committee 25 League Basketball Referee 3 924 Pacific Ave. TACOMA CENEVIEVE YEAGER ' Honor ROI' 2- one hundred eleven lt i .4 W' :np- ,- fam, f - 77' -a in f - W .V H , l ' fu I ff , M, - in ' X X xf' Q., f il O 5 .. . ...V S N E rf- .--- lm:--II--ummm--1nmlInII1n1IHuI-Inun...mm-nm--mm E ,,, 5 , .A Q, xg W f cf 'W' Q , CONGRATULATIQNS' ' SH JJ by Yu 53 and best wishes for success fo the W . 17' I939 graduates of Puyallup High. U27 N 'fxffkf x , ,J u if ,X ,f X? X, is ' J Q gf ' 'X ' I ' rl ' I ' X , JDIIIIQUII-LDA af I 'N 1'1Y as LUIIIPII 'R T Printing - Lithographing - Bookbinding NPN .FSH HX 726 Pacific Ave. TACOMA BR d y2238 'X ................. ........... . ...................... . fa X 'Ng Rgllmglwaiybl gggmog h p fb C C e d gusp N 1902 il 1 EIGL? f a 'fa J w gas ,lei xDxkw7f,,, xg W-3, 'J- - . ,X ., f N. fy,- L, f
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