Riverside High School - Mercury Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI)

 - Class of 1929

Page 1 of 180

 

Riverside High School - Mercury Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1929 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 180 of the 1929 volume:

% JHL kSi i Sff OH THE MERCURY 1923 Published By RIVCRri E)E tiier cticci. cf A ILWAWKEE FCREWCRD It in later years these pages brin£ back some memories of the jcys the trials and the friendships ef yeur hifji schcol lite then they will have fulfilled their purpcse egipjHHOTajfflfflaH a V. T T Eg CCN THE JCHCCL RIVE lit IDE INtTCUCTION THE TENIOET THE Tt DENT ACTIVITIEJ CfcCANIZATICNf JCHCCL LIFE ATHLETIC HUMOR .(xSL- , DEDICATION In recognition et unselfish service during Hs twenty live years ef leadership and in gratitude tor guidance during cur own years here we dedicate this Mercury to 6eorge A. Chamber lain cur beloved principl In the few short years of our stay at Riverside, we cannot help but learn to ad- mire and esteem Mr. Chamberlain, — not only for what he, as principal, does for us and means to us, but also for what Mr. Chamberlain, the man, really is. Capable farseeing, broad-minded, encouraging, pleas- ant, this versatile man is the most prominent figure in our school life. Because of our appreciation for the prin- cipal and our admiration of the man, the life story of Mr. Chamberlain should be doubly interesting to us. Mr. Chamberlain ' s high school days were spent at the Woonsocket, Rhode Is- land High School. After graduating there he attended Harvard University, where he received his A.B. degree in 1891. For the next two years he assisted in the Harvard Physics Laboratory. Soon afterward he started his career as a member of the facul- ty of East Side High, in the physics and chemistry department. During the period 1892-1902 he was coach of the football and baseball teams, adviser on the Mercury, and coach of the winning intersocietv debate team of 1902. In 1903, the responsible position of prin- cipalship descended upon Mr. Chamber- lain. Immediately after his appointment, he introduced several changes which, though then considered rather radical, extreme, and unfounded, have since proved sound and worthwhile. Among these was the development of the nine different depart- ments under their respective chairmen who work with the principal. Another change was the classification of students into homo- geneous groups, according to ability to learn rapidly or slowly. This was the basis of our present x , y , and z classes. 1912, the year in which the new high school — the present building, — was erected, marked a turning point in the history of Last Side. If it had not been for Mr. Chamberlain ' s foresight and keen inter- est in the welfare of the school, the his- tory of Riverside might have been consid- erably different. For it was due to Mr. Chamberlain ' s efforts that the new school was built, not in the middle of the lot, but to one side, thus allowing plenty of space for our spacious and beautiful athletic field — and providing for our unusual athletic development. The many banners, cups, and other victory trophies which we now display in our halls are silent monuments to Mr. Chamberlain ' s vision. But Mr. Chamberlain has not been in- fluential in these fields alone; fof Riverside today holds a scholastic position unique among the high schools of the city and of the whole state. From schools all over the -country Mr. Chamberlain receives letters expressing congratulations for the superior work of our graduates. Mr. Chamberlain, however, has found time for many outside activities. Recently he has been appointed Chairman of the Educational Committee of the Milwaukee chapter of the Izaac Walton League. He- is an active member of the Wisconsin State Board of Control, supervising state high school contests for 24 years. He has been instrumental in developing the present rules and systems of supervision. He has found time for community service also. For a number of years he has been a member of the City Club Committee on Civil Service, which introduced and secured the passage of a bill to improve Milwaukee County Civil Service. Mr. Chamberlain is also a member of the Wisconsin High School Principals ' Association, the City Club, the National Educational Society, and the Harvard Club. Thus Mr. Chamberlain, the man and the principal, can be well considered a suc- cessful man in every sense of the word. And so he is today — an inspiration and an ideal for all his students to admire, honor, and emulate. Milwaukee, April 1, 1929. To the Students of Riverside High Schooi;- A quarter of a century of faithful and efficient service in any undertaking is, in itself, cause for congratulation. But when this serrice has been unselfishly rendered to the community and has influenced for the better, the lives of thousands of young men and women, the occasion is worthy of more than ordinary tribute. As a graduate of old Sast Division High School just twenty-fire years ago, I had the pleasure of being not only in Ur. Chamberlain ' s classes, but later, of profiting by his able direction of the school as its principal. One forgets much of the detail of school life as he becomes absorbed in his life work and after twenty-five years, recollections are largely the lasting impressions made by people rather than by books. I think of Kr. Chamberlain in my high school days, as a helpful counselor, an efficient and square administrator, and a friend. His sports- manlike administration of athletic affairs has probably left a more vivid and helpful example for every day conaact than any other. Let me express to hira my congratulations and hopes that Riverside will be so fortunate as to have his tfuidlng hand for many years to come. Very truly yours. l Pffa-Apu; Class of 1904. t M try fthe school iHi ' Hin, RIVEEflDE Let us consider Riverside from the view of a great sociable family. It is exceeding- ly difficult for one whose very nearness does not give him the proper perspective to write about it logically and convincingly. How- ever our school has a certain atmosphere peculiar to itself, composed of two ele- ments which are found in the ideal family circle. The first is sociability, the camaraderie, the unity that comes of friend- ly coordination ; the second, the spirit of freedom. Probably in no other school is there seen the easy, hearty friendship so prevalent in Riverside from early in the morning, through the weary eighth hour class. Recently a substitute teacher, ac customed to a school of rigid discipline, in which there could be no sociability, and aghast at our noisy good fellowship be- tween classes, pronounced it prattle, not to be tolerated in a high school. The very thing she was denouncing is one of the in- fluences which have made study at River- side so delightful. A direct outgrowth of this sociability is the freedom we are priveleged to enjoy. It is primarily a freedom of thought and expression. The high school student en- joys nothing more than to formulate and express unrestrained his own ideas which are the desirable result of study. As socia- bility and freedom are the basis of democ- racy in the country, so they are in a school -a- r f Sfc4 . of democratic organization. Our school is composed of many classes ranging from wealth to poverty. This condition only proves more conclusively that democracy prevails at Riverside, for this mingling tends to strengthen the principles of equality. It is to be expected that a family of such sturdy foundation the individual will be in no way hampered. In fact, the pupil is even helped to express his individualism, for Riverside strives in every way possible to prevent her students from being formed in a common mold. The problem is to find a means to bring out the differences and abilities of every student to his own best advantage. This heavy burden falls for the % most part on the teachers. That they rea- lize that they are not merely machines teaching stupid children how to master certain things, but rather that they are verj important factors in teaching self expres- sion and in revealing the latent abilities of every pupil is to the great advantage of the school. Unlike many of the modern youths, we still cling to our ideals and the individual- ism that we so proudly possess is of prime importance in the shaping of these ideals. Our athletic traditions are so glorious and have been recounted so many times that it seems needless to develop them thoroughly again. For the last twenty-five years, they have signified unbounded achievement. It has made no difference whether we have won or lost as long as we have attained what we have set up as our goal, hard mus- cles, honor, sportsmanship, and good fel- lowship. Glorious as our athletic tradi- tions are, our traditions of scholastic achievement are of greater significance. While the former show that we have suc- ceeded in the extra curricular activities, the latter indicate that we are justified in our verv existence as a school. Thus Riverside, by its own splendid ex- ample, has laid the foundation in our hearts for an ideal organization of human relationship, which, after all, is the purpose of education. Let us hope that we will prove worthy of the training and care which Riverside has given us. 3 INSTRUCTION ECCLRy English WIWKIIIN HI n-lNttll In order to equip himself properly tor delving into the field of literature, the stu- dent like the me- chanic must have the proper tools. When he enters the first year ' s work, t h e fundamentals, grammar and composition are presented. Poetry offers a new phase of interest. One Hundred Narrative Poems, awakens an appreciation of poetical expression. This new companion leads the student on to new heights in Scott ' s Lady of the Lake. Another offering with which the student battles, presents itself in the form of Ameri- can poetry. In succession the student wres- tles with Chaucer ' s interesting Canterbury Tales, Wordsworth ' s deep appreciation of nature, Keat ' s charming contributions and finally the thrilling tales of Tennyson. Our impression of the outstanding les- sons in prose are made by the Odyssey in which Homer gives a vivid description of life in the ancient world : by the human ' Aep i-C Tagt I igblcen THE MERCURY Department story of Silas Mar- ner, as told by George Eliot ; and by the char- acter of Sydney Car- ton in that ever-liv- ing Tales of Two Cities. The field of dra- ma is brought to us in A Midsummer Night ' s Dream, in our Freshman year to give us a final thrill of fairyland before we became dignified Sophomores. The beauty of Macbeth is matched by the in- tensitv of the subject matter which Shakes- peare gives us in that famous drama. Our powers of expression and appreciation of verse of prose, and of drama have been awakened to a degree of usefulness. As Seniors we are enabled to apply this knowl- edge in our speech course, which includes many types of expression : plays, poetry, drama, extemporaneous speaking, debating, and the study of parliamentary law. A t f fcERHN« I MMtW t f.M.ftr ' - . Page Nineteen THE MERCURY mch v ni y n c iNTO n Commercial Department The commercial course equips students with the fundamentals of a business career. The student receives not only the Three R ' s of business, but also experience which is a most important element when he ap- plies for a position. As a Freshman he struggles through the depths of per cent and easy multiplications in Commercial Arithmetic; and ways of handling money and merchandise, and deal- ings with banks in Business Forms. As a Sophomore he learns of the various industrial and trade problems of the world in general by studying Commercial Geogra- phy, and is taught how to keep a set of books in business by the art of Bookkeeping. When a Junior, he continues his art of bookkeeping and flounders through the principles of Shorthand and the mysteries of the typewriter. ?W I unit TtlE MERCURY In concluding his high-school career, he learns the laws of business, Commercial Law : the art of being a salesman and an advertiser, Salesmanship and Advertising: the principle of business organizations, Bus- iness Organization: the methods, machines, and principles used in the modern office. Office Practice: and concludes his study of Shorthand and Typewriting. In Office Practice the student studies the ins and outs of the posting machines, as well as an excellent course in filing and general practice in an office. 1 he purpose of such a course is to pro- mote the business career and aid the stu- dents who expect to earn their own living after leaving high-school ; however, these are not the only pupils who take these sub- jects, for those who expect to attend college elect them to help them work their wa through college and to aid them in their general college work. A R. CAKUCN MISS PRI6NO •. , ' Twtnty-o THE MERCURY History Department 1 ime is as nothing in the study of his- tory. When very, very young — when we were Freshies, to be exact — we followed the rise of man from prehistoric time to the downfall of the Roman. In five months we watched him progress through 50,700 years. In the next five months we saw him mark time for a few centuries and then rise to new heights. The next whole school year we studied the problems of Europe from the time of Louis XIV and his absolute monarchy to the great War that was to make the world safe for democracy. Now came the subject dearest to our young American hearts, the story of Colum- bus ' new-found land and the development of it up to the time when Our Roys joined the fight of war on war. The last year we spent in the present and looking to the future. The problems of the citizen, social and political, were studied and manv times almost satisfactorily solved. t4i33 V oodhousc ' While we read history, we make his- torv. Page Twenty -iv o TtlE MERCURY Foreign Languages Many students at Riverside are taking a modern foreign language. While doing this, they become better acquainted with their own language, grammar, the deriva- tion of words, and peculiarities and defi- ciencies. Incidentally, they learn some- thing about the geography, history, litera- ture, and customs of the lands whose lan- guages they are studying. French, and sometimes German, is nec- essary in preparing for certain professions. Tihose who take German for two years at Riverside, have a good foundation, and with further study will be able to read the works of Schiller, Goethe, and other authors. French and Spanish writings will attract others of the foreign language stu- dents. During the first two semesters of modern language study, the students spend most of their time on grammar, but during the third and fourth semesters they study short stories, which they translate and discuss, and which they are required to tell without lapsing into English. Mistakes made in translations provide amusement and laughter almost daily for advanced classes. T1 K1L Ha Klmt r„j. I MtHty-tbrti THE MERCURY l EAXTf U MISS Hcr y Latin Department Latin occupies a place by itself among the languages. It lis a subject in which one not only learns facts, but also acquires culture. The first year of Latin is spent in study- ing grammar and the foundation of the language. In the second year, we study the works of Julius Caesar, the interesting narration of the Gallic Wars. The third year is devoted to the study of the orations of Cicero, one of the finest orators the world has ever known. And last, as Sen- iors, we study Virgil ' s Aeneid, the story of the wanderings of the pious Aeneas in efforts to found a city for the Trojans whose own city had been destroyed. Our Latin classes are beneficial in many ways. We not only acquire a general knowledge of the language, which helps us in our every-day reading and speech, but we also become acquainted with many inter- esting facts and characters of history. With the constant questions and discussions be- tween the students and teacher, we find that in a very enjoyable manner, we have obtained a certain amount of learning and culture that can be found in no other sub- ject. i , l ,, nly-jmn THE MERCURY Mathematics Department The first year student meets a course in mathematics designed to appeal to him as worth while. He makes graphs, interprets them, and develops an understanding of this method of representing statistics. The essential principles of Algebra are involved and learned in connection with this ma- terial. Beside formal demonstrative Geometry, work in construction and measurement is given. Numerous direct applications have been found in many fields, such as survey- ing, carpentry design, architecture, and phy- sics. Out of doors, heights and distances are found by the direct application of nu- merous geometric principles, and the knowl- edge acquired in the class room is put to immediate use. In the more advanced Algebra and Trig- onometry, the use of the slide rule is learned, and the student going into engi- neering has this tool for rapid calculation at his command. The surveyor ' s transit is put in the hands of the Trigonometry stu- dent. Thus, the former purely theoretical course is made a practical one. V MIX HCWE HI IESF f A ■St MM WW - I § , i -f .... — Iv flEil i ' ■iHfc ' 1 5P5 wCmmmm «- A ' M If lit X.M fl U. MB 4jmmm 1 m- mm%tm Page I it atty-fii THE MERCURY Art Department The activities of the art department are many. The art students, under the direc- tion of Miss Skinner take care of the art work and cartoon work for the Mercury magazine and the Merc Annual. The scenery for the Junior-Senior play and the decorations for the prom are designed and painted by the art students. Posters for the various clubs and activities and slides advertising movies and matinee dances orig- inate in 313. The art faculty teaches everything from drawing to craft work, which includes leather tooling, batiks, and metal work. Drawing I and II are devoted to learn- ing the principles underlying drawing. Some of the problems are studies of color, principles of design, free hand drawing which includes nature study, object draw- ing, and art appreciation. The second year ' s study includes color, more advanced design (city planning), interior decoration, costume design, and free hand drawing. The third and fourth years are much the same except that the work is more special- ized and advanced. It is these advanced pupils who do most of the Mercury work. p,gi ;«■• . ,- THE MERCURY Music Department Riverside is noted for its success in musi- cal activities. A great measure of the suc- cess is due to our musical directors, Miss Ellen Sargent and Mr. Schenk. The Riverside orchestra is state cham- pion. It will be interesting to note that Riverside will always remain sate cham- pions inasmuch as there will never be an- other state contset to determine our succes- ■pmww 1 Several members of the orchestra were chosen as members of the all-city high school orchestra. This organization was picked from the various orchestras of the city. The music appreciation classes of the school during the past semester have become familiar with the various instruments of a symphony orchestra and have studied the history and development of orchestral mu- sic. This study of the music masters is an interesting course to all music-lovers. The chorus studied Coleridge-Taylor ' s cantata, Hiawatha ' s Wedding-Feast. Riverside ' s orchestra was honored by being chosen to accompany this chorus of eight hundred voices which formed such a de- lightful part of the music festival. The band was especially prominent dur- ing the football season, when it played at the games. HI ACCENT Page Twenty-seven THE MERCURY Science Department Riverside students who take science may rightly be proud. We are told that no school has better equipment, and the students concede that neither has any school a better corps of science teachers. In the first year, while the student ab- sorbs general science, he has no extra lab- oratory periods. He learns a little about all the sciences, which knowledge will help him understand the life about him. If not discouraged, he will next year stu- dy objects such as frogs and flowers, in short, all life. After accumulating this knowledge, he tackles chemistry, which is the science treat- ing of changes, disintegration, and combina- tions of different kinds of matter. Later the senior must push this informa- tion further back in his brain to enable him to find room for the vast scope of physics. This field is so wide that it is hard to define further than to say that it explains the forces and forms of energy. It is through the perception and under- standing of its principles that the marvelous inventions of our present day are possible. Although science is as old as the human race, its scope has been enormously extended within very recent years. i.. ! n ,u i -eight THE MERCURY Manual Arts Every boy has at one time or another tinkered with his toy tools and wished that he had tools like dad ' s, and every girl has made so-called pie, small and crude but good just the same, and wished she could take her mother ' s place as head cook of the household. Our school has three departments in which the students are taught how to use their hands. There is a large shop for the boys in which ev erything is manufactured from candlesticks to davenport tables. The fellows are taught the use of machinerj in woodworking and also the way to duplicate the work of the machines by hand. There is also a cooking laboratory for girls and boys. Here is made everything from ordi- nary biscuits to hot, juicy pies. The third section of Riverside ' s manual training bat- tery is the sewing department. The girls do weaving and plain and fancy sewing making their own costumes and costumes for the little brother, besides scarfs, cush- ions, and other useful articles. And after one sees the number engaged in manual arts, it would take courage to say that all young people are helpless around home. .Miff EEATir wuf on 11 a Page Twenty-nine THE MERCURY Physical Education Physical education or gym as it is more commonly called, is one of the few subjects everyone enjoys. All students are required to take it for one and a half years unless excused because of physical disability. The classes are the same length as those of regular subjects, and are under the direc- tion of Airs. Fuller and Mr. Hezelton. The girls ' work includes group exercises and games, volleyball, baseball, and athletic events. The classes are divided into groups of about ten or fifteen each, which are under the direction of upper class girls, and compete with each other. In volley- ball the ten best players are selected from each class, and on open house night, these teams play for the Freshman class cham- pionship. The winirng team plays a group of ten assistants, and usually loses. The boys ' work is like that of the girls ' , but they have in addition track, soccer foot- ball, and basketball. Their classes are also divided and under the direction of an upper classman. During the warm weather, both boys and girls have all work outside, and the boys sometimes go swimming in the river. Ptffl ' Thirty THE MERCURY Library and Office Few people seem to realize what a very important part the office and the library play in the smooth running course of life at Riverside. To Miss Dohman and Miss Kiefendorf, who have general charge of the office, we owe a great deal for the efficient manage- ment of the school in its business (and sometimes social) functions. For the office may be well considered the hub — the heart of Riverside, so important are its duties. The daily attendance is checked here; pro- grams are arranged ; lockers are assigned ; and lost and found department is main- tained ; and what is very important, com- plete records, scholastic as well as oherwise, are kept of every student. Like the office, the library plays a very important part in the life of Riverside. The functions of the library are many. It con- tains seventeen thousand volumes, to which about two thousand are added annually ; it keeps as many as fifty different maga- zines in the magazine rack, and files sev- eral of the more important newspapers. About twenty seven thousand books are borrowed during the school year. Much credit and appreciation is due to Miss Paff, the librarian, for her consistent service and for her sympathetic coopera- tion with the students at all times. 4 Ml ICB HA.N HI P4FF m Va%f Thirty -one FdiiiuT Cr I£9Z ' SrStt n?t REHE4K 4L f ' oxr Tbirly-lu THE MERCURY February Class Officers J. MJ rAT C.BCDI G J.PtSNlR Jane B. Muskat President Cyril Boding Vice-president Janet Penner Secretary-Treasurer June Class Officers OVENDELELFG E. ANDEPLA R.AVCCNEY George Wendelburg.. Eleanor Sanders Richard Mooney President Vice-president ..Secretary-Treasurer Pant! Thirty-three THE MERCURY Class Will We, the class of 1929, do bequeath and bestow the following single, various, and sundry traits and properties. Jane Muskat leaves her popularity to the teachers and her good marks to the students for use during four marks. Ralph Wettstein bestows his supply of Jokes on Johnny Penner ; he leaves them to a freshman because he feels he may be able to appreciate them. James Keyes bequaths his power with women to John Schafer. Georgiana Mockley and Janet Block leave Bob Penner and David Xunn, respec- tively. George Wendelburg and Fred Cramer are each leaving one of Mercury ' s sandals (plus the overhead and other appendages) to their successors. Eunice Eickelberg leaves her golden hair to some freshman who tries to obtain that color. Elmer Winter bestows his booming voice on the next president of Cue Club. Cyrus Edmonds desires to leave behind him his power to see and yet not to see, to know and yet not to know. There doesn ' t seem to be any aspirant for this doubtful charm ; so Cy will probably have to keep it. Dorothy Aarons donates her crowning glory to her dear Alma Mater to be used in making football chrysan- themums. Eddie Roberts and Darb Ewald pass on to their successors two pair of orange plus fours, gloves, socks, and shoes. Edith Fischer is the lucky heiress; she will get Tottie Geiger ' s string of Junior admirers. John How-duz-ie Ball turns over to Virginia Anderson a part knowledge of his mystics on the condition that she disclose none of his secrets. Janet Marks receives two down-cast eyes from Francis Barnes. Girlie Casper and Jo Innes say goodbye to ttheir locker. They hate to part with it because it has so many memories of eloquent swains woven around it. Millie Oberst leaves her excellent portrayal of Huguette and Mrs. Van Winkle to shine as beacons to future members of Cue Club. Bob Mann leaves five sticks of partly-chewed gum. John Koehler and Neal Drought leave a recipe for generosity — a formula which they used very extensively with their cars during football season. (We don ' t blame them though; most of the girls were pretty keen ). Al Biermann broken-heartedly gives up his place behind the bars of the book- store to Tom Terry. Chet Hitchcock, Grace Gore, and Bernice Sanders leave such a gap in the quartet that it is no longer a quartet but a solo. George Huebsch wills his book on How to Become Famous in Ten Lessons to Estelle Montwid. Laura Sanders was going to bequeath her kind smile to Mary Louise Macka but decided to leave Kerwin Knoelke to the ravages of underclasswomen. Page Thirty-four THE MERCURY Thomas Fairchild, Jerome Mehlman, and Richard Mooney tun over their famous debate to Crescent and Orient to be put aside now for use when the spirit of rivalry between the clubs dies out, wlhich time they earnestly hope will never come. Ethel Knebel bestows on any underclasswomen her own book, Equal Club Rights for All. Doodie Patton leaves her sweetness to be combined with the good looks Francis Vallee leaves, to any one desirous of obtaining popularity. Peg Fox and Victoria Huntzicker, with sighs of relief, leave the Senior Quo- tations and all emotions — good and bad — which the aforesaid may have aroused. Alice Borchert leaves her deep, booming voice and her dramatic talent to future speech talents. Girls struggling with lhalf-long hair are fortunate because Gladys Kaestner leaves some of hers for them. Harold With row bequeaths his secretarial ability along with his football prowess to anyone struggling with parliamentary law. The rest of the class has settled its affairs in individual wills, but as a whole we do bequeath our wisdom, glory, and fame to be saved for incoming freshmen. Our scholastic successes we leave to the Juniors. We leave the world to the Sopho- mores. In witness whereof, We, the said Class of 1929, have hereunto set our hand and seal at Milwaukee, Wisconsin, this bright day of June, A. D., 1929. CLASS OF 1929 Page Thirty-five CLAJ7 POEM Allwerd grow trite and rtllted in your prai e And reason flavor net the entirnent. A phrare extravagant extcli your wayr E ' en, though love and gratitude are blent Let at £c lat£hlri£ ar ve turn away To Join the rhadowf and tine echoei old, And realize hew little we car ray Of all the thoiicjitf and memorlex we hold levering of friendly tier cur fcremc t wee Thcucfi cut-worn werdr tc zorrcw give the lie Be tter in Ji lent eloquence tc go The beauty cf filence llvei, while word seen die. Jo then, let cur Impctericy tc ipeak A tribute be, a pledge grown never weak. V. huntzicker - AVFcx fuse Tbirty-ii ' . THE MERCURY PAUL E NDERSON Andy- Elective Course Bavtlett Avenue School Track ' 26; Shovel Club ' 28. The time demands l( Tall men. sun-crowned who live above the fog. BERNARD A. BALL B ' r ? ' e , Elective Course Holy Rosary Schoo Latin Club; Track ' 28; Senior Football; Shovel Club; C. C. C. .M..st men (until by losing rendered sager) Will back their own opinions by a wager. ROY E. BECKER I . I ? ed , Elective Course Center Stree School Shovel Club ' 24; Newsboy ' s Club ' 24, ' 25; String Quartette ' 27. ' 28; Basketball ' 27. 28; Orchestra ' 24, ' 28. . . , . The man that hath no music in himself. Is tit for treasons, stratagems, and spoils. MINNIE M. BELTZ O Min Min Science Course Hillsettlement School, Cataract. Wis. Camaradarie ' 25. ' 28; Shovel ' 26, ' 27; G. A. A. ' 25, ' 27, ' 28; Science ' 27, ' 28; Merc Monitor ' 28; Student Board ' 27, ' 28. Whence is thy learning? hath thy toil O ' er books consumed the midnight-oil? JANET BLOCK -! an ' , ' ivc.i,e course Hartford Avenue School Cue Club ' 25, ' 26, 27; Shovel Club; Art CVub ; Cam- araderie ' 25, ' 28. Oh ! She was good as she was fair Nunn — NFunn on earth above her. CYRIL J. BODING Cy Accounting Course Yeatman High. St. Louis Shovel Club; Band; Football ' 27, ' 28 E; Intramural Basketball; Vice President. Senior Class ' 29: Stu- dent Board Monitor; Mercury Monitor; Ticket Sale. Rip Van Winkle. The man that blushes is not cpnte a brute. EUGENE C. BOSL Gene Elective Course Hartford Avenue School S.P.Q.R. ; Band ' 25; ' 26. ' 27, ' 28; Shovel Club ' 28; Cue Club ' 28, ' 29; Science Club ' 27, ' 28; Vice President ' 28; Jr. Sr. Play ' 28; Christmas Play ' 28; Jr. Sr. Play ' 29; Class Football ' 28. If you believe in fate tn your harm, believe it. at least, for your good. JOHN H. CHURCH Johnnie Elective Course Mukwonago Public School Shovel ' 27, ' 28; Once in a Blue Moon ; Student Board ' 27; Glee Club ' 25. But whatever his weight in pounds, shillings, and ounces, He always seems bigger because f his bounces. Page Thirty-seven THE MERCURY JOSEPH J. DOBERNIG Joey- Accounting Course Third Street School Football ' 27, ' 28; Shovel Club ' 26, ' 28. lie gave them the best that he had. DARBY A. EWALD Darb Manual Arts Course Bartlett Avenue School Cheer Leader; Mercury Monitor; Basketball; Shovel Club; Band; Class Football; Interclass Track. Towering in the confidence of eighteen years. HAROLD C. FREUNDT Harry Accounting Course Third Street School Student Board; Shovel Club; Track Manager; Foot- ball Manager; Football Ticket Sales; Rip Van Wi nkle Ticket Sales; Poster Work; Valedictorian: National Honor Society. Love seldom haunts the breast where learning lies, And Venus sets ere Mercury can rise. LEONA B. FREY Elective Course St. Roberts Shovel Club; Camaraderie; G.A.A.; Household Arts Club. What persons are by starts, they are by nature. MARGARET C. GALLOGLY Marge English Course Holy Rosary Camaraderie; Shovel; Household Arts Club; Jr. Sr. Play 28. She has her beauty and her youth and some house- wifely skill. ' JEANETTE T. GRUENWALD Jinny Elective Course Brown Deer Public School Camaraderie; Allen Club; S.P.Q.R. Don ' t swallow every yarn you hear. STELLA M. HEINZ Elective Course Third Street School Camaraderie; German Club; Treasurer ' 27; Vice President ' 28. The winds and waves are always on the side of the ablest navigator. ROBERT C. KAENTJE Elective A willing heart adds feather to the heel. 1 ' cK ' Thirly-lifhl THE MERCURY Hedda Fratney Street School 28; Household Arts ' 25. HERTHA KARSTEN Stenographic Course Camaraderie ' 25, ' 26, ' 27 ' 26, ' 27; Shovel ' 26, ' 28. Howe ' er you try with douse or dope You cannot change the Aethrop. JANE KIEL History Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Science ' 27, ' 28; Shovel ' 26. ' 27. ' 28; Prom Decorations ' 27; Jr. Sr. Play Scenery ' 28; G.A.A. ' 26; Art ' 26. ' 27. ' 28. Wherever I am. there ' s always Pook. There ' s always Pook and me. RUTH ANN KIESEL Ruthie Elective Course Bartlett Avenue School Shvel Club; Camaraderie; G. A. A.; Mercury Staff. Who shall dispute what the reviewers say, Their word ' s sufficient. HEINZ WILLIAM KLUGE Bill 57 Accounting Course Fratney Street School Shovel Club ' 28, ' 29; Art Club ' 28. ' 29; Bookstore ' 27, ' 28; Bookstore Manager ' 28. ' 29; Track; Jr. Sr. Play. Ticket Sale. Reserve is the truest expression of respect toward those who are in its objects. ARTHUR L. KRUEGER Shriner Art Elective Course Center Street School Freshman Football ' 25; Football E , ' 26, ' 27. ' 28, Captain ' 28; Track ' 27. Track E . ' 28; Student Board; President of Student Council; Shovel Club; Basketball ' 28. ' 29. The voice of the schoolboy rallies the ranks. Play on! Play on! And play the came. IRENE E. KUEHN Stenographic Course Third Street School Camaraderie ' 25, ' 26. ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; Shovel Club ' 25: German Club ' 26, ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; Treasurer ' 29. The sunlight in her hair that lie- Seems from an early sea. FREDERICK W. LANDER Fred Freddie Accounting Course Bartlett Avenue School Bookstore ' 27; Manager ' 28, ' 29; Shovel Club; Art Club. . , 1 think I am . ticket man. Who ' s selling tickets — please. HARLAN LEVIN Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Class Football ' 26. ' 27. ' 28; Intersociety Debate ' 28; Orient Debating Society. Treasurer ' 27; Vice President ' 28; Latin Club ' 26. ' 27, ' 28; Glee Club ' 28. Ewa-ge! My little owlet. Page Thirty-nil THE MERCURY FRIEDA O. LORENZ Fritzie Stenographic Course Framey Street School G.A.A. ; Camaraderie ; German Club ; Class Day Committee; Open House Program ' 25. It is good to rub and polish our brain against that of others. WILLIAM C. LUEBKE Elective Course Shovel Club ' 26, ' 27, ' 28. No other knight in all the land Could do the things which he could do. Bill- Third Street School LORRAINE M. LUEDTKE Noney Wayne History Course Bartlett Avenue School C amaraderie ' 25, ' 26; G.A.A. ; Shovel Club. Her very frowns are fairer far Than smiles of other maidens are. KURT F. MARTENS Fritz Elective Course Jerusalem Lutheran School Student Board ; German Club; Treasurer of Ger- man Club ' 28 ; Assistant Advertising Manager of the Mercury ' 29. What should a man do but be merry? • MABLE L. MEYER Stenographic Course Camaraderie ' 27, ' 28. To laugh one needs flesh and blood. Mabs Green Bay Avenu; School ELEANOR O. MORRISON Elective Course Fratney Street School Art Club ; Science Club ; Home Economics Club ; President ' 28, Camaraderie; G.A.A.; Shovel Club. Nothing lovelier can be found In a woman than t study household good. JANE BURGESS MUSKAT Latin Course Hartford Avenue School Art Club; Allen Club; Student Board; G.A.A.; S.P.Q.R.; Mercury Staff; Art Editor ' 28; Mer- cury Annua l Staff ' 27. ' 28; Shovel Secretary ' 28; Cue Club President ' 28 ; Camaraderie President ' 28; President Senior Class; Thanksgiving Play ' 25. ' 27 ; Christmas Pageant ' 27 ; If I Were King ; Rip Van Winkle ; May Fete 27; Chair- man of Junior Prom Committee. ' Tis the eternal law That first in beauty should be hrst in might. JANET M. PENNER Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel ; Camaraderie ; G.A.A. ; Art Club; Allen Club; Mercury Staff; Student Board. Gloom and wisdom and right and pride Cast them aside And kiss, and cure our quarrel. THE MERCURY WILLIAM C. PETERS Bill Pete Elective Course Center Street School Shovel Club; Newsboy ' s Club; Student Reserve; Science Club. And unextinguishe ' d laughter shakes the skies. HOLLIS I. PREISS Holly Elective Course Marquette High School Student Board ' 27; Shovel Club; Senior Football 28; Riley Program; Newsboy ' s Club; Jr. Sr. Play ' 29: Cue Club ' 29; Football Reporter ' 28. • Faith, that ' s as well said As if I had said it myself. KATHRYN D. PRIEBE Kitty Elective Course Green Bay Avenue School Camaraderie; Art Club; Household Arts ' 25; Shovel Club. In books or work or healthful play. HOWARD F. RAABE Howie Accounting Course Third and Ring Street School Shovel Club; Student Board. His guiltless heart is free From all dishonest deeds Or thought of vanity. EDGAR B. ROBERTS Roberts Eddy Elective Course Jexerson High Minneapolis Cheerleader ' 27, ' 28; Cue Club; Boy ' s Glee Club; Shovel Club; Senior Class Football; State Orihes- tra Champions; Intramural Basketball ' 27, ' 28. Thus all our lite-lung we are frolic and gay. HAZEL M. ROBESON Haz.lle Elective Course West Division H. S. Camaraderie. — round large eyes Ever great with new surprises. CHARLES W. SCHMIDT Chip Accounting Course Third and Ring Street School Shovel Club. Setting raillery, let us attend to serious matters. EDNA C. SCHNACKENBERG Schnacky Stenographic Course Center Street School Camaraderie ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; German Club ' 26. •27; G.A.A. ' 26. ' 27; Shovel Club ' 27; Junior Glee Club ' 27; Senior Glee Club ' 28, ' 29; Student Board Member ' 25; Christmas Play ' 27; Spring Concert ' 28. Am I my brother ' s keeper? P j$e Forty one THE MERCURY CARL SCHOENBAUM Cully Science Course South Division High School Glee Club ; Drum Major ' 27 ; Spring Concert ' 27 ; Shovel Club; Band ' 26. The inborn geniality of some people amounts to genius. MILDRED L. SCHROEDER _ Billie Lon Stenographic Course Third Street School Shovel Club ; Camaraderie ; G.A.A. 26; Monitor of Allan Club ' 27. Be still, sad heart, and cease repining For moviedom a star is shining. JANET C. SLOAN Mathematics Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie ; S.P.Q.R. ; Shovel Club ; Science ; Sec- retary Science ' 28; G.A.A. Then turn not pale, beloved snail, but come and join the dance. MARION STAAB Elective Course St. Peters Paul ' s Camaraderie; Shovel Club; Household Arts; G.A.A.; Basketball champions 28. Life is more sweet than 1 knew. ROBERT O. STEPHENSON Bob Accounting Course Bartlett Avenue School Radio Club ' 25, ' 26, ' 27 ; Shovel Club ' 28; Prom Committee ' 27 ; Stage Crew. It is tranquil people who accomplish much. ALAN IRVING STERN Al Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Orient Debating Society 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Vice Pres. ' 28; Cue Club ' 26. ' 27, ' 28; Shovel Club 27, ' 28; S.P.Q.R. ' 25; Junior Senior Play ' 28; Radio Club ' 25, ' 26. ' 27; Track 27, ' 28; Class Football ' 28. Bid him come forth And not blush so to be admired. NORMAN W. STEUSLOFF Elective Course German Club. Happiness makes the beautv in beauty. Lefty Third Street School ETHEL M. STOLL Elective Course Fratney Street School Camaraderie; Mercury Art Work ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28. ' 29. I was a child of the shining meadow. I was a sister of the sky. Pane Forty-two THE MERCURY GERTRUDE MARIE STONEMAN Gay Stenographic Course Center Street School Camaraderie ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Senior Glee Club ' 26, 27, 28; Shovel Club ' 27, ' 28; Student Board ' 26; Spring Concert 28. I love men ' s faces and their eyes. GEORGE TEWS Judd Science Course Center Street School Shovel Club ' 26, ' 27. ' 28; Science Club ' 27; Track E ' 28 ; Christmas Play. The gallant Ichabod. RICHARD DAN THOMPSON ' Dick Elective Course Bar tie tt Avenue School Shovel; Science; Glee Club; Drum Major; Basket- ball; Secretary of Science Club; State Champion- ship Orchestra ' 25, ' 28. He dearlv lov ' d the lasses, O. GERTRUDE R. TREIS Gert or Gertie Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Household Arts Club ; Camaraderie; Cue Club. Here ' s a dear, true, industrious friend. ROBERT A. TRETTIN Bob Elective Course St. Marks Lutheran School Mercury Monitor; Football. On their own merits modest are dumb. RUTH MARY VOGT Elective Course S. S. Peter Paul School Shovel Club; Camaraderie; S.P.Q.R. ; Household Arts Club. Not being less, but more than ;ill The gentleness she seemed t be. CARL W. VOSS Cully Elective Course Center Stree School Class Football; Shovel Club ' 26, ' 27; Mercury Moni- tor ' 27, 28; Intramural basketball 28. Why name his countless triumphs Whom to meet is to be famous. DANIEL WASHBOURNE Dan English Course Maryland Avenue School Cue Club; If I Were King ; Rip Van Winkle ; Boy ' s Glee; S.P.Q.R. Treas. ' 27; Shovel Chair- man Christmas Party ' 28; Senior Hi-Y Treas. ' 28; Constitution Day Program; Flag Day Program; Merc Monitor ' 26, 27, ' 28; Pig Tail Day Program; Beethoven Anniversary Program. He argued at breakfast, he argued at tea. And he argued from midnight till quarter past three. Page Forty-three THE MERCURY CHARLOTTE C. WEISSBRODT Sharlie Chocolate English Course Bartlett Avenue School Shovel Club ' 25, ' 26, ' 27. ' 28; Camaraderie ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; S.P.Q.R.; G.A.A. ' 26. Joy was a flame in me Ton steady to destroy. RALPH T. WETTSTEIN History Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club; Art Club; Cue Club; Riley Day Pro- gram; Rip Van Winkle ; Track ' 24. The look in his eye seemed to say to the sky ' Now- how tn amuse them today ? ' ONA LOUISE WILSON Baby Pudge Stenographic Course Green Bay Avenue School Camaraderie ' 25, 26, 27, 28; Shovel ' 27, ' 28; G.A.A. ; Art ' 27; Household Art Club ' 25, ' 26; Student Board; Household Arts Play on Open House Night. It isn ' t much fun for one, but Two Can stick together, says Pooh, says he- That ' s how it is, said Pooh. THEODORE F. WALLENBERG Ted Teddy Elective Course Center Street School .Shovel Club; Students ' Reserve Club. I trust I have not wasted breath. EMILY F. ZALEWSKI Ernie Ema Elective Course St. Casimer ' s School Camaraderie ' 22, ' 23, ' 24, ' 25; Shovel ' 23. ' 24; Shovel ' 23, ' 24; Science ' 22. ' 23; G.A.A. ' 22; H.H.A. ' 22; Art ' 22 ; German ' 28. A thankful heart is not only the greatest virtue but the parent of all the other virtues. ROBERT R. ZANDER Bob ' Manual Arts Course Center St. Grade School Basketball ' 28; Shovel Club ' 25, ' 26, ' 27. His face was washed, his coat was brushed Ills shoes were clean and neat. NORMAN E. ZIMMERMAN Zimmie Elective Course Hi-Mount School Shovel Club; Student Board. 1 have to say to people when they re giving me a sweet Oh, Binker wants a chocolate, so could you give me two ? And then I eat it for him cause his teeth are rather new. I t ■ For 3 -four THE MERCURY DOROTHY AARONS Dot Latin Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel Club, Camaraderie. Cue, Exchange Edito r of the Mercury ' 26, ' 27, ' 28. A rider unequaled ; a sportsman complete A rum one to follow, a hard one to beat. HERBERT ABRAHAM Herb Science Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club, Student Board. Mercury Monitor, Track E ' 28, ' 29; Track ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Basketball •28, ' 29. He ' d jump the life to come. WILLIAM ALDRICH Bill ; Bud Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Basketball, Art Club. Shovel Club. ' Tis but a bit f childhood thrown away. FRANCES EVELINE ANDERSON Fran Elective Course Girls ' High; Atlanta, Georgia Cameraderie ' 25, ' 28. ' 29; H. H. Arts Club, ' 28; G. A. A. ' 25; Shovel Club ' 28. I ' m so happy — no profession could be dearer — If I ' m not humming tra-la-la — I ' m singing tirer-lirer. MILDRED J. ARCHAMBAULT Archie Stenographic Course Hartford Avenue School Senior Glee Club. Cameraderie. Shovel. Art Club. Mercury Staff. Art Work for Junior-Senior Play •28, Music Festival ' 29. In framing an artist, art hath thus decreed To make some good, and others to exceed. BARNARD B. BAKER Barney Latin Course Maryland Avenue School S. P. Q. R. ' 25. ' 27; Shovel Club. ' 26; Track ' 27, ' 28; Football Manager ' s E ' 28; Student Board ' 25. ' 27, ' 28; Merc Annual Staff ' 29. I fear not loss. Ihope not gain, I envy none, I none disdain. JOHN DUDLEY BALL JR. Howduzi Elective Course Maryland Avenue School Orient. Science, Cue Pigtail Day Play, Magician Act, Caducius. He spoke in courtier words. MARY BALLANTINE English Course Normal Training School Cameraderie. Shovel. Science Club ' 28. ' 29; Allen Club, ' 28. ' 29. I live a life that ' s safe and planned with forethought and precision. ?agt For j-five THE MERCURY LORAINE BALSOM Lorry Stenographic Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie, G. A. A., Champion Volley Ball Team 1928. German Club. Mercury Typist. Is kind as she is fair? FRANCES BARNES Fran English Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie. Shovel, Household Arts, Science, Cue Pig-tail day program ' 26. Merry she is, and quiet. ANITA DOROTHEA BEHLING Neetz Needa Stenographic Course Bartlett Avenue School Allen Club, Camaraderie, German Club, Secretary of German Club ' 29, Pig-tail day program ' 27, G. A. A., Championship Volley Ball Team ' 28, Champion- ship Base Ball Team ' 29, Mercury Typist, Student Board. ' Tis beauty truly blent, whose red and white Nature ' s own sweet and cunning hand .laid on. ANTOINETTE R. BELITZ Tony Elective Course North Division High School Shovel Club, Camaraderie, S. P. Q. R. ' Tis reason ' s said to govern and to guard the heart. MAY VIOLET BENSON Bunny Elective Course Third Street School Camaraderie. Shovel. Household Arts Club, G. A. A , Championship Volley Ball Team ' 28. May Fete. Silence is the perfectest herald of joy. DOROTHY CLARICE BENTON Dot Elective Course Lincoln High School Shovel Club, Art Club, Household Arts Club, Cama- raderie, Science, Students ' Reserve, Mercury An- nual Staff ' 29. Rare is the minion of beauty and virtue. EVELYN ELLA BERGEMAN Evie Stenographic Course Girls ' Trade and Tech High School Camaraderie, Shovel. 1 shall think — and thought is silence. ALFRED H. BIERMANN Bud , Al Elective Course Center Street School Bookstore ' 28. ' 29; Manager ' 29; Art Club ' 26, ' 27. ' 28; Shovel, Mercury Staff ' 27. ' 28, ' 29; Cartoon Editor ' 28, ' 29; Mercury Annual ' 28, ' 29; Chicago Scholarship Team ' 29; Student Board ' 27. ' 28. He only does it to annoy. I ' ,i. :: For y-j A THE MERCURY GUSTAVE G. BLATZ Gus Science Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club, Science Club, Cue Club, Junior-Senior Play ' 29. On the stage he was natural, simple, affecting. ' Twas only that when he was nff, he was acting. ALICE ELLEN BORCHERT Susie Al English Course Center Street School Camaraderie, Shovel, Student Board, G. A. A., In- firmary Work. She gives a side glance and looks down. Beware! Beware ! HELEN BORDEN Chegs History Course Hartford Avenue School Camaraderie, Cue Club, Junior Glee Club, Senior Glee Club, Junior-Senior Play ' 28, G. A. A., Infirm- ary, Shakespeare ' s Birthday Play, Spring Concert. I have found more joy in sorrow Than you could find in joy. MILDRED ELLEN BORGMAN Millie English Course Hartford Avenue School Camaraderie, Cue Club, Shovel Club, May Fete, Junior-Senior Play ' 27. Mercury Staff ' 29. And oh, she dances such a way ! No sun upon an Kaster day J- half so line a sight, EDWARD BORKENHAGEN Eddie Science Course Center Street School Newsboys ' Club. Great Souls Suffer in silence. JOHN A BOWERS Jack , Bow-Wow Science Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel Club, Glee Club, Hi-Y, Student Board, Mer- cury Monitor. What hast thou done for me. grim old age. Save breaking my bones on the rock? ARTHUR BOYAJAIN Elective Course Untwisting all the chains that tu The hidden soul of harmony. ALYCE MARY BRADLEY Allie English Course Hartford Avenue School Secretary and Treasurer Girls ' Junior Glee Club, Girls ' Senior Glee Club, Camaraderie, Art Club, Spring Concert ' 28. She has moved a little nearer to the master of all music. Page Vorty-seitn THE MERCURY FREMONT E. BRAUCH Elective Course Third Street School A life without a purpose is ship without a rudder. RAY BRUTWITSKE Brooks Elective Course St. Galls ' School Intra-mural Basketball, Red Sox, Writer Cat Tales, Sophomore Class Football. A boy ' s love is like water in a sieve. NAOMI BUCHBINDER Nomi English Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie, Shovel Club, Cue Club. She frivols through the lifelong day. Her lot seems light; her heart seems gay. GORDON BURMASTER Accounting Course Shovel Club 27. A day for toil, an hour for Red . Shorty Third Street School sport. ALICE MARY BURNS Al . Irish History Course Cedarburg, Wisconsin S. P. Q. R., Shovel, G. A. A., Camaraderie, Assistant in Infirmary and Library, Riley Day Program ' 28. Junior-Senior Play ' 29; Secretary of Student Board ' 28; Christmas Play ' 28. Can any low born care pursue her. FRANK BURTON Latin Course Wisconsin High, Madison Quotations Committee, Mercury Staff. Will you walk a little faster? said the Whiting to the Snail, There ' s a Lobster just behind me that is treading on mv tail. HARRIETTE ORLOA BURCZYK Toddy Elective Course St. Casimir ' s School Camaraderie, S. P. Q. R.. Art. Shovel, Allen, House- hold Arts, Science Clubs. Student Board, May Fete, G. A. A. In modest innocence. MONA GERTRUDE BUSH Stenographic Course St. Marcus Lutheran School Camaraderie ' 25. ' 27. ' 28. ' 29: G. A. A. ' 29. Reserve may be pride fortified. frf.vr FoTly-eigbt THE MERCURY EVELYN M. CAAN History Course Shovel, Camaraderie. S. ' 26. 27. ' Tis a well known (act that virtue the beautiful. Evey Third Street School P. Q. R., Student Board nre fair RITA CASPER Girlie Elective Course St. Robert s School Cue Club ' 28. ' 29: Shovel ' 26. ' 27. ' 28, ' 29; Camara- derie ' 26, ' 27, ' 28. ' 29; Student Board ' 27; Junior- Senior Play ' 28. ' 29; Thanksgiving Play ' 27; Junior Prom Committee ' 28; May Fete ' 27. ' 28; Spring Operetta 28; Glee Club ' 26, ' 27. ' 28, ' 29. Forget you! Men do not live sn long! MURIEL CHAPMAN Elective Course Milwaukee Downer Seminary Camaraderie ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; Shovel ' 28. ' 29; Household Arts ' 27, ' 28. How sad and bad and mad she was But then, how sweet. ALFRED CHESNER Al Elective Course Center Street School Track ' 25. ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Football E ' 25, ' 26, ' 27; Vice Captain ' 27; Shovel Club ' 27, ' 28. I envy not the monarch ' s throne Nor wish the treasured gold my own. MAITLAND COOK Malt Science Course Third Street School Art Club ' 29; Annual Art Staff; Science Club; Scen- ery for Rip Van Winkle ; C.C.C. There ' s no huni-druin m him, Nor anv silly-shally. MARION S. COOK Cookie Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Household Arts Club ' 25. ' 26, ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; Cama- raderie ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28. ' 29. Not a variety is given in vain. EDWARD PATRICK COOKE Cookie Elective Course Shorewood High School Orient Debating; Vice President Science Club ' 29; Shovel Club; Mercury Monitor. My words are only words, and moved Upon the topmost froth of thought. FREDERIC L. CRAMER Mathematics Course Hartford Avenue School Orchestra ' 26; Orient Debating Society; Inter- Class Football; Mercury Staff ' 26. ' 27, ' 28; Edi- tor-in-chief ' 29. When men at last are forced by fate To work, they won ' t procrastinate. Page Forty-nine THE MERCURY MARY LOUISE CREAGER Mary Latin Course Normal Training School Camaraderie; Senior Glee; Shovel; S.P.Q.R.; Mer- cury Staff ; Caduceus ; Allen ; May Fete 26 ; French Club; Music Festival ' 29. The life I led was the life I liked. GERALD CROWELL Elective Course Let us then be up and doing With a heart for any fate. Jerry Des Moines, Iowa ROBERT M. CRUMP Accounting Course Shovel Club. He chortled in his glee. Lake Mills Bob High School FLORENCE DAEMRICH Flo Florrie Stenographic Course Maryland Avenue School G.A.A. ; Camaraderie; Shovel; Mercury Typist. Tranquility consists in steadiness of the mind. DOROTHY DAVIS Dot Stenographic Course Menomonie High School Camaraderie ; Girls ' Reserve. Her looks do argue her replete with modesty. RALPH HUNTER DEIHL Delhi Science Course Normal Training School Band, Science Club, Cross Country, Track, Junior Orchestra, Basketball. To live in mankind is far more than to live in a name. HELEN L. DOWNER English Course Center Street School Camaraderie; Shovel; Science; Household Arts Club. 1 do say thou art quick in answers. NEAI DROUGHT Science Course Normal Training School Shovel Club; S.P.Q.R. ; Boys Glee Club; Once in A Blue Moon ; Student Board, President ' 28; Junior Prom; Mercury Monitor. A man he seems of cheerful yesterdays and confi- dent tomorrows. Pagt rut) THE MERCURY Dulittle Bartlett Ave. School Radio Club; Orient Debating Class Track ' 26. ' 27 ; Cross ROY EDWARD DULAK Elective Course Shovel Club Monitor; Society; S.P.Q.R.; Country ' 25. ' 28. He was the mildest manner ' d man That ever scuttled ship or cut a throat. ' WILLIAM DUMEZ Bill Willie Will Science Course Hartford Avenue School Science Club; Cross Country: Track; Junior Hi-Y ; Band. Without knowing the force of words it ' s impossible to know men. CYRUS WALKER EDMONDS Cy Elective Course Normal Training School Shovel Club; Christmas Club ' 27; Junior Senior Play ' 29; S.P.Q.R.; Junior Prom Committee ' 28. He had so many things which he wanted to do That, whenever he thought it was time to begin, lie couldn ' t because of the state he was in. ISABELLE M. EHLERS Izzy Elective Course St. Gall ' s School Camaraderie. ' A thing of beauty is a joy forever. ALTHEA CATHRINE EICHFELD Allie Al Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel Club ' 27. ' 28; Camaraderie ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Sci- ence Club ' 26, ' 27; Students ' Reserve ' 26, ' 27; Vice President ' 27; G. A. A. ' 26; Art Club ' 28, ' 29; H.H. Arts ' 26, ' 28. Joy flies monopolists; it calls for two. ROBERT H. EICHHORST Bob Science Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel Club; S.P.Q.R.; Reserve Club; Mercury Monitor. This fellow picks up wit. as pigeons peace, He is wit ' s peddler. EUNICE EIKELBERG Bunny Mathematics Course Bartlett Avenue School Shovel ' 26. ' 27, ' 28. ' 29; Camaraderie ' 26. ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; Science ' 27, ' 28; Household Arts Club ' 26. •27. To those who know thee not, no words can paint. And those who know thee know all words are faint. THOMAS E. FAIRCHILD Tom Latin Course Wisconsin Avenue School Orient ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Shovel ' 26. ' 28. ' 29; S.P. Q.R. ' 26, ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; Glee Club ' 27, 28; Or- chestra ' 27. ' 28, ' 29; Publicity Manager. Spring Concert ' 27; Chairman Prom Advertising Com- mittee ' 27; Cafeteria ' 26. ' 27. ' 28; News Editor. Mercury ' 27; Ass ' t Editor Mercury ' 29; Mercury Annual ' 28, ' 29; Consul. S.P. Q.R. ' 28; President Orient ' 28, ' 29; Student Board ' 26. ' 28: Student Athletic Council ' 29; Inter-Society Debate ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Winner of the Harvard Book ' 28. I am quiet gentleman and T should sit and dream. Page Fifty-one TI1E MERCURY HORTENSE M. FESTERLING Hortie Elective Course Reedsville High School Senior Girl ' s Glee Club; German Club; Junior Girl ' s Glee Club ; Science Club ; Camaraderie. A woman ' s work, grave sirs, is never done. ' WILLIAM REED FOSTER Bob Science Course Normal Training School Shovel; News Boys Vice President ' 28; Students Reserve; C.C.C.; Track; Class Football. A fixed idea ends in madness or heroism. LOVISA MARGARET FOX Latin Course Milwaukee University School Mercury; Mercury Annual ; Shovel Club ; Vice President 28 ; Camaraderie Secretary ' 28 ; Cue Club Treasurer ' 28; Caduceus Secretary Treasurer ' 28 ; Allen Club Treasurer ' 27 ; Sophomore Class President ' 27; Art Club; Orient Debating Society; Junior Prom Committee ' 28 ; Student Board ; G. A. A. It ' s a cheerio, my deario, That pulls a lady through. MILDRED M. FOX English Course Camaraderie ; Shovel. God ' s rarest blessing is, after all. a good woman Milly Washington High School GLADYCE FRAUENDORFER Glady Glad Elective Course Third Street School Camaraderie. Her smile is sweetened by her gravity. MANLEY L. FRENCH Frenchy Elective Course Ladysmith High School He scatters enjoyment who can enjoy much. CLAIRE E. GADZICHOWSKI Honey Stenographic Course St. Casimer ' s School Allen Club; Shovel Club; Camaraderie; G.A.A.; Championship Volley Ball Team ' 29. Always at work. KATHERINE GEIGER Tottie Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel Club; S.P.Q.R.; Camaraderie. Look cheerfully upon me, Thou seest how diligent 1 am. Page Fifty-tWO THE MERCURY EDNA GENSKE Ed Eddie Elective Course S.S. Peter Paul School Camaraderie; Shovel Club; Alternate for Student Board. Your claim is more than others That is why you are silent. MARY GLATZ Sukey ■■Bunny- History Course Grace Ev. Lutheran School Camaraderie ' 25. ' 26. ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Shovel Club ' 27. ' 28, ' 29; Pig Tail Day ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; German Club ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29 ; President of German Club ' 28 ' , ' 29. Thinking is but an idle waste of thought And nought is everything and everything is nought. JEROME GOETZ , I ' ™ ' ' . Elective Course West Division High bcnool Band; Shovel Club. It is good to lengthen to the last a sunny m 1. BEATRICE W. GOLDBERGER English Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie; Science Club; Reserve; Secretary S. P.Q.R. ; Treasurer of Students Reserve Club ' 27, ' 28. Her best companions, innocence and health. BEATRICE E. GOLDFISCH Bea Beats Elective Course Rockford High School Shovel Club; Camaraderie; Household Arts. I slept and dreamed that life was beauty; I woke and found that life was duty. VICTOR GOLDSCHMITT Vic Mac Goldie Manual Arts Course Scott Street School Shovel Club; Track ' 25, ' 26; Basketball ' 26, ' 27; Mercury Monitor; Newsboys ' Club. Good humor is success. GRACE GORE „ , , English Course Normal Training School President of Glee Club ' 28; Cue Club ' 26, ' 27. ' 28 ' 29; Shovel ' 26. 27. ' 28; Camaraderie ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Senior Girls ' Glee Club ' 26. ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Chorus ' 29; Quartette ' 29; Sophomore Secretary ' 27; Junior Leader Camaraderie ' 28; Junior Prom Committee ' 28; Homecoming Dance Committee ' 28; Once in a Blue Moon, The Goose Hangs High, Spring Concert, Athletic Board ' 29, Alternate Stu- dent Board ' 27, G. A. A. ' 26, ' 27. I ' ll ask my mother, says Pinkle-I ' urr. JOSEPH GRAHAM Joe Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Latin Club; Shovel Club; Science Club; Crescent Debating; Student Board: Mercury Monitor. Well done! Thv works are great and bold. Page Fifty-three THE MERCURY ROBERT GRAU Bob Elective Course Washburn High. Minneapolis Shovel Club, Basketball. A learned man can only be appreciated by another learned man. VIRGINIA M. GRELL Jinny Stenographic Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie. Shovel, Household Arts, G. A. A,, Jun- ior Glee Club, Senior Glee Club, Spring Concert, April Festival. Trifle.-, make perfection, but perfection is no trifle. JOSEPH GRIMM Red Elective Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club. Boys ' Glee Club. Basketball. A man ' s a man for a ' that. ROBERT HAROLD GROGAN Bob Elective Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club, S. P. Q. R.. German Club, Art Club. Merc Monitor. Class Track. Cross Country ' 27, ' 28, Track. 1. like the world, am a wheel and will come ' round right. RUTH D. GROTENRATH Rufus Science Course Bartlett Avenue School Shovel, Camaraderie, Art Club. Junior-Senior Play Scenery, Prom Committee, Mercury Staff. Art Edi- tor ' 29, Mercury Annual Staff. The beauty seen is partly in him who sees it. JOHN GRUPP Johnny ' Science Course Center Street School German Club, Shovel Club, Basketball, Student Board. The destined victor of the skies. RUTH EVELYN HAISCH Ruthie , Rusty Elective Course Third Street School Camaraderie. Shovel. Household Arts. Mercury Moni- tor ' 29. No grape that ' s kindly ripe could be So round, so plump, so soft as she. EUGENE HAEBERLE Gene Mathematics Course Hartford Avenue School Track ' 25, ' 27. ' 28; Football ' 25. ' 26, - 27. ' 28; Shovel Club: S. P. Q. R. ' 25. ' 26, ' 27, ' 28. ' 29; Once in a Blue Moon, Christmas Chorus. Every man for himself. Page Fifty-font THE MERCURY FERN HAMMEN English Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel. G. A. A., Camaraderi , Glee Club, Music Festival, Spring Concert, Christmas Program, Allen Club. Science Club. A nun demure. of lowly port. ELEANOR HAMMERSMITH Ellie I.atin Course Normal Training School Art Club ' 25. Senior Glee Club. Caduceus. May Fete ' 26. French Club, Camaraderie. All n Club. Mer- cury Staff. Junior Prom Committee. Music Festival, Shovel. All that ' s be-t of dark and bright Meet in her aspect and her eyes. GERTRUDE HANNA English Course Denfeld Senior High. Duluth Camaraderie, Cue Club, Rip Van Winkle. In each cheek a pretty dimple The lovely work of laughter. DOROTHY HANSEN Dolly Stenographic Course Third Street School Camaraderie. Treasurer 23. ' 29. Secretary ' s E . Football ' 28, Secretary ' s E Track ' 29. Student Dot. Shovel Club. For the good are always merry And the merry love to dance. L. EUGENIA HARLEY History Course Shovel, Camaraderie. S. P. Q Club. Library Assistant. Her voice was like the voice the stars had When they sang together. Tocky Simpsinville, S. C. R., Cue Club. Glee GORDON HATCH Gordie Science Course Harlford Avenue School Shovel Club. Art Club. Treasurer ' 29. Science Club. Treasurer 27. I rest so pleased with what I have. I wish no more, no more 1 crave. HELEN JEAN HAWKINS Jeannie ' Science Course Bartlett Avenue School G. A. A., Camaraderie, Shovel, Household Arts, Glee Club, Librarian and Secretary of the Junior Glee Club. Spring Concert ' 28. T know her by her joyous air Her bright black eyes, her bright black hair. ELSIE HENNING Accounting Course Camaraderie. G. A. A._ They laugh that win. El St. Marcus Luth. School Page Fifty-tiit THE MERCURY CHESTER H. HITCHCOCK Chef English Course Normal Training School Shovel, Band, Track ' 28. Junior-Senior Play ' 29, Boys ' Glee Club. A careless song with a little nonsense in it now and then Does not misbecome a monarch. CHARLES JOHN HOLST Charlie , Chuck Science Course Center Street School Shovel, Student Board Merc Monitor, Cross Coun- try 29, Track ' 28, Vice-Captain ' 29 E . A merry heart goes all the day. HELEN HOPPE Polly , Lena Stenographic Course Fratney Street School Her stature tall — I hate a dumpy woman. EVERON C. HORNBURG . Checkers Accounting Course Center Street School Bank Messenger, Student Board, Mercury Monitor. Humour is the only test of gravity and gravity of humour. MARION M. HOUGHTON English Course St. Gall ' s School Household Arts. Shovel, Camaraderie, G. A. A. With thy keen clear joyance Languor cannot be. GEORGE V. HUEBSCH English Course Bartlett Avenue School Latin, Shovel, Cue Club. Orchestra. All-City Or- chestra, Junior-Senior Play ' 29 .Orient. Love you? said I, then I sighed and then I smiled upon her sweetly, For I think I do this sort of thing particularly neatlv. LYMAN L. HUNT Doc Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Glee Club, Orchestra, Band, Football ' 26 ' 27. Once in a Blue Moon, Shovel. Mixed reason with pleasure, and wisdom with mirth. VICTORIA H. HUNT2ICKER Vic Latin Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie ; Crescent Debating Society ; Shovel Club: Mercury Staff ' 27, ' 29; Mercury Annual Staff ' 27. 29: Quill and Scroll ' 29; G.A.A.; Allen Club ; Junior Prom Committee ; Lincoln ' s Birth- day Program. Wit refreshing, touch most light. And most of all, perception keen and bright. Pagt Fifty-six Tnt MERCURY GEORGE IDE Cowboy English Course Redland ' s High School, California Latin Club; Shovel; Student Reserve; Orient, Trea- surer ' 29; Football Reserve Emblem ' 27. Born in the mountains, never raised a pet, Don ' t want nothin ' an ' ain ' t got it yet. JOHN FRANK IMP Elective Course Shovel ; Science. 1 love the man that is Johnny St. Francis School nmlestlv valiant. ' JOSEPHINE INNES Jo English Course Minneapolis Cue; Shovel; Entertainment Committee of Shovel Club; Camaraderie; Student Board; Prom Com- mittee; Camaraderie Leader. As a wit, if not first, in the very first line. CECILIA G. JANKOWSKI Ceil Elective Course St. Gall ' s Senior Orchestra; Camaraderie; Shovel; Household Arts; Spring Festival; State Champion Orchestra; Student Board Alternative. O Music! sphere-descended maid, Friend of Pleasure, Wisdom ' s aid. TERESE JANKOWSKI Tessie Elective Course St. Robert ' s School Camaraderie; Shovel; Household Arts; G.A.A.; Merc. Monitor; Open House Night; Art Club. Better to have one friend of great value than many friends good for nothing. HENRY JERGER Hank Manual Arts Course Bartlett Avenue School Chief Carpenter; Stage Crew; Student Board; Shovel Club, Carpenter for Junior Prom. No steps backward. VIRGINIA M. JOHNSON Ginny Gin English Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel; Camaraderie; Cue; S.P.Q.R. ; Orient; Mer- cury Annual Staff. To pile up honey upon sugar and sugar upon honey. MARGARET ANN JONES Shrimp English Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel; Camaraderie; Cue; Allen; Pigtail Day Pro- gram. Let us have wine and mirth and laughter. Sermons and soda-water the dav after — Page Fifty-seien THE MERCURY MARGARET JUNKERMAN Marge Mudge English Course Maryland Avenue School Glee Club; Allen Club; Camaraderie; Shovel; Cue; Science. Second thoughts, they say, are best. GLADYS L. KAESTNER Latin Course Center Street School Camaraderie; Allen; Shovel; Latin; Riley Day Pro- gram ' 28; Prom Committee ' 27; Infirmary Moni- tor ' 28. - 20. 1 ' npracticed she to fawn or seek for power. GERTRUDE M. KASTERN Elective Course St. John ' s Cathedral High School Camaraderie; Shovel; Household Arts; G.A.A. Let me silent be; for silence is the language of love. ARNOLD EUGENE KASZUBOWSKI Gene Accounting Course St. Casimir ' s School Cue, Shovel; Cre scent; Bank. - 27, ' 28; Bank Mes- senger ' 29. ' Deep on his front engraven Deliberation sat, and public care. PAUL KELLY English Course Shorewood High School I saw thee in a mood of vague indifference. Shovel; Hi-Y: Latin: Student Board; Mercury Mon- itor; Reserve Club. JAMES JOHN KEYES Jimmie ' Mathematics Course Holy Rosary School Shovel; Latin; President Junior Class; Representa- tive to Milwaukee High School Convocation; Prom Committees. Though many a man prefer to bluff, it doesn ' t prove he lacks the stuff. ETHEL M. KNEBEL Elective Course West Division High School Camaraderie; Art; G.A.A. ; Shovel Club. To women silence is the best ornament. RAY S. KNOFCZYNSKI Tubby Smiles- Elective Course St. Casimir ' s School Shovel; S.P.Q.R.; Science; Junior and Senior Class Football; Mercury Monitor; Stage Hand for If I Were King. He was wonderfully active for si. very stunt a party. P«(« hit THE MERCURY GEORGE KNUDSEN Shorty Accounting Course Bwtlett Avenue School Cue ; Shovel : The Goose Hangs High ; Cross Country. The artist is a rare, rare bird. There were but two, forsooth, In all me time (the stage ' s prime) and The Other One was Booth. LEWIS KNUDSEN K Elective Course Bartlett Avenue School Business Manager of the Mercury Annual and for the monthly; Shovel; Shovel Club Monitor; Stu- dent Board; Orchestra; Band. Deems each day ' s work least fitly done a victory worthy to be won. LENORE ANN KOEGLER Billie Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Camaraderie; Shovel; Household Arts; Secretary of G.A.A.; Student Board. My favored temple in a humble heart. JOHN P. KOEHLER Science Course Shovel; S.P.Q.R. ; Band; Though I am young 1 s of borrowed wit. John Pete Hartford Avenue School Student Board, •orn to flit on wings BURDETTE A. KOESTER Buddy Stenographic Course Third Street School G.A.A.; Camaraderie; Shovel; Household Arts. Your absence of mind we have borne, till your presence in body came to be called unquestionly it. Elective Course St. Marcus Luthern School HERMA ELISABETH KOHLS Camaraderie; G.A.A.; Shovel. A shy face is better than a forward heart. EVELYNNE KRIPKE Evey English Course Hartford Avenue School Camaraderie; Shovel; Roman State; Student Board. Words declare your eyes are bright. VIOLET MYRTLE KROLL Vi Elective Cuorse Purdy High, Marsh field. Wis. Camaraderie; Household Arts; Shovel ; Alternate Student Board, We are our own aptest deceiver. Page Fifty-nine THE MERCURY FLORENCE LEHMAN English Course Cue Club; Shovel Club; Junior-senior Play ' 29 Secretary Cue Club; _ Student Board; Junior Glee Club. Seen vou down at chu ' ch las ' night Whut f mean? Oh dot ' s all right. Nevah min ' Miss Flossie. Lem ' ' Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie: Allen Club Pig Tail Program ' 28 Junior Prom Committee MERCEDES C. LEISEN Stenographic Course S, G.A.A. ; Camaraderie. None are fair but who are kind. ' Mercy S. Peter Paul School MARGARET J. LETCHWORTH Marge English Course Bryan High, Dallas, Texas Cue Club; Camaraderie: Shovel; Senior Girls Glee Club; Christmas Pageant, If I Were King. I, too, am a rare pattern. RAYMOND LE VIN Ray Elective Course Fratney Street School Class Football; Shovel Club; Mercury Monitor; Sci- ence Club. Wit does n..t take the place of knowledge. RALPH H. LEWANDOWSKI History Course St. Casimir s School Shovel Club. I am quiet gentleman. And I would sit and think. CLARE M. LINCOLN English Course Shorewood High School GAA.; Secretary and Treasurer ' 29; Camaraderie; Allen Club, President ' 29; Science Club; Shovel Club; S.P.Q.R. There ' s always a good tune coming, girls, always a good time coming ! ELIZABETH E. LORENZ History Course Hartford Avenue School Allen Club; Camaraderie; Junior Glee; Art Club. Being everything which thou now art. Be nothing which thou art not. ADDISON LOVE . . J n or Elective Course Normal Training School Shovel; S.P.Q.R.; Orient; Boy ' s Glee Club; Mer- cury Monitor; Orchestra; Mercury Annual .Mart. The mildest manners and the gentlest heart. Page Sivfy THE MERCURY RUTH A. MAACK Ruche Stenographic Course Center Street School Camaraderie ; Shovel. Though I am always in haste, I am never in a hurry. ROBERT WILLIAM MANN Bob Science Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club ; Science Club ; German Club ; Cross Country Club ' 28; Track Team ' 29; Class Foot- ball ' 28; Basketball; Rip Van Winkle; Christmas Play 28; Latin Club; Treasurer Hi-Y ' 29. He had then the grace, too rare in every clime. Of being, without alloy of fop or beau, A nnish ' d gentleman from top to toe. MARIE CAROLINE MANSKE Wee-Wee Elective Course Ripon Jr. High School Camaraderie ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; S.P.Q.R ' 26, ' 27. Take her up tenderly Lift her with care. HELEN MAROSE Stenographic Course Camaraderie ; Art ; Shovel Board member; G.A. A. ; I sit a silent siren. Rosie Tootie ' Shady Grove School Club Monitor; Student Mercury Monitor. MELBA R. MAYER Mel — Melb Stenographic Course St. Elizabeth School Camaraderie ; Shovel ; Household Arts ; Camaraderie leader; Shovel Club leader. Moroseness is the evening ( turbulence. ISABELL McKEITH Izzy History Course Maryland Avenue School Cue Club ; Shovel ; Camaraderie ; G.A. A. ; Allen Club; Senior Girls Glee ; Science Club sec ' y ' 29 ; Goose Hangs High; Jr. Sr. Play; Rip Van Winkle. We laugh, we cry, we are born, we die, W ' h will riddle me the how and the wliv ? JEROME S. MEHLMAN Jerry Latin Course Maryland Avenue School S.P.Q.R. ; Shovel ; Crescent. Ass ' t Clerk ' 29 ; Sci- ence ; Caduceus ; Intersociety Debate ' 29 ; Ass ' t. Editor ' 29 Annual ; University of Chicago Schol- arship Team; Senior Class Football. The speechless babe. HARVEY W. MENGEL Manual Arts Course Basketball; Shovel Club. lie thought as a sage, though he felt as a man Slim Bartlett Avenue School Va$,e Sixfy-otie THE MERCURY GEORGE MEUNIER Accounting Course Band ; Orchestra. It ' s one day up and the I lead a romantic life. Georgie Holy Rosary School text day down. JACK MIKULA Docor Jack Mathematics Course Normal Training School Shovel Club; Crescent; Jr. Hi-Y, President ' 27; Class Football; Class treasurer ' 28; Jr. Orchestra; Basketball; Mercury Staff ' 29; News Editor; Mercury Annual Staff ' 29. And wisely tell what hour o ' the day The clock does strike by algebra. DELLA MILLER Teddy English Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie; Shovel Club; G.A.A.; Glee Club; Science Club; Allen Club; Spring Concert; Music Festival; Christmas Program. We wear a face of joy Because we have been cvlad of yore. GEORGIANA MOCKLEY ' Georgie Science Course Fratney Street School Shov-1 Club; Latin Club; Camaraderie; Sr. Girls Glee Club; Chri stmas Pageant ' 27, ' 28. The quiet mind is richer than a crown. CHARLES S. MOHAUPT Charley Science Course Fratney Street School Shovel Club ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Student Board ' 29; Oh ! then I drank the poisoned bowl And love now nestles in my soul. RICHARD MOONEY Dick Latin Course Holy Rosary School Shovel Club, Crescent, Class Football, Student Board. Minstrel Show, Mercury Staff. Intersociety Debate ' 28, ' 29. Presidential Election. The eldest oyster winked his eye And shook his heavy head. Brownie Lake View High School BENJAMIN C. MOTT Elective Course Shovel Club. Art Club. The little boys of Harbury when they are laid to sleep Dream of masts and cabins and the wonder ol the deep. GERTRUDE MUELLER Gen Stenographic Course Center Street School Shovel Club. German Club. Camaraderie. Coolness and quietness indicate tine qualities; a lady is serene. . .. Sixly-lm THE MERCURY VIRGINIA MURPHY Ginny ' English Course North Division High School Cue Club. Camaraderie. Shovel Club. Allen Club. If I chance t.. talk a little wild, forgive me. GENEVIEVE NACHREIMER Gen Elective Course Holy Rosary School Camaraderie ' 26. ' 27, ' 28. ' 29; G. A. A. ' 26, ' 27. ' 28; Latin Club, Allen Club ' 28, ' 29; Shovel Club. For her own person It beggar ' d all description. CARLA NAHRATH Sis Science Course Island Avenue School Shovel Club, Science Club. Camaraderie, G. A. A. What! Gone without a word! MARGUERITE NAPS Migs . Puck History Course Center Street School Camaraderie ' 26, ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; Shovel Club ' 27. ' 28. ' 29; German Club ' 27. ' 28, ' 29; Vice President German Club ' 29; Pigtail Day Program ' 26 , ' 27. ' 28; A Midsummer Night ' s Dream ; Christmas Pageant ' 26, ' 27; Student Board ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Cue Club ' 27, ' 28, ' 29. Good things come in small packages. EDGAR NEUSTADTL Ned Science Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club. Reserve, Senior Hi-Y. Secretary Stu- dent Council. Cross Country. Science Club. Boys ' Glee Club. Mercury Staff. One foot in sea. one n land Tn une thing constant never. CAROLYN NICKEL Stenographic Course Center Street School German Club, Camaraderie, Shovel Club. Beautiful as sweet. And young as beautiful, and soft as young. DAVID H. NUNN Dave Elective Course Main Ave. High, San Antonio S. P. Q. R. One woman ' s hair draws more than oxen. CASIMIR J. NYCZ Cas Elective Course Center Street School Latin Club, Shovel Club. There is no use arguing with the inevitable. P«r Sixly-lliret THE MERCURY MILDRED ESTHER OBERST Milly Elective Course Grant Street School Shovel Club, Cue Club, Camaraderie, Riley Day Program, Washington Program, Junior-Senior Play ' 28, ' 29, Senior Leader. Camaraderie, Student Board. Twelfth Night. Come, sit down, every mother ' s sen, and rehearse your parts. KATHRYN M. OLSON Kitty . Kate Stenographic Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie, Shovel, G. A. A., Household Arts, Basketball Team, Baseball Team, Open House, Student Board. Neither above or below her busmen HUNTINGTON J. OTIS Hunt English Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel Club .Cue Club. Newboys ' Club, Freshman Football. Football ' 26. ' 27. ' 28: Football E . Student Dot. Track ' 26. ' 27, ' 28, Basketball, Christmas Play ' 27; If I Were King, Rip Van Winkle. As larire as life, and twice as natural. ERWIN C. OTTO Irv , Jack Accounting Course Center Street School Shovel Club, Mercury Monitor. Tired of the last and eager f the new. WILLIAM D. OWEN Bill Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Orient, Cross Country, Band, Art Staff of the An- nual, Basketball. Class Football. I. like all (Treat men, am misunderst 1 ' ELINOR JANE EVENSON Elective Course And yonder sits a maiden And she combs her yellow hair. El Madison. Wis. CONSTANCE V. PATTON Doodle English Course Normal Training School President Freshman Class ' 26. Thanksgiving Play ' 28. Prom Committee, Junior-Senior Play ' 28. Student Board ' 26 ' 27. ' 28. ' 29. Christmas Play ' 28, Cama- raderie ' 26, ' 27 ' 28, ' 29; Shovel Club ' 26, ' 27. ' 28; Cue Club ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29. Never Idle a moment. RUTH PELTON ? ufus , Elective Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie ' 25, 26, 27. ' 28; Shovel Club ' 26. 27. ' 28- F.z soshubble ez a baskit er kittens Pixr Sixly-fom THE MERCURY WALDEMAR C. PETERSEN Pete Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Band. Junior Orchestra, Art, Science, Shovel, Class Football. Seek to be good, but aim not to be great. GLADYS E. PIPER Elective Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie, Art, Household Arts. G. A. A., Shovel. I had not ever noticed I was a comely lass. ROBERT LONGWELL PIPER Bob Latin Course Marquette High School S. P. Q. R., Shovel, Crescent. I ' ll lay my sun against your moon And gamble for the stars. JOSEPH F. PLACEK Elective Course Shovel Club, S. P. Q. R. A gentleman makes not noise. ' Joe Chicago, 111. GENEVIEVE E. PAGLIARUL Gene . Gin Stenographic Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel, Camaraderie, G. A. A., Household Arts, Allen Club, French Club, Shovel Club Monitor. Good health and good sense are two of life ' s best blessings. CAROLYN HORTENSE POLLAK Carrie Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Glee Club ' 26. ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Camaraderie ' 26, ' 27. 28; Music Festival ' 29; Elijah ' 28; Spring Con- cert 28. I hold it cowardice To rest mistrustful, where a noble heart Hath pawned an open hand in sign of love. WILLARD POLLAK Bud Science Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel Club ' 26, ' 27; Student Reserve ' 27; Orient ' 26, ' 27; Science Club ' 28, ' 29; Chairman Program Committee 29; Mercury Monitor ' 26. And who that knew him could forget The busy wrinkles ' ound his eyes? ROBERT MARSHALL PRICE Bob Accounting Course Lapham Park School Shovel Club. The silence of a people is a Icsmih for the kings. 9 - J ( Page Sixty-five THE MERCURY • FRANK C. RAKOCY Doc Accounting Course Center Street School Shovel Club. Track Manager ' 29. Silence never makes any blunders. JOHN J. RIECK Jack Science Course Milwaukee Normal Training School Track, Football, Football E ' 28, Student Dot. S. P. Q. R., Freshman Football, Student Board, Basketball. That boy with the grave mathematical look. Charles E. Rodee Charlie Science Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel S. P. Q. R., Merc Annual. Football E ' 28, Student Dot, Track, Student Board, Intramural Basketball, member team winning in the Senior Division. Then, Pallas, take away thine Owl, And let us have a lark instead. ANGELA B. RONCKE Angel Stenographic Course Center Street School Camaraderie, H. H. A., Shovel, G. A. A. If solid happiness we prize Within her breast this jewel lies. DOROTHEA RUEDI SILI Dot English Course Jerusalem School Camaraderie, Shovel, German Club. Bid her come forth And not hltish SO t« be admired. JANE RUNDLE English Course West Division High School Shovel Club, Cue Club, Camaraderie, Junior-Senior Play, Washington Program. I ' ve often regretted my speech, never my silence. JOSEPH EDWARD SARA Rudy Mathematics Course SS. Peter and Paul School Shovel, Science. There is such a choice of difficulties that I am myself at loss how to determine. BERNICE SANDER Bee Elective Course Center Street School National High School Orchestra, State Orchestra Champions. All-City High School Orchestra ' 29, All-State Orchestra ' 27, 2 ' 8, Mikado, Once in a Blue Moon, Junior-Senior Play ' 27. ' 28, ' 29, Music Festival ' 27, 29, Mixed Quartette. Soprano, Girls ' Glee Club Accompanist 25, 29, Boys Glee Club Accompanist ' 28, Spring Music Program ' 27. ' 28, Operetta ' 29, The First Christmas Cantata ' 27. School Accompanist. We are the music-makers And we are the dreamers of dream Page Sixty-si THE MERCURY ELEANOR SANDERS Sandy , Ellie Elective Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie, Junior Leader ' 28, President ' 29, Cue Club, Vice-President ' 29. Junior-Senior Play ' 28, Washington ' s Birthday Program ' 29, Shakespeare ' s Birthday Program, Twelfth Night ' 29. May Fete ' 27, ' 29, G. A. A., Art Club. Shovel Club, Mer- cury Annual Staff, Christmas Play ' 28, Vice-Presi- dent Senior Class ' 29. Fondness for pirls coupled with dramatic ability. LAURA ELEANOR SANDERS Science Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie, Shovel, S. P. Q. R., G. A. A., Science. Allen Club, Junior Girls ' Glee Club. Senior Girls ' Glee Club, Mercury Staff, Student Board. She stand., single in responsible act and thought- MILTON M. SAX Milt Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Shovel Club. Latin Club. Orient. Cue Club. National High School Orchestra. ' Tis pood-will makes intelligence. ALICE MARY SHERMAN Al . Allie Stenographic Course Center Street School Camaraderie, Shovel. G. A. A., Household Arts. Then heigh ho! the holly! This life is most jolly. WINIFRED LUCILLE SILBER Winnie English Course Maryland Avenue School Camaraderie, Shovel Club, Allen Club. S. P. Q. R. In the all-enclosing freehold of content. HENRY MARSHALL SCHMIDT Schmitty Accounting Course Grace Lutheran School German Club. It is tranquil people who accomplish much. RAYMOND R. SCHMIDT Ray Elective Course Center Street School Football Trainer ' s E ' 26, Track, Football Mana- ger ' s E ' 27. Basketball. Football Major E ' 28, Shovel Club. I ' m not goinK to do Nothing any more. HAROLD SCHREIBER Doc Elective Course Manitowoc High School Shovel Club. Track. Track E. I am a part of all that I have met. Page Sixty-seven THE MERCURY ROBERT T. SCHULTZ Bob Elective Course Bartlett Avenue School Orchestra, Class Football, Track, Football, Basket- ball. I live my days apart. F. CHESTER SCHWAB Chat Elective Course Shorewood High School Cue Club, Shovel Club, Art Club, Glee Club, Mercury Staff ' 29, Annual Staff 29, Shakespeare Play ' 29. Still 1 am learning! RUTH MARIE SCHWEIKERT Boots , Ruthie Elective Course Green Bay Avenue School Household Arts, Camaraderie, Shovel, G. A. A., Mercury Monitor, Student Board Monitor, Christ- mas Program ' 25. Sounds heard are sweet. Those unheard are sweeter. LOUISE FRIEDA SCHWENKE Lou Stenographic Course Center Street School G .A. A. ' 26, ' 27. Camaraderie ' 25, 26, ' 27, ' 28, Shovel ' 27. Allen Club, ' 26, ' 27. Health is the vital principle of bliss And exercise, of health. HAROLD SOMMERFELD Hal Elective Course Center Street School Basketball ' 27, ' 28, German Club, Shovel Club. I were better o be eaten to death by rust than to be scoured to death by perpetual motion. ELIZABETH STIVERS Betty Science Course Hartford Avenue School Camaraderie, Science, Orchestra, Glee Club, Junior and Senior, Students ' Reserve, Cue Club, Library. Moderation, the noblest gift of heaven. A. LAWRENCE STOLZ Larry History Course SS. Peter and Paul School Shovel Club, Science Club, President 28 ; Track 29. A joke ' s a very serious thing. ROLLIN DRAKE THOMPSON Rollie English Course Hartford Avenue School Cue Club ' 25, ' 26, ' 27. ' 28, ' 29, Crescent ' 25, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, 29, Latin Club, Boys ' Glee Club, Shovel, If I Were King, The Goose Hangs High, Student Board, Alternate, Mercury Monitor. 1 am very fond of the company of ladies. Page Sixty-tigkl THE MERCURY EVELYN AGNES TONN Eve , Ev tri iv.. Course Bartlett Avenue School Mercury S°aff ' 28. ' 29, Student Board ' 28, Camara- derie, S. P. Q. R. . , . , „ The true poem is the poet s mind. C. EDWARD VAETH Bddie , Bd 5!,.,, Course Bartlett Avenue School Ituden, Board! S. P. Q. R.. Science Club. Shovel. What female heart can him despise. FRANCES ELIZABETH VALLEE Fran English Course „,.,,. r,™ n ., Ts Camaraderie, Cue Club, Shovel. Junior Glee Club 26, May Fete ' 26, ' 27, ' 29. Junior-Senior Play 29. Twelfth Night. My true love hath my heart And I have his. ELIZABETH JANE VEBBER Shovel. Camaraderie. (( Be merry as you are wise. Betty , Bets ALBERT W. VINSON Vinny , Nagurski ' , Swede English Course 27th Street School Football ' 27. ' 28; E ' 27, ' 28; Track ' 26, 27,. 28, ' 29; Class Basketball ' 28, ' 29; Cue Club, President Ahletic Council, Twelfth Night. Come out — a bundle and a stick is all You ' ll need to carry along. LILLIAN W. WATTENBACK J- ' 1 ' , ' Mathematics Course SS. Peter and Paul School G. A. A., Shovel, Camaraderie, Orient, Sophomore Basketball Team, Junior Basketball Team, Student Board. Joyous as morning Thou art laughine; and scorning. HELEN ELIZABETH WELLS English Course Maryland Avenue School Mercury Staff ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, Mercury Annual Staff ' 29, Student Board ' 28, ' 29, President Senior Girls ' Glee Club ' 29. Secretary Art Club ' 29, Junior- Senior Play ' 29, Christmas Program ' 29. Riley Program ' 28, Crescent, Senior Girls ' Glee Club, Camaraderie, Cue Club, Art, Allen Club ' 27. Shovel. Your wit makes others witty. GEORGE WENDELBURG Windy Mathematics Course Waupaca High School Orient ' 27, ' 29, Mercury Annual Staff ' 28. Editor Mercury Annual ' 29. Track ' 27, Cross Country ' 27, ' 28, C. C. C. E . Student Dot 28, President of Senior Class, Valedictorian. Activity that knows no rest. VaRe Sixty-nine THE MERCURY CHARLES H. WERNER Charlie Latin Course Maryland Avenue School Latin Club. Shovel Club, Senior Hi-Y, Junior Hi-Y, Boys Glee Club. But a rascal nf a child ! MARGARET WEST Muggy , Marggy English Course Hartford Avenue School Allen Club ' 26. ' 27, ' 28. 29. Secretary G. A. A. ' 27, |28, ' 29, Camaraderie ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, Glee Club ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, Once in a Blue Moon, Midsummer Night ' s Dream, Christmas Play ' 25, Student Board Alternate ' 29. A cheerful temper will make beauty attractive, knowledge delightful, and wit good-natured. GERALD WHEELER Jerry- Elective Course Third Street School All-City High Orchestra, Band, Glee Club. Basket- ball, Orchestra. Ah! I can tell how hard it is to climb The steps where Fames proud temple shines afar. Honey , Kitty ' ' Center Street School LILY L. WIDULE Science Course Camaraderie, German Club, Shovel Club, S. P. Q. R Student Board ' 27, 29. The most manifest sign —-cheerfulness. nf WlMloIll 1- cmtinued ' Midge HELEN CLAIRE WILKE Stenographic Course Camaraderie, G. A. A., Champion Basketball Team. Open House Program. To women silence gives their proper grace. ELEANOR WILLIAMS Willy- English Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie, Shovel, Household Arts, Latin Club, Allen Club, Treasurer Science Club ' 28, G. A. A., Vice-President ' 28, President ' 29, Champion Base- ball Team ' 27, ' 28, Captain Class Basketball Team ' 28 ' 29. I ' m just wrapped up in gym. DOROTHY BLAKELEY WILSON Ditto , Dot Stenographic Course Bartlett Avenue School Camaraderie, Shovel Club, Pigtail Day ' 28, Mercury Typist. Allen Club. And ye shall succor men ; ' Tis nobleness to serve. ELMER LOUIS WINTER Elective Course West Division High School President of Cue Club, Vice-President Shovel Club, Intersociety Debate ' 29, Secretary of Orient ' 29, Treasurer of Orient ' 28, Class Football ' 28, Basket- ball, If I Were King, Rip Van Winkle. Christ- mas Play, S. P. Q. R-, Mercury Monitor, Wash- ington Birthday Program. Track ' 28, ' 29, Glee Club. A combination; and a form indeed, Where every god did seem to set his seal. To give the world assurance of a man. Vaxc Sri tnty THE MERCURY HAROLD WITHROW Elective Course Third Street School Football, Track, C. C. C, Basketball, Cue Club. Art Club, Shovel Club, Secretary of Glee Club, Sudent Board. There is nn surety like gentleness. JOSEPHINE E. WUPPER Jo Elective Course Cedarburg High School Art Club Camaraderie. Art Editor ' 29. Annual Mer- cury Staff, Junior-Senior Play Scenery, Prom Scenery. Thine art I ' d applaud t.. the echo, That should applaud again. CATHERINE ZAHN Katy ' Elective Course Third Street School Household Arts, Camaraderie, Shovel Club, G. A. A., Student Board ' 29. Her ways are ways of pleasantness and all her paths are peace. MAURICE ZEALLY Maury Elective Course Third S. rcet School Shovel Club, Glee Club. Football ' 27. ' 28, Track ' 26. ' 27, Freshman Football, Basketball ' 27, Captain Basketball ' 28, Mercury Monitor. He visioned Shakespeare as an empty name, Tunnev and Tilden. how his eyes would shine! FRANK ZINDA Elective Course My fife is une In Boys ' Technical High School rid grind. MARIE ZWICK Merle Stenographic Course St. Elizabeth School Camaraderie, G. A. A., Senior Champion Basketball Team. Shovel Club. The rigour nf the game. Marinette, Wis. JOSEPH FISCHER Elective Course Shovel Club, Latin Club. A lazy boy and a warm bed are difficult to part. ' Vage Seventy-one THE MERCURY EVELYN KLOCKOW Jere Elective Course Bartlett Avenue School Shovel, Camaraderie, Art Club, G. A. A. The quality of mercy is not strained. WALTER H. PLATO Manual Arts Course Shovel Club. Don ' t call your bird or offspring by A name his future may belie. Jim Center Street School MARION JEAN MARSH Totsy Modern Language Hartford Avenue School Shovel. Camaraderie, G. A. A., S. P. Q. R., Cue Club. A thing of beauty is a jr.y forever. CARL E. RIEMENSCHNEIDER Carlie Elective Course Hartford Avenue School Science Club. Shovel Club, Art, Class Football, Ger- man Club, Sr. Hi-Y. Every great artist was first an amateur. MARGARET MULHOLLAND Marge Elective Course Holy Angels ' Academy Assistant Student Board, Mercury Monitor. Beauy is truth, truth beauty. SAM PARSONS , 8 „ B ,_ a11 Science Course Maryland Avenue School Shovel, Basketball. Football, Track. Let ' s go, boys. HENRIETTA RAMIEN Modern Foreign Language Maryland Avenue School G. A. A., Camaraderie, Household Arts, Shovel. Where the stream runs quietest The water is deepest. IRENE J. BORKOWCKI Jo- Elective Course St. Mary s School Camaraderie Shovel, Science, Students ' Reserve, S. P. Q. R., Allen Club. Art. I have a little shadow That goes in and out with me. JOSEPHINE C. SULLIVAN Jo Elective Course St. John ' s Cathedral High School Shovel Club, Camaraderie. Household Arts Club. For the world was built in order And the atoms march in tune. FRANCIS GEORGE TOBIN Toby- Science Course St. John ' s Cathedral High School Stage Crew ' 28- ' 29; Cue Club, Shovel Club, Pig Tail Program, Students ' Reserve, Science Club. I have climbed to the snows of age And I gaze at a field in the past. ELWOOD BERG A bronze lank man. KARL B. GOKE Solomon in all his glory Was not arrayed like one of these. ' -JULIUS A. GRAD What thou art we know not. VIN LINCK I strove with none For none was worth my strife. MARION T. GOLDSMITH English Course Milwaukee Downer Seminary Camaraderie. Cue, Orient, Caduceus, Shovel. Mer- cury Staff. Mercury Annual. Quill and Scroll It takes life to love life. FREDERICK HECKER Science Course Shovel, S. P. Q. R.. Track. Fritz Center Street School 6 Timothy Tim Has one red head And one red head Has Timothy Tim. ' WALDEMAR PETERSEN Elective Course. You are uneasy; you never sailed with me before, I see. ROBERT RAMSTACK He who climbs above the cares of this world has found the sunny side of life. JULIUS SERCHEN I am not one who much or oft delight To season my fireside with personal talk. Page Stvtnty-lwo THE MERCURY The Class of Twentv-nine Father Time was sitting at his desk. He was somewhat rushed because it was the twentieth of June and on the twenty- first he would have to have the records of the Class of ' 29 readv. Of course there was no question in his mind that the soul of so shining a class would be admitted to Paradise when it ceased its physical being, but nevertheless, records were necessary and Father Time just had to have the dope in black and white. Consequentlly, he wiped his aged brow, set his scythe up against the hall tree in the corner and pulled the day-book out of the drawer. Having adjusted his glasses, he ran his fing- er down to the twenty-ninth line on the page headed Milwaukee East. 1900-1950. There were three columns. In the first, headed Entrance, he marked 1925. In the second marked Graduation, he wrote 1929. The next column was quite a wide one and bore the title Remarks. Hmm, mused Father Time, I believe that I shall have to assign Mercury to get the facts of the case, and he pushed a button on his desk. A young gentleman entered whom we as- sume to be Mercury since he had wings on his heels. Merc, said Father Time, fly down to Riverside, you ' ll be able to rec- ognize it from the air by the E which its wings form, and find some material about this class of ' 29 which is going to graduate tomorrow. Get a pretty good history of it so that we shall know whether to admit its spirit into Paradise or not. No sooner said than done, said Mer- cury as he picked his winged hat and cane off the hall tree. Arriving at Riverside, he interviewed the teachers and various members of the Old Settlers ' Club, including the President, Mr. Chesner. Having spent a very pleasant day there, Mercury flew back and presented his report to Father Time: It seems that the class arrived in two groups. The first, as scouts, came in Feb- ruary, and so quickly was a spirit of life brought into affairs by the advent of this sparkling class, that the first Student Board was organized, including several members of the new class. In September the second part put on long pants and came to high school. Those whom I interviewed remembered these verdant freshman as quite a normal group of children ; that is, they indulged in the classical Riverside sports of brief case dumping, book spilling, and tie-pulling. Aside from the physical aspect, they are remembered to have been superior in spirit to the common run of freshman classes. The class chose as its leader for the first term, Constance Patton of Normal fame. The secretary ' s position was awarded to Chester Hitchcock. After the election, the class duly smiled at Mr. Werner ' s jokes, paid their nickels, and left. A year passed and the Class put on airs and became sophomores. That second year, they chose Peggy Fox, well known basket- Page Seventy-three THE MERCURY ball player of M. U. S., president; Grace Gore, Secretary ; and John Waddleton, treasurer. By this time the Class had a good start in activities. The end of the year found them represented in club offices, one member on the Inter-Society Debate, and Art Krueger on the City Champion football team. The Class was well repre- sented on the City Track Championship team by Joe Shutz. Two important staff positions ever filled by ' 29ers ; Fred Cra- mer, later the editor himself, was the giggle and grin dealer, and Jane Muskat did Art Work. Although only a sophomore, Mar- garet Naps achieved national prominence when the cartoonists began to draw her next Al Hapke. Then the Class turned into juniors. They had to run a prom that year. They elected Robert Brown, president; Jimmy Keyes, vice president ; and Jane Muskat, secretary. The adviser, Miss Bixby, ap- pointed the man to handle the money. She picked Jack Mikula for this post. The prom under the direction of these and com- mittee chairmen, including in the number Neal Drought, was a real success and one long to be remembered. The Class, of course, had its finger in the usual number of pies. It furnished many club officers, and a large part of the Mercury staff. Three out of the six debaters, including Senator Dick Mooney, Harlan Levin, and Tom Fairchild were of the Class, and many of the cast for the Junior-Senior play belonged to ' 29. Rita Casper played the lead. The Class also showed itself to be progressive by changing to a new Class ring design. Art Krueger, football captain, won a double E and Joe Shutz a double circle E. In football, seven of the Class won emblems and in track the Class made a similar good showing. At the State Meet, Charles Hoist took first in the broad jump. The girls ' infirmary was introduced that year into Riverside and the Class of ' 29 furnished all of the crew of assistants. The Class grew old, and became grave old seniors. However, in spite of their age, they kept their minds active in every field. Page Seictity-four This Class inaugurated the new system of Mercury editors, one for the Monthly and one for the Annual. Fred Cramer, who in early youth saturated his head with oil and is st.ll burning it, was editor of the Mercury Magazine, and George Wendel- burg was editor of the Annual. The Class which left in February, schol- astically headed by Harold Freundt as vale- dictorian, chose for officers Jane Muskat, president; Cyril Boding, vice president; and Janet Penner, secretary-treasurer. Captain MacMillan, although he may not have real- ized it, was honored at the annual convoca- tion by having ' 29 as a large part of his Riverside audience. James Keyes was Riv- erside ' s representative in the council. The Class again furnished most of the members on the debate, adding Elmer Winter and Jerry Mehlman to tiic representation. In the Junior-Senior play, Rip Van Winkle, ' the Class of ' 29 furnished Mildred Oberst and Ev Baker as well as many members of the supporting cast. Track also included a good number of ' 29 people. The June Class elected for officers George Wendelburg, president ; Eleanor Sanders, vice president; Richard Mooney, secretary-treasurer. The valedictory was given by George Wendelburg, highest rank- ing student, and the following were includ- ed in the Honor Society from both Classes: Alfred Biermann, Alice Borchert, Evelyn Caan, Tom Fairchild, Harold Fleundt, Dorothy Hanson, Charles Hoist, Richard Mooney, Jane Muskat, Marguerite Naps, Jack Rieck, Charles Rodee, Helen Wells ' , George Wendelburg. With an interesting graduation, the story closes. What do you think of it? asked Mer- cury of Father Time. Father Time wrote something in his book which Mercury read over his shoulder. It showed the names eternal life had blessed And lo, this Class ' name led all the rest. THE MERCURY The Future of the Class of ' 29 Looking into the future written for the next two score years of externity, I sez many a most interesting scene. What forty years will do to a class of two hundred is most remarkable ! Gazing with inspired vision into the facts I see, for instance, dim in the future, amid much glamour and acclamation, the crown- ing of the first true heavyweight cham- pion of the world since Gene Tunney, the king being none other than my old friend, Addison Love. As the scene quivers and becomes more clear, I can make out the gruff, leather-lunged announcer, Mildred Archambault, and who should be sending the fight over the radio at the rate of twen- ty-two sentences a minute but Frank Bur- ton. Joseph Graham is selling peanuts in the audience, and Elizabeth Stivers is there as captain of the police. Fading, the scene then shifts to a metro- politan department store, where I see Wal- demar Peterson very much absorbed in his job at the lace and ribbon counter although h:s old classmate, Elizabeth Lorenze, is just opposite him selling sporting goods and tires. Down the aisle Frances Yallee is demonstrating a new tooth-paste, and Chet Hitchcock is autioning off a set of antiques taken from an old building at Bartlett and East Locust. The vision then shifts rapidly from place to place and for an instant I can catch a flash of Monte Carlo, where I see a fat and robust Robert Piper watching his great establishment operate. I can make out in the group about the table Isabelle McKeith before the scene changes to Constantinople, where, horrible to recount, there is a new Sultan, Richard Mooney, who, for the fate of our greatest of women haters, has eighty wives. Miserable day! But the scene again shifts (before I catch sight of the harem) and presents a non-stop air race seven times around the world. Our dash- ing pilots seem to be old classmates: Mary Ballantine, Eugenia Harley, and Mary Creager. As a novelty, Jerry Goetz is go- ing to race them on ground on a motorcy- cle ! The set of varied visions continues swiftly shifting: Dorothy Aarons, breaking in bronchos ; Arnold Kaszubowski teaching dancing; Sam Parsons writing poetry; Gladys Kaestner as a veterinary; Victoria Huntzicker singing Mammy songs; and at last the scene seems to steady itself. An eager group of about twenty-five ap- pear. They are the remnants of the Demo- cratic part , and they are holding their national convention. Who is the chairman but Ralph Lewandowski. After fiery and inspired speeches by Rita Casper and Eve- lyn Tonn, the convention settles back to hear some new ictor Records made by the whispering tenor, Grace Gore. They also listen to a recitation of poetry by its author, who is a more modern modernist. He has succeeded in his writings in elimin- ating not only rhyme and rhythm, (as they do now) but in eliminating also word sense and thought. He is, of course, that great proponent of modern poetrv, Tom Fair- child. The scene then pictures the L nited States Senate, where Elmer Winter is mak- ing an address in the Indian sign language. The visions then start changing quickly again, and I see Willard Pollak ushering at our good old Downer 1 heater; Jack Rieck a professional golfer, be being the only person in history to have made two holes in one; 1 can see Paul Kelley, a librarian; Margaret Letchworth, follow- ing her natural callings, driving a double- decked bus ; Constance Patron as an effi- ciency expert; and Bob Mann a profes- sional wrestler. There next appears a most remarkable vision. Through much steam and flame I can see Satan in the depths of Hades, and there by his side sits Ben Mott. Edward Cooke is busy combing Hees from Cerberus. It seems that the brakes on Ben ' s car did wear out at last. Tom Johnson is also there, somewhat in the role of court jes- ter. This horrible scene then fades and in its place I see Lyman Hunt and John Imp teaching Sunday school classes ; the Page Seventy-five TOFTY YEAR HENCE TOM DRIFT and HIS WONDER CRYSTAL Page Seventy-six THE MERCURY boys always seemed so fitted for such jobs. Harold Schreiber is in the same scene as minister. Next a little drama seems to present itself. I see John Ball, aged and stooped, ar- rested for picking pockets by the great Sherlock Milton Sax Holmes. He is brought before Judge Lehman, famous for his decisions in love pentagons. It is inter- esting to note that George Ide is the clever state ' s attorney, and George Knudsen is op- posing him on the defense. John claims that trisecting angles as a profession did not support him, but he is convicted on the Aldrich clause, section 406. He succeeds, later, in a jail break, however, led by Fran- ces Anderson. This too, fades, and next there appears a great scroll inscribed with champions from the class of ' 29: There is Alfred Bierman, national tit-tat-toe champ; Jerry Wheeler, inventor of the world ' s largest musical instrument (his old hank- erings) ; Bernice Sanders, hog-calling cham- pion ; Margaret Jones, district coffee-drink- ing champion ; and Mildred Oberst, holder of a new speed record. The next vision presenting itself is one of a huge circus. Jack Bowers seems to be head ring-master. Included in a group of wild west riders are Clare Lincoln and Eleanor Williams. As general handy-men about the place, I can see Henry Jerger and Harvev Mengel, with tools under their arms and protruding from all parts of their clothing. Last of all I can see the fellow with a huge job; the cleaning up of all the locker rooms (or whatever they are called in a circus), this person is our friend, Barney Baker. Virginia Johnson is also there, a bearded lady. Just outside of the circus Frances Barnes is doing stunt flying. I can also see a big billboard reading: I can make a man out of you. Why be a ' weakling. ' Take Chesner ' s course in phy- sical training and lick the world. There are also various posters advertising the ap- pearance of Arthur Boyajian, the world ' s greatest violinst at the Cook Theater. Just before this scene fades, I catch sight of an early Model A new Ford in green just pulling away, and sure enough, Gus Blatz is at the wheel ! There then appears the interior of the Edmonds Night Club, where George Huebsch is evoking jazz from a group of people who are more or less musically in- clined. Smiling Ed Neustadtl is passing in and out among the guests as head waiter. The great manager of the largest chain of air filling stations in the world, Lewis Knudsen, has a booth. He also sells maga- zine subscriptions as a sideline. Al in- son ' s home cooking is served. The modern- istic walls were done by Ruth Grotenrath. As the glimmering visions shift a bit and show a busy street corner, I can make out John Grupp directing traffic. Suddenly he places both his hands in the air and all traffic comes to a stop ; two fire engines speed through. Gripping the wheel of one is John Peter Koehler, who performs his task quite deftly, and from whose path no one is slow to move ; Robert Eichorst, Reed Foster, and Harold Sommerfeld all have positions as protectors of property, and they are clinging for dear life to the swerving apparatus. The scene then changes and presents what is commonly called a nut- house. I can see one aged person tottering about, and he seems to be raving. He keeps repeating, the Annual, those pictures, no pages in the dummy, those proofs, gosh what a mess, the Annual, etc., and lo, I see George Wendelberg .still recovering from his little task of ' 29. The scene then shifts and presents a neatly-lettered glass door: Chairman W. C. T. U. and Presi- dent of the Society for Repeal of Prohibi- tion, M. Fox. The doors opens before my eyes, but the office of Neal Drought, lawyer, also attorney for H. Abraham, bootlegger. Just before this scene fades, Charles Mohaupt dashes through the hall, trying to catch Charles Hoist, the world ' s smallest writer, and get him to insure his handwriting. This, too, disappears, and then a figure takes shape which I recognize as Jack Mikula, who, lo and behold, is just getting in his news materials for the Paris Tribune. I can next see Jimmy Keyes, walking up an avenue with green dark goggles on, probably so that he won ' t see any women, the sight of which he does not like. Page Set cuty-set en TUt MERCURY The visions begin to grow dimmer, less concise, and they do not come so rapidly. My look into the future is drawing to a close. I can see cartoons by Chester Schwab; and I then see Alice Burns now a famous player of mother parts on the Charles Werner circuit which has also suc- ceeded because of its manager. I can make out Jo Innes, Toddy Geiger, and Eunice Eickleberg, all living contentedly on quiet farms, many miles out of the bustle and busy life of the city. Maurice Zeally, Har- old Withrow, and Charles Rodee all have office white-collar jobs, because they never did like outdoor exertion. Then my visions begin to go out very rapidly. All I can make out now, in that dim future, is Eleanor Sanders and Helen Wells, both successful actors, and finallv the scene fades out entirely. It takes one dying breath however, and present a dim snowy-white vista, with icy mountain peaks in the distance and snow and white as far as one can see. One little dark spot wan- ders across this place slowly. It is, I can see, Jerome Mehlman, who has been lost in the Antarctic for just forty years, and oh, sad fate, has had no one to whom to talk all these years ! The vision then goes entirely, but I can see something else forty years hence, with- out any strange vision. I can see myself, tired and panting, running like Orestes still, with close on my heels about one hundred people who didn ' t like what Frederick Cra- mer said about them in the class prophecy of twenty-nine. Page Sfl ' ttity-eigbt -Y ?. THE MERCURY Junior Class Officers HBi J. HU tvVT I IISMi F.LE I VICE-PRES1 DENT SIX ' UK 1 ' AIO -TREASURER Sophomore Class Officers J. tlAEJVLER J. PCRTH 1 A ITI PRESl DENT VICE-PRESIDENT SECRETARY-TREASURES Freshman Class Officers £ HAR IN RIEAUS lhSJIIjeu „ ♦ . V t A4 PRESIDENT Y fV. TRi l DKNT M ' .QJHfl -a in THE MERCURY Mr. Fricker 101 Commercial First Row: Ray Bachowski. Walter Herbst. Peter Sara. Florence Judge, Helen Malovasich, Mary Senger, Helen Knap. Mary Gorecki. Edward Bischke. Second Row : Jack Harrington. Eleanor Gale. Lloise Wat- kins Edward Strelka. Ray Swinskev. Ray Bnsack, Theoda Laabs, Grace Knaffle (Student Board). 1 bird Row • Mr Fricker Frederick Tripp, Chester Malicki, Murriel Wahner, Ruth Urbanek. Betty atson, Lorraine Mueller. Gladys Balazentis, Miss Dempsey. Fourth Row: Jerome Karass, Cyril Seyler. Kenneth Flynn, Margaret Mulholland (Mercury Monitor). Mr. Aplin 103 Commercial First Row: George Meunier, Agnes Zerza, Esmeralda Dryer. Evelyn Rinzel. Dorothy Meier, Irene Dors- zynski. Helen Wilke. Betty Matzek. Glenn Kengott (Student Board). Second Row . Casirnir Nycz. .Mar- garet Quabius, Dorothy Krueger, Marcellr Olp. Alvin Paulus. Lester Luchesi. Gerald Rindfleiscb, Charles Sherman. Third Row ' : Mr. Alpin, John Gregory, Arthur Jacobs, Mildred Kaap, Kathryn Olson Irank Schnackenberg. Gilbert Kluge, Etnt-t Stanke. Fonrth Row: Charles Keidel, Gerald Jens. Benedict Gottfried (Mercury Monitor), Elton Johnson, Joseph Placek, Ray Brukwitski. Pagf EiRljl) THE MERCURY Miss Henry First Kuw : Lorry S ludercgge William Sheir, Eleanor Kiehl, Shirley Sax, Kolltwsky. Second Kuw : Frank Mathematics Ri iberl Johns in, Rlroy Chay- Kinnel. Marjorie PolUk, i liar kow.iki, rohn Ewakl, K-.-.l Lipsky, Francis Kotlewsky. Second Row: Frank Kinnel, Marjorie Pollak. Lnar- lotte Gadsky, Eleanor Reed, Hetty Lou Robertson, Douglas Cook, Edward Bull, .1 ! ' Daggett (Student Board). Third Row: Miss Henry, Frank Augustine, Dorothy Nunstcttcr, .Mai mim Knwsend. man Hanson. Lois Angell, Edwidge Herald (Mercury Monitor). Helen Schupack. Fourth Row: Joseph Schwartz, Rr n  rt Tinker. Heorere Kimz. Clarence [trandt. Kamloli Uieve. Mr. Dunham 109 Jer First Row: Joseph Struzinski, Henry Mazurczak, Henry Baribeau, Edward Wyderka, William Backes. Second Row- Mr. Henry Rynski, Howard Robel, Henry Pierchalski, Castanzio Alfred Poot, Arthur Heesch, Donald Erickson, George Sequenz, felbein. F. until Row: Elmer llackbarth, Glenn Davis. Manual Arts Erwin Hahn, Raymond Mueller. Euclide Dunham. Walter Schaller, Ray Riekkoff, M.attano, Norbert Kane. Third Row: Roy I.eiske. Kenneth Cook. Ray Schie- Page Eighty-one THE MERCURY Mr. Weidman 114 Commercial First Row: Howard Schmidt. Isabelle McKeith. Ellwood Braatz. Wand Hirsch. Laverne Lentz, Loraine Ruhland. John Kaminski. Richard Kuzdas. John Rubin. Second Row: Emma Sanchez. Ethel Burckardt. Dorothv Gussick. Lillian Morris. William Zimmerman. Lorraine Xord. Harold Seemann. Adolph George. Third Row: Mr. Weidman. Edward Leonard. Paul Schaefer. Gordon Fausel. Ruth Freiberg. Jayne Faulks. Hilda Osid. Vera Herferth. Roy Olson. Fourth Row: Stella Matyasz. Frank Moslavac. Jane Ruhe (Stu- dent Board I. Earl Kloppman. Mary ' Jean Calhoun. Robert Krome. Gordon Wettstein, John Strothman. Fifth Row: Russell Oldenburg. Clifford Zinzow. Albert Vinson (Mercury Monitor). Miss O ' Neil 117 Manual Arts First Row: Anita Saunders. Mildred Oberst. Delia Miller. Bernice Sander. Helen Sweet. Ruth Hemsing. Linda Benz. Harriet Birczvk. Gertrude Hanna. Second Row: Louada Campbell. Cecelia Jankowski. Frances Anderson (Mercury Monitor), Angela Roncke. Ethel Knebel. Jean Hawkins. Jane Rundle (Student Board). Dorothv White. Third Row : Miss O ' Xeil. Violet Knoll, Dorothy Prurmers, Gertrude Ehle. Gertrude Herr- mann. ' Amy Wiskocil, Helen Schwarz. Virginia Willson. Albertarac Sherman. Fourth Row: Marjone Bollow, Verona Heiser. Fern Hammen. Elinor Evinson, Gladys Piper. P.jtr EiflHi-l TUt MERCURY c n o rs Miss Beatty 121 Manual Arts First Row : Harriet Bierman, Elizabeth Makal. Marian Forrer, Mildied White, Elizabeth Munich, Sally Orchowski, Muriel Duke, Ruth Lemke (Mercury Monitor), Lillian Choenache. Second Row: Anna Kol ssa (Student Board), Ellen Lad wig, Louise Eiffler, Florence Festerling, Do roth j Benson, Nathalie Schaafs, Helene Krupa, Hazel Henthorne. Third Row: Alice Pedenska. Miss Turell 124 English First Row: Wallace Hughes, Gertrude Kastern, Ruth Ray, Betty Levzow, Ethel Kotecki. Mildred Kocher, Ethel Braun, Nancy Bacon. Marion B runner. Second Row: Miss Turell. Alexander Koenig. Russell Dakin, Eric Wenstrand, Woodrow Wilson (Mercury Monitor), Richard Domluowski. Jean Garlick, Estelle Montwid. Third Row: Raymond DavidorT. Harry Nuernberg. Charlotte Pleskatchek. Natalie Browne. Estelle Remmel. Margaret Ritz, Regina Machikowski. Edward Parker. Fourth Row : Roman Jakubiak. Clarence LaLonde, Alfred Chesner. Page Eighty-three THE MERCURY Miss Ross, Miss Batty 201 English First Row: Arthur Daly, Eunice Roessler. Virginia Shauss, Virginia Armitage. Julia Cygan, Jesse Sherman, Jesse Fiske. Leona McCoskey, Harriet Timm. Helen Bliss. John Schieble Second Row.: Edward Boya, an, Emmaline Gierman, Louise Everson, Helen Mathiak, Florence Bauman. Margaret Schoebel, Lincoln Freuck Michael Beyer. Charles Borchert (Mercury Monitor). Leslie Balone. Curtis Flieman. Third Row Miss Batty Grace Tetzlaff. Emily Schudiske, Edith Peterson, Dorothy Mussotter, Joyce oung Leila Schroede, . arbara Mitschc. Mary Lou Movie, Millee Bogadi. Fourth Row: Harold Staab. Louise Jab owski. William Oweil Stephen i ene.,wski. Dorothy Wilson, Virginia Grell. Mona Bush, Dorothy Hansen. Mercedes Leisen, Alyce Bruhii. Mrs. Stevens 202 English Madeline Barry. John Gross. James Owens, Robert Bardlen, Louise Erwin, Catherine Hannon, Second Row: Mrs. Stevens, Anita Scherr. Annamarie jane Mueller. Kathryn Hansen, Manmn Kaneen. Hermann. Dorothy Krcig. Helen Ib.i stmeyer. He Row Andrew Mcintosh. lack Hardiman (Student Board). kow-ki. Gwendolyn Williams (Mercury Monitor). Ruth Rossnuller. Schroeder, James Donahue. ' N, u:;! ' ; B;mke l cordon Heme„!an! ' ' john ' ' 1 1 ! Fourth Row: John Tufts. Arthur Pane Eighty-four THE MERCURY Miss Butcher 203 English First Row: Gladys Kaestner. Alice Borchert, Edna Heims. Peggy Fox, Eleanor Hammersmith, Mary Creamer. Lenore Koegler. Beatrice Goldberger, Margaret J. .lies. Second Row:. Miss Hotelier Alice Burns Dorothea Rendisile. Daisy Nehls, Virginia Johnson. Alice Reeck, Dorothy Davis. ( onstance Patton. Third Row: Maitland Cook, Alvin Reitman. George Huebscli. Charles Mohai.pt (Student Board). Anita Behling, Mary Ballantine. Mildred Archambault. Fourth Row: Charles Werner. Edgar Neustadtl, William Aldnch. Robert Eichhorst (Mercury Monitor). Miss Puelicher 208 English First Row: Carla Nahrath, Claire Gadzichowski, Virginia Murphy, Melba Mayer, Eleanor Zetterlund, Roene Frei. Olive Ludwig, Evelyn Bergemann, Henna Kohls. Second Row: Helen Hoppe. Isal.elle Ehle.s. Mary Willev. Jean Wilkins. Winifred Silber, Eunice Schwaiger, Helen Morose, Elsie Grehg. Theresa . an- kowski. Third Row: Erwin Porth. Giles Lello, Ivan Schulte, George Luce. Hazel Ludwig, Lorraine lal- son,. Elsie Henning. Edna Genske. Fourth Row: William Voigt Henry Gram. Carl Prach auser (lorn Monitor), Harold Schreiber, Ralph Nielsen. David Xunn. Richard Mooney (Student Board). Raj LeVin. Pagr Eighty-five THE MERCURY Mr. Raynes 209 Manual Arts First Row : Rav Reit. Chester Bvkowski. Charles Melius, Allen Rasmussen, Lewis Ninfo. Edward Misiak, Howard Clark. ' Francis Curry, Clement Kramer. Second Row: Mr. Raynes, Norman Binger. Gaylord Shepard. DuVal Purkins, Herman Goff. Elmer Burkwitzki, Kenneth Dittman, Oscar Pfeiffer (Student Boardl. Eugene Haeberle (Mercury Monitor). Third Row: Walter Barron. Joe Young. Boh Horning. Arthur Schiefelbein, Ed Kaiser, Robert Sullivan. Joseph Price. Fourth Row: Howard Telan, Adelhert Meyer. Mr. May 215 Commercial First Row: Leo Karasciewz. Ruth Norlow, Alma Ruemelin, Lucille Humply, Evelyn Neverman, Margaretha Schneider, Alice Wizelman, Gordon Burmaster. Second Row : Lucille Lukowitz, Muriel Chapman, Lucille Boltz. Isahelle McGraw. Clara Lelo, Harriet Loomis. Geraldine Klumb, Myrtle Dietrich. Third Row: Mr. May Beatrice Luebke. Margaret Rosenberg, Arthur Mueller. Ray Zyvicki. Richard Roth (Student Board). June Kunz, Mary Grenyo. Fourth Row: Pauline Faytle. George Fisher, Mildred Mueller. Dorothy Runge ( Mercury Monitor i. Pane Eigbiy-lix THE MERCURY r n r O r LJGMfr £ ( ■ ' , 1 w(l H L. vft 1 iW. • Bflr j ■ J - % 1 T m W) U m H w L f= r A w ■1 ' ■ 4 J • 1 1 Mrs. Howe 216 English Fivst Row: Launcelot Schippers. Myra Jacobsen, Erna Burgemeister, Barbara Stephanski, Agnes Phalen. Eleanor Purtell, Eunice French (Student Board), Virginia Van Den Berg, Sidney Teweles. Second Row: Wanda Wojtyczek. Ruth Schuchardt, Violet Sax. Alvilda Tendick, Maybelle Kahle. Helen Pinkley, Mddred Spaude. PJivlis Piatt. Mary Aiken. Third Row: Robert Bremner. Herbert Schmidt. James Woodward. Karel Katz. Lester Laatsch, Harrison Reed, Ruth Nowatney. Ruth King. Fourth Row : Earl Wegner, Myron Zimmerman. Nelson Winkless (Mercury Monitor I. Charles Sainsbury, Grover White. Paul Reitman. Roland Coerper, William Poyser. John Behling. Miss Linnard 217 English First Row: olive Kaltenback. Gladys O ' Gorman. Irene Broude. Dorothy Fish. Catherine Conway, Marion Johnston, Kathleen May, Dorothy S ' toneman. Helen Krielsheimer (Mercury Monitor I. Second Row: Ger- trude Alt. Ruth Erlich, Ruth Works. Kathryn Wanvig. Sophie Ronke. Mary Morris. Hattie Landowskl. Dorothy Shroeder. Third Row: Miss Linnard. Norman Walters. Oscar ( .ram (Student Board). Martin Bauman. loe Casper. Clifford Bitker. Clifton Stevenson. Fourth Row: Lyle Hoskins. George Jung. Page Eigbly-seien THE MERCURY Miss Noltner 221 Commercial First Row: Marie Manske, Dorothy Techel, Amy Lederer, Claire Lederer, Pearl Greve. Dorothy Baerecke. Ruth Meyer, Ethel Drev. Dorothy Haisch. Second Row: Julie Eyenson, Agnes Osmanski, Evelyn Kaslo Alberta Simons. Elizabeth Jones, Angela Spankowski. Martha Makal leanette Langson, Pearl Thill. Hurt Row Miss Noltner. Dorothy MacFall. Marjory Detning, Ruth Baumann, Eleanor Bielefeld (Me cim Monitor), Amanda Brodhagen, Shirley Hornburg (Student Board). Dorothy Czarnecki, Virginia Hornburg Fourth Row Audrey Melius. Anna Wojciechowski, Dorothy Landon. Ruth Leidgen, Margaret Turzinski. Miss Helmar 22? Commercial First Row rune Fowles, Dorothy Rinzel. Margaret Holmes, Katherine Stoch, Tulianna Lange, Margaret SSStduST Marion Gust, I la Luebke, Anita Reiss Second Row : Miss Helmar CUraJuhay, Roberta May, Lucille C.las Florence Lehman (Student Board), Jane Kiel, Janet Sloan. Allied Alonzo Ihml Kow. Rutn Ryker, Edward Kresnek, LeRoy Voelz, Margaret Daks. Elain. Ahlswede, Marjorie Mungen, Eunice Geyer. Fourth Row: Joseph Schudrowitz, Victor Goldschmitt, Elmer Wintsr (Mercury Monitor). Pagt Eighty-eight TnE MERCURY Miss Snow 224 Commercial First Row: Catherine Nevins, Ruth Berthold, Alta Rath. Eileen Kotlewsky, Irene Mikkelsen, Steffie Kramtz, Helen Bach, Agnes Bethe, leannette Loge. Second Row: Genevieve Mueller. Lorene Hammen. Viola Jenss. Dorothy Mikkelsen, Cecilia Borenitsch, Elizabeth Fuchs, Lucille Bleier, Dorothy Koch. Third Row: Miss Sno ' « Benjamin Moore. Lester Senger, James Nevins (Student Board), Henry Nycz, Lillian Kuehn, Harriet Sax. Norma Lucas. Fourth How: Evert DeBaer, Philip Arnold, Milton Frauendorfer (Mercurj Monitor), Raymond Brill. Frederick Rapp, Ralph Crow, Carl Kiichn. Mr. Siegmeyer, Miss Juneau 301 Foreign Languages First Row. Bernice Tillman. Eleanor Hibicki, Miriam Glasgow, Marie Kotecki, Lillian Pullman Marion Werha. Janice Adams. Virginia Smith. Beatrice Miller. Second Row: Emily Macks, Fiances Drohniewski. Louise Fountain. Evelynne Kripke, Helen Rogers. Gladys Frauendorfer. Sylvia Kripke (Mercury Monitor). Catherine Wozniak. Third Row: Mr. Siegmeyer. Miss Juneau, Antony Slawinski, John C.rogan. Frances Thomas. Eleanor Taskow ski. Sereen Tellefson, Virginia Rom. Evan James. Fourth Row: Edward Butz, Jerome Cale. Everon Hornhurg. Douglas Thatcher. Charlotte Stewart. Betty Kuchlhorn. Doris Gastraw. Kenneth Allen. Fifth Row: Robert McKeever. Willi on Ludwig, Lawrence Stolz, John f.rupp (Student Board). Erwin Otto. Page Eighty-nine THE MERCURY Miss Tournadour 302 Foreign Languages First Row Arthur Best. Elizabeth Lorenz. Naomi Buckbinder, Barbara Pachaly. Jane Muskat. Lille Hauser, Rutli Loennis Helen Lellu, Ewald Neitz. Second Row: Caroline Pollak, Frances Vallee, Mildred Borgman. Tanet Marks. Janet Penner. Bettina Babcock, Katherfne Geiger, Dorothy Aarons. Third Row: Richard Burtons Alice Jankowski. Eleanor Sanders, Elizabeth Nell. Gina Cerminara (Mercury Monitor). Marion Jens Margaret Letchworth. Irene Pedenski. Adele Meunier, Margaret Junkerman. Fourth Row: Herbert Braun John Muskat (Student Board). Roland Heller, Carl Moebius. Harold Wolfe, Robert Mann. 1-red Johnson Richard Munsche. Emma Jean Archer. Chester Hitchcock, Richard Morawetz, John Bowers. Miss Keller 303 Foreign Languages First Row: Dolores Braatz, Annette Illian, Jane Whithead, Mildied Kienitz. Alice Bradley. Gertrude Woidnick, Cozette Krueger (Student Board). Kenneth Koester. Bill Graham (Mercury Monitor). Sjecona Row: Miss Keller, Wilnia Thiel, Violet Gruenwald, Josephine Hull. Ruth ittke. Betty Olson, Angehne Kielpinski, Edith Knapman. Third Row: Stephen Nowiki Lembke, Bernice Briesc, Erna Otto, Florence Alfred Bergeman, Stephen Piechura, J Tillotson. ilit Daemmrich, Behrens, Cbarh Robert Hutchinson, Arthur Manke. Adeline ... rutin. ' Staffeld. Ida Rittinger. Fourth Row: s Grasch. Harry Pierce. J. MattausS, Arnold ?oRe Niutty THE MERCURY Miss Baxter 307 Latin First Row: Ruth Steidte, Bertha Sigunick, Helen Wells (Studenl Board), Hermine Goldberger, Grace Gore, Geraldine Lipsteiu, Mary Donald, Juhnette Nicholus, Mildred Adkins. Second Row: Miss Baxter, Ruth Westermann, Carol Hammersmith, Edith Dudgeon, Betty Schmitz, Doris Douck, Lester Arnow, Elias Hartenstein. Third Row : Carlton Schmidt, Alyce Papke, Alice Riley. Dorothy Sauter, Melvin Froh, Nat Schlossman, Alexander Kaemp-fer, Tmn Smith (Mercury Monitor). Fourth Row: Albert Landes, Robert Clague, James Forth. Harold Zuelsdorf, Robert Appleby. Elmer Kaestr.er. Charles Xisen. Mr. Lean 308 Latin First Row; Harold Werbel, Marion Goldberg, Hubert Richman. Mary Homa. Harold Judell, Margaret Stark. Edmond Liss, Carol Clark. David Altman. Second Row: Dorothy Koester. Frances Barnes, Ger- aldine Smith. Thelma Simpson. Isabelle Cooper, Margaret Gessner. Jane Grobben, Margaret Prin. Third Row: Mr. Lean, Monroe Tarne. Rollin Thompson. Marvin Glasspiegel (Mercury Monitor), William O ' Brien, Ruth Bowers, Blanche Huntzicker. Fourth Row: Bill Sickles (Student Board), Robert Calhoun, Eugene Kerns, Ray Luck man, Merritt Huntzicker. Page Ninety-one THE MERCURY Miss McKay 309 Latin First Row : William Kincajde, Clifford Campbell. Edward Showrup, Ruth Steffen. Bernice Cohen. Maybelle Dougherty, Betty Jane Xelson, Albert Dawe. Richard Foerster, Byron Wells. Second Row: Kathryn Morse, Ann Walker, Mary Alice Caldwell. Jane Herbert. Robert Powell, John Penner, Chester Bogdanski, William Dermody. Third Row: Stanley Brown, Miss McKay, Robert Stern, Horace Pfeiffer. Godfrey 1 looser. Francis Landkowski, Mary Bisset, Gertrude Peary. Ruth Otter, Carl Burghardt. Herman RiedeburR. Fourth Row: Donald Thatcher, Rosalyn Grossman. Samuel Cole, Oscar Fuchs. Robert Reitman. Richard Buckles. Robert Patmuthes. Howard Fronun. Robert Welke. Roy Chassey. Pafi Nititty-lu THE MERCURY Miss Kendall 311-A Study Hall Alvin Koehler, Robert Hagelgren (Mercury Monitor), Jane Best, Eiliene Kretsinger, Gene First Ro Romanuwski. Olive Leitzk e, Marie Downer, Jane Burychk, Stanley Paape. Second Row: i Kucokowski, Myrtle Harris, Arliene Loomis, Leona Burychk (Student Hoard). Helen Baron. Third Row: Irene Karpovitch, Beryl Brandt. Margaret Szpanski. Walter Japolonski. George Weise. Adolph Haubner. Otto Mueller. Ray Webber. William Peterson, Ray Zinda, Joseph Wirnsburger, Vincent L Lcnore Brinn, Dorothy Dietz Haase, George Fourth Row : Konij Miss Williams 311-B Study Hall First Row- Ruth McMillen (Student Board), Anna Costelli, Hattie Trimpola, Lillian Andrezyenski, Rut Carlson. Sadve Ingraham, Grace Reiner, Dorothy Callen, Lorraine Kapp. Second Row: Miss illi Juanita Shummon, Barbara Beard. Betty Bennett. Florence TetzlatT. Wilson Jost Ludwig (Mercury Monitor) West. Mary Nohl, T ernon Donald Frank. Oliver Lillis. Berhard Mueller. ' era Third Row : Raymond Leopold, Albion Hanked Marjorie Nelson. Margaret Minks. James Eide, Steve Romanowski, Waldemar Krueger. Fourth Row: Joseph Stasiouski, Earl Nitzband, Roy Olson. Vim fi Ih THE MERCURY Miss Pribnow 311-C Dziubek, Wilnia Tubbs, Norma Miss Pribnow, Charles Kuhn First Row : Donald Koepke, Bruno Nowakowski, Florence Twose, liene Kluge, Gracemary Billings, Alice Morgan, Robert O ' Brien. Second Row (Mercury Monitor), Carl Eckenrod, William Holton, Nathalie Peterson (Student Board), Georgianna Smith Emma Ortgiesen, Bernice Munsche. Third Row: Hubert Lutz, Emil Obejat, Gerald Hartel, Roderick Keebler, Sigmund Olejmezak. Alex Hazelwood. Henry Koeske. Miss Mcintosh 311-D Study Hall First Row: Raymond Anderson, Eva Christopher, Florence Meier, Lucille Williams, Frances Antosiski, Florence Strelka. Catherine Trempala, Alice Clas. Eugene Stefanski. Second Row: Miss Mcintosh. Berenice Kaege, Evelyn Brandt, Ktlu-1 Mcintosh, Norene Beyer, Alice Tutajm, Helen Ronowska. Adeline Gale, Dorothy Dentz. Third Row: George Mueller. Graham Mueller, Eugene Policki, Chester Roberts (Mercury Monitor), Edward Zabkowicz, Robert Stolz. Alfred Karas. Tom Vebber. Fourth Row: Sylvester Herbst I Student Board). Lewis Herman. Page Ninety-four THE MERCURY Mrs. Herzog 312 English First Row: Marion Fleischer, Gail Vogel, Dorothy Dewey, Mary Manke, lima Seebach, Esther Peterson. Eleanor Schmidt. LeRoy Johnson, Robert Pope (Mercury Monitor). Second Row: Mrs. Herzog. Eleanor Theiss. Ruth Winkenwerder, Vinette Gentile, Ann Baker (Student Hoard I. Mildred Kimple, Camdle Won- holdt. Mildred Maas, Estelle Kavemann. Third Row : Earl Luck, Ralph Works. Robert Ricker, Margaret Lavin, Carolyn Hansen, Dorit Forsbeck, Janet Sweeney. Fourth Row : Norman Epstein. Robert Pentler. Hugo Masuhr. Herbert Ehlers. Roy Shapiro, John Townsend. Miss Skinner 313 Art First Row: Josephine Innes, Rita Casper, Margaret Heiden, Grace oerenberg. Marion Cook. Althea Eichfeld, Enid Kenmitz. Mildred Erdmanu. Dorothy Benton. Second Row: Miss Skinner. Margaret Cogishall. Marion Marsh. Melba Greene, Lehna Sadek. Ruth Sehweikert. Josephine W upper, Barbara Bnggs. Third Row: Gordon Hatch, Ben Nott, Eleanor Thomas. Virginia Billeb, Ruth C.rotenrath. Chester Schwab, Waldemar Peterson. Fourth Row : Robert Meyer, Lorenz Kronke. Page Ninety-five TtlE MERCURY Miss Leonard 315 Mathematics First Row: Louis Johnson. Ignatius Truss. Howard Brem, Ralph Kuchn, Vera Junkerman. Evelyn Adams. Walter Rowse. Billy Surles. John Pountaun. Leo Lurie. Second Row : Fenner Kimball. Elmer Pearson. Clairmont Ronton, George Widule. Kenneth Wille: Donald Cowles, John Cobl). Robert Glassner. Third Row: lack Martin. Bert Kerns, Walter Lohman, Milton Joyce, Lucille Berdie. Lillian Piper. Ruth Hayes. Gladys Wuerfler. Fourth Row: Russel Busack. Edward Martin (Student Board). Chester Tuckerman. Frank Warzala. Leonard Schmidt. Arthur Geisel. Manuel Kroog (Mercury Monitor). Thomas Gemmil. Mrs. Coons 319 Mathematics First Row: George Downing. Carl Kasten, Margaret Diehl, Alfreda Gessner, Hazel Urban, Margaret Grupp (Student Board), Charlotte Kruke, Robert Stivers. Carl Boese. Second Row: John Ball Jr. (Mercury Monitor) Barney Maker, foseph Graham. Ethel Schoenbaum, Ruth Pfeiffer, Hazel Martin, Mildred McNary, Arthur Wiese. ' Third R. ' .w : Herb l ' nin.lcxter. Joe Krueger, Hugo Kreil. George Holmes. Don Kambe. Fred Peters. John Shaft r. Otto Andrae. Fourth Row: Kent Kennan. Bob Penner. R,,b Gram. Hclh Seip, Ralph Lewandowski, Cvrus Edmonds. Pi K r Ni THE MERCURY Miss Howe 320 Mathematics First Row: Dak- Crowell, Dorothy Lawson, Charleene Robins. Hess McGlocken, Kthel Withrow, Edith Goelzer, Betty John, Helen Roberts. Daniel Torsrud. Second Row j Miss Howe. Janet Haeuser. Lorraine Wiltgen, Nancy Conger, Evelyn Taylor, Esther Policki, Hetty Nichol, Ruth Ingraham, Slay belle Hogan, Harry Olszewski. Third Row : Gilbert Jaeger, Edward Jankowski, Jane Marnitz, Alice Roran. Edward Lange (Mercury Monitor ), Billy Reeves. Charles Zielisch, Eugene I ' itz. Robert Repinski, Karl Redders. Priscilla Briscoe, Edna Zweifel. Robert Vinson ( Student Board . Leonard Burczyk, Hubert Fox. Huge Riesen, Anthony Zaidel. Miss Bixby 321 Mathematics First Row : John Fishback. Frederic Cramer, Robert Stoessel, Marie Zwick, Gertrude Mueller, Eunice Eickleberg, Burdette Koester. Lillian Wattenbach, Marguerite Naps Second Row : Frank Burton. Harold Sommerfeld, Boyd Allen, Jake Gendleman, George Wendelburg (Student Board). Elizabeth Morton, Irma Hernke, Evelyn Caan. Third Row: Tom Fairchild. Addison Love (Mercury Monitor), Stephen Grenyo, William Konig, Edward Borkenhagen, William DuMez. Henry Arnstein, Xeal Drought. Fourth Row: Jack Mikula. Noel Spratt, Jerome Mehlman. Charles Hoist. Charles Rodee. Han 1.1 Withrow, Milton Sax. Fifth Row : Paul Anderson. Jack Rieck. Page Nitiety-sei en THE MERCURY © Miss Reynolds 401 Science First Row : Lucille Zalin. Bernice Blink. Charlotte Vidal, Marion Steuber, Ruth Zock, Ruth Berwich, Esther Strauss. Dorothy Winkie. LaVerne Schwerm. Second Row: Dorothy Kortsch, Janet Ailler. Harriet Alyer, Ruth Buening, Marion Anderson, Mary Lou Messmer. Adeline Arnovitz. Elsie Brumke. Third Row: Miss Reynolds. John VanVleet, Herman Ahufis, Mary Hickman. Sally Calahan. Lucille Brady. Mary Louise Mackav. Theckla Staub, Anita Volkman. Fourth Row: Richard Riemenschneider (Student Board). Lewis Knudsen. Frederick Schroeder. John Swift. Lawrence Royt. Sylvester V ..Izinski. Arthur Sperling (Mercury Monitor). Earl Khinne. William Phillipson, Theodore Rit-deburg. Mr. Carlson 402 Commercial First Row Dm.. tin Khun. lei. Anita Hardtke. Elsie Fungbauer. Lucille Lalonde. Helen Palzewski, Anne Zimmerman, Alice Furgens, Leona Dev. Anita Diefenbach, Lucille Lear. Second Row: Violet Schwartz. Catherine Zalin (Student Board), Dorothy Bloe, Fagille Zimmerman. Anne Powichoski, Vera Otto, Ruth Gloyeck, Ruth Haisch (Mercarj Monitor), Sahina Nowidie. Third Row: Mr. Carlson, Walter Rohm, Toe ' Grimm Leonard Yerrick. George Grimm, Eddie Zuelzke. Doiothea Hachey. Evelyn Kocher, Lama Pirner. Fourth Row: Richard Gregory, Harvey St. .11. Willard II. .we. Earle Parker, Edward Walta. Roman Krezimiski, Dan Smith. ?,g, Niiirty-eifbl THE MERCURY Miss Kleist 403 Foreign Languages First Row : Erna Meinke, Lorraine Voss, Vera Kloppman, La ina I lej . Anita Ai nstein, Elizabeth Meyer, Minnie Kramer, Helen Kmiotek, Dolores Koenitzer. Second Row: Ruth Mueller, Mildred Schupack, Frances Haefner, Dorothy Schroeder, Leone Gelder, Ruth Richards, Ruth Justinan. Beatrice Roos. Third Row: Miss Kleist, Arnold Scheer, David Gelder, Howard Pershcacker, Lester Luther, Otto Stifter, Howard Kowalsky, Marion Dobner. Fourth Row : Walter Ruhe, Eugene Xemojeski, Walter Rudolf, Edward Czer- winski. Albert Ciese. Milton Jacobson, Russell Dreazy. ' — Mr. Schneck, Mrs. Ray 407 Science First Row : Ella Keipper, Evelyn Nickel, Genevieve Lewis, Jeanette Lewis, Isabel Trantec, Pearl Schwei- kert, Anita Orlie. Audrey Willis, Genevieve Xachreimer. Second Row : Mrs. Ray, Cecil Rmibrawa, Edna Jordens. Hamld Vick, Richard Kluge, Joseph Fischer, Florence Yollmar, Lily Widule (Student Board). Third Row: Jerome Goetz, Elbert Allen, Charles Chaplrine, Ralph Krueger (Mercury Monitor), Huntington Otis, Robert Price, Edward Mankiwicz. Fourth Row : Robert Grogan, Harvey Mengel, Darrell Miller. PjRe Ninety- THE MERCURY Miss Anderson 409 Commercial First Row : Glen wood Miller. Rose Jasinski, Agnes Pecar, Emily Schaeffer, Eleanore Thomas, Eleanore Prout, Erna Luke, Helen Troka. Alice Swedoski, Anton Svasos. Second Row : Ruth Voelz, Lorraine Strubbe. Ruth Christopher, Lucille Dane. Harriet Seek man. Mabel Rollof, Louise Degner. Evelyn Vuband. Roy Grimm, Robert Gross. Third Row : Miss Anderson, Anna Macrezewski, Lydia KniephorT. Esther Pipkorn, erna Opitz, Lucille Kreft, Eleanor Modrzynski (Student Board). Evelyn Koepke. Marguerite Moratz. Fourth Row: Arthur Breen. Lucille Schwaiger, Edward Ewald. Elizabeth Conway, Helen Kegler, Jean Chapman, Ervin Bykowski, Ray Karrels ( Mercury Monitor I. Mr. Lewis 412 Science First Row : Fred Koerker, Merlin Nicks. Edward Caleb James McMillen, Margaret Petersik. Harriet Downer, Viola Wendt, Robert Lovell, Emanuel Zola ( Mercury Monitor). Second Row : W ' ilmer Hearing (Student Board I, Clare Lincoln, Antoinette Belitz, Louise Paul. Evelyn Kaiser, William Heinze. John Desmond. Third Row: Mr. Lewis, Gerald Crowell, Siegfried Heller. Edward Cooke, Frederick Randolph, Robert Schmer, Robert Schultz, Lincoln Pritcbard. Fourth Row : Robert Tret tin. Thomas St roth man, Robert Postnikoff, John Imp, Paul French. Robert Lorenz. Page One Hundrtd THE MERCURY Miss Woodhouse 413 History First Row: Paul Cornell (Student Board and Mercury Monitor), Al Lehman, Helene Anderson, Betty Phillips, Marion Safir, Olive Broetler, Janet Glasgow, Victor Schlitz, Byron Taylor. Second Row : Harold Guy Enola Siegel, Jessie Selber, Alice Gratz. Fay Turner, Mary Hannum, Naomi Ganger. Robert Larkm. Third Row Miss Woodhouse, Curtis Schwarten. Bruce Jones, James Kmtzele. James Trayser Van ( leneay, Morgan Hamm. George Comerford. Fourth Row: Irving Rice. Charles Schnell. Warwick Hanson. Arnold Matzat. Mr. Pray 414 Science Mildred First Row: Charles Kircher, Charles YVerba. Gladys Wittke. Mathilda Lisak, Lillian Wolfman Davidoff Jeanne Cobb. John Scott. Second Row: Robert Schmidt. Dorothy McC abe. Ruth James. Greta Larson, A riel Dawn. Ana Marie Sanchez. Louise HarlofT. Third Row: Mr. Fray ; Bicman. Andree Crosby. John Rice. Gordon Extrell. William Wing. Fourth R.,w : K Haessler Charles Kielpinski. William Harton. Martin Goers. Kerwm Knoelk. Job, inneth Bond, Hu bert Stuhmer, lack Pa e Out- Hundred On THE MERCURY Mr. Wadleigh 416 Science First Row Lawrence Keenar. Herman Stehle. Dorothy Grothey, Dorothy Heidtmann. Claire Boley, Con- stance Croy Elizabeth Kroesing, Nathan Kornhauser J, Mercury Monitor I, Alexander Olivette. Second Row: Edward Rapocy. Frank Szczepanski. Robert Tess, Clemence Janicki Bess Arnold. Harriet Kesselman, Russell Eichler. Vincent Nitka. Third Row: Mr. Wadleigh, Leroy Haberkorn. Ed Trumamc, Carle Wrede, George Eckman. Arthur Czisny, Robert Zlmtner, Richard Allen, Clarke McCormick. Fourth Row: Jack Andrews. James Farley {Student Board). Elmer Nicklas. Mr. Hafey 419 History First Row: Dorothy Conell, Eugene Seely, Dorthea Kraus. Kathryn Razall, Robert Hayden, Cornelia Rowdl, Sylvia Czech. Richard Shannon, George Ann Smith. Second Row: David Halsey, Ruth Halbreder, Dorothv lerkt Florence Smith. Marion Madsen, Marion Emmerich, Marjone kranycz. Frank Jazwick (Mercury Monitor). Bernard Burton. Third Row: Mr. Hafey, Lorraine Seyerson Bernice Foster. Laura Sanders (Student Board). Mae Benson. Kay Zanowski, John Rynski, Marion Kline. George Bautnann. Fourth Row: Dorthea Smith, Margaret Archambault, Miriam Kunes, Maurice Zeallcy, Jerome Kernel-, Lloyd Flieman, Joyce Broche, Marie Voss, William Demiug. p,g« ci,;, Hundred Two THE MERCURY Mr. Ashford 420 History First Row Edward Murray, Georgiana Mockley, Ella Jacobsen, Elvira rellefson, Elizabeth Kornliauser, Ida Gallas. Eleanor Williams, Bernice Best, John Sell. Second Row: Thomas Johnson, Louise Eilmann, Helen Klinetka Jean McNary, Dorothy Kulow, Sylvia Hase, Alysius Osmanski, Harold Rmvm. Car] Nahrath. Third ' Row: Raymond Knofszynski, Mr. Ashford, William Cody, William Foster, Franklin Tillman Charles Richardson. Carl Sehmer, David Savick, Martin Kaprelian, Bernard Angel, Will: Fourth Row: Herbert Abraham, Frederick Gillen, Ray Gleich, George Ide, Robert John Koehler, Martin Mueller. Wi ids Mac Smith, Miss Wooster 421 History Row Eleanore Granger. Virginia Anderson. Do,,, tin FrOmm, Betty Porth, Mary Hansen. Leon., Elizabeth Rheinek. Ruth Marck, Hortense Festerling, Renatta Reinke. Second Row: Dorothy Arnold. Emily Czerwinski, Dorothy Wetzel. Mary Obcrly. Frances Lewis. Alice Sherman Helene Katz. Virginia Washer, Tohn Schafer. Third Row: Miss Wooster. Henry Mawat, Roman Chojmacki Ed Matthes, Barge Gnshgarian . Arthur Tashou. W ' illard Boyd. Irviu Fuhr, Marvin Ruhland, Vernon Gelzer (Student Board) Fourth Row: Paul Dull,, is (Mercury Monitor). William Tinker. Webster Woodmansee, Gerald Hughs. Harry Galkowski. Dan Froelich, l ' eter Geller, Robert Marsh, ' Firs Loos Lowell Warfell, David Kitz. Page One Hundred Tlirtc A HAZV IDEA CF er EEXIDE tlARD-WCMsINC HI JlilAN THE CATI-KAtl Boy CUR BAND 4- T — _, I «ftd| f IFTH HCLP M€E YCENE f t Tl EH S AND 1 AE1EY ' ■T tH)l E ilXTDCE lAliCH . CLCWN , L AU6H P«g Oik Hundred Vo J • -4 ' - m %} 1 W 4WtfN 4 ■mvwim 151 I • ,-, iifi i 1 fe J K ; VLiflB Sd || il 4 £ ? 1 1 1 9 l 1 i!S i L.FER.CE ORGANIZATION! Pagf o r Hundred F; THE MERCURY Shovel Club Robert Penner - President Elmer Winter - - Vice-President Jane Muskat Secretary Roland Heller Treasurer Miss Puelicher Adviser Shovel Club leaves behind another year of which to be proud. With a larger en- rollment than ever before the club has ren- dered its extensive program of service once again and has been successful. Eeighty-one families were provided with Thanksgiving dinners, and over three hundred children at the Detroit Street School were made hap- py at Christmas time. The club now main- tains a scholarship fund, thereby helping a girl through college. This year, besides the annual matinee dances and candy sales, a Negro quartet, here under the auspices of Shovel Club, entertained the students with negro songs and spirituals. The crowning social event of the year was the Minstrel Show. S. P. Q. R. J GRAHAM R.HELLEF I. Graham, R. Heller ... Consuls Elmer Kaestner Quaestor Edith Dudgeon ..---.- Praetor Mr Lean. Miss Baxter, Miss McKay Advisers S. P. Q. R. is the Latin Club of River- side. Its purpose is to give and add inter- est to the study of Latin through a better understanding of the Roman people and their language. Although meetings have of necessity been at 3:10 instead of the eighth period, a surprising number have joined voluntarily and maintain an active interest in the meetings. Our programs, consisting of playlets, pageants, talks, original poems, Latin songs, have been exceptionally varied and interest- ing, due largely to the efforts of the AediliV — Robert Piper, Ina Cook, Ann Baker, and Hubert Richman. Additional interest has been furnished by the contest held to obtain original material and suggestions for pro- grams. We especially enjoyed the party in November, the movie, The High School Hero, shown in December, and the mati- nee dance. fagc liu, Hundred s, THE MERCURY Camaraderie Camaraderie is the girl ' s club of the school, and, as its name suggests, its prim- ary purpose is to promote good-fellowship among the girls. In carrying out this pur- pose, the club aims to bring out the indi- vidual talent of each girl. We believe that real talent has been discovered in the girls, for the entertainments which follow the monthly business meetings have been un- usually fine this year. The outstanding events of the year were: the Mothers ' Day meeting, the Valentine party for welcom- ing the February freshmen, several demon- strated talks on etiquette, the Senior Tea, a hot dog sale, and the Camaraderie Mixer. The meetings are so arranged that each class has charge of one meeting each sem- ester. The success of the meetings is large- ly due to the able direction of the class leaders and to the supervision of the ad- visers. Eleanor Sanders President Jane Rundle Vice-President Frances Lewis — Secretary Dorothy Hansen Treasurer Miss Reynolds. Miss Turell. Mrs. Herzog Advisers Cue Club Cue Club is the dramatic club of River- side. The club offers to all students inter- ested in public speaking a chance for fur- ther development in special club and school programs. The meetings are held monthly. They consist of plays, pantomimes, readings, songs or dances. Although membership in this club requires more personal responsibility than in most clubs, the benefits and pleas- ures are correspondingly larger. The num- ber of members is limited to sixty. These are chosen by tryouts before Miss Bodden, the adviser, and the club officers. The insignia of the club is a gold pin representing a Greek mask. At the end of each year, those members who have shown exceptional ability in the club are awarded guards to these pins in the shape of cues. Ten members received these last year. J. HU I T FHINTER FIRST SEMESTER Jane Muskat President John Muskat Vice-President Florence Lehman S ecretary Roland Heller Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Elmer Winter - President Eleanor Sanders Vice-President Florence Lehman Secretary John Muskat Treasurer Miss Bodden Adviser Page One Hundred Sficti THE MERCURY Science Club yi The Science Club aims to bring together all of the students who are interested in science. It gives the members a chance for self-expression and discussion of many £ scientific problems. At our meetings we X L learn many new and startling facts of the •U WW science of our modern world. These facts are brought to us by outside speakers, teachers, our adviser, fellow-club members, , . - H slides, and moving pictures. We have l ,lU taken main interesting trips, during the year, to industrial plants of the city. Al- first semester though we are deeply interested iii science, Lawrence Stolz - President we J no t forget to be SOCial. I he mem- f.™t n sto.°n d .. V,Ce Ie r cre ' ar n ; bers of the club have enjoyed a numberof William K - ; g sid6N6 semester TreaSUrer Parties and entertainments throughout the William Konig President year . The Science Club has equipped and SbenrMci th :::::::::::::::::::::::=::::■ v,C2 secreur . placed in the chemistry laboratory an u P - james Donahue IhIu to-date medicine cabinet. Mr. Lewis - 0,1!c ' Orient Debating Society T FAIRCHILD H LEVIN FIRST SEMESTER Tom Fairchild ----■ President Harlan Levin Vice-President Harold Wolfe Secretary Elmer Winter Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Tom Fairchild ----- g res en ; Harold Wolfe Vice-President Elmer Winter Secretary George Ide Tre , asurer Miss Crewes. Mr. Carlson, Mrs. Stevens Advisers The purpose of Orient is mainly to dis- cuss questions of interest, to instruct its members in parliamentary law, and to train for public speaking. Although Orient is one of the oldest clubs of Riverside, it is not one of the biggest ; it limits its member- ship to forty. Quality and not quantity has marked the club ' s work. In spite of the limited membership, the club is opened to all interested students from freshmen to seniors. Each meeting consists of a scheduled debate followed by comments and discussion by the members. The meeting is concluded by choosing the best of the day and the team presenting the best ar- guments. The team that represented Orient this year in the Intersociety Debate con- sisted of Harold Wolfe, Elmer Winter, and Tom Fairchild. Fred Cramer, Ed- ward Cooke, and George Ide acted as al- ternates. fag, o.„ Hundred Eight THE MERCURY Science Reserve Club The Science Reserve Club is composed of juniors, sophomores, and freshmen. 1 he juniors are chiefly interested in chemistry ; the sophomores are interested in birds, flowers, insects, trees, and health topics; L - J fc l 5 ?! tin- freshmen are interested in airplanes, photography, radio, collecting, etc. The L 4 programs are arranged according to the wishes of the club members. Trips to re- presentative industries are occasionally taken and outside speakers are always glad to assist in making our programs interest- • FIRST SEMESTER ln fe- Emanuel Zola President Boyd Allen - Vice-President Our aim is to plant at least one tree and | th c J es -ZZIZZZZZZZZZZZZ Treasurer such shrubs as are needed, somewhere on . SECOND SEMESTER OUT campus, each year. James Porth President John Bond Vice-President We always welcome new members who Dorothy Callen Insurer - . . Chas. Sainbury treasurer wish to learn more about science. Mr. Pray Adviser Crescent House of Representatives The primary purpose of the Crescent House of Representatives is debating. Its minor objectives are the study of parlia- mentary law and the procedure of the United States House of Representatives. The society is organized after the plan of the national body, with each member acting as the representative from a selected state. The officers are the speaker, clerk, assistant clerk, and sergeant at arms, as in the House. In all possible cases the club adheres to the rules used by the House. Everyone has a chance to show what he can do, in this club. Every member is on a formal debate at least once a semester, and all may speak in the open discussion of the question. The year ' s best debaters take part in the annual Intersociety Debate, a highly coveted honor. The past year has been quite successful. with a large membership and attendance. FIRST SEMESTER Richard Mooney Speaker Dorothy Kulow Clerk Helen Wells Ass ' t Clerk Roland Heller Sarg.-at-Arms SECOND SEMESTER Richard Mooney Speaker Dorothy Kulow ;-• Clerk Jerome Mehlman - Ass t Clerk Roland Heller Sarg.-at-Arms Mr. Hathaway. Mr. Ashford. Miss Woodhouse, Miss Linnard Advisers Pdge One Hundred Nine THE MERCURY Allen Club C. LINCOLN X. K C NARY Clare Lincoln President Mildred McNary - Vice-President Margaret West Secretary Eleanor Willaams Treasurer Miss Butcher Adviser To face life squarely and to find and give the best, are the aims of Allen Club. For the purpose the club meets on alter- nate Thursdays at Plymouth Church and have had pleasant and profitable discussions about situations which we have to meet. In this way our ideals of correct living and conduct are formed. Allen Club is for all girls who have ideals and are reaching toward the best. The club meetings, however, are not en- tirely devoted to discussions, for at each meeting we serve refreshments and set aside a time during which the girls have a jolly get-to-gether. Sometimes we have games and sometimes little plays which are pre- pared and given by the girls. Household Arts Club [ HCPil tN L KCEGLER FIRST SEMESTER Eleanor Morrison President Lenore Koegler Treasure? Ethel Kotecki Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Dorothy Kuhn , P 5 ' ! Lenore Koegler V,Ce £e|sur M B ty Miss O Ned. ZL BBBS The Household Arts Club was organ- ized for Riverside girls who are especially interested in home making and its related arts. Programs are arranged and plays given on subjects related to househould arts. Several speakers have given inter- esting talks on subjects dealing with food and clothing. Trips have been taken to food and clothing factories. As this club tries to spread the gospel of health, the proceeds of the Christmas Sale and some of the money from the candy counter in the cafeteria are used to provide graham crack- ers and milk for the underweight girls of the school. Each year, money from the treasury is given to Doctor Barth to use for the undernourished children of the city and also to provide clothing for them so it is possible for them to attend school. Page  ■ Hundred Trn THE MERCURY Art Club The Art Club is supported by those stu- dents who are interested in any phases of Art. The purpose, enlarging one ' s appre- ciation of the Art of all ages, is carried out in the varied programs. Talks about the old masters and contemporary artists are prepared by members of the club and there are illustrated talks by outside speak- ers. To further the interest in Art, a trip to the Art Institution was made by the group to see the exhibit of Art work done by Milwaukee High School Students. In December the club gave one of the most successful matinee dances of the year. The social element is always present, but the purpose of recreating the individuals is dominant. U.GPA H t.NEW FIRST SEMESTER Henry Gram - President Dorothy Grothey Vice-President Elizabeth Neu Secretary Robert Kaentje Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Henry Gram President Eric Wenstrand Vice-President Helen Wells Secretary Gordon Hatch Treasurer Miss Skinner _ Adviser G. A. A. The Girls ' Athletic Association has had a very successful year. Basket-ball and volley-ball were the chief activities of the first semester. The members of the win- ning volley-ball team received their G.A.A. emblems. Base-ball was played among five teams of girls during the last semester. Tennis was played in the warmer months. Audrey Dusold, a graduate of Riverside, refereed the basket-ball games. She was given a token of appreciation by our president at the end of the semester. Upper-class girls refereed the volley-ball and base-ball games with our adviser, Mrs. Fuller, superin- tending. Main ' thrilling games have been played with a keen sense of competition and good sportsmanship. All the girls and members of (i. A. A. were invited to watch the basketball games last semester and a wood crowd usually turned out.. E.UII1IAHS Eleanor Williams President Mildred McNary Vice-President Clare Lincoln Secretary-Treasurer Mrs. Fuller Adviser Page One Hundred I I,-,,- THE MERCURY German Club Ai. GLATZ m AV.NAP FIRST SEMESTER Mary Glatz President Stella Heinz Vice-President Anita Behling Secretary Irene Kuehn Treasurer SECOND SEMESTER Mary Glatz President Margaret Naps Vice-President Anita Behling Secretary Mertin Nicks Treasurer Miss Kleist Adviser The German Club has concluded a very interesting vear. Besides the usual round of activities, which include songs, poems, and stories, the club had several novel en- tertainments. One meeting was devoted entirely to the German opera, Wallcure, by Wagner. The story of the opera was told, and the opera played on the Yictrola. At another meeting a short play, Die Bes- trafte Fee, was given. A riddle-meeting was much fun. The Christmas party was, as usual, a huge success. These varied pro- grams prove to be instructive as well as entertaining and bring the members in closer contact with the German language and literature. News Boys ' Club F.JCHN CN W.FC TfR , M Fred Johnson President William Foster Vice-President Franklin Tillman Secretary Henry Gram Treasurer Mrs. Coons Adviser During the last year, the Newsboys ' Club has very successfully accomplished its object, to create a fellowship among the newsboys of the school. Nearly all the newsboys in the school attended our regu- lar meetings, and enjoyed the various en- tertainments prepared by the officers and adviser. This year ' s club participated in all activi- ties offered by the Newsboys ' Republic. Al- though our swimming team did not win the meet, it made a good showing and our newsboys did well in several other meets. The regular meetings of the club have stopped because of the eighth hour classes. Nevertheless, this semester was not without a meeting. The officers and adviser plan- ned one grand assemblage which all the newsboys thoroughly enjoyed. P«g, Our IhuiJrr.l TutUl ICriCCL LITE P«j( One HuiidrtJ Thirteen THE MERCURY Student Board First Row: William S.ckels, Anna Kolassa, Helen Wells. Eleanor Modrzynski Margaret Grupp Grace Knaffle. Ann Baker, Laura Sanders, Cozette krueger Eunice I- rench, Paaul Cornell. Betty Nelson Second Row: Lily Widule, Katherine Zahn. Dorothy Uietz. Ruth McMillen Sh.r ey Hornbnrg, Natalie Peterson, Florence Lehman, Helen Borden, Jane Bundle ■ Third Row : Stafford Jaryella Harlan Cray Harold Guy, Robert Vinson, Jack Hardiman, Charles Mohaunt. diner Haering, Richard Roth, James Nevins, Oscar Gram, Vernon Goelzer, John Muskat; Fourth Row : R.chard Riemenschneider, Oscar Pieiffer, Glenn Kenngott , Richard Dombrowski, Ed Martin. Herbert Abraham, R.chard Moone . Donald Erickso ' n, John Grupp, James Farley. The Student Board The Student Board is a democratic in- stitution that gives every student an oppor- tunity to bring important problems into dis- cussion. Each assembly elects one member and an alternate to represent it in the Stu- dent Board. This member keeps his as- sembly informed about the work of the Board. Through him the members of the assemblies can suggest new changes in the school. The president of the Student Board appoints a committee to consider these prob- lems and, if they are worth while, to bring them before the Board for discussion. 1 he committee also takes the problems to Mr. Chamberlain for his advice. Besides taking care of the general wel- fare of the school, the Student Board mem- bers take care of the sale of football tickets and other tickets for school activities. They also take care of the sale of the Athletic- Association pins. Every member is expected to watch the boys in his assembly who are to take part in athletics the following semester and en- courage them to gain good marks in their studies so that they will be eligible for the teams. This takes little effort on the part of the members and is of great value to the school. The Student Board is further connected with athletics in that it elects the student member of the Athletic Council. This is the fourth year that the Student Board has been in operation. Many prob- lems have been successfully solved during this time. We hope that it will continue in its good work. Page One Hundred Tmrtnu THE MERCURY CGRCUNRXIH Y.HUM ICKER K.KENNAN JttlKlLA LKNLD EN H UAEIl Monthly Mercury This year for the first time The Mercury was divided into The Mercury Annual and The Monthly Mercury, each publication with its own staff and its independent oper- ation. The covers and some pages of the ation. The covers and some pages of the six issues of the Monthly Mercury are re- produced on one of these pages. We have published some excellent short stories, poetry, essays, book reviews, and other literary material. Such an outlet for student literary talent serves well to encour- age writing. The news and athletic events of th: school are more or less reviewed in the paper, since they are hardly news after a day or so. There is, of course, humor and other lighter things such as CatTales, and editorial comment in the paper in addition. However, one of the features of the maga- zine is the opportunity it offers for student art work and drawing. Besides the color- ful cover designs, there are the illustrations of stories, cartoons, and all the headings of departments, to be drawn by the students. This year, our Mercury prided itself particularly upon its makeup and the inter- esting appearance of its pages. We tried to get away from that dry printed sheet which inevitably characterizes a school newspaper and brands it as such. Editorially, the paper ran a campaign for accurate and better English, as well as for the support of all school activities. Our policy was to make the paper inter- esting so long as it was good and worth while ' and we believe we have succeeded in doing that. Pjgf Oar ll„,i,lrrJ Fifteen   ■ I I 1 I - HAtmm ii 1 1 1 1  v 32.9 zj Paw One Hundred Sixteen • 1 VQ A. V - O0J - OkA 0 I t } ()3 iKAa kaA, THE AVONTHiy AERCLRy AAAA 4 tlRniNVI  .EOX J MMll E.CINNMJER C SIMS BEiDPfl f.NH rAITE RFENNER VVIXHh E TC ' M. N J. 41 V« IB an I.MIMII R. ftONE? V«.|II (N I llllll lirSilll A KMIItl IMIli; SHIIt1 6EACIAEV EEPAIIN HI1 INHM fal A BIER HAN EWEN ERANE C .TCHV4E l. .UAI AT I V I I I I I I II Ml wh i r m D.AARC . .H)W,HAN IIISMI F.LIVI VI I II I v E mCvtA.f P S ' One HunJreJ S,, ,.,;,,„ |K| MEECURy ANNUAL TAFF CWFNDElBtCG J.HEHLHAS J.WEPPEF V.EPNFZICFEF J. HlfULA LJMD7FN F.F IPCE1ILD B. BAKER A.BIEPjHA N F.CCAHEF P.GPCTEWP4FF E. TASLECX F. Bl ' PPCN P MCGNE M. FIX A.LCVE H.CHEN F.MCPAWETZ L. FEPCE H.AEDRICFI i )m Hundred I i , ' t i ■■■■ HERClJRy ANNUAL XTAfT N.CRCUCWT UWELLJ J. lD.fKAT I l l LL V JOHN ON C.EDHONDT E. WINTER D.AARONJ C Hill CfCtimfc LWEN TRANJD E.WLL4- U JHVUll J MEL LWATTENBACH ♦VXHITH IH SKA I lilllfl M.COOK J JVUAS i Pagt One Hundred ,„,i,; Pair One llmijrrj Tunit) THE MERCURY Rip Van Winkle The annual Junior-Senior play, Rip Van the Art department, who decorated the out- Winkle, was presented on the evening of door scenery ; the stage crew, who had January IS. charge of the interior settings; and the commercial department, who typed the The choice of the play was a happy one. manuscripts. The Shop department ren- Mildred Oberst, Helen Wells, Everett dered the stage crew valuable assistance by Raker, George Huebsch, and Gustave Blatz constructing much of the scenery. were the outstanding members of the large cast. Milderd Oberst co-starred with The success ot the P la ? :,s due u tht - Everett Baker. The entire cast supported « ' mb led e «° s ot Miss Bodden. drama- the chief characters admirably. One of the tlc coach : xvh ° s0 Pa-nstakmgly framed the u- ur u i a l u j cast; Miss Sargeant, music director, for highlights of the play was a novelty dance 6 ' which was coached by Helen Stimson. the assistance of her well conducted orches- tra ; Miss Skinner, art director, for the The scenes effectively portrayed the artistry of the outdoor scenes ; and Mr. period of the story. Great credit for the Baker, business adviser, for his well organ- success of the play is due to the efforts of ized ticket sales campaign. CHARACTERS IN THE PLAY Rip Van Winkle Everett Baker Derrick Von Beekman Gustave Blatz Nicholas Vedder HoIIis Preiss H end rick George Huebsch Cockles Paul du Bois Seth Slough Huntington Otis Jacob Stein Daniel Washbourne Gretchen Mildred Oberst Meenie Helen Wells Katchen Jane Muskat Children: Helen Katz, Gertrude Hanna, Clement Kraemer, Eester Arnow, B j Glassner. Elders of Village: Men: Ted Reideberg, Cy Edmonds; Women: Helen Borden, Gina Cerminara, Alice Burns; Dwarfs: Macy Smith, Herman Ahrens, Sidnej Teweles; Village Maids: Isabelle Mc- Keith, Florence Lehman, Frances Vallee, Rita Caspar, Jane Rundle, Helen Katz. Village Boys: Elmer Winter, Robert Mann, Chester Hitchcock, Ralph Wett- stein, Jr., Gene Bosl, Dave Cammack, Paul du Bois. Leader of Dance: Helen Stimson. Pj.V ' Off Hit it J re J T II cut -uii 9 jgwp ' ■ m r m r l tit Ek-  fl y i ' V. • 1 ■ -%i £ tfL3 Paj-i ( «, Hundred I wtnly-ln THE MERCURY R MCR WETZ R . E INNER U.tVCirf. f LEHI The Junior Prom On the night of December fourth, River- side held its Junior Prom in the school gymnasium. The event climaxed weeks of hard work. Approximately live hundred Riversiders and their guests attended. The spirit of Christmas pervaded everywhere. Christmas trees encircled the gym, holly with its green leaves and bright red berries encased every arch, and soft red lights cast a ruddy glow over all. Many persons who had never been in the limelight before had their first taste of it on this night when the operator of the moving spot light sin- gled them out for special attention. At twelve o ' clock the punch had all been drunk , the cookies eaten, and the orchestra tired out, so the prom came to an end. Man) persons gave time and effort that the party might be a successful one. Those who gave most help were: the Junior class officers, John Muskat, Robert Pertner, Frances Lewis, and Richard Morawetz, the orchestra committee, Karbara Pachaly and Robert .Mann ; the publicity committee, Harold Wolfe, Helene Katz, and Macy Smith ; the refreshment committee. Kent Kennan, Martin Mueller, and Leone ( icl- der; the decorations committee ' Grace Nc-u- renberg, Eric Wendstrand, Eleanor Thom- as, and Lucille Ferge ; and the two faculty members who always give the help and lead- ership which make the prom possible, Mis Skinner, the art director, and Miss Bixby, the Junior class adviser. Page One Hundred Twenty-three THE MERCURY 6.CEMUNAEA E. DUDGEON T. EAIDf HILE MLNTZIDKIR K.KENNAN E.KNLDJEN J. UELIEA p ) Hl IU « NILS EN CWimiLtll I. V I H I F The Quill and Scroll Again membership to the National Hon- orary Society for High School Journalists has been conferred on several of our River- side students. The exacting qualifications necessary for admittance into this society include not only superior writing, editing, or managing abili- ty, but also a high scholarship record. The candidates must be recommended by the high school supervisor; and then if the recommendation and the samples of the student ' s work submitted by the teacher are satisfactory to the national secretary-treas- urer, the candidate is admitted to the organ- ization. This year the distinctive honor has been conferred upon eleven Riversider s. We can also be proud of the fact that our own Miss Butcher, in room 203, is the state president of the organization in Wisconsin. Pagt () ;, Hua.hc.l Turnty.foiir THE MERCURY I 4. Blf RM4NN A.. BCRCI1ERT f . CAAN T. FAIPCHU fl _ JH Kl H. FREliNOT C. HOL T D. HA . RMMSf J. Ht r T . MA.VS J. Hill c. nisi i miii MtNrrii ' irt The Honor Society The highest honor that can be bestowed upon a Riverside student is membership in the National Honor Society of Secondary Schools. All other recognition in high school is merely tor one specialized talent or aptitude, be it scholarship, journalism, athletics, dramatics, or club-activity. But in order to be a member of the National Honor Society, one must be chosen, not for ability in one particular line, but for schol- arship, character, service, and leadership. These four requirements for entrance to the Society cover not only all the before-men- tioned talents and aptitudes, but such things as character, which is seldom recognized in high-school in a definite, concrete manner. If one is a member of the National Honor- ary Society, he can be assured that he was unusually and immeasurably successful in high school life. It is the desire and ultimate aim of every student at Riverside to be- come a member, but few are able to en- joy the coveted honor. It is not the aver- age boy or girl who can stand in the up- per fourth of his class scholastically and still find time to serve and lead his school. Page One Hundred Twenty-five THE MERCURY Mercury Monitors First Row: Howard Rodee, Billv Graham, Charles Borchert. Robert Stein, Paul Cornell, Ruth Lenike. Ruth Haisch, Helen Kreielsheimer, Emanuel Zola, Robert Pope, Frank Jozwiak ; Second Row: Ruth James, Herald Edridch, Dorothy Runge, Vera Ludwig. Gina Cerminara, Eleanor Bielefeld, Gwendolyn Williams Sylvia Kripke, Frances Anderson; Third Row: Franklin Tillman, Lorenz Krouke, Milton Freundorfer, ' Margaret Mulholland, Gottfried Benedict, Tom Smith. John Ball, Woodrow Wilson, Gene llaeberle Manuel Kroog, Gordon Nord ; Fourth Row: Addison Love, Stafford Jarvella, Ray Karrels. Marvin Glasspiegel, Edward Lange, Arthur Sperling. Al Vinson, Paul Du Boid, Elmer Winter, Bob Eichhorst, Carl Prachthauser, Nelson Wtnkless. The Mercury Monitors The circulation department of any mag- azine is fully as important as the literary or the advertising division. The circu- lation department of the Mercury is the group of hustling, industrious, enthusiastic boys and girls commonly called the Mer- cury monitors. Without this group, there would be so few subscribers that it would be unnecessary and useless for the students to write for the magazine, or for business people to advertise in it. A more fitting name would be, perhaps, the Mercury sales- men, for their most important duty is to sell the merits of our magazine to their respective assemblies. A person can well display his ability as a saleman in this ca- pacity. A Mercury monitor must be industrious and enthusiastic, capable and dependable, because he must have a thorough under- standing of the Mercury in order to in- form his assembly of the policies of the Staff; and he must, of course, keep his re- cord accurately. The monitor has, for the most pleasant of his duties, the coveted assignment of dis- tributing the Mercury Monthly and Ann- ual to those in his assembly who so eagerly and impatiently await to read them. Al though it has been but a few years since the monitors were given complete control of the department, the abilities of the stu- dents have been proved worthy of the trust placed in them and circulation of the Mer- cury has steadily increased. ' „.;, (). ,- Hundred Tuenty- THE MERCURY Merc Typists First Row: Marie Zwick, Dorothy Davis, Dorothy Hansen. Claire Gadzichowski, Helen Wiike Ruth Maack; Second Row: Gertrude .Mueller, Florence Daemmrich, Genevieve Pagliaral, Caroline Nickel, Katherine Olson; Third Row: Dorthy Wilson, Anita Behling , Loraine Balsom, Alice Sherman. The Mercury Typists Too much credit and commendation can- not he given to the girls who, of their own accord, type all the material of every issue of the Monthly Mercury and Annual be- fore it goes to press. Without recompense of any sort, they spend several hours of their spare time type-writing this material whenever they are asked. The work is always done n e at I y, efficiently, and promptly. These girls who have taken this responsibility are not only doing a great service to the Mercury, but are get- ting valuable experience in typewriting as well. It would be well for us to realize that the Mercury typists are rendering a valuable service; and since we are unable to repay them in any other way, we should be deeply appreciative. Page One HiniJrcJ T„c,,l THE MERCURY Infirmary Staff First Row: Helen Wells. Gladys Kaestner, Alice Borchert, Mildnid Adkins. Second Row: Ruth Buening Evelyn Caan, Helen Borden, Janet Marks. The Girls ' Infirmary Last year when the building was en- larged, an unused room was converted into an infirmary as an additional touch of com- fort and convenience for the girls. 1 his room, 102, is admirably suited for this purpose, as it is well lighted and ventilated. and has all the facilities necessary to a room of this sort. It is, perhaps, the most cheer- fid room in the school with its gaily cur- tained windows, colorful furniture, and comfortable beds. Any girl in the school may go to the infirmary after obtaining permission from some teacher. Miss Reynolds has appoint- ed an attendant for each period in the day, who takes care of the girls who come to the rest room. It is due largely to the efforts of Cama- raderie, the girls ' organization, that this rest room has been established and main- tained throughout the year. Under its su- pervision, it has been a great success, and has certainly been appreciated by the girls of Riverside High. P«j[i ()„, Hundred Twenty-right THE MERCURY First Row: Lyle Hoskins, Henry Jerger, Fred Buttke, Hugh It Kloppman, James Donahue. The Stage Crew Karl Kloppman took over the responsi- bilities as stage manager a week before the Junior-Senior Play, Rip Van Winkle , in which our former manager Everett Baker, starred. A few weeks later Karl went to the hos- pital, and the way in which Henry Jerger kept things going on the stage is well worth mentioning. All things were put in ship shape order. The crew has worked hard and faith- fully this semester. Every night during the school weeks finds the crew clearing the stage, preparing for a rehearsal or play for some club. The Cue Club uses scen- ery for dress rehearsal, which means that the crew must have the scenery up at three- ten for rehearsal, taken down after the re- hearsal so that the orchestra can use the stage, and ready again at three-ten. The crew rendered the Mercury a great service in the efficiency which they handled the four heavy platforms that had to be moved every day during the taking of the assembly pictures. 1 he crew, now consisting of seven mem- bers, is at the service of any club or teacher at Riverside. Past- Out- HitnJnJ Twetity-tih THE MERCDI y J. MEHLMAN The Inter-Society Debate On March twenty-second Riverside was entertained by the twenty-seventh annual Inter-Society Debate between the Crescent and Orient Societies. Orient was declared - the winner by the unanimous decision of the judges. The question for debate this year was: Resolved that the state of Wiscon- sin enact a law requiring all motorists to carry a minimum liability insurance policy of $5,000 or establish and maintain finan- cial responsibility to that amount. In up- holding the affirmative, the Orient based their argument on the statements that the conditions are now deplorable and are in need of a change; and that compulsory au- tomobile liability insurance is the logical solution because first, it is economically sound, and second, it is sound in principle. Crescent declared that compulsory insur- ance is unjust to the motorist and to the state ; that it provides no material improve- ment for compensating the victims of au- tomobile accidents; and that it increases accidents. Both teams had very logical, convincing, and authoritative arguments; indeed the de- bate was more closely and sharply contested than the decision of the judges might in- dicate. Page Om Hundred Thirty MERC! IRY Faculty Athletic Board First Row: Mr. Dunham, Mr. Fricker, Mr. Kahle, Mr. Lean Second Row: Mr Alpin, Mr. Weidman, Mr. Heselton. Faculty Athletic Board A great part of Riverside ' s athletic reputa- tion is due to the excellent aid given by the faculty. East ' s athletes could not be victorious time after time if they did not have the ex- cellent coaching they get in every sport. The Orange and Black coaching staff consists of seven members: Mr. Kahle, coach of track and cross-country; Mr. Heselton, coach of football; Mr. Lean, coach of basketball and assistant coach of track; Mr. Fricker, assistant coach of football; Mr. Weidman, assistant coach of track; Mr. Dunham, assistant coach of football, and Mr. Alpin, faculty manager. While it is the athlete who brings the glory to the school, it is the coach who prepares him for his achievements and who advises him in his performance. Page Our Hundred Thirty-am THE MERCURY Student Athletic Council First Row: Richard Dombrowski. Eleanor Williams. Robert Penner, Grace Gore. Second Row: Al Vinson (President), Jo Scbudrowitz. Tom Faircliild. The Student Athletic Council The Student Athletic Council was or- ganized for the purpose of giving the stu- dent body some representation in the man- agement of the athletic affairs of Riverside. This council is composed of the manager of the track team, the captain of the foot- ball team, the captain of the track team, the captain of the cross-country team, the president of the Girls ' Athletic Association, a member of Camaraderie, and a non-athle- tic member elected by the school. The chief functions of the council are the assist- ing in the awarding of athletic emblems and the running of the interclass track meets. This year the council awarded Mr. Chamberlain, our principal, a double E, a circle, and a double captain ' s star in recog- nition for service and leadership to Mil- waukee East. Under his leadership River- side has attained national recognition for the excellence of its teams. tagtOnt Hundred Tbhty-tvn THE MERCURY The Football Season This year East ' s righting gridiron war- riors finished in fifth place in the City Conference with two victories, three de- feats, and one tie. The team also scored two victories over non-conference elevens. Under the leadership of Captain Kruger and Vice-captain LaLonde, the team was always fighting every inch of the way, whether in victory or in defeat. East opened the season by vanquishing Pio Nono in a closely contested game, 6-0. A week later the team scored the first Orange and Black football victory over Shorewood, 21-0. East took its first two conference opponents by storm, defeating North, 21-0, and West, 19-7. The team met its first defeat of the season when Bay- View eked out a 21-20 victory in the clos- ing minutes. The championship Lincoln team handed East its second defeat by scor- ing a 20-0 victory. The Orange and Black met its third straight defeat at the hands of the Pur-golders of Washington, 18-7. The team closed the season on Thanksgiv- ing morning by playing a 13-13 tie with South in the traditional homecoming battle. In picking their AllCity team the coaches honored East with three places, one on the first and two on the second team. Capt. Kruger made the first team as center; while Hans LaLonde and Al Vinson were named full-back and guard respectively on the second team. This was the third successful year for Krueger on the all city team. agi () „■ Hundred Thirty-three Pujji On. Hundred Tbirly-lom fb - 7 yM ) il; • TI1E MERCURY Track Team first Row: Holton J. Penner, E. Pearson, R. Roth, Burghardt, J. Nevins, J. Ide, I. Fuhr, G Nurd, Martin, M. Ruhlan ; Second Row: Coach Kahle, V. Goelzer V. Komg, R. Penner, R Dombrowski, G. Rindfleisch, M. Mankewicz. O. Fuchs, C. Moebms ; Third Row : Janmcke, RBusack F Tillman, B Gottfried. R. Ilinkforth. A. Devoursney, R. Mann, G. Eichfedj; Fourth Row : C. Hoist, A. Vinson II Abraham, J. Kerns, ' W. Horton. ' J. Forth, W. Foster, M. Hamm ; Fifth R J. Schutz, C. Tuckerman, R. Leiske, H. Schreiber, D. Kincaide. C. Rodee, The Track Team While East has made a name for itself in all branches of athletics, track has been its greatest source of glory. During the thirty-four years that the annual city meet has been run, East has been returned the victor on thirteen occasions and has finished second no less than ten times. At no time during the entire history of the meet has East fallen below fourth place. The ma- jority of East ' s track victories have been won since Mr. Kahle became head track coach. This year ' s team was up to the standard of East and did excellent work in the interscholastic competitions. The first part of the track season is spent indoors. During the month of March a scries of interclass meets is run. The final meet of this competition was the Interclass Handicap Meet which was won by tin- Seniors. The indoor season came to a close with the Northwestern and Iowa national indoor meets. East managed to score but one point at Northwestern ; however, at Iowa, East finished fifth despite the fact that it competed against the strongest teams in the country. With the coming of Spring, outdoor track track work started. Dual meets were won from South, Washington, and St. John ' s Military Academy. The team per- formed very creditably at the Midwest Re- lays in Madison. The next week East scored one of its greatest triumphs in history by winning the national championship at the Marquette Relays. This fine early Spring work gave great promise for excel- lent work in the State and City Meets. , v i iw Hundred Thirty-six i 9 Fuge ();;,• HiuulrrJ Tbirty-sei THE MERCURY Cross Country Team First Row : C. Morton, E. Pearson, R. Busack, R. Tenner, C. Mankiewicz, W. Horton. Second Row ; V. Goelzer, G. Wendelburg, Coach Kalile, 1. Schuetz, Tom Holton. The Cross Country Team 1 he cross country team had one of its most successful seasons this year. The team won every meet it entered with the excep- tion of the Midwest Run held at Iowa City, Iowa, in which our harriers finished second. East won its fifteenth and eighth consecutive State Inter-Scholastic Cross Country championship this year. The first meet of the year was run against the State Teachers ' College and resulted in a 22-33 victory for East. In the next run East scored a one-sided 15-40 victory over St. John ' s Military Academy, all of the Orange and Black runners fin- ishing ahead of the men from St. John ' s. 1 he first big event of the season was the Midwest Run. East went to this meet as Midwest champions, having won the title last year. Although our team did not re- tain its championship, it performed credit- ably, finishing second. The climax of the season was the State meet, sponsored by the State Teachers ' Col- lege and held over a course running through Lake Park. Our team retained its state championship by defeating ten of the best teams in Wisconsin. South finished second, and Manitowoc finished third. Cross Country this year was made one of the major interscholastic sports of Riv- erside, a position which it deserves through the excellence of our Kahle-coached teams. ?tft i me Hundrti ThMy-el%hi THE MERCURY Sophomore Football Team First Row: Gail Vogel, Karl Luck, Henry Mazurczak, Russell Busack, Robert Pentler, Roy Shapiro, | hn Wolf. Second Row : Elmer llackbartli. Henry Blawat, Darrell Miller, John T.iwnsen.l. Mi.ruan Hamm, Kenneth Flynn. Third Row: Robert Sehmer, David Kincaide, Glen l)av Mr I tanham. Inter-Class Football Riverside ' s inter-class football program was again very successful this year despite inclement weather conditions. Continued rain made it impossible to play the cus- tomary round-robin tournament and an elimination series was substituted. In the first round, the seniors scored a fifteen to nothing victory over the juniors; and the sophomores won from the fresh- men by a score of eighteen to nothing. When the seniors met the sophomores for the championship, sixty minutes of battling resulted in a scoreless tie. Two weeks later the game was replayed in a sea of mud, and the sophomores scored a victory over the seniors to the tune of twelve to nothing. The fact that the sophomores won the championship gives promise of a strong school team for the next two years. ' ,«. One Hundred Thirty-nine THE MERCURY Red Sox Basketball Team Ed Mankiewicz, Clarence LaLonde, Jo Schudrowitz (Captain), Ray Brukwitski, Elmer Hackbarth, Charles Rixlee. Basketball Champions Cardinal Basketball Team Ralph l iclil. Gerald Wheeler. Jerome Kerns, Darel Miller, William Owen, Benedict Gottfried (Captain) ' .,, ,■ ilne Hundred fort} ir€)Blff?A¥H1B_OT$ IWW WHEN scoR£ieer? ' ofl(. WW50W could r©55 a ne w SP£Wf f BtuEi r n.- OR WOT, ' uoyi.xjcffRRrf0eu3 fRon swTnro ArntW5 WOULD WWD3 LnLOWe. PIW AWflSl-f StOCK fOflfflf P y f? m d i ? au or rumor Uiff£ eOTM0SLEtKtuT3i UPULV LCAO ft . vo -. j JUSTCPlJLDtV ' T 0«r PMDov. ' % IF OUR f — — 7 ' fno i an JuriPCRS PMCtWSTUX -yriruc PUDDU Kl([)CfUD£ COHO ftX?OAf?D OUR ffCCAV 2 ITflnUOUlD i ' roaiye Pfff55s n nitous m (twits: BROftD- LI VCD ((0 JUnP£P.5. Pagi One Hundred forty-oa THE MERCURY Girls ' Volley Ball First Row: Mae Benson, Harriet Downer, Barbara Stefanski. Second Row : Clare Gadzichowski. Senior Girls ' Basketball Team Fust Row: Helen Wells. Eleanor Williams (Captain), Ruth James. Second Row: Marie Zwick, Clare Lincoln. Helen Morose. fagi Oni Hundred forty-two THE MERCURY Girls ' Baseball Team First Row: Elizabeth Fuchs, Eleanor Williams (Captain), Viola Wtn.lt. Second Row: .Kan McXarj Gladys Wuerfler, Anita Behling, Helen Morose, Kathryn Wanvig, M ildred McNary, Ruth James. Girls ' Athletics The girls of Riverside have an excep- tional opportunity to enjoy sports. Our four major sports are basketball, volleyball, baseball, and tennis, which are promoted by the Girls ' Athletic Association. This year the unexpected happened. The seniors won the basketball champion- ship. Last year, their Junior year, they lost, even to the Freshmen; and in their Sophomore year as well they lost all their games. This year, however, they won with a comfortable margin and received emblems. The volleyball teams had a very exciting time. The victors also received emblems. At the beginning of the second semester, five baseball teams were organized, and played a round robin schedule. Team Four was victorious having lost no games. Ten- nis was of most interest during May and June, and the winners received gold tennis pins. I ' j.v.- () (• Hundred forly-lbret ' :,,:, o... Hundred Forly-faiir THE WEAKLY REPORTER NIGHT EDITION FIVE PAGES Driver Loses Control Of Vehicle A Side View of the Accident Brilliant Rescue By Student Milwaukee, Wis. An acci- dent, occurred here yesterday, when Sidney Teweles, reaching across the table to get a salt shaker, slipped and fell into his bowl of noodle soup. His clothes dragged him down and though he knew how to swim well, the noodles prevented him from swinging his arms and legs freely. He tried to call out, but he choked on the soup and couldn ' t make a sound. It was at this moment that Ted Reideburg fortunately came up, and seeing young Teweles struggling in vain among the noodles, reached for a handy soup spoon and dipped the un- fortunate lad out. Mr. Teweles invested three cents in another bowl of soup and enjoyed it thoroughly from the outside of the bowl. The Humane Society advises aboli- tlion of soup to prevent cruelty to dumb students. Business Man Addresses Students Mr. G. V. Hockafeller gave the students of Brain Pain Un- iversity a very interesting talk yesterday, on the subject Which is better, Milk or Cream? Mr. Hockafeller liked both but pre- ferred oil to either as it was richer and gave more strength. Look at me, he said, and then remember, Standard Oil did it. ' His talk remained unfinished because he dropped a dime some- where between here and Chica- go and had t ocall out the I ' ni- ted States Armv to hunt for it. WEATHER The sun may shine around to- morrow, but there may be rain, hail, snow, clouds, or fog. The fac tthat it rained yesterday when we predicted snow was the weather ' s fault, not ours. Chickens Killed As Car Runs Wild Highway 23, Wis. (.,. I. Seagrave crashed in- to a tree on the side of the road here today and was quite seriously in- jured while travelling at the tremendous speed of 15 miles an hour. Mr. Seagrave is in the County Hospital suf- fering from alterations about the head and shouders. The car is a complete wreck, and the driver almost one. Mr. Seagrave stated to our press correspondents af- ter the accident, I am through with automo- bile driving forever. It is too dangerous! The accident occurred thirty feet south of Cy Samel ' s Chicken Farm on High- way 23. Mr. Samel, the only witness of the accident, related his story. I was workin ' in the fields hoein ' corn, he told our correspondent, when I heard a noise that sounded like a hoarse cow trying to whistle ' The Sidewalks of New York ' , Well, I looks up and here I sees this car comin ' a roarin ' down the road about 7 per. It actually made more noise than the fel- low that sings in Church on Sunday, and that ' s goin ' some I kin tell you. ' Lordie, ' I says, says I. ' What is this here mo- dern generation comin ' to, when men kin travel at sich an un- godly rate? ' Well, even as I was thinking that, the car lets out a bellow like a maddened bull, comes rippin ' down the road, tries to git a half nelson on mv mail box, smears itself all over that there tree, and kills three of my chickens. I niver yet seen sich proceeding. Mr. Seagrave has paid Mr. Samel for the dead chickens. Page One Hundred Fcrly-fi THE WEAKLY REPORTER Boys Furnish Sensational Upset Tom Fairchild And Harlan Levin Star Riverside Campus: — Coming to bat in the ninth Harlan Le- vin crashed a screaming line drive to center field and ended the most thrilling and spectacu- lar game ever played between the East Side boys and girls. The final score was 6 to 7, Keyes scoring on the drive and Levin coming home when the girls ' pitcher, Josephine Innes, forgot the game while she tucked her hair back under her cap and mopped her perspiring brow with a silk handkerchief. Sharing in the hon- ors of the day was Tom Fairchild, who held the pine swing- ing threats, Margaret Fox and Constance Patton, hitless. Eleanor Sanders bunted down the first base line on the second ball pitched. Fairchild dashed in, scoped up the ball, and tossed it to John Ball eagerly waiting at first. However, Miss Sanders was already safely lodged on third base, having run the wrong way, and refused to be called out. A min- ute later she scored from third the side when Fairchild and Bierman, catcher, went into a huddle. The umpire tried to make her return to third, but she flatly refused saying that she didn ' t like the looks of the third baseman. Rita Casper, next up, was so frightened by the continued talk- ing of Biermann behind the plate, that she made the umpire let her go to first base. Here John Ball accidentally bumped her, and she was allowed to move on to second. However, Margaret Fox popped to Keyes, wlvi threw to Mehlman at sec- ond in time to catch Rita Cas- per. This fast working double play might not have been ac- complished if Miss Casper had not been busily engaged mid- wav between second and third trying to insert a stick of gum in her mouth and tie her shoe lace at the same time. Miss Evinson was next up, but refused to bat because she didn ' t want to run to first base. I ' d have to stand in the sun, she explained, and I ' d be sure to get freckles. This retired FAIRCHILD LBVIK ej -a.n itn bortant j r a.v-t irv vaster tjay ' i win. Jfr bUwed •pa -t ir 3Vr! ru | v M d the umpire finally decided that technically Miss Evinson was out. Fred Cramer was first up for the boys, and on the first ball pitched drove a two bagger to the pitcher ' s box. He was call- ed out for accidentally jostling against Rita Casper. Dick Mooney, next up, never had a chance. For some reason or otller, he couldn ' t keep his eyes on the ball. Jimmie Keyes then drew a bye, by smiling pleasantly at the pitcher, and a moment later moved to second when Harlan Levin hit a slow roller past Eleanor Sanders, who was engrossed in searching for a four leaf clover. How- ever, Levin was called out im- mediately for matching pennies with Fairchild who was coach- ing at first. John Ball then came up with a determined look on his face. He rapped the plate several times with his bat and spat up- on his hands to get a good grip; but it availed him nothing. He was called out immediately for appearing tough in front of la- dies. It was then found that the boys had four outs instead of three, and so the girls were given two more runs. In the fifth inning, the boys, by being extra careful not to appear rude, tied the score. However, the girls came back strong, and with the aid of a great many tears and wringing of hands managed to get a run in each of the next three in- nings, (p to the eighth, the boys were held to two measly hits. But in the eighth, aided by all day suc- kers passed to the girls, the boys made two more runs. Then came the ninth. Cramer first up, to left but was called rousing tripled out for kicking sand into Elea- nor Sanders ' s eyes. Dick Mon- ey got to first on a walk, but was called out for stepping on Miss Oberst ' s toe. It looked bad for the boys, but Jimmy Keyes drove a two bagger past Ruth Schneider who was powdering her nose. Then came Levin ' s leather splitting sock that drove in the tieing run and put the winning run on third. Millie Oberst led the attack for the girls, bursting into tears twelve times and getting on base twelve times. rigt «• Hundred -..rM- THE WEAKLY REPORTER Biography Of A. O. Smith Mr. Smith, the 55th vice president of the General Motors Corporation, is a man, who, hav- ing been born in a little hick town in Missouri with a general merchandise store run by a ne- gro, who, having been attacked by the gout, is undecided wheth- er to sell his store to a man, who, being quite wealthy, hav- ing earned a great deal of money in the stock markets and having married a lady with money who died of the pneumonia while swimming in a small lake five miles south of town, is intending to turn the store into an auto livery and meat market, or con- tinue with the store in hopes that his gout will improve under the sur- gical treatment of a oung physician, who, having attended a large northern university with a good reputation, is giving him pills invent- ed by a man with a cork leg who suffered with the gout for many years, went to the district school taught by a lady, who, having married a man somewhat taken to drinking, is trying to earn enough money to keep the family out of the poor house and buy a new dress to visit her sister who married the +2nd vice-president of the Ford Motor Car Company of Detroit, and graduated at Hy 2 years of age. He attended the University of Missouri which is a large institu- tion with several beauti- ful buildings, and hav- ing many fine compan- ions, he went out for football, track, and base- ball, coached by a hard boiled ex-convict from Kansas State Prison with a record of three mur- ders and two minor crimes, and also Ping Pong. When he gradu- ated with an LLB de- gree, he went to work teaching for two years in a school where all the children were rich, because of lack of money. Finally a kindly man with whiskers and several false teeth which were loose, because he did such fine work, got a job for him as one of the vice- presidents which he is still hold- ing. This forceful paragraph is an excerpt from the prize winning biography of the Hockafeller Foundation for Disabled Milk- men. Milwaukee Youth Makes Discovery A young science student made an interesting scientific discov- ery. Standing on a fourth floor window sill he dropped a fea- ther. At the same moment he kicke d a flower pot from the window ledge. The pot landed first showing that it was heavier than the feather. The pot dug a hole in the pavement just in front of the feet of a faculty meber who looked up and smiled encouraging the lad to continue for the benefit of science. 13 to 15 AILE5 P£R HOUR AAAZING BEHOLD! SIARTLING THE. NEW AND DIFf EKEMT rffl?LD5 TOUR ravai in Uc 4- PROrmriTanJ ENTIRELY NtW FEATURES ' . 1. A MOTOR 4 2. A GrOOD rAOTOR A 3. AN ZtCmmULY FINE A 0T0«? A 4. AN WCEllENT ENG-IN E tf0R5£P0V ER G0 VR.ANT6.E.O -+ READ WHftT TKfc PKINC£ OF YVAIL$ 5A S kBOUT Trti specimen e beao woflKMN ship o power: TltE.FEEKLfc5S fO )R PROMISES TO REVOLUTIONIZE AUTO HO 61 LI | 1 AND MAKE nOTORING-ATKteiLUNG- AND NON-DANGEROUS SPORT STtf |N AMO C-AZE M THE C fTlpT CAtf VAUt Page One Hundred Forty-seven THE WEAKLY REPORTER Two Young Men Are Expelled (By telephone to the reporter) Herb. Abraham and Ned Neu- stadtl, seniors, have been expell- ed one day before their gradu- ation. Officials of the school stated that the two boys insisted on reporting at the building hours ahead of time, and that not a few times, they had been arrested for loitering about the building in the gray hours of the early morn. The officials refused to state whether the two young men would be reinstated after grad- uation. Young Neustadtl had no state- ment for the press except that he was considering a vaudeville contract calling for a salary of five hundred dollars per week. DAILY QUESTIONS Question: If one goes out to dinner and is asked what part of the chicken he prefers, what should one answer? Answer: It is quite inconse- quental to my recognized ab- stemiousness and supersensitive stomachic nervatation, whether I be tendered an infinitesimal portion of the opaque nutriment of the nether extremities, the superior fraction of a pinion, or the snowy cleavage from the cardiac region. Question: I got a 98 in Latin last month when I know I didn ' t deserve it. What should I have done? Answer: You should have climbed up on the desk and given an imitation of a startled waterfowl about to take flight. Important Decision Reached By Coaches The W.C.T.U., the New York State Boxing Commission, and the A.A.U. have vetoed, at last, the proposal that football teams be composed of thirteen men in- stead of eleven, made by Knute Blockne, football coach of Nowsda Dame University. At the eleventh hour Coach Hard- head, famous mentor of Mil- waukee Music School persuaded the board to oust the rule. Friends, men, and fellow- football coaches, lend me your ears and get this, he said. Do you realize what you are about to do? Do you realize that you are about to make football one of the most unpopular sports since girls began chewing gum? Don ' t you realize that thirteen men to a team will make each team so unlucky that no games will be won? Every game that is played will be lost because of the thirteen men bringing bad luck! Isn ' t it enough of a job to win a game now? Moreover, don ' t you realize what a task it would be to coach thirteen men? Man! Are you aiming to drive yourself nuts trying to train thirteen blockheads? I ' ve come mighty close to it coach- ing only eleven. Now do as I say and oust the law and save yourself the trouble of reserving a padded cell in the bobby hatches. The proposal was stoutly defended by lobbyists of the Amalgamated Football Deal- er ' s Association, who urged that it would improve the standard of American citi- zens by giving coaches more men on which to practice character building. The Emergency Hospital also had a lobbyist in favor of the proposal. Ain ' t Love Grand? Red Cramer has been seen acting rather queerly lately. His hair ' s cut, he shaves once a week; uses Listerine; cleans his nails; he ' s even taking up roller-skating. Further details may be obtained from an M. I ' . S. Freshman on Stowell Avenue. Pjxc Out Hundred Forty-eight THE WEAKLY REPORTER How To Greet Your Friends Professor G. My Backerts, in a recent dispatch to the Report- er, states that 99 44 1007r of the boys of the United States don ' t know how everyday greet- ings should be made. Accord- ing to observations made at Riverside High School, where everything is done right or not at all, Mr. Backerts asserts that there is only one way to greet a companion. For example, the professor said, if two boys meet each other in the hall or on the street, they should not, as is the belief of most people, shake hands; this is altogether unhy- gienic As the two boys ap- proach each other, one should double up the right fist and hit the other with all possible strength between the elbow and the shoulder; the other, at the exact same instant, should reach out and spill the books of the first, and as the owner stoops over to pick them up, clap him such a severe blow on the back that the teeth, whether false or real, wil immediately fall out. The greeting is now- complete in every detail, and the two boys may proceed on their way. Some boys, still further to show their affection for one another, begin pulling ties and mussing hair, al- though, these greetings, upper- classmen should remember, are quite effiminate and really should be avoided. CLASSIFIED I will make you a tailor made suit for a milk cow or work horse. Phone: Agedinwood 2304 Wanted: To sell. Short Me- thods of doing Algebra. Fred Cramer. Wanted: A young man to fill a post in the Information Bu- reau of the Electric Company. No questions asked. Phone; Handover 642. For Rent: One graduation suit. Due to unforseen circum- stances owner has no use for it. Phone: Hot Waterbottle 7 come 11. Lost: My temper. Peggy Fox. Lost: Five pounds from a tack hammer Reward. Found : Nothing. Lost: Two hours of sleep; finder may keep one. Wanted: Jerome Mehlman to make up two spelling tests and a book report. Miss Ross 201. Wanted : A horse and buggy. Hank Ford. VITAL STATISTICS The price of gasoline went up two cents. Every boy and girl of high school age has 10 hours of sleep each night. Afof of but! isWt THAT fl FINE -i - n PICTOR.E f • 99 THrVr 5 WHfVT EVERYONE WILL SflY flND WE CAN Mf KE. Just as fine r picture of -tou vP Fo charge ABSOLUTELY ifQ COST TO yoo -- Drop im a mo see (J 5. 1.ERR.H OUR EASY TER.WS. cfa-fcHS f m SUSHtNQSOF ' MNOAYanJ THURSDAY FISH ON FRI0AV 2 Hi=rtHfSCWN3Cfi ICE INDIGESTION GUARANTEED 0UR BACON CNfTBE BEAT 0NC£ W TOf IT, WftL ALWAYS TASTE ff. WBHSSbKkWtii + DON ' T KILL YOUI? Vim. LLTU5D0 YOUR DIRTY WORK GAUGHAMTLAJT LAUHDRYCO NOTICES ( 1 ) Knights of Pity Is club-dues must be paid promptly. (2) 5c is due for the elevator fund. (3) Turn in your dollar for the Satur- day Evening Toast now. (4) Contributions to the duck soup supper will be collected to- morrow. (5) Everyone owes monev. WHEN CALLED DOWN BY YOUP PPINCIPAL TOP A 5C5SION ON TrlC CAPPCT J0© LIGHT A PEVR Page One Hundred Forty-nine n p A RRTUS TO CONVERT CHEMISTRY TERMS TO R DIGESTIBLE FORM PPARRTU5 TO OUiPKEM PUPILS WHO 5LLLP IM Cbn5SE5. y a Vagi Out Hundred flflj 1iLN GLl5H He t j h°avS I UT£RCHiiOt.h flpY s 5is , ( 3o™ N , W HO WfvTTB ft ( WflLT VMTMRN? B I WW ONE OP THE C° J fc ■■ ' ■■ ' r jm S $ N£ Ssl I 4 Jj k C, J Jk) |p ? k . iwDuaTRiouciSK ewr U0PK5 ALLMQTOIU ftLQ. ne cones to class BUT ' £C CflLUD fORo Pw Ont HitmlrrJ fifty-am JOHN IN PER ON icvciSr IANC HUDCLF A TRONC H FK CLII UNCLr ike FIFTH li€UK GA C Hfll IICH l i S r dm Hundred I ifty-hia ' - ' ■■fl ENATCfc-JUCF I CCC - JAN ItMNVH ■!?? Evti?ci?FEN Ti rr II ISJfS« rtt yTAlff H T FifhlLd cue Page () .- Hundred Tifty-tbt ■ 4 or Li ein an Assembly BiEQfWN Page One Hundred Fifty-four THE MERCURY Freshman Class List BOYS First Semester Allen. Richard E. 416 Anderson, Dean C. 319 Augustine, Frank 107 Baran. Walter 209 Beyer, Michael E. 201 Bogdanski, Chester J. 309 Borchert. Charles H. 201 Boyajian, Edward J. 201 Braatz. E. O. W. 114 Bradly, William P. 309 Brandt. Clarence H. 107 Breen, Arthur W. 409 Brown, Stanley D. 309 Burkwitzki. Elmer 209 Backles, J. Richard 309 Bull, Edward II. 107 Burghardt, Carl A. 309 Busack. Raymond H. 101 Busack. Russel J. 315 Bykowski, Chester J. 209 Bvkowski, Ervin J. 409 Campbell, Clifford F. 309 Chaykowski, Elroy 107 Choguacki, Roman 421 Clark. Howard 209 Classey. Rov A. 309 Cole. Sam W. 309 Cook, Douglas W. 107 Czisny. Arthur F. 416 Dagget, Inlin M. 107 Dawe. Albert R. 309 Dermody, William 309 Dettman. Kenneth G. 209 Ewald. Tohn W. 107 Foerster, Richard II. 309 Frenck, Lincoln (1. 201 Fromm. Howard 309 Fuchs, Oscar 309 doff, Herman 209 Grimm, Roy C. 409 Gross, Robert R. 409 Hammermeister, T. V.310 Hardtke. Fred I- 320 Harrington, Rodger 101 Herman, Lewis C. 311D Holton, William I. 31 1C Horning. Robert H. 209 Honser. Philip G. 309 lablouski. Walter T. 31 1A Johnson, I. Robert 107 Johnson, Melvin G. 31 1C Tozwiak. Frank 419 lung. Joe I. 209 Kaempher. W. W. 201 Kaiser. Edward 209 Karpinski. Tnseph L. 101 Kasten. Ca ' rl L. 319 Kellev. Augustus II. 308 Kincaide. William 309 Kinnel. Frank 107 Kloppmann, Earl W. 114 Kotlewskv, Francis 107 Kowalsky. H. W. 403 Krueger. W. K. 31 1C ECunz, George C. 107 Kuzdas. Richard 1 114 Lillis. Oliver W. 31 IB Lipske. Fred W. 107 Luther. Lester 403 Melms. Charles B. 209 Mever. Adelbert H. 209 Miller. Glennwood D. 409 Misiak. Edward J. 209 Mueller. Graham Li. 31 in Xiufa. Louis 209 Oberiat. Emil II. 31 1C Pabicke. Eugene T. 31 ID Patmythes. Robert 309 Penner, Tohn 309 Pfeiffer. Horace G. 309 Powell. Rohert R. 309 Puchura. Stephen T. 303 Rasmussen. Allan 209 Reit. Raymond W. 209 Reitman. Robert L. 309 Reideburg. H. W. 309 Rieve, Rudolph H. 107 Rubin. John J. 309 Schaeffer. Paul W. 114 Schieble. John B. 201 Schiefelbein, A. M. 209 Schwartz, Joseph H. 107 Seemann, Harold W. 114 Skowrup, Edward M. 309 Sonderegger, Larrv 107 Staab. Harold S. 201 Stern. Robert M. 309 Stifter. Otto 403 Strothman. Robert L. 114 Sullivan. Robert C. 209 Svatos. Anton 409 Szezepanski, G. W. 311 A Thatcher. Donald S. 309 Trieker. Robert C. 107 Torsrud. Daniel M. 320 Vebher. Tom O. MID Warfield. lack W. 107 Wells. G. Byron 309 Wilke. Robert H. 309 Wilse. Arthur C. 319 Zareck, Eugene C. 409 Zimmer. Robert E. 4 In Zimmerman, William 114 Zynda, Raymond V.311A GIRLS First Semester Angell, Lois M. 107 Armitage, Virginia 201 Baumann. Florence 201 Biermann. Harriett 121 Bisset, Mary 309 Bliss. Helen 201 Bogadie. Millie 201 Brand! Evelyn V 31 ID firuhn. Alvce M. 201 Burckardt. Ethel R. 114 Burczvk, lane C. 31 1A Caldwell, Marv A. 309 Chapman, lean 409 Christopher. Ruth H. 409 Chupper. M. M. 22 3 Cohen. Bernice A. 309 Conway, Elizabeth ( ' . 409 Cygan. Julia V. 201 Degner. Louise E. 409 Dey. Esther E. 403 Everson, Louise L. 201 Fisk. Jesse L. 201 Frei. Leona A. 208 Gadske. Charlotte E. 107 Gierman, Emaline 201 Grossman. Rosalyn J. 309 Hanson. Vivian M. 107 lustman. Ruth E. 403 Karp. Rachel 114 Kemnitz, Elinore D. 310 Kloppmann. Vera II. 403 Kmiotek, Helen D. 403 Koegler. Helen E. 409 Koenitzer. Delores . 403 Kortsch. Dorothy C. 401 Kramer, Minnie J. 403 Kuentzel. Audrey 224 Leitzke. Olive E. 311 A Luke. Erna E. 409 Mathiak. Helen C. 201 Mitsche. Barbara M. 201 Mor=e. Catherine R. 309 Moyle. Mary Lou 301 Mussoter. Dorothy C. 201 Nelson, Bettv Tane 309 Opetz. Verna K. 409 Otter. Ruth F. 309 Peeve. Agnes R. 409 Peterson. Edith A. 201 Pfeiffer. Ruth M. 319 Prout. Eleanore 409 Reeck. Eleanore 107 Robertson. Betty Lou 107 Roessler. Eunice C. 201 Rohloff. Mabel E. 409 Sanchez. Emma D. 114 Sax. Shirley E. 107 Schaeffer. Emily F. 409 Schaus. Virginia H. 201 Schoebel, Margaret E.201 Schroeder. Dorothy P. 403 Schroeder. Leila E. 201 Schudiske. Emily J. 201 Sherman, Jessie A. 201 Sieckman. Harriet B. 409 Steffen. Ruth D. 309 Streeka. Florence D.M1D Swedoski. Alice V. 409 Teich. Tune 319 Tetzlaff. Grace D. 201 Timm. Harriet P. 201 Townsend. M. E. 107 Trempala. Hattie S. 31 IB Tn.ka. Helen 409 Voss, Lorraine O. 403 Welker. Ann D. 309 Young, Joyce S. 201 Zimmermann. Louise 101 Zoch. Ruth M 401 BOYG Second Semester .Mo,, is. Herman R. 4 1 Allen. Boyd E. 221 Allen. Kenneth E. 321 Anderson. Raymond .MID Bachowski. Ray A. mi Ballone. Leslie F. 2111 Bauman, George 419 Beders. Karl 320 Behling, Tohn W. 216 Behrens, Tulius 303 Bischke, Edward 101 Mont. .n. Tohn C. 315 Tiremner. Robert P. 216 Burton. Bernard W. 419 Burzeuski. Ralph A. 208 Cizewski, Harrj K, 320 Coerper, Roily F. 216 Council. Edward P. 107 Co. well. Dan D- 320 Dalv. Arthur I. 201 Darling. R. Keith 419 Dembouske. Stephen 201 Dickev. Robert E. 401 Disc. Earl E. 416 Disc. Leslie 319 Eckenrod. Carl J. 31 1C Eckman, George F. 416 Fausel. Gordon F. 114 Flieman. Curtis T. 201 Frank. Donald H. 311B George, Adolph R. 114 Grenyo. Stephen A. 321 Grosch. Charles W. 303 Hagelgren. R. A. 311 A Halsev. W. David 419 Hamilton. D. W. 31 1C Harringston. Tack D. 101 Hartel. Gerald E. 31 1C Hartinstein. Elias M. 309 Haubner, Adolph A.311A Hauka. Albion 31 IB Hayden. Robert T. 419 Hazlewood. Alex S. 31 1C Herald. Edwin W. 107 Herbst. Sylvester P. .MID Heyden. Earl A. 310 Horton. Charles M. 409 Huntzicker. M. T. 308 lablonski. Lewis S. 201 lager. Gilbert 320 Janicke, Clemence M-416 Jankowski, Edward J. 320 Johnson. Le Roy E. 312 Jost. Wilson W. 31 IB Tuilell, Harold 308 Kambe. Donald E. 319 Kaminski, John L. 114 Karas. Alfred F. 31 ID Karass, Jerome E. 101 Karpinski. Edmund 310 Karrels. Raymond G. 409 Keebler. Roderick G.311C Klug. Gilbert L. 103 Koehter. Steve 311 A Koepke. Donald A. 311C Koeske. Henry A. 311C Konig. V. A. Y. 31 1A Kornhauser. N. F. 416 Krome. Robert T. 114 Kuhn. Charles 31 If Laatsch. Lester C. 2 In I.ange. Edward G. 320 Lentz, Laverne C. 114 Leopola. R. H. 311B l.iss. Edmund F. 308 Lurie. Leo S. 315 Lutz. Herbert J. 31 1C Malicki. Ch( stei 101 Makowski, [sidor A. 114 Mattauo. Toe 303 Menge. Rali h L. 208 Milkowski. II, W. MID Minks. Vernon E. 31 IP. Moore. Benjamin L. 224 Mueller. Bernhard 31 IB Mueller. George G. 3111) Mueller. (Ht.. 311A Metzbami. Earl A. 31 IB Nicklas. Elmer J. 416 Mowakowski. I! ( ' , 31 ]( ' Nowicki. Stephen L 311 . i IP..,, n. Robert W. 311C O ' Brien. William L 308 Olejuiczak. S P. 31 1C Olivetti. Alexander 4|i. Paape, Stanly F. 311A Peterson. William H.3UA Philipson. V II 401 Poyser, William T. 216 Rakocy. Edward H. 416 Purkins. Dn Vol 209 Reed. Harrison R. 216 Reitman. Paul II. 216 Rice. Irving P. 413 Richman. Hubert I: 108 Riemenschneider. R. 401 Roberts. Chester D. 31 ID Romanski. linn- 31 1A Romanowski, S. P. 31 IB Royt. Lawrence E. 4t)l Sainsbury. Charles F. 21 ' . Scherr. William H. 107 Schippers. R. L. 216 Schmidt. Herbert E. 216 Schmidt. Howard L 114 Schultz. Ivan G. 208 Seely. Eugene 419 Seip, Edward H. 319 Shannon. Richard C. 419 Sherman. Clark 320 Sigurick. Leo 416 Smith. George A. 419 Sperling. Arthur F. 401 Rtasiowski. Joseph J.311B Stenhanski. E. H. 311D Stehle. Herman H. 416 Stolz. Robert 31 ID Swinsky, Raymond J. 101 Szezepanski. Frank C.416 Tess. Robert W. 416 Teweles. Sidney F. 216 Tillotson. Arnold F. 303 Toryfter. George E. 311 A Tripp. Frederick J. 101 Tumanie. Edward W. 416 ITibel. Wilbur H. 311D Van Vleet. John M. 401 PigeOur Hundred Pifly-fi THE MERCURY Freshman Class List (Continued) BOYS Second Semester Vinson, Robert L. 320 Weber, Raymond C. 311A Werner, Earl C. 216 Werbel. Harold J. 308 Wettstein. Gordon A. 114 White. Grover C. 403 Wiese. George A. 31 1A Winkless. Nelson B. 216 Wernsberger, J. E. 311 A Woodward, James L. 216 Zabkowicz. E. J. 216 Zanowski, Ray H. 419 Zarne, Monroe L. 308 Zimmerman. Myron F.216 GIRLS Second Semester Adler. Janet E. 401 Aiken, Mary L. 216 Alger, Harriett G. 401 Anderson. Marion B. 401 Andrzejewski, L. 311 B Antosiski, Frances 31 ID Arnold. Bess C. 416 Arnovitz. Adeline 401 Arnstein. Anita 403 Balezentis. Gladys M. 101 Baran. Helen 311A Beard. Barbara J. 31 IB Bennet. Elizabeth O. 311 Benson. Dorothy O. 121 Best. Jane E. 311 Beyer, Norene 311 Billings. Graeemarv 31 1C Blink. Bernice A. 401 Boren. Alice P. 320 Bowers. Ruth E. 308 Brachv. Joyce M. 419 Brady. Lucille A. 401 Rrandt. Beryl A. 311A Briese. Bernice A. 303 Bruin. Lenore E. 311 A Brunke. Elsie 401 Burczyk. Leona C. 31 1A Calhoun. lean M. 114 Callahan. Sally M. 401 fallen. Dorothev E. 321 Carlson. Ruth 31 IB Castelle. Anna 31 IB Christopher, E. W. 3111) Clark. Carol R. 308 Clas. Alice J. 3111) Couger, V. Jane 320 Czeck. Sylvia B. 419 Dane. Lucille W. 409 Deutz. Dorothy G. 31 ID Dretz. Dorothy J. 311A Donald. Mary F. 307 Downer. Marie D. 31 1A Duke. Muriel J. 101 Eiffler. Louise H. 101 Emmerick. Marion J. 419 Forrer. Marion F. 121 Foulks, Jane W. 114 Frackowiak. H. A. 311D Freiberg, Ruth L. 114 Fuchs. Mae E. 301 Gale, Adeline L. 31 ID Gessner, Margaret A. 308 Getzlaff, Florence A.311B Glasgow, Janet L. 413 Goelzer. Edith C. 320 Goldberg, Marion 308 Gorecca, Mary H. 101 Gorske, Stella M. 121 Grothenrath, Ellen 311A Gruenwald. Violet A. 303 Gussick. Dorothy R. 114 Haase. M. B. 311A Haefner. Frances B. 403 Haeuser, Janet E. 320 Harris. Myrtle R. 31 1A Heidtmann. D. R. 416 Herbert. Jane K. 309 Herferth. Vera E. 114 Herkowski, I). B. 41( Hickman, Mary E. 401 Hirsch, Wanda 114 Hogan. Mavbelle F. 320 Homa. Mary A. 308 Huband, Evelyn I. 409 Hull. Josephine M. 303 Hutchison, Jean A. 216 Ingrahm, Sadye 307 Jacobson, Myra E. 216 Jasinski, Rose B. 409 Jordens. Alice A. 121 Judge. Florence E. 101 Junkerman. Vera J- 315 Kaegi, Bernice H. 31 ID Kahle, Mable E. 216 Karpowiez. Irene B. 311A Katz. Carol K. 216 Kienitz. Mildred L. 303 King. Ruth M. 216 Kluge, Norma D. 31 1C Kluml, Frances M. 409 Knap, Helen F. 101 KniephorT. Lydia E. 409 Koepke, Evelyn 409 Koester. Hennetti C. 303 Kotecki. Marie M. 301 Kraus. Dorthea M. 419 Kreft. Lucille A. 409 Kretsinger, Erlene 31 1A Krupa, Helene C. 121 Kuczkowski. F. 311 A Laabs. Theoda A. 101 Ladwig. Ellen A. 121 Lawson, Dorothy J. 320 Lemke. Ruth L. 121 Lipstein, Geraldine 307 Loomis, Arlsene 31 1A Ludwig, Hazel 208 Ludwig, Olive C. 208 Ludwig, Vera 31 IB Macizewski. Anna R. 409 Mackay, Mary Louise 401 Madson, Marion E. 419 Makal. Elizabeth M. 121 Matyasz. Stella 114 Messmer, Mary Lou 401 Modrzymski, Eleanor 409 Moenick. Elizabeth E. 121 Moratz. Marguerite 409 Morgan, Alice B. 311C Morris. Lillian C. 114 Morter. Elizabeth L. 321 Mrozek. Gertrude C. 101 Mueller. Lorraine E. 101 Munsche. Bernice A. 31 1C Xakielski, Agnes 31 1A Nelson. Marjorie J. 31 IB N ' ichol. Bettv R. 320 Nicholus. Johnette E. 307 Nohl, Mary L. 311B Nowatney, Ruth H. 216 Orchowski. Sally R. 121 Osie. Hilda 114 Papke. Alvse I. 307 Padeuska. Alice M. 121 Puikley, Helen 216 Pipkorn. Esther A. 409 Piatt. Phyless B. 216 Polczinski. Lillian M. 101 1 ' ollak. Marjorie 107 Pullman. Lillian M. 301 Rapp, Lorraine M. 301 Razall. Catherine H. 419 Reiner, Grayce M. 311B Robins, Charleene F. 320 Ronowski. Helen A. 311D Rowell, Cornelia R. 419 Ruke. Jane M. 114 Ruhland, Lorraine C. 114 Sax. Violet I. 216 Schaafs. Nathalie F. 121 Schupack, Helen 107 Schwaiger, Lucille J. 409 Sehmerm. La Verne E.401 Seuzer, Mary C. 101 Shumman, Juanita 31 IB Smith. Florence A. 419 Smith, Georgiana F.311C Spande. Mildred E. 216 Stark. Clara M. 308 Staub. Thekla A. 401 Steuber. Marion C. 401 Strauss, Esther L. 401 Strube. Lorraine E. 409 Taylor. Evelyn 320 Tendick. Alvilda M. 216 Thiel. Wihna L. 303 Thorns. Eleanore A. 409 Trempala, C. V. 311D Tubbs. Wilma Z. 31 1C Tutaj. Alice G. 311D Twase. Florence P. 31 1C Urbanek, Ruth J. 101 Van Deu Berg. V. 2W Vidal, Charlotte J. 401 Voelz. Ruth C. 407 Warmer. Muriel J. 101 Watson, Betty E. 101 White. Mildred 121 Williams. Lucille 31 ID Winkie. Dorothea E. 401 Wisinski. Emily L. 121 YVithmw, Ethel L. 320 Witt. Dorothy O. 403 Wittke. Florence E. 303 Woidneck. G. A. 303 Wojtvczek, Wanda W.216 Zahn. Lucille E. 401 Sophomore Class List BOYS First Semester Azarowicz, Bernard 402 Bergman, Alfred W. 303 Blawat. Henrv G. 421 Boyd. Robert F. 402 Brem. Howard C. 315 Cleneay. Van B. 413 Codv. William 420 Curry, Francis H. 209 Des Marais. R. A. 321 Dreazy. Russel D. 403 Epstem, Xorman L. 312 Felam. Howard C. 209 Fishback. John F. 321 Flynn. Kencth J. 101 Gajkowski. Harry E. 421 Gelder. David W. 403 Glasncr. Bob J. 315 Gregory. Richard 402 Guy, Harold E. 413 Hardimon. Jack K. 202 HoskinS, I.yle B. 217 Howe, C. Willard 402 Jacobson, Milton P. 403 Johannes, Virgil F. 310 Johnson. Lewis G. 315 Jones. Bruce M. 413 Joyce, Milton II. 315 Kenar, Lawrence A. 416 Kerus, .-t S. 315 Kimball, Fenner D. 315 Kraemer. Clement W. 209 Kuehn, Ralph J. 315 Kuentzel, Davier K. 103 Krzyzanowski, Jerome 215 Lamster. Alfred 320 Larkin. Robert W. 413 Lohman, Walter H. 315 Luckmann. Raymond 308 Martin. Edward J. 315 Martin. Jack H. 315 Matzat, Arnold R. 413 Meyer, Robert E. 313 Mosliavoc, Frank J. 114 Mueller. Arthur 215 Mitka. Vincent H. 416 Oldenberg. R. E. A. 114 Perschhacher. H. 403 Pountain. John C. 315 Regule. Frank W. 310 Reitman. Alvin A. 203 Rowe. Oliver E. 101 Rudolph. Walter F. 403 Rvnski. John A. 419 Schick. Clement R. 114 Schlitz. Victor U. 413 Schnell. Charles H. 413 Seyler, Cyril C. 101 Shepard. Gavlard E. 209 Stoll, Harvey W. 402 Surles. Billy W. 315 Gaylor, Byron E. 413 Grayser. James H . 413 Griess. Ignatius J. 315 Urmanske. Chester J. 402 Warzala. Frank E. 315 Widule, George B. 315 Wille. Kenneth A. 315 Wodzinski, S. J. 401 Wolf. John F. 312 Wrede. Carl F. W. 416 Zielsck. Charles R. 320 Zuelsdorf, Harold II. 307 Zywicki, Ray A. 215 ' GIRLS First Semester Adams. Evelyn 1). 315 Archambault. M. 419 Berdie. Lucille A. 315 Berry, Madeline 202 Bleier, Lucille M. 224 Broether, Olive M. 413 Dobner, Marion A. 403 Erwin. Louise M. 202 Fass. Winifred W. 310 Favthe. Pauline E. 215 Fisher. Gladys M. 215 French. Eunice 216 Gale, Eleanors R. 101 Gauges, Naomi B. 413 Grenyo, Mary C. 215 Grobben, Jane 308 Haunum, Mary U. 413 Havemann. Estelle M.312 Heims. Edna A. 203 Tagt One Hundred fifty-si THE MERCURY GIRLS First Semester Hermiansa, A. 202 Holmes, Marguerite B.223 Humpley, Lucille F. 215 Ingram. Ruth M. 320 Jones, Elizabeth J. 221 Keiper, Ella A. 402 Ke.selman. Harriet E.416 Kimpel, Mildred D. 312 Kaapman, Edith K. 303 Kocher. Evelyn _ C. 402 Kranjecz, Marjorie A. 419 Kunes, Miriam A. 419 Landowski. Frances 309 Lange, Julianna M. 223 Lavin, Margaret M. 312 Lear. Lucille C. 402 Lembke. Adeline H. 303 Leutzen, Anna J. 121 Lewis. Genevieve H. 407 Lewis. Jeannette A. 407 Mass. Mildred L. 312 Macko. Emily M. 301 Marnitz, Jane R. 320 Mikkelsen, Dorothy 224 Mueller. Mildred E. 215 Marlow. Ruth A. 215 Nehls. Daisy E. 203 Neustelter. D. E. 107 Nevermann, E. A. 215 Nickel. E. A. 402 Nord. Lorraine 114 Olson, Betty L. 303 Orlie. Anita E. 402 Philips. Lydia C. 310 Preiss. Annette, M. 215 Prior. Margaret M. 308 Quartullo, M. M. 223 Reeck, Alice L. 203 Richards. Ruth A. 403 Richter. Margaret M. 215 Rithiezer, Ida M. 303 Roberts. Helen E. 320 Roos. Beatrice H. 403 Ruemelin. Alma 215 Runge. Dorothy E. 215 Ryker. Ruth V. 223 Safir. Marion E. 413 Schmidt. Eleanor E. 312 Schmidt. F. E. 121 Schneider. M. 215 Schupack, Mildred M.403 Schwartz. Violet O. 402 Schweikert. Pearl L. 407 Sweeney. Janet M. 312 Srauter. Isabel E. 402 Volkman, Anita A. 401 Vollman. Florence I. 407 Watkins. Eloise M. 101 Willis. Audrey D. 407 Wizelman. Alice S. 215 BOYS Second Semester Alonso. Alfred 223 Andrews, lack T. 416 Bardeen. Robert K. 202 Baribean. Euclide 109 Buiger. Norman H. 209 Bond. John M. 414 Brill. Ray B. 224 Brunangh. William 310 Burezyk, Leonard 320 Burton. Richard E. 302 Busack. Russel 315 Buttke. Fred. P. 302 Cale, Jerome E. 301 Caspari. Charles A. 402 Cobb, John S. 315 Comerford, George I. 413 Cook, Kenneth A. 109 Cornell, Paul W. 413 Croy. Harlan R. 310 Davis. Glenn 109 De Boer. Evert J. 224 Denning, William G. 419 Dietrich. Charles M.209 Donahue. James F. 202 Donbrawa. Cecil M. 407 Eblers. Herbert L. 312 Eichfeld. Gilbert F. 310 Eichler. Leslie 416 Eide, lames 31 IB Engtl, ' William 310 Erfert. Harold A. 114 Ewald. Edward J. 409 Feinberg, Milton 1- 3111 Fitzgerald. John E. 310 Froh. Melvin F. 307 Goelzer. Vernon 421 Goers, .Martin J. 414 Grimm, George N. 402 Gross. lack 202 Hackhar ' th. Elmer F. 109 Haessler. lack G. 414 Hahn. Erwin O. 109 Hamin. Morgan H. 413 Hanson. Warwick W.413 Heesch. Arthur G. 109 Herbst. Walter I. 101 Holstein. E. A. 313 Hopp. Richard F. 310 Hupfer. B. Nic. 217 Hutchison, Robert R. 30.1 Ide. John D. 310 Tackson, Francis E. 22-i lames, Evan W. 301 Kaempher, A. C. 307 Kane. Monbert J. 109 Kaneen. Mannin 202 Karasiewicz. Leo J. 215 Kincai de. David V. 308 Kintzele, James R. 413 Kircher. Charles R. 414 Kloppmann. Karl A. 319 Koeppen, Wilbur A. 221 Kresnik, Edward A. 223 Kriehn. Carl W. 224 Kryzminski, Roman 402 Laskowski, John A. 202 Lehman. Albert E. 413 Leiske. Roy R. 109 Luck, Earl H. 312 Manke. Arthur W. 303 Masuhr, Hugo I. 312 Mattano. C. J. 109 Mazurczak, Henrv J. 109 Merckle. Ray W. 413 Meilu-1, Leymour II. 414 Mueller. R. C. 109 Neitz. Ewald E. 302 Ncmojeski. E. T. 403 Nevins, lames L. 224 Nicks. Merlin A. 413 O ' Brien. 1. Paul 310 Olson. Roy H. 114 Osmanski, A. A. 420 Owens. lames G. 302 Parker. Earl J. 402 Pearson, Elmer 1. 315 Pentler. Robert T. 312 Pierzchalski. II . S. 109 Putner, Erhart 402 Pope. Robert R. 312 Porth. Tames V. 309 Rapp. Frederick G. 224 Reeves. Billy L. 420 Rice. John L. 414 Ricker. Robert P. 312 Riesen. Hugo 320 Rindfleisch. Gerald 103 Rozowski. Ray F. 224 Rowse. Walter L. 315 Rubinstein. B. W. 310 Ruhland. Merwin H. 421 Sara. Peter B. 101 Schiefelhein. Ray H. 109 Schlossman. Nat T. 307 Schmidt. Leonard W. 315 Schmidt. Robert W. 414 Schmit, Carlton S. 307 Schroeder. A. F. 202 Schwarten, Curtis I. 413 Scott. John L. 414 Sehmer. Carl F. 420 Senft. John H. 401 Senger. Lester F. 224 Shapiro. Roy E. 312 Sherman. Charles A. 103 Slack. Ben 310 Slawinski, Anthony 301 Smith. Tom W. 307 Streeka. Edward J. 101 Townsend, John W. 312 Nitz, Eugene W. 320 Vick. Harold E. 407 Werba. Charles S. 414 Wing. William F. 414 Wolts. Edwards L. 402 Works. Ralph H. 312 Wuerfler, Edward J. 109 Zaidel. Anthony E. 320 Zuelzke, Edwin C. 402 GIRLS Second Semester Adams. Tanice V. Adkins. Mildred L. Ahlswede. Elaine L. Anderson. Helene Arnold, Dorothy L. Bach. Helen V. Bachowski. Alice P. Baerecke, D. E. Baker. Ann K. Barthel, Genevieve Berthold. Ruth E. Bethe. Agnes J. Beyer, Alice A. Millet). Virginia R. Bloedow, Dorothy F. Borchert, D. E. Borenitsch, Cecilia Briggs, Barbara S. Briscoe. Priscilla B. Burgemeister, Erna Cobb. Jeanne R. Cooper, Isabel G. Croy, Constance Daun. Ariel E. Davidoff. Mildred C. Deihl. Margaret M. Desfield, M. F. Desotell. Marion R. Devlin. Lenore M. Dewey. Dorothy M. Dey. Leona L. Diefenbach. Anita K Dietrich, Myrtle Drey. Ethe) B. Drobinewski, F. A. P. J. A. H. Dzinlek, Irene S. Fischer. Edith M. Fleischer. Marion Forsbeck. Dorrit Foxe. llermaine Fuchs, Elizabeth Gastrau. Doris I. Gentbe. Vine 1 ' - H. Glasgow. Miriam E. Gloyeck, Ruth A. Evelyn Fannie E. D. M. Dorothy Lorene R. Hammersmith. Carol Hannon. Catherine Carolyn E. . Anita B. Louise E. Tillv H. Heuthonee. Hazel M Hibicki, Eleanor M. Horstmever, H. L. Hyde. Helen P. Goldberg. Goldman. Hachey. Haisch. Hanimen. Hansen. Hardtke Harloff. Hauser. 301 307 _■_ ' ; 413 421 224 201 221 312 301 224 224 223 314 402 310 224 313 320 216 414 308 416 321 414 319 310 j 308 312 402 402 215 221 301 11C 202 312 312 202 224 301 312 301 40 310 310 402 221 224 302 202 312 402 414 302 121 301 21)2 202 A. lllian. Lcnnctte Jankowski, Eleanore Jeuss, Viola John. Elizabeth C. Johnou, Edith E. Juergeus. Alice J. Jungbauer, Elise S. Kasten. Betty J. Kasten. Ruth M. Kastern, Dorothy Ann Kielkuiski, A. M. Kinnel. Sylvia M. Kuaffl. Grace M- Koch. Dorothy Ida Kraiutz. Steffie Kripke, Sylvia S. Kriehllwun. Betty C. Kuehn. Lillian E. Kunz. Jane P. La Lonile. Lucille F. Landou, Dorothy Larson, Greta L. Laskowski, Eleanor Lederer. Amy I . I.ello. Helen J. Lelo. Clara P. Lisak. Mathilda V. Loewrus. Ruth li l.oge. Jeannette Loonus, Harriet S Likowitz. Lucille Makal. Martha F. Malovasiscli. H. K Manke. Mary D. Mankiewicz. C. F. Martin. Hazel A. Matzek. Elizabeth E. May. Kathleen D Mayer. Elizabeth M. Mueller. Elizabeth I Mueller. Genevieve S Mueller. Ruth M. Nevins. Catherine S Nowicki. Sabuia C. ( Km auski, Agnus W. Otto. Erna L. 1 1 . . . Vera Pahl, Louise A Palicki. Esther Pedenski, Irene Peterson. Esther Phalen, Agnes E Philips. Betty B Pirner. Laura M Powichowski. A. Purtell. Eleanore Riley. Alice R. Ruizel, Evelvn F. Rossmiller. R. A Sadek. Lehna C. Scherr. Anita H Schuchardt, Rutl Seeback. Irma J. Severson. L. M. Sigmuick. Bertha Smith. Dorothea Stefanski. Barbara M Stewart. Charlotte J. Techel. Dorothy M. Tellefson. Sereen O. Theiss. Elanore R. Thomas. Frances L. Thomsen. Helen I . Tburuer. Fay A. Turguiski. M. A. I ' rban. Hazel E. Vogel. Gail F. Weuiholdt. C. D. Westermann. K. E. White. Dorothy E. Williams. G. A. Wiltzen. Lorraine C. Wtiikenwerder. R. L. Wiskocil, Amy L. Woiciechouoski. Ann Wolfman, Lillian R. Wozniak. Catherine E Zimmerman, Anna M. M. M. A. R. E. 303 202 71 4 320 310 402 402 402 221 202 303 310 101 224 224 301 301 224 215 402 221 414 301 21 302 215 414 302 402 215 215 221 101 312 310 319 103 217 403 201 224 403 224 402 221 303 402 412 320 302 312 216 413 402 402 21i. 307 103 202 313 202 216 312 419 307 419 216 301 77 301 312 301 310 413 ■ 7 319 312 312 307 117 202 320 312 117 221 414 .301 402 ' ,. ' , On Hun Irei fifty- Tilt MERCURY Junior Class List BOYS First Semester Backes, William A. Best. Arthur H. Bie:mann, Hubert C. Bitker, Clifford J. Boese. Carl A. Boyd, Willard F. Brown, Herbert W. Butz, Edward A. Clark, Harry J. Cowles, Donald J, De Voursney, A. M. Dummert. William F. Erickson, Donald T. Farley, John H. Farnum, Willard M. Flieman, Floyd W. Fox, Hubert B. Frauendorfer, M. H. Froelich, Dan H. Fuhr, Irvin Glasspiegel, Marvin Graham, Billy P. Cram, Oscar E. Gregory, John J. llememan, Gordon W I leinz, William A. Hinkforth, Raymond lb-, tun. William H. Hughes, Gerald P. Johnson, Elton H. jozwiak, Michael T. Jung. George Kitz, David R. Kronke, Lorenz A. Kroog, Manuel Lorang, Harry L. Lorenz. Robert H. Matins, Edward W. Miller. Darrel G. Xycz. Henry J. Palaszewski, J. Paulus. Alvin Pfeiffer. Oscar H. Pierce, Robert S. Raetker. Henry L. Randolph, F. L. Richardson, C. E. Robel, Howard A. Roth. Richard L. Savick. I )avid Schaus, Douglas I. Scheer, Arnold S. Schroeder, Fred G. Schmer, Robert O. Sequenz, George J. Smith. Dan K. Stevenson, Clifton A. Struzinski. Joseph F. Stuhmer, Kenneth C. Terry, Thomas W. Tufts, John W. Voelz, Leroy E. Walters, . onnan P. Yerrick. L eonard J. Zimmerman. Fogel X Zwiefel, Edward GIRLS First Semester Alt. Gertrude A. 2 Archer. Emma-Jean Berkwick, Ruth M. Bertram, Irene M. Bollon, Marjnrie K. Braun, Ethel L. Ilroude. Irene P. Gunnel. Dorothy C. Conway, Catherine J, Crosby, Andree C. 10 .102 414 217 319 421 302 301 216 315 310 303 109 319 315 419 320 224 421 421 308 303 217 103 202 412 310 414 421 203 217 217 421 313 315 209 412 421 407 224 924 103 209 310 103 412 420 109 215 420 301 403 401 412 109 402 217 109 414 301 202 22.i 217 402 .402 320 217 302 401 302 117 124 217 11 217 414 Dicks. Margaret E. Doman, Ruth A. Dorick, Doris L. Ertlman. Mildred L. Elich. Ruth A. Festerli ng, F. V. Fish. Dorothy J. Fromm, Dorothy M. Garlick, Jean M. Gessner, Alfrieda E. Geyer, Eunice E. Glass. Lucille A. Granger, Eleanor Greve, Pearl M. Gust. Marion T. Halbreder. Ruth O. Hansen. Mary E. Hayes. Ruth M. [lumber , Shirley M Johnston, Marion A. Juhay, Clara M. Kaiser. Evelyn Kaltenbach. Olive K. Kemnetz, Enid B. Klipitka. Helen E. Kline. Marion E. Klumh. Geraldine B. Kotlewski, Ieleen M. Kreilsheimer. Helen Kreig. Dorothy J. Krueger, Cozette Landowski, Hattie Lederer, Claire J. Loos, Leona Luebke, Ila A. May, Roberta B. Mayer. Eloria Meinke. Erna E. Melius. Audrev T. Meyer. Ruth E. ' Mikkelsen. Irene A. Miller. Beatrice B. Morris. Margaret E. Mtingen, Marjorie A. O ' Gorman. Gladys E. Palaszewski. H. F. Pelton. Lillian E. Perry, Gertrude Piper. Lillian P. Pleskatcheck. C. Portley. Betty Pruemers. Dorothy Reiss, Anita Rhenieck. E. G. Rinzel, Dorothy A. Ritz. Margaret G. Roncke. Sophie E. Sanchez. Anna M. Sauter. Dorothy T. Schroeder. Dorothy M Siegle, Euola L. Smith. Geraldine II. Smith, Virginia S, Stock. Catherine I. Stoneman, Dorothy 11 Tellefson, Elvera L. Tnckerman. C. V. I ' lik, Irene M. Mauviz, Kathervn J. Wendt, Viola E. Willson, Virginia A. Works. Ruth I.. 22} 223 307 313 217 121 217 421 124 319 223 223 421 221 22} 419 421 315 217 223 412 217 313 420 419 215 224 217 202 303 217 221 421 223 22} 223 403 221 221 224 301 217 223 217 402 121 309 315 124 421 117 223 421 22 124 217 414 307 217 413 .!l)S 301 ?21 217 420 315 117 217 412 117 217 BOYS Second Semester Appleby, Robert C. Arnow, Lester Bauman, Martin C. Blackwood, Malcolm Braatz, George Browne, Donald Catel. Edward F. 307 307 217 321 303 301 412 Chapline, Charles O.407 Hague. Robert 307 Crow, Ralph H. 224 Czerwinski. E. A. 403 Dakin. Russell 124 Davidoff. Raymond D.124 Desmond, John A. 412 Dombrowski. R. 124 Downey, George D. 319 Du Bois. Paul G. 421 Estrell. Gordon E. 411 Farley, James E. 416 French. Paul H. 412 Geller. Peter 420 Gemmill. Thomas 315 Gillen. E. Frederic 420 Goshgarian, B. M. 421 Gottfried. B. B. 103 Grogan, John K. 301 Haernig, Wilmer J. 412 Heller. Roland M. 302 Holmes, George F. 319 Hughes. Wallace 124 Jacobs. Arthur R. 103 Tarvella. Stafford E. 403 Jens, Gerald J. 103 Johnson, F. V. 302 Kaestner. Elmer A. 307 Kennan. Kent YV. 319 Kenngott, Glenn 103 Kerus. Terome L. 419 Killpinski, C. J. 414 TCoenig. A A J. 124 Koerper, F. W. 412 Konig. William G. 321 Kreil. Hugo H. 319 Krueger, Joseph W. 319 Laudes. Albert 307 Leonard. E. R. 114 Lovell. Robert H. 412 Lucchesi. Lester H. 103 Ludwig. William A. 301 Marsh. Robert 421 Moebius, Carl W. 302 Morawetz. Richard I. 302 Mueller. Martin W . 420 Munsche. Richard C. 302 Murray. Edward H. 420 Muskat, John B. 302 Nisen. Charles M. 307 Nord. Gordon I. 310 Nuernberg. Milton H. 309 Parker. Edward M. 124 Peters. Frederick N. 319 Pierce. Bill I. 101 Pierce. Harry A. 303 Poindexter, Herbert 319 Postnikoff. Robert A.412 Pritchard, Lincoln G. 412 Riedeburg. Ted. 401 Rvnski. Henry C. 109 Schafer, John G. 421 Schaeler. Walter A. 109 Schnackenberg, F. F.103 Schafer. Fohn E. 319 Stanke. Ernest 103 Stivers. Robert E. 319 Tashon. Arthur W. 421 Thatcher. D. E. 301 Thomson. Donald E.311B Tillman. Franklin J. 420 Truker. William G. 421 Warfel. Lowell C. 421 Wibn. Paul R. 208 Wenstrand, Eric W. 124 Werner. Carl II. 301 Wilson. Woodrow U. 124 Wolfe. Harold 302 Woodmansee, W. W. 421 Woods. Robert M. 420 Zind, Frank J. 209 Zola. Emanuel 412 Zinzon. Clifford F. 114 GIRLS Second Semester Anderson, Virginia 421 Babcock. Bettina 302 Bacon, Nancy F. 124 Bauman, Ruth E. 221 Benz, Linda M. 117 Bielefield. Eleanor C. 221 Bolev. Claire I. 416 Brodhagen. A. E. 221 Browne. Nathalie 124 Brunner. Marion M. 124 Buening, Ruth M. 401 Campbell. Luada A. 117 Cerminara, Gina 302 Chase. Mildred P. 310 Chojnacki, Lillian R. 121 Cogeshall, M. 313 Cook. Ina Marie 420 Czarnecki. D. V. 221 Czerwinski. Emily L. 421 Deming, Marjorie 221 Dinnauer, Emily J. 421 Dorsynski. Irene L. 103 Downer, Harriett G. 412 Dryer, Esmeralda 103 Eberhardt. Ruth E. 420 Ehle. Gertrude E. 117 Evenson, Julie J. 221 Fulmer. Doris V. 221 Gallas. Ida Helen 420 Gelder. Leone M. 403 George, Grace T. 420 Greene. Mellia M. 31.1 Grupp, Margaret E. 319 Hase. Sylvia B. 420 Heiden, Margaret 313 Heiser, Verona A. 117 Hemsing. Ruth S. 117 Herrmam. Gertrude F.117 Hornburg. Virginia L.221 Huntzicker, B. R. 308 Jankowski, Alice P. 302 Tens. Marion 302 Tordens, Edna N. 407 Kaap. Mildred P. 103 Kasle. Evelyn E. 221 Katz, Helene M. 421 Kluender. Dorothy L. 402 Kocher. Mabel G. 124 Kornhauser. Elizabeth 420 Kotecki. Ethel P. 124 Kroesing. E. H. 416 Krueger. Dorothy H. 103 Kruke. Charlotte H. 319 Kulow. Dorothy M. 420 Langson. Jeanette A. 221 Leozow, Betty E. 124 ■ Lewis. Frances R. 421 Lucas. Norma E. 224 Marks. Janet 302 Meier. Dorothy E. 103 Meier. Florence 31 1A Merkt. Dorothy M. 419 Meunier. Adele H. 302 Montwid. Estelle 124 Neu. Elizabeth 302 Oberlv. Mary C. 421 Olp, Marcella I. 103 Ortgiesen, Emma K..111C Peterson. Nathalie 311C Ouabius, Margaret D. 103 Ray. Ruth M. 124 Remke. Renatta L. 421 Remmel, Estelle M. 124 Rogers. Helen R. 301 Rom, Virginia H. 301 Rosenberg M. H. 215 Roth. Aha (I. 224 Sax. Harriet R. 224 Schmitz. Bettv K. 307 Schoenbaum, E. M. 319 Ptgt ( ,„■ Hundred fijly-clnbl THE MERCURY Schwaiger. Eunice M.20S Schwartz. Helen F. 117 Seely, La Vergne C. 421 Sherman, Albertarae 117 Sillier, Jessie M. 41.5 Junior Class List (Continued) Simmis, Alberta J. 221 Simpson, Thelma I. 308 Spankowski, A. B. 221 Staff eld. Lorraine A. 30! Thill. Pearl 221 Thomas, Eleanore Tillman. Bernice V ' oss, Marie T. Wascher. V, G. Wetzel, Dorothy M . 3 i i 1. 301 419 421 E. 221 Whitehead, Jane Wilkins, Jean M. Wittke. Gladys M. Zerza, Agnes M. 303 208 414 103 Senior Class List BOYS First Semester Adams. Charles W. Allen. Elbert W. Altnian, David K. Andrae, Otto A. Angell, Hemard F. Arnold, Philip W, Arnstein, Henry I.. Hrnkwitske, Kay I. Calhoun. Robert W. Cam mack, David H Casper, Joe J. Damp. Harvey Geisel, Arthur !• . Gendelman, Jake Giese, Albert 1 ' , Gleieh. Raymond E. Gram, Henry II. Haberkone. Le Roj E, Haeberle. Eugene G. Hatch. Gordon Heller, Siegfried E. 1 de, eorge Jaknberak. Roman A. Johnson, Thomas V. 420 Sell, John 1. 420 Kaprilian. Martin 420 Sickels, William F. 30S Keitel. Charles A. 103 Smith. Macy A. 420 Kerns, Eugene 308 Stoessel, Robert F. 321 208 Kluge. Richard F. 407 Strothraan, Tbom. H 421 407 Knoelk. Kerwin W. 414 Voigt, William B. 208 30.H Knutsen, Lewis A. 401 319 La Londe, C. W. 124 420 Kuehn, Carl L. 401 GIRLS 224 Le Vin, Ray C. 208 321 Luce, George H. 208 First Semester 103 Mankiewicz, Ed. J. 407 308 MeuitiL-r. George S. 103 Best, Bernice B. 420 310 Nahrath, Carl R. 420 Boltz. Lucille E. 215 217 Xiedecken. Dean G. 2 OS Borgtnan, Mildred E. 302 301 Xielson, Ralph J. 124 Burczyk. H. 1). 117 315 Penner, Robert C. 319 Casper, Rita W. 313 321 Porth, Erwin J. 208 Dudgeon. Edith M. 307 403 Pott, Alfred J. ' 109 Eiffler, E. H. 103 420 Prachthauser, C. F. 208 Eilman. Louise M. 420 208 Trice. loseph 209 Ferge, Lucille A. 403 416 Riepkoff, Ray F. 109 Foster, Bernice M. 419 201 Kohn. Walter T. 402 Fowles, June D. 213 313 Rube. Waltei 403 Grefig, Elsie A. 301 412 Ruwin. Harold M. 420 Cirotbev, Dorothy L. 41 420 Sax. Milton M. 321 Haisch, Ruth E. 402 124 Schudrowitz, J. J. 223 Hanimen, Fern A. 117 [acobsen. Ella M. 420 Junkerman, M 302 Koeher. Mildred Koester. Dorothy E. 303 Krenke. Irma M. 321 Kripke. Evelynne 301 Leigen. Ruth P. 221 Luebke. Beatrice 215 Marsh. Marion I. 313 Niulholland. M 101 Xuerenberg. ( ' .race A. 313 Oberst. Mildred E. 117 Pachalv. Barbara R. 302 Petersik. M. A. 412 Piper. Gladys E. 117 Pountain, Louise M. 301 Rundle, lane 117 Saunders. A. F. 117 Schneider. H. Ruth 308 Silber, Winifred L. 208 Steidte. Ruth H. 307 Sweet. Helen E. 117 TetzlafT. Ruth L. 308 Werba. A. Marion 301 Wiiley. Mary X. 208 Zetterlund. E. T. 20s l ' a X ,- ().;,• Hundred fifly-n ( ( Q A The End ' - -f ' ' «iX ■■ Sm V , ! A «H5 s I Wi J 1 r t H 1 1 7 1 4 f HJMJTH


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Riverside High School - Mercury Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

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1926

Riverside High School - Mercury Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Riverside High School - Mercury Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

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1935

Riverside High School - Mercury Yearbook (Milwaukee, WI) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937


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