San Antonio Academy - Blue Bonnet Yearbook (San Antonio, TX)
- Class of 1928
Page 1 of 140
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 140 of the 1928 volume:
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NL Q Gln 51112 Qtmexzran 4 egnm SZ 5 6 I 1 1 igifw 2 , a g W'- S g 4? gs Qbilzrztiruxt 2 W3 : ,,,,,,,,,,, ..............,..............,.................... -0'-G--f -- I-IIS, the fifth edition of the Blue Bonnet , the students' annual of Texas Military Institute, is dedicated to the American Legion, in acknowledg- ment of the debt of gratitude which our generation, in common with countless others yet-liunborn, owes to the gallant men who in 1917 and 1918 saved democracy for the world. Our fellow citizen, lVlr. Nat lVl. Washer, in his eloquent tribute which follows, brings to us. the inspiration to better citizenship that springs from the activities of this great association of the veterans of the greatest of all wars. Mr. Washer, himself an honored veteran of that great Service-at-Home. which united the whole American people in spirit and in effort as never before they have been united in our history,-sets vividly before us the high' and patriotic purposes of the American Legion. Next October the survivors of that eternally memorable Crusade of Free- dom will meet in annual convention in San Antonio. Behind the fun and thc frolic of what is to most of these men an annual vacation, may we people of San Antonio see the high spirit and dauntless courage that carried them through the filth and misery, the perils and horrors of a roaring inferno, thc worst this world has ever known, and may we then and always give them the honor and show them the courtesy which their outstanding service so richly merits. -JOHN C. CARRINGTON. Page 'Two I ' 5 Y xl 'M ll' 7,511 W.':gll'yD'1 HN! ' J' - I -Q ' ll ! '1 'n.I 35? Lzlldhk 1 X bdhmftl -li ftitlatpxgnm Illlllw,..mIIlIlllIflli.......W My Ny .I U T .lj,z,,,.-ll-l 0.1, 3'-5 ., 1-. Z wc. -N v,,A,j' A t - elwidltlyll l llllIIIIIIJIIHIHHHIIHIHWIWIWQIQHIHIQMKWIUW . iiT'! '1'l::7'2-fl'55Xii. g , Hi 1:51, f IWIHIWIHIIIIWIIIIF may 1 f 0 . '- E ' ' mfffx. f Ebe fl5xmerican'1Dzgion . Following the close of every civil conflict, after peace had been assured and the minds of the participants had become tranquilized, the almost universal custom has prevailed amongst the survivors on either side, of forming an association in which the members might be drawn more closely together in the bonds of an intimate and considerate fellowship through which they might also commemorate and memorialize the stirring events of the shared conflict. It is but natural that such a desire should animate the minds and stir the hearts of men, who, after a season of peril in which many of them were mirac- ulously snatched from the jaws of death, many of them become mute witnesses to terrifying and pathetic scenes, all of them standing ready and willing to make the great sacrifice for Country demanded by honor and duty, should feel drawn irresistibly towards each other, should wish to perpetuate for all eternity the patriotic principles that called them to service, should delight to cement the common ties of unity that bound them so closely as they enlisted in the cause and thereafter served together through times of adversity that tried men's souls to the utmost. ' Thus at varying periods in the history of our own Country we have had, in addition to auxiliary associations, the Society of Colonial Wars, the General Society of the War of 1812, Association of Mexican Veterans, Grand Army of the Republic, United Confederate Veterans, United Spanish War Veterans, and now, latest but not least, the American Legion. When the United States of America determined to enter the Great World War, to cast its lot with the Allies who were in a death struggle with their enemies on the battle fields of Europe, four million American boys were quickly recruited for military service, made ready, though not wholly prepared, to take up the gage of battle as it was being waged in foreign lands, and, in the face of unknown, unexpected and to them untried methods of warfare, to fight in the air, on the sea, or in the trenches against an implacable foe, in the righteous cause to which, with the Allies, we ourselves were and always will be irrevocably pledged. Page Tlzrcc I UZDIIZW il ff ,J I-'llll ,.. 'Maas wule:'p S ,hal-9 fa ,fast ,fee u,,,,,.d,i,,.. , ,rw ,, i -. .-, - .,',f V if ,F 1 . , ,..- Q--7,-if-1,25-v 'ggi-.Ju 'lf' --fffezee 'wR,9 E0ll'- r i -If 55 ' --ef' li live-2. ff? 59.4 ' gl as i :' M A ,lfhmliggfe-emsilnlllllllullmwlll C U '! it rv 9 9 ref Fl -': , . W !' i Ut:-H i ' I . M , , -ilk,-g ,. , fini M Ali? f ,f 1 lllllllllllllll0IIIIHIllIHHWIIHIIJHIHHFHJWIJJIHJ -ai p .T-11 1 it... l- F-5.44 'f f f ff f WW W if f' W W ' 'F' llllllllllIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIHlllllllllA 1' r' 2 ' ' f ffffffff f ff f ff !14aLZ.ffff,ff4,g.ffff r It was a struggle for the preservation of Liberty, to make the world safe for the privileged enjoyment of the highest human ideal, without the indulgence of which the march of civilization would have been retarded, as individual freedom of thought, speech and action must have yielded to the dictum of an otherwise self-imposed autocrat and War Lord. Even as Eternity was opening to view, the last pathetic and impelling cry from Flanders field, came in the deathless words: ' To you from failing hands, we throw the torch, Be yours to hold it high. It was the torch of Liberty, and our 'brave boys in battle line, catching and holding the great light higher and still higher, vowed that it should never be extinguished, that it must remain the beacon to guide unborn generations in their search foran' ideal system of government in which the rights of the individual will not be circumscribed by accident of birth, by social caste, by privileged superiority of wealth, or by the exercise of preferential political power. In other words to quote Abraham Lincoln: A government of the people, by the people, and for the people. And thus, in forming their association, the American Legion, the founders promulgated a preamble to their Constitution, that has the appealing force of an emphatic and irresistible call to patriotic service which no self-respecting American can deny or disdain. Indeed, to be eligible for membership therein, and thereafter to be known and recognized as a Legionnaire is a privileved 7 -5 opportunity none will neglect. It speaks with emphasis in thesetterse sentences: F0r God and Country, we associate ourselves together for the following purposes: to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States of America, to maintain law and order, to foster and perpetuate a one hundred per cent Americanismg to preserve the memories and incidents of our association in the Great War, to in- culcate ag sense of individual obligation to the community, state and nation, to combat the autocracy of both the classes and the masses, to make right the master of might, to consecrate and sanctify our comradeship by our devotion to mutual helpfulness. Page Four I U ?- a'eqqr - sq--. ws- ix. . Yer' .... 5, ff-H !m'iizg:':e.sS' -wfifgif M mx'?i'U ?W 'w'a's'c+ -wf.-- ----in isiimll 'ffgigfw-eg::.:I:MI ll I' I 52'-Egtgsfi? N'-' . in.gliliiiilniii........W. .lil ig :u ul mi' Ll as - Efvggg, H. dl' - E uunnll ,QM I 7 f ll ll - - A 53513 --I W! yffw ffffffff-,f,f,f,ffffff,ffff ffffffffl If I If MJJFMHHHIIIIIIIIIWIIIHIIIIIIIHFIIHIHWII I ' A 'ffffmfffffmfmffffwffffifnffffffffff . f fgfwqffffffffffffff f Lf, Note well its purposes as they are so pertinently expressed in language definite, unmistakable, distinct, and then agree as you must, that in all the associations heretofore formed by survivors of any war, none excel, if indeed they equal, the declared devotion and dedication of the individual to patriotic service in its broadest and most comprehensive application. How well the Legion has functioned in carrying on its progressive and constructive program of useful service to the Nation and to its individual mem- bers is a matter of record to which they may well point with pride. Thousands of disabled boys, victims of maladies resulting from shell shock, exposure and wounds, are being made comfortable, cared for and nourished in Government Hospitals established by and through the work and influence of the Legion. Through the use of a great endowment fund raised by them in a nationwide campaign for this purpose, the unfortunate but deserving Legionnaire is being provided an opportunity to find himself, to make good, and thus happily to enjoy in comparative comfort the closing years of his lifeg while in happy homes throughout the land, in which they have been placed, the orphaned chil- dren of men who lost their lives in the great struggle but made no provision for the care of loved ones left behind, are being privileged to enjoy the affec- tion of foster-parents, to be clothed, educated and trained, and thus to have opportunity of becoming useful members in the citizenship body of our several States and our Nation. All honor to the Legionnaires and to the glorious organizations through which they are giving and will continue to give true expression of loyalty and fealty to our great government. All praise to them for their services to each other, for their labors in ameliorating the conditions of the less fortunate ones amongst their number. May the tie that binds them so closely together stand firm and unbroken until the last Legionnaire shall have crossed the great Divide that marks for him the ending of time and the beginning of eternity. -NAT Nl. WASHER. NOTE: Mr. Washer was elected Buddy First Classu on june 3, 1926, by Alamo Post No. 2, American Legion, San Antonio. He is the only man in Texas who has been honored with this distinction. Mr. Washer is General Chairman of the Executive Committee in charge of arrangements to care for the National Legion Convention in San Antonio, October 8-12, 1928. Page Five IQQSQ 'vvvvs ll gn N V T 1 f lv pal K ,F 'Is' ' I 1' Ill!! ! lfia?f'g':?6 P Inf? . it ....f ni rwlllllllllllllll 1 umum g 3,6 - E! Ilan: q gs :fi E! 2 El 1.'- ' ' Dr- I . li 2 it ' I mg 1. . 2 I- 1, 'A Vw ? -231251 A gf of IW' 'IW' 1- .,m 7 - If ' RL-I I X I HI I IIIIIIIIHIIHIIWIII IIH Ill A n I .- V 'ff' 1 . lf San Antonio Academy -'AND-'-' Texas Military Institute NED tLonei WEATHERS .Our Best Drilled Cadet Page Six TWO GOOD SCHOOLS OFFERING A TI-IOROUGI-I COURSE OF TRAINING FROM THE FIRST GRADE TO THE UNIVERSITY ...... x One of the most widely affiliated in- stitutions inthe South. The only mil- itary school in San Antonio recognized by the U. S. Government and the State Department of Education. FOR OTHER INFORMATION WRITE TO THE SUPERINTENDENT ltgff'-f rrtzt-stef . ni IllE'?23W'n5'f ' TW w--fs T 'f':::!fV1J.ii.srg ,-g43.af-.......r- .1 '- I VHA'Nulllllllh-I----WS-9n .--:L K! QI sig., Ll , . gg ll Q tttataia- I 0 1 I g ' f ffzg gq!-I V . ' f wi f! fff. fff.ffffff,f fflfffffl MHIIIMJFWHIIIHIHWIWMIIIIHIIIHHI 1 ' '-Q . 'ffffffff A xxx 1 f fyff,ff,fffM,f1fm,.ef, ffffff f f ff CONSOLIDATION OF SAN ANTONIO ACADEMY AND WEST TEXAS MILITARY ACADEMY MARKS NEW DAY FOR BOY EDUCATION IN TEXAS. BOTH SCHOOLS GREATLY STRENGTHENED. FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS SPENT ON IMPROVEMENTS. NEW BUILDINGS TO FOLLOW. CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS TO BEAR THE NAME OF TEXAS MILITARY INSTITUTE. During the late spring of 1926 the San Antonio Academy, having outgrown its location at San Pedro Park, and desirous of separating its older boys from the younger ones, began quietly to seek for additional quarters. The phe- nomenal growth of the school made this change imperative. In the meanwhile the Board of Trustees of the West Texas Military Acad- emy were seeking a superintendent for their institution, in consequence of the resignation of Col. Williams. This school had enjoyed a most impressive history under the auspices of the Episcopal Church, Diocese of West Texas. A mutual friend of the two institutions conceived the idea of supplying their needs by consolidating the two schools. The feasibility of the plan was at once recognized, and after several conferences the consummation of the plan was announced. That this was done so quickly and so smoothly is a striking testimonial to the friendliness of the rivalry that has existed between these two historic institutions, and also a splendid spirit of Christian fellowship and co-operation. The West Texas Military Academy was founded by a clergyman, Bishop j. S. Johnston, of sacred memory, loved and venerated for more than two gen- erations by men of all creeds, and all walks of life. The San Antonio Academy was founded by a Presbyterian Elder, Dr. W. B. Seeley, a graduate of Princeton, and a pioneer in private school work in Texas. Page Seven 'wg' 4' Wg: K' AGB 'jfwf-54-i'.fse'ff I at .. .... -I lull I .. 4 if-S 6' Ur ' V I a ' ct ., - u. 1' rf' ' lZ+'1-'fw' iii 'it' A im i' G P' ll N 53 LV . Q5 -E, qt . -Wifi. ., ' 'gif 7: L-X , 5: -. :QQ -.. ' rL:'-'QQX .r : : M5 Z ik : , 1-3. ,- X 733.5 ii?-S f:f.' Z. 4.- Eg 5 12 fin. Z- - ui 'E li- ' ,WE f if-:T-5 : . 0 . raw! -9212 'Z -i.....,4, E X Q x X S X X 5, . Xu,- W f. f l' .. 1 3 U .. Wi xx x ,. , T-T .-51: if r-'-'Eg N., 2 ' L' J 3 xl: jfljf ll! Qafmmffffwfffzmwm 3, 1 k wa BEE FQ w'T'Y , Q Q 1 . H' an xl sg F' -, wr' :E Nm X , Y Y Xnnxu f ff ff ff gg f ff f fffffff fff- gfgfgfg fif ff 9 fwfff f fffififignffi fi f f flifffl 'f,ffi'.fif' f 'fI'ffw,ffff,ffff I ' i ar ,IL n r, ,, 'E :F :mi L, 37 'ilf A 'IIIII nluvluu , . V, , f 715-51 'BEET , IS-ZR ff-4:2-f A -- ' ' I' 221' -tele?-Jiifiiaag Q 1: U Bishop W. T. Capers of the Diocese of West Texas, succeeded'Bishop john ston as President of the Board of Trustees of West Texas Military Academy and now serves in the same capacity for the newly consolidated schools. Dr W. W. Bondurant, an Elder in the First Presbyterian Church of San Antonio. succeeded Dr. Seeley as head of the San Antonio Academy, and now assumes the position of President of the consolidated school s. During the summer of 1926 fifty thousand dollars were spent on improve- ments on the West Texas school plant. All buildings were completely renovated. refurnished and thoroughly modernized. The grounds were improved, includ- ing the athletic field. A volley ball court was erected, an indoor baseball diamond laid off, and fifteen hundred dollars spent on buildin three most 8 excellent tennis courts. All improvements have been made for the sole purpose of providing the boys with modern facilities for study and recreation. This campaign is not completed. Another year will see a still 0 larger and better athletic field, an admi greater number of improvements, a nistration building, a recreational build- ing and gymnasium. The building program will place the school in the front rank with the best equipped American schools. A new name for the consolidated schools was imperative. After several conferences over this question, and very generously taking the boys into con- fidence in this matter of vital concern to them, the euphonious name of f'Texas Military Institute was selected. This name has been accepted with enthusiasm. So T, M. I. is fast supplanting the old names of San Antonio Academy and West Texas in the hearts and minds of the cadets. And the future for this new T. M. I. looms bright and glorious, opening up new fields and greater possibilities in this God-given work at which it has so earnestly set itself. Page Nino ll I Illulr.- '-EDEQZ 'wgifxfbeuill X I wg6:.3 . . .x llllll' MX' 1 I --- 4 - - Kiley' i g V W I w T e fT'fT'fRfTv' Yagi -' 'WLT mga if 43 Haw P1 EEF- Rf H751 T ,FH Hr lm PH Enix gl Tw M Q Q5 Q To 1, chi 1 5 I -1 'L '51-f 1 . f' S x'1':n:1' -,P--, ' ' y Y I , f!f f'if7Qff'7 C7ir' , F' r I f f f ' f ' WW Q.X ff33fi iQ3ix35QH3,f3?i1'i'l53fHf::EFH?vW-'QPSQWQ X K J E ' X R - . b Y . :Rf -' ,l1'f ' 'fffkf-QI1: ' M' 'f 7-DIV' 'i4 'f'3 7f J! i Aff 'Wd X f , A - QM . fo ...f ! THE RT. REV. WILLIAM TH EODOTUS CAPERS, D.D. of the Episcopal Church President of the Board of Trustees and Rector Page Ten un ' ' is ' . Y . , X X! ' ar ,, '- iEf1iS5'iQ2e.-'N' Q wg? war W -' Jlw1lllQi..Q:,,,2vg,q4.-3,3-:mi.N.. H 1 imc. --rg N, NM M N , -.-T . MMI Mlllllllllllll I I rx' - . 'JS ff P' A 3155535 1: -t7 ' , ,,,- , i-n I... ,Z :Iss Wffffffff f ffZffKWWfZfffffffifffeffffffffnfe ff ls: 5: 2 ff 2 ET za :ie Q Fr- ?,'f'17 'f31-5lf' - if-1' ff- F 9Q15?f3igT2','j,Qff?E' 5 'f -M-'----H -.-f- -.W.-.--q ffff f ffff ff! ffffff fffffffffffffffffeew e . !f'ff 7f-75 L ' 'T' 1- Q5+ :1'l 1--, 'A - ' --1 iff- -Y' --hi as -,... NAT. IL VV. W. BONDURANT, M. A,, Litt. D. Principal of T. M. I. and S. A. A. Page Eleven ' ' W 'f 'wmww 'Kaz VR' QN - znwm- M- 'fs' 1-s '- HI .... '-v. 5 5SQqX ge 1 g' f 1 Q ,O '- gif In ns. .rag lk W1 . --a'Q'mgi.'?i21MNE IIIIHHJ ....... ee I .if as e 1 f .M 'r -Nfgpf' -A - .4 yi 'TQ fe 5i'g:ef.gu sas nuummru Illlmef.Q,QmllrllWmmQg!.mmm. . .., 'y ,lg ' Igli' ll E 'A II I 1 f ff ff fwWf f fff 0 ,A A-,LK ,VT .1 ,dgtb-ll? 4..e.. V 1 '. , '-V' 4- I ff ,ff f ffmf I A ' ,f ,.. W ' X f if ,. X N , -i . I mf -Wv.q?MfA+ AY V X M1415 iffwrswv-',.-' .f 'T , ,- EA NW, 0 wh '-H .Q AWA, JN , Bl'ILMf:fs:I-L --9 093' Kin iN+I'IAM rLrnN Page Twelve 5aE+2vT'r2:-? '11I' V Q' iq' 1 ' w a :r-21' f-' ' T ' GI-X9 Illwnwlllllllllllllmg.Qn Q4 K f5.. Ea qg?1-5Illlllllllllllllwhnwllll X 3 , A - .A Q IMIII I EEEQEEEJEHIQHSH: ' 5 IWHIIHIJ 1 my ,Q . .- -mggpu j ff f A A f A ' ' 'xi f!!.f,!!,M I M 1, A,,.HV ,, I fic. 'YY an E '. . ht' fy. .Ag 'ft-' A QU' . l' ' . Spf? 4 v A 1 Y I ' r K v . . x MRS. LAURA E. FA In chmge of Hospital MISS ALICE MAYFIELD ' ' ' II1Sf7'lICf0f in Music T. JI. I. 'XX AML lf ' mf ,, ' . W A 4. ff, , fggngj-.1,A M 'VT' G ., , VMI ,, ,N , ,fr ,f iff ,A ' , f fv, 'A-, Wg., 34. -,QQ 65,2 bf I .j,vi.hqx2fq 3, ,WI ., , L ,f Af J A V vumv sf ,W , . AWA wwf ,,,- . 1 19 f M , ' 747, 4,5 wifi? ,4wgQf,3fjf g9'KZ F ' . S . '-25,2 . f 2 -, '- f 1, , A A Wag. A R , A 1 Q-Q ,Qi I N fy I W if 3 , 53 'X Q X , ,ff f an-. -Z1 5 2'-2261 ' ,xg Llkf f iljh ini? V , , MX, .W-4f,,' 51,6 . : ' fi z mf' GWR' xi QM W 'Q ,f -M, A .y X4 , Q A wx Af wigxxiiff ' ' ,Q A if f f 2' .gf -fvmkfxfx ,, , , X X X A ,, V Q 'f vhff, X f ff: Q3 Q ' WX X 1 , NFS . 1 K ,, ' Nix J' Af . MRS. NED HARVEY MRS. ELIZABETH HODGES Diefician S. A. A. Dietician T. M. I. Page Thirteen A ll - - 1'-vw '- vw: ' 0 'fl f ' V if W' ZWWW? .75':'i 5'5':!457i:3'5-gl!- 1 L V f7f N'f'- ,f,,,.-fa.-mfs.-S44f?2 aF: 6 A K A I X J r 'K 'si s A ,. A l ' ,f'Pi H M 19 il Jwwwwp, fy, , - ' - fP ' -, 'Y , lg 1,11 7' F' ' F 31 ' if! 5M'fI?L.' I k YM! W H! f A f,4M14Wwvf3mfQ933Qf95kd1r?Y?if,-fifiil Zfff W if ff 'fgf5 fff 71 .A, ' fo A 'W-ff : :ffl--'fu J 1 'f14f- Lua 4- B , ' if' ' , f Y f X! 1 A ' Wil-I A fffyxfflffflzf'f',ff!71Lf f'!7fffff7Y ff f'.fQ'f!7.f ',f' gyQg7Nff!'QV ',, , W AES'-'ff 5 X b Page Fourteen 4, Q- ISSQQ SUAM V I 4. ' ' .' f X :N , kf' in KR, 'Q N ' 4: V ' 7H5gi,jfTfig5gr,, , Yau M I Il --Ql IlIl lI i f5 ?f5.gpq -,jjggh 1 NA X -'LlllDLE,g-HH 4 1 ,f v W1 Lrwlfp A z:1' A F llllllllh -3. EE Hjglfgluizl qlkqkalx ge' 'Ak' rg' '-5'1+-.:f . F , Tpirv I ly A 'f ' If T+ ++-v -A 7 , 14 S Z1 5 ,I v I f I 1 ,f 7 3 ,fl f 5 X I 3 'I ' 1 4 R X X 5 X A' J? . ,, F f 5 f gf! ' B0RfQ4Qx0I1Jex--pw ,' 5 V J If lip!! X .X I -I -, 1 4 'xxx Ewfwgw-zf:w ' F ff f ff! J' ,J .f ,f I 74, Af iff Page Fifteen ,f !! :'2weu 4 ss.-4 ' ' N QISSWZ bvfiw ' f 4 Q. 1 .4535-' Q2 Niaad I' ' Ilw 5-+Ma5N6: -----A 'D d b I. , 9 5, ,, A ,ng go Ii I 4 gnu L M 'fri 1 Hlmlllul ly firg g ' wg 3 'a fr' A lf 1 ff f f f f lllllllllllll0IHIIIIIHIIHJIMIIHIHIIIIIIHHHW -9. 11 v- - its ' I ., Q J ,. . W UH!! V ! y y y W I WIIIIJHJIHIIIIIIHIIHIII I f 1 , ' H' .iiil School life is very much like a stageg and the students, young and Old, willing and unwilling, play many parts. A boy, in his time, makes many en- trances, trotting off at first, holding his nurse's hand, to the kindergarten, where he cuts pictures out of books and colors them withcrayons. But the most fearful entrance is that awful time when he lets go of his mother's apron strings and starts out to be a real schoolboy. Here he learns the world's a battlefield with big boys to beat him upl' and strange teachers bore into him with accusing eyes. In his next entrance, he's become a whale of a boy with a swagger, one of the regular fellows, plays marbles and ball and other things. Next he reaches' a dizzy pinacle of greatness, perhaps the highest in his long career, he enters S. A. A. and wears a uniform. He is a soldier now with a strut and with a gun bigger than himself. He loves to do about face , and salute, and goes to bed with a forward march.', But just ashe thinks he knows it all he has a greatshock and finds himself at T. M. I., an ignorant freshman, looking up with timid awe at the grave and reverend seniors. I Anon he gets to be a sophomore, foolishly wise in his own conceit, for when some professor with a vision gives him a glimpse of what science has revealed of the Amazing Scheme of Things, he imagines he has acquired the sum total of human knowledge. At his next entrance he is a junior, beginning to suspect that there are things in heaven and earth not found in his philosophy. Meanwhile some have made sudden exits, perhaps unattended by applause, except in secret by the faculty. , The last entrance of all, the senior withcares and duties thick upon him. His voice now is deep and rough, and his stride is soldierly. Publicly he has considerable satisfaction in being called a man, privately he has his doubts upon the subject. As Commencement approaches, he suddenly wakes up to the fact that school life, especially student life at T. M. I., is a kind of era in his life. He begins to feel that the boys he has drilled with and entered contests with have -become his friends and that the ha h d y ve s are together experiences that will never come to them again, as they travel down life's highway. He discovers, with a sort of sinking feeling in his stomach, that Commencement is really the commencement of a new life, the opening of new strange doors to college or to business, and he t h' ' ' to be won. se s is teeth over the grim thought that his spurs are yet -JOHN C. CARRINGTON. Page Sixteen I! 'XWWN Nr' my , ' .imll mwfl X , 1,1 SQ L I fs-s .I 'I YA it H- --. f- in . .... 't ID ' 'i 'f lllllllllllllll aN 1IIIIlIvtiaylM..ml.l ii,P.lt-t,,..:.. .,.....'.'IIWIIIIIWi it XX 2 -7 Xj 1 -J X U U -Ilkslfnlii -,QQ EQQI 111111111111110zlllmzllnamlmlaulflluunmnvnnmm2Qfi..-.ffm-.,l..5,,ff1g,,....1,.1,5 f ff 7 fff ' 'I ffff f 7 1 f it -pf 1 ' IIJIHININHIIIIIIHIHWHIIIIIIIHIIIIIHHHllIMI IIIH -1 ' 'fff ' L. , A1 mf4fMM4f,f, X 1 .XXZ rh- -'CF' - ICA ,xv 'ag 'T' ll' -f 'fr 1 1 L 1 2 X - i f : 1 1 l 1' ' ' ' l l 5-.. V V U A Y ERNEST l.El-AND ANDERSON ROBERT NElL CAMPBELL Chubby Bob ' Entered W. T. .Xl. A. 1923. Captain Adjutant. 1 ' Et-'dS.A.1923.C' .lC.B.D'llT' . -......, . l '27, '2gl? Tennis Team '2s.'pql iig-OT'-XX'ai' 'ZS H,0CkCY V,l? 'llJTCQl'l '23 20-U 2'-,525 Pfesludclll My Society .ggi College Prcfelvncc. Colorado School l.1t. Soezety -5. lublxeity Coinnnrttce ..f. X nee-l rcs. t of Nlincs. Class 231. Annual Taft' 28. Class Secretary 28. ' College 'relereneez rineeton. l Rllll-l.1XRD lll.lDOl.Pl-l 7X'l'lilNSON 'UHN Fl UBORNE CXRRINVTOY 1 --nick - 1 ' ' ' l lack Coolv Calhoun 'f' E t- d T. XX. I. 192'. P ': ' C . A. l.' -'4 'A ' ' ' ' . . . ' Soeiimivlgzz-r. Editor ol' --'Panl1iilf 'tL'2s.0 Colleggeulgxiel Emqcd S: fx' l9'?3' C3P.'1 l' Nlgply ..ElH'ffl' ' fcvcncc. Texas A N M- Drill leant 21, ...x Literary boeiety ..3, ..n, .,ti, l ' '27, '2S. Secretary '27, '2S. Scholarship '2-1. '25, '27. Y' , , , Commencement Debate '27, Class President '24i. An' l' H' T- Blxlldn nnal Stall' '28, Pulwlieitx' Committee '2N. X'alcdie- 1 Olsen torian. College Pret'eren'ee: Princeton. 1 Ent'r'l S. X. X. 1924. Privat' CN. B. C lI'g- , , ., , , , , 1, Prefeienec: XV'llSlll'lll1lOl1 N l.ef. L ' 0 L L -lol? 5TEPHtlN CMUALOP Steve H XX'fXl.l.ACE H. B01-l1XRT Entered XX'. T. M. IX. 1922. Captain Co. A. Rifle in Q nshicku Team '2N. Drill Team '25. '26, '27, '2N. Literary 5 v '3.'. J: -X .- J f' few. 3 g 1' Entered S. A. 1X. 1925. Drill Team '27, '2S. Cor- i'li'L, , .E ,I . W' ' im' In SOHC 7 'One C lxeferutee. Texas A. A .Xl. rr, poral Co. A. College Preference: Boston Tech. 3 , GEORGE XYIYZEY D XX'lS lf PHn.1P .xnrnua BURNETT ,.w1u.,' ' Y Blue Eros . P, TX. ' 7 , ' . . . E t' 'd S. A. .-X. 11125. C .l C. Xu D 'll lime.-ed ut. T. .xr A. nm. and mat. 1.0. c.. Tc.,ff,'527. -A L,,m,,. S,,c,Q.Ql 'fQ,5 'guage X . Drill Team '26, '27, '2S. Rifle Team '2S. lndiridnal 1 ,f, , ,. . V ' ' ' I lre efen e Texas X X XX E Soldier '27, College Preference: Sewanee. I T ' ' N K ' ' f NED DQPUY ' f ,l:X.XXES HERRON CTXXXPBELL nrqed-- 4XlHi0t ' featured s. A. A. nm. Corporal CQ. B. min -Entered S. IX. .-X. 1923. 2nd l.ient. Assn. Supply Team '27, '25, Tennis Team '2H. Hockey '27, '2R, . Ullleer. Literary Society '2-l, '25, '21i. 'IX College Tna:-of-XX'ar '2N. Literary Society '26, '2S. College l Preference: Texas ll. Preference: Texas lf. ,' -s. f ar- Pagr SL'l'Cllft'Cll . I 'T '-.- 'SW-'W2l21'U f Y T b4w W.azm21fsE-5-zfrezgfev . 1 ...w'fi?.re'Tf3l ll G P argisvgiflc ,5sZf?-'Medial'-if-l f .n llllllllllllE3iQn S.5 A A i -----...-.-..-...,..,.-,..,..'v . .., . - -Q I ,v 9 gl .-'I , . ... .L fl Q' I I U' Ui I 1 ff I . I .. ' .1 ' . 7147 f f ff fm wx fffffffffffffffff fffff HIIIHIIW :mar -'f trrmff ,- 1- I ' t. - -. - I , llnlilllllyIlIIllllllllllgilmillllmlll ' w - I A ' f ' If 1 ff f f ff! ff ff!! f f'f! fff1!!fffff fX! f f, llllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIHIIIHII I Il I I 1 I - ,IOI-IN EDWARD' DENIKE l'Squirrel-Head Entered S. A. A. 1925. Bugler. Ice Hockey '26, '27, Rifle Team '27. Literary Society '25, '26, '28. President '25. Class'President '25, Swimming Team '27. College Preference: Stanford U. I , LYLE J. norms A 'tCupie Entered S. A. A. 1924. Private Co. C. Football '27. Drill Team '27, '28. Tug-of-War '27. Drum Corps '26, College Preference: Sewanee. CARLOS FLEISCHMANN Chipmunk Entered S. A. A. 1925. Corporal Co. B. Football '27. Track '28. Drill Team '28. Tug College Preference: Texas A. Sz M. -of-War '28. 4 THOMAS GIVENS Tommy E-ntered S. A. A. 1923. Corporal Co. C. Literary Qoclety '23, '25, '26, '27, tzs. Ice Hockey '26, '27, 28. Drill Team '27, '28. Dance Committee '28 Class Treasurer '28. Class Vice-President '27, Coll lege Preference: Sewanee. HARRY Hobo ES Fuzzy Entered W. T. M. 1921. Captain Co. C. Drill Team '26, '27, '28. Rifle Team '28. Literary Society '27, '28. College Preference: California U. Page Eighteen FRANK C-RANGER HUNTRESS l KCI-log!! Entered S. A. A. 1923. Corporal Co. A '25, '26. '28. Hockey Team '26, '27, '28: Manager '27g Cap- tain '28. Drill Team '27, '28. Rifle Team '27. Lit- erary Society '23. '24, '25, '2S: Secretary '2-lg Vice- President '28. Publicity Committee '28. Class Vice- President '25, '2S. Class Secretary '26, '27. Attend- ance '24, '25, '26, '27, '28. Captain Tug-of-War '28. Dance Committee '28. Annual Staff '28. College Preference: Dartmouth. P- GEORGE HARVEY HUTCHINS Hutch Entered S. A. A. 1923. Priv '27, '28. Rifle Team '27, '28. Litcrary Society '23, '24, '25 College Preference: Texas A. N M. ate Co. A. Drill Team Swimming Team '27. . Honor Council '28. WILLIAM F. ,IEDERMANN MBHIH Entered T. M. I. 1926. Drill Team '28. Basketball '28. Literary Society '28. College Preference: Texas U. WILBUR WARREN JOHNSTON HW. W. Dubya, Dubya. Entered S. A. A. 1924. Private Co. A. Drill Team '27, '28. Attendance '25. College Preference: St. Mary's. A. H. KEID EL Molly Entered T. M. I. 1926. Drill Team '27. Literary Society '27. College Preference: Texas U. V I u ?:?'f': 3 m593I' Q3i? Q ' 7 2 P 'N '?A l'lW'a '?5'3 i 24- su ill 1' ' Q l Iffetttfyi i .lllliamasllllllliiwi All W l ull -4 s o .I ',-:.-Il- .,- gg! ., It ,f ' ga . .E vog., lllllllllllllldllll IIIWII JII I 1 - . I lil' ' ' 111110111110111111nl1llIIllnnMlllnlflzlmllllmlllffflllll ' A - my ,T , ,IACK HOUSEWORTH l,lGHT ,IOE AlcDUNAl.D Beck Mac Entered S. A. A. l923. Platoon Sgt. Co. B. Drill Entered T. M. l. tSl2tS. Prixate Co. A. Drill Team Team '27, '2S. Publicity Committee 'ZS Annual Stall' '27, 'ZS. literary Society '27, 'ZS. Honor Council '2S. College Preference: Dartmouth. '2N. College Preference: West Point. TERRENCE SUMMIT l.lCHTHOUSE OLNEY Y. .NleDO'.'l'El.l. Buster ,N'lac Entered W. T. M. A. jan. IQZIS. Corporal Co. A. Entered T. M, I. 15126. Private Co. A. Baaketl'-all . l.iterarv Societv 'ZX College '27. '2N. College Preference: U. of Southern Cali- Drill Team '27. 'ZS I , Q Preference: A. R M. C. tornia. DAVID .IOHNSON LYBROOK. jr. ROBERT C. NL'HN Dave Holi Entered T. M. l. 1926. Sgt. Co. A. Drill Team Entered T. M. l. lfflti. Section Sgt. Co. li. Crack '27, 'ZS. Football 'ZS. Baseball 'ZX Dance Com- Co. '27, 'ZX Tuchol-War 'Z7. 'ZN. College Prefer- mittee '28, College Preference: Georgia Tech. ence: A. 8 M. R. H. MADRIGAI. FRANK l'ASCllAl, Chango Squaw Entered W. T. M. A. 19.24. Drill Team 'Z7. 'ZN Entered T. Al. l. 10213. Sgt. Co. H. Football '27, Rifle Team '27, 'ZS. College Preference: California '.2N. liaselrall '2N. Drill Team 'Z7. 'ZR Rifle Team , Tech. 'Z7. College Preference: Texas U. A. RANSOM MARIDW I- D. PATRICK Runs , Adix opal-- EItlCl'CLl lv. T. Al. A. lll.?.2. .fthfl l.lClll. CO. B. Rifle Ente,-cd S. A. A. 1925- private CO. B. Drill -I-cam Teanr Z1. '2'S. Dilill Team 'ZtS. '27, '2S. lziter- 'LSTA -Zen Ummm. Society -25. College Preference: ary 'society 28. Lollege Preference: Q-corgna Tech. Tcws A. S M' Page Nirxclcvrt V74 1 -Q' wr -.1 'U'-'N' if Qnw-'f -.asv 1 ww jwfif -gags, M .llltt lylllt2.fns19.9'ti4-fiiftiljfi lllllllll li . -- '-Y- -.--...-.........-,,..,...,........,.., . 7 ' .- A V A' i s t 2 773 f f f ff fffffffffi ff ffffff' fffff ' ff lllllllllllllllHIIIIHIIIIll0IOIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHHIWQIHW w ... . . . f. , - i f f X!! ff ff! fff ff!! fnf! ff!! ff If 1 -nl ,vgl9f!g'Fnf'1. ...-.. 9' Q' I xl l lIl,i' .... .H 4.1 . ,' fi lr 'af 1, AJ f 1 I llllllllllllllhkln 1107! c 'li ' ' 1' 'P A 2 1 A . ,,,, . ,,,, ,. ,,,,,, ,,,f f .1 LAWRENCE SHERMAN PAWKETT Pawrk Entered S. A. A. 1923. Corporal Co. A. Hockey Team '26, '27, '28. Drill Team '27, '28. Literary Society, '23, '24, '27, '28. Hockey Captain '27. Col- lege Preference: Texas A 8: M. JESSE WOLLEIT SCHUMACHER CC eSS7! Entered S. A. A. 1925. Private Co. B. Literary Society '28. College Preference: Boston Tech. SETH S. SEARCY Mexican Pete Entered S. A. A. 1924. Private Co. A. Football '25, '26, '27. Track '25, '26, Football Captain '27. Baseball '25, '26, '27. Drill Team '27, '28. Literary Society '25, '26, '27. Class President '27, '28. Col- lege Preference: ' FRANCIS S. SPRINGALL ccjackn Entered S. A. A. 1925. Corporal Co. A. Drill Team '28. Best Platoon '28. Literary Society '26, '28. Honor Council '28. Salutatorian. College Pre- ference: Austin College. WALTON SPRINGALL oe Entered S. A. A. 1925. Corporal Co. B. Drill Team '28. Mail Man '27, '28. Literary Society '26, '27, '28. Vice-President Literary Society '27. Col! lege Preference: Austin College. - JOHN BELKNAP TALCOTT Talflop Entered W. T. M. A. 1922. 2nd Lieut. Co. A. Hockey '26, '27, '28. Football '23, Rifle Team '28. College Preference: Texas. C. UPHAM CHARLES Charlie , Willie Entered S. A. A. 1925. Society '25, Drill Team Texas U. Private, supply. Literary '27. College Preference: L. W. VAN METER . Van , Napoleon Entered W. T. M. A. 1924. lst Lieut. Co. B. Drill Team '25, '26, '27, '28. individual Soldier '27, '28. Track '25, '28. Literary Society '27, '2S. College Preference: West Point. NED S. WEATH ERS uldonen Entered S. A. A. 1924. 2nd Lieut. Co. A. Rifle Team '27, '28. Drill Team '27. '28. Literary So- ciety '27, '28. College Preference: Texas A. X M. GEORGE FREESE WROTEN, jr. Gentleman George , Hotcliamascotch Entered W. T. M. A. 1923. Cadet Major. Drill Team '24, '25, '26, '27, '28. Rifle Team '27, '28. Individual Soldier '25, '27, '28. Relay Team '26, '27, '28. Hockey '26, '27. Track '28. Dance Committee '25, '26, '27. Publicity Committee '28. College Pre- ference: Sewanee. WILLIAM FRANK WROTEN Wild Bill Entered W. T. M. A. 1923. Captain Co. A. Drill Team '24, '25, '26, '27, '28. Individual Soldier '25, '26, '27, '28. Relay Team '27, '28. Football '27, '28. Baseball '28. College Preference: Sewanee. Page Twenty 7 . 1? f 'l 'f -1 ' 'vt 'F F' 'v 'av - .a-vw'- -a 'aa-I' ' fQ.ll lllmW Qil '3'i g Ng, A i W1110110 HI 0 IH 101111 In 10 ,5231-53, .1 5-j ' 1 -fffffffif C , 1 I n a ' 1 ' I ,,. 's ev , ,':r:?:', f,'l1f fm' 1 'ff 1 1 1 0101 010101001mM00001101011101110111110110 1 1 '. ' 'f fa10.f.w1zfff:ff.ff011111fwfffffffi fA11 .oi- li iv-s ' ,r' ' A k l . V . SENIOR CLASS SETI-I S. SEARCY ...........,,......,..... ...,40., . .. ..., ...President FRANK G. HUXTRICSS. Ji' ..,... .A0, ,,.,,0 , . ..4.. X 'ice-Presicient ROBERT N. CAMPIHCLIJ ..,..,,,. ..,..A.. .... .... ,,........ S e c 1 'etn1'y-'I'rens1irel' E. L. Anderson H. Hodges R. C. Nuhn R. R. Atkinson I . G. Huntress I . Paschal NV. 1-I. Bohnrt G. H.Hutehins IC. W. Rougennx H. Y. Bailey NV. Jederninnn R. H. Schultz M. Boyd W. W. Johnston J. XY. Seliuinuchei' P. A. Burnett A, H. Keiclel S. Searcy J. H. Campbell J. H. Light. I-'. S. Springull R. N. Campbell T. S. Lighthouse XY. Springull J. C. Cll1'l'iI'lgt0ll li. J. I.yhi'ool: J. H. Tnlcoti J. S. Cnvazos J. H. Alelionnhi C. C. Vphain G- XV- Davis A- R' N111111111' L. XY. Yun Meier N, DQP115' O. Y. Klvlhiwell X , XX. I In J. E. iienike J. n. 11.111-im. Q- f1'Uf'S 1,. J. Doyle I.. s. Puwkell U- Tv V1'11lG11 T. N. Givens R. H. Mndrigul XV. F. XYroten Ellfl2lI1lQd with the study of leni'ning'. :ind the zulinimlion of virtue: stirred np with hopes of living' to he hrnve men. :ind worthy pniriots. dear to God. and famous to :ill ages. -MILTON. Page Twenty-one IIIIIIIIII . lll fwllllllll g L ff S -G..-L...f-!IIIIlIIIllII 1 ' 'J Qi J J WRT ' 'J My Iillllllllllll .,......-..v--..-...-..-..---.55-W --,. . . ., .Img U A H ,.1 . ..- -Ill ggi:-gl' llfnstilh ,f-ull: I ' lb E I-L i 'i f gf'-4 if -fp WMMIIIHHIIHM 1 f IIIHIWIIMJI . 44, .. 1. L! 7' . ...., ,, . ,,,,, , 4 ' ..-.. , , ,. cm:-11'-'rl ' . f r 1 V -If f f , ll f Honor Page We dedicate this page to the Cadets who have achieved high honors in the class room during the past year. To get one's name on the Honor Roll is no easy task. It means an average of 902, or more for the month's workg it means continuous, consistent work in the class roomg it means excellence of a very high order in all assignmentsg it means self-denial and devotion to dutyg aid finally, it means the building of character and preparedness for the coming struggles in the greater battle of life. We hope some day, not in the far future, to find the names of these young men inscribed on the HONOR ROLL of this great and honored country. HONOR ROLL ' , OCTOBER A HIRAM BAILEY FRANCIS SPRINGALL JOIHN O. CARRINIGTON TYSON SEA RCY RALPH HAINES D VVILLIAM WEST TE-RRENCE S. LIGHT-HOUSE Q NOVEMBER ROBERT N. CAMPBELL DAVID MCKELLAR JOHN C. CARRINIGTON TYSON SEARCY RALPH HAINEIS FRANCIS SPRINGALL ' TERRENCE S. LIGHTHOUSE . VVILLIAM VVEST . DECEMBER- RICHARD-Rf ATKINSON FRANCIS SPRINGALL R-OBERT N. CAMPBELL VVALTON SPRINGALL JOHN C. CARRINGTON A. J. VIOK TERRENCE .s. LICHTHOUSE JANUARY . RICHARD R. ATKINSON . TERRENCE S. LIGHTHOUSE ROBERT N. CAMPBELL FRANCIS SPRINIGALL JoHN C. CARRINIGTON A. J. vrorg RALPH HAINES- F, VQN ROSSUNI Q FEBRUARY RI-CHARD -R. ATAKIINISON A. MENDIVE B. BEVANS FRANCIS SPRINGALL ROBERT N. 'CAMPBELL A. .I. VIIQK JOHN C. CARRINCTON rw, VON RQSSUM RALPH HAINES i MARCH: RICHARD R. ATKINSON ' A, LMENDLVE ROBERT N. CAMPBELL FRANCIS SPRING.-XLL JOHNC. CARRINCTON A. J, VICK RALPH HAINES F. VON ROSSUM TERRENCE S. LIGHTI-IOUSE A Page Twenty-tuao vx.x'v-1 vi ,Ju mv., A X lf' We ,Xl 2' gl bfi, I rr ga. ry- V ' A . A ..i- -..-.,,, . I -v I in 'I I S F ii V ju- .i '... 'fi i il J :again S -- Ng A .... ....IllIlIlllllllllzanwlllii Y. 73' X n . 'I A :Dj I f fl J' ,ff Q i .. .- b-..,,,....-wap ,, AJ , f e if 5 I V I l I I A ,X 1 ll an un Illlfll Y ,! .ev nn ii. -- Q Q s .i ii 'gui .. .,s.f.. 001 0 f I g if' -- '3't'f'f ' f ' I I I 7 A-'Q V ffffff f f X ff! I I X!!! ff!!! X!! i., 9 J f' Most Representative Cadet. Most Popular Cadet ...... Most Handsome Cadet .... Most lndustrious Cadet... Marist Dignilied' Cadet .... f'f f 39554 cz. if. wi:mBN. ir. Best Ice Hockey Player. .. Biggest Feet ......... Best Musician. .. Biggest Griper. . . Meanest Cadet. .. Best Declaimer. . . Salutatoi ian. .. Valedictorian. Hall of Fame W ho's W he ..................,,. -f '!1.Z -'Z Best Dressed Cadet Best Officer ....... Biggest Gold Brick. Best Natured Cadet Best Skater ....... Biggest Sltiek .... Best Dancer. .. . Best Scholar ...... Best Drilled Cadet. Biggest Gi ouch. .. Biggest Balwy. .. . . . .Xllf . ...... A. Best Athlete ....... Best Matltematieian.. .. G. F. WROTEN. ,yt-. ....xv F. XVRGTEN Y. BAILEY R. N. CAMPBELL L. xv. VAN METER H. Kennet. R. N. CAMPBIQLL Z L. xv. PAXYIUTIAT Wm. BENCHOI-'11 ....RAY xt'i2sTON J. C. CARRINGTON F. G. HUNTRIQSS. it-. xl. s. CAVAZOS ..T. S. LICHTHOUSIZ .. ..I. C. CARRINCTGN NED XYBATHIZRS ... . ..R. BANKS . ..... F. R. ZIMMIQBS ..l7. C. HUNTRBSS. lr. B. 'CDN FRIEDIZRICH .....H. HODGES H. WEST C. H. HUTCHINS .R R. ATKINSGN s. SPRINCALI. e. CARRINGTON Pai! Tirrtiii'-Ilirww l .AH Aexgig Qs55rfE'2'Vi'QfSf A4 AA in mmm' N ew llll sim u l .... I I f .I 's - 1- .u V, In . ss sz si llivllgf :4,::'?! gl VII ' ll II ' I ji I L , .A l l 'WI A JIMM JI 001 I f' iff fH7 1111000110111 111 A A 0 mm f ll 0 if 0,4 WW? Page Twenty-four - V 0' .- .. ,...- .. A 1 1 1 el-xp V 1 A 'UUCP V .num - ,In nnn nflnn u sr an Ilfllilllfllllrlillllll 1, i I 9 ' , , f:-ZZ? EBSQ! LST BSI - -M.-. ..... V.,.. . 7 f,-f 'ff fffffzfwvff f f f i.'f4,u,:,..b:qZ'fxs?g?9u,5m+ f 4 4- V-tw -fr' ' - -PM: X V -,L .. W ffffffff fffffffffffmffffffffffffff fff f ff' ffffff' X Q A -- UJILL Zvi NMWEI YiW1' TsaJ 3QR ' G1iE2iCil1qIQ-x- -,Z Pugv T11'vr1fy-five 'ws Q- - W 2 -' 77? w- fm-M1fLrefnll:Sm:iQ:s!lI 1 JI' MMIIIPIlln5b,w....,.......,E1gQgamut n -'xc-,?g' .g-y, lggww fy A-Avayzgw 53.191553 ...Q-if-X sl nw! ,Y -...-..---,,.. -- M... fx -. . 1 ,Vu I A FJ 1-lflglid Fi' ' ' 'WE W, '.. - f t V ff' fHff7 1 Fx E11iig?:?'s,f55iX 7 'WW' ' ' f X f Y.. -.-- .Mr K1 c':rgj5:-r fi ' 'waz Aw' Y V I X y f , .4 A - 1' -1 JUNIORJI CLASS RICHARD E. BRYANT .....,.... H. A. MILLS ........................... --A.------------------------ W. C. Akers R. Haines S. W. Brunson J. AH. Holt R. E. Bryant S. E. Hays G. Bustamante P. L. Johnson F. Crutchfield A. G. Lowe P. L. Dublin A. J. McGowan T. E. Everett W. F. Mcoffueb C. VV. Foster R. Morris F. lo. Fouts H. A. Mins VV. Hindes H. Osterinan T. H. Patterson ,,,,.,,,,,...,,..,P1'esident ,,,,,,..,,,.,,..,.,.,Vice-President XV. Reinking J. E. Russell F. Von Rossuin E. D. Ray V. J. Steger J. E. Sorell J. XVH,l'1'S'I1 PV. D. XVQdOgill'l.11Gl' H-. WEL XV. ll. Von Friedrich The true purpose of education is to Cherish and unfold the seed of iiiiiiiortzility already sown Within usg to develop, to their fullest extent, the capacities of every kind with which the God who made us has endowed us. -MRS. JAMICSON. Page Twenty-six up -esfvwru v-1 r IIIQQ N V Y X f ' ' Hgrlizfsrtaafesw self. Illllllllllffiti Q sms A it N g -- fha... 5 - 1 -.:'-'fn f' 2. 6' f+:eaSm-W5N.'uu'l--'f- Illllwwlllllllllllua L N i A . ,Ury f ' -1 ,ll rinn, J? lan IllllilllflilillillllllE!,,-l , , ,Ti-Q-5 B FF, I I F3 3 BI , -.1-li-1-----H .... . ...., HN., I 7 f ff! ','f7!7f fff,f!!!f', ',f' 'f f'f'f'f, , , v Z 'ff f ff! ff fffff fffffffffffffffffffff,'f'f.f'ff 1f' 'fffff'l 'f7f ' V 9 ' ' ,,,,,,,,HM 1 , y! X l f X W Y T- W Q I X .xl Q , 1 X Bokfkfexosiic ..,Lgf. 'F Q K ' , A Pago Tzz'1'nfy-sfwml I Lfri's-ws-+Qw.x-. QF 2 - if wa f f-MM12's:2fmll:N1nsi:s!lI Nl Q D ll' QA x 'W W 'sf''Wiywllllllli K ..-,.-.,..,-,, , E . -x ,. H1 ' 7 ' W J 'ffl Elf F ll '45 Qi 'Q 'T . i - -fllf 'Iwf19.5 wwf .f77075777f'f l 21133531 Mifcilififzanirg. ' .. . . ..cgfvp-gm! . v.v. ,Um 71,7 -lab!!! Xlfjfff ff f y f X f X , f A - - ff 2 vw tiff.. af La., 'via 42, . ,, - I - SQL, P' SOPHOMORE CLXASS A WM. BENCHOFF ..... ---- ---A----' P resident E. PASCHAL - -'-- ..,....... X 7iCe-P1'6SiCl9I1i S, A. Barclay R. O. Hundley J. H. Rodney J. Bowman E. Gadenhead O. YV. Cameron W. G. 'Campbell H. J. Crase R. E. Eiser J. R. Graham -J. R. Hyslop E. T. Jenison B. F. Karotkin L. C. Levy L. C. Lewis A. J. McKenzie E. G. Paschal T. M. Searcy C. P. Sliearn A. Sierra F. .Sie1'1'a. P. R. Smith M. C. Wakefield NV. West But it was in making education not only common to all, but in some sense compulsory on all, that the destiny of the- free 1'e'pub1ics of America was practically settled. -LJOVVELL. Page Twenty-eight 437 3'ag-we-s--w'1v1 ::: -- Al' . WX, - V V 5 ar g p- .-aw ,q-Q-,au-,,5g.,. F -- ..,,, ' R Illuw M fy I--wqyN..Quu M A fm-1-fmmilizfilzgamIIIIIllIlllllIl'lmuwIHl V g-'23 .2 ? I I ll:, 1 - 1:22. g, , ' surf fir ll: ' X 1 ,CF lllll H ,UL ll bn-NV ' V K5-5' , , --Nr ., , Lf'-Q , lll0lllllWllllllll0llll - ' IIINI A ' ' L-il., ' P' ' ' ' ' 1 f ' ff vnu IIHIIW 111 I0 111 Illl 1 ' ' oo M7 me -Miyggtsicler Palm' Txzwzfy-111:10 4-'hvwff- Q-'42!5 '0X' V Q Q4w:4wf22-we, f , ..-I '. n ' lnl..G 'Rafi 91.5911 :mu V '5?f'4.1g1f, f' W u 32. ' 4 45' uw' '11, til- - ,y-3'!s VW Q .--,,f,gx.j we-? 'm L llllllllll mu wf-.fwllulimmmiwmssg K X1,AZWMMWQIIIIIl11l111M...w.1111 i, iii. -.,.,,-V U B X I n. ,ggfllpl f, - I MQ QI . ll, - 1-:I I 1 f 1 f fff 1 ly ff W ff 'l7if1' 1 0I'WIIMIIIIIMMIWMIHWJ. ' ' if ' nu A A ff!! ffffffffflfffl ,fmmm,t.t ff if 17722117 whlihmlillhllllllllml ' G f A if Q ff! A4, 352 ffl if ,wfziff-A ff' Z X 1 V,,li X,.V A if 1 -WAV ,XT fs l .Jf A E .,f E 5 I x,ff I K V G FRESHMAN CLASS L, FALLEY ,,..,,,,A,,,,,, .,,,,,,, ..,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,, , 4,,,,.,,,A..,.....,,.. A...,,.,..........................,,, P 1 'esident R, BANKS ,,..., ,.,,,,,,,,,. ,,..,,,,,,,,,,,,,b,,h . . ,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,.,v 4,,-fffff .....,,,,,,,,.,,.,....,......,. Q.?i.X7lCG-Pl'ESldQllf .ai mpfiffvz . wigs? ka, . L. Acevedlo R. Dyer 5 5 ' J. '.-'la.ness R. E. Burleson VfW , N. K. Ellis . L. Mears D. Bell ixGg,f?'yyf'S. D. Fi'ee'bo1'n A. Mendive R. T. Banks Q 'f.fff H. G. lfuentes i L. M. Mclinery B. 0. Bowles .35 xi' lN'3fAT'f Green jj.. Ofnei' M. C. Bennett A. Gonzales rn? A. Reynoso B. Campbell ' 'el l Ga' lflillkf' .1 W ,HQ W. Russell B. S. Chandler v flffudspetli iq 'lB. T. Reeve G. R. Catts ZF. C. Hayes ff.. QJ! C. Speeclie D Cornell Knickmeyei' .ff f'JiQ M. Sheurei' R. L. Cope W. 3 fl. S. Kahn 37 Ky YF. l. Stegei' C. V. Van eieve 1 I T. E. Linn Nigsaril- B. A. Dreibrodt C. C. LaIBeff Q, AZ' J. Vick C- D11HW0i0dY G. H. Liberty 1 tlilmyw-fliP. R. Zinuners Q A. Levy .. ' 1 f' 6 'tEducati0n comi nces at the lllOtl1Glf'Si nee, and every word spoken within the hearsay of little chiclren tends 'toward tix lfoundation of Cll1ll'2lClGl'. 'Y-flfUSl'LX BALLOU. G Page Thirty I I ,Y-Lx: I . ,.V' 'v iii' ly Q nv .,:e?:c1,..,b.iTL I W ., i w wm .. lim QQN5 W, . . . . X. u- -lu I h I-' ., gg-SU ... 'I ' h L i I ' - . V gi l Al fl7'l lllnulW 1MlIllu:f!!!!. l2 XX! 4, f 'V , Il Il J V' . V 2. i .44 ff If I , I . I E -- . 5. i r I' In 1: A ,IQIIIIIII ,A D.- r 41 4. ' '?.!Fi 4' Q . . 'f ' lf .ffffff A , ln ' .. , ' e , Illllllllllllllllllllllllllf 1111 A ll f' . na ,ug s-,L .. 'N 5 f f W ,W W , , ,W,,,,W,y X X I ' A ' ' if t 'Wyffffffffffmfffffffffffffyff,w,i,ff.iN, 1,f11 f ,,,M,,,p,,g,,,w Ill Hlllll W lll lllllll lllll ll Ill . z-- ---k .I -. 1 -.K ,Vista ofthe Yeer if J. c.2lcARR1NoToN . i K i ii f A XX tl 5 A IV! Y-an ' if 'rt f The poet wh wrote about the la'ggard steps of youth coming back to M t school might have made a stirring martial hymn entitled: When johnny Comes FN I Marching Back to T. M. I. 'He would find here all the ingredients to make a poemg the blue September skies: the old school with its turrets, standing on a hill like a castle of oldg johnny with his brass buttons, trying to step out proudly with a martial tread in spite of the fact that his heart is beating tread to the tune of The Girl l Left Behind Me. Of course there are some johnnys 'forfwhom this girl is the nicest one of all, his mother. . . . b Us Prof. Bondurant tried to fill up the aching void, generally not a oy h b ivinfr us a red hot Mexican supper. The Spanish heart but his stomac , y g g . . class lauded it over us by rattling off 'thot tamales, enchiladas, chile con carne. Chiles rellenos , but Dreibrodt disgraced Prof. Blanton by saying, l never knew before that chile was the Spanish word for hot. ' ' d ut But when the drum beat for the ides of October, old T. Nl. l. steppe o with a drill team that was a drill team. After weeks of soldiering under Capt. d S t Cra in when even Catts knew the difference between squads Henion an g . g , right and column right, we entrained in true military style for Dallas and ' ' d the' didn't the State Fair. But the Dallas bunch heard we were coming an 5 dare let that crack drill company march through the city. Comparisons. as the poet says, might become odious. No, sir! They smuggled us through on trolley ca is, they dumped us. and then made us march weary miles to supper. That id not break our morale, for the next day we won a place in the line of honors. being the only San Antonio team to do so. Our Chamber of Commerce con- fided to us afterwards that it's about as easy for a camel to go through thc eye of a needle as for a San Antonio crowd to carry off honors in a Dallas com- petition. l-lowever, it was a great trip. We saw all the exhibits from the horn th horn frogs Took in all the side shows including peanuts and cattle to e ' -. 'n We came home wiser and happier. but sleepier. than when we left. popcoi . V . We marched affain on Armistice Day. this time the whole Battalion. Sev- O l officers told Captain l-lenion that we made a better appearance than the era - ' ' ' ' ' b f ' the World War. army itself. lf the lxaiset could only haxe seen us e ore who knows-the course of history might have been changed. Page Thirty-mic ' Nets s- 42'3'0B-'Q' s4iw:4wa2-aaa' -sf. I I vigil.: 320. . -. vi 5- ....,',: 1' V I l, .7,-...Lg,?,5:iFgE,-ia:- i Illwigillllllllllefwgnimii NE fi.. arz.ge+ri?illIllllIllllllllMi..will. C V 4 X . . , r I fftes AX he ,dzgaravsr 1 fn ,,,,,lll!.l,, H A-.nm gl fl ' 1 1 1 1 1 ff ff HllllllllllIIIIHIIIIHIIHIIIMlllllllllmufgllmlllgf f' ,,', ful 3 -Vf.1 fp. . I X X M W W I, 7, , . ,M . My , vlllmllllnlllllmyl 01 ' ' 1 I ' . 1 V ' ' i But the Captains and the Majors all went their ways and we marched back to the daily grind that led us to that fateful time when the Christmas exam- inations held sway. But amid these honors and duties, I quite overlooked the moleskin heroes of the gridiron. On many a hard fought field they carried the orange and black. Sometimes they bucked the line without breaking through, but be it said to their honor, they had the nerve to buck the lineg and won their share of victories. Let every boy keep his own memory of the 'Christmas holidays, old Santa Claus and the hanging mistletoe. We all came back to new victories won by a hockey team that was hard to beat. For the third straight year they won the City Championship. Led by their star captain, Frank I-Iuntress, they knocked over everything in sight with credit to themselves and T. M. I. The Basketball team started out strong but Hsickled o'er with the pale cast of thought when two or three of the best go-getters went out and got the flu, which ended all efforts for victories and honors. T. M. I. again emerged victorious in the annual R. O. T. C. field day, March 2. Competing against teams from Main Avenue and Brackenridge, we won first place in every event we entered. First came the crack drill team, winning the city championship. Then the Tug-of-War team pulled the op- position all over the lot, just after Ned Weathers had won the First Prize in the Individual Soldier Contest and L. W. Van Meter taking home third. Then came the Relay Race and T. M. I. had won her fourth victory. It was a success, sweeping and overwhelming. In fact it was a famous victory and got us all uplifted, even and including our good friend and mentor, Bishop Capers. On several occasions during the year, the eloquent Bishop addressed us, telling us how to be good. After this victory, he came out all excited and told us how good 'we were. Prof. Bondurant then made it unan- imous by giving a banquet for the winning teams, and the boys proved they were good at other things besides drilling. The final curtain and commencement is in sight. Here's hoping the Pro- fessors will find us all as good in the exams. as the Bishop says we were in the R. O. T. C. competition. Page Th ty two 1 N' 1 f 'IWW it ' is 'lm 0 lXXlIllllIuII I: -. - .55-. , fx' ... TMC A , ,D :W ggfimitiwi illlilliilifgffwllliffifl tfim W tnillllilliliiilll i -4 ,U U il -'ral ia- f V 5 --1 5 l, Fllll IMIIIIIIIA gg I, , 'Cl ii . .2 4, ' 'dj vlllllllw U, I . , lvaxfr -ll . -Ti.: 1 nhl 'AINHHI IHIII 1 A' f ' , ' - N ' x aw' W-f---M -- . ,,..,... -,. .W .. - l wx. Im llllllllll ll ll ll llllll .. . . .. ' A ' ,X ' A e, . - 7- I X, r J e 4 A l I 'U ,A g -10 ..!, Y 4' '- I-,L 'Yi' 4115441.14 .i I, D :gf T111'r1.v-17111 1' I IIIIIIIIN H iillllllllilillll I ' ' Ja'- I f .p I ,p g 9 1: ,, ,,- .f. fl Q' II IN . 1 , ,M r ' , 1. 1 B L54 I 1 f . -e - 'fi'-7 1 111111111171 wfff1ff1'f'fff'1 11111111111H110any11lnnmdmalallalunmdlqalla ag . vm . 74 ff-14 -Fi fi., - -. X X , f X M X Z, J I ' -, ' 1- ,. 1, -- -- -' 2 P ' nf - f , ,f '31 1 1'11 1 111 11 IIHlllllllllllllllllllllll IIHI IIIIIIII 1 Ill , - - f WW f ff ff Legend of the Blue Bonnet A TOAST TO Tl-IE BLUE BONNET I-Iere's to the dainty blue bonnets of Texas Of fragrance most sweet and clear, Which bloom in the beautiful spring time, The favorite season of the year. To gather the dainty blue bonnets Brings to everyone glee and cheer, And we gather them as our class flower, For all our classmates dear. Texas springtime is always Blue Bonnet time. These beautiful, luxuriant flowers, symbolic of Texas loyalty, attain their mature growth and bask in the beauty of Texas sunshine. Many wonderful legends are told of the origin of the Blue Bonnet, but the lore of the Cherokees and Comanches is by far the prettiest. A Many moons ago a terrible pestilence swooped down on the tepees of the Indians. Chiefs and warriors died, priests and medicine men prayed to the Great Spirit to send relief. But the Manito had turned his face from his chil- dren. Brave men and women continued to perish. At last the Great Spirit spoke. To atone for the sins of the people, an offering must be made in sac- rifice. While warriors listened tothe decree of the medicine men from the Great Spirit, a little Indian maiden sat in the background of the council fire and nursed her reindeer doll. To her, that doll was the dearest, most precious thing in the great camp. It was made of the white skin of a fawn, its eyes and mouth had been painted. with berry juice, and for hair, it had a gorgeous flare of feathers-the blue feathers of a jay. ' After the council fires had died clown, the little Indian maiden lay awake pondering. Even as the older mothers loved their living papooses, she loved her deerskin doll-but a sacrifice must be made. At last, she slipped quietly out of the tepee, sought a dark corner in the camp and made a fire. The fawn doll crackled in the flame. When the sacrifice had been burnt to ashes, she gathered the ashes in her hand and scattered them. The next morning, the ground was covered with flowers of the same hue as the jay feathers of the deerskin doll. The pestilence had ceased. Blue Bonnets had been born. -P. J. FRANK. Page Thirty-four liSS,,j'-'QQ ' ' ' ' 'WZ ,Bg gg.5,.,:,1Q3,ae'gg1 I V N I 'ii-57' 'A lg' ' ' I I - --gl 1' - ' ' ea e' -' ' lll I lllllfre... ees it QAIQ f .I I.. , . .. - mmmmlu y I lllllwamillllllllmiiwi Qu i.Qil i!M L9IIIIIIIlIllllllMEgi ii -4 .u u il--Q-Ilfalivt mga . - I .X Jr. 111111 0 fr , . Af f IWWYWIWHI ami ' li ' 70 f . f' ' I f , . ,. 1 5:w?-:f -M-T f'f.1 'x:- K' -N .N .M -T'f 'QY:'fMv MLA 'v':kk 9 by ,AQ 3:-QZIFIQS? ,T A , W . ,, Nh. .. . .. ,, , I , 5 Sanfinfonigmthecity gi Eg k I W Af O rv if 5X I NBlue Bonnetsf-f Ei ji 55 . I x 4 .. . 7 1 . -.','- 'Wray V ,' ? M pw , 1 .. f ff' ' 1 . f9L'1 fQ - .V '. , .I .L . - fr , . J M .9 , x vw zgffmw gi , -E , ,Lf 'Q ,T l kmyh ti ' ' -if' hx nfl' Q -4 G V i i33','T,iiLZ'Ti11L'T17V 'TM' 5 I A -W 1 4 1 f'ff W A ,133 K1Lx Z 'A Xe +255-w. ,, 'WL if F9 K 'N ' '24 A 'V Z -2 ,I z -u V A - ju . y,',..J, XV f f 33 gf: 3 . h . . .Ah , -,wr . A x -' 5f5l' L-,:.iv 3':'3'?9 '- W - ' ' Aj' , ,Aj-.Q lv 'J'-:-.f. VLA.: .Qlbvujf-:7'i.,N N 9 II 1' Fai-FU4535:'11fi .1 ',-4'-rv'fri-X-wif'7. 1 f' A .. fi t fl Q .. 55 -42. 'ffm-.th ' -1 - K V 1 H SI ia 'Q?IQ51',Q2-rs!-3?aa5af . ,Q ,M .f'j. j ll ' ' ' QM 'e Y rw N' '-JW,-' A bf1 'f3f'f'i?ffS Eff-wi-, P 'i 'sf . V may ' ' .M I 1 5 . - ,4, , v Y, :NT-S , yy.. , 'difaje ' Pagw Thizfy-111 K xfls, r rd , l nl 'glue X I lIlllIlI!l 'u:i, f m u1mr.1..5gI.+T3?g. 11 .2 JiigimimggiuillllliilllllIll 'I U 'P lu 3- 9 9 aff!! 1 . . .. 4' !' IIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHII 111 Ill J A I. I . 3 2'-iift fff f fl . t rot nHlllllllllilllnlnlllllllll ' ,I ' ' I I ' XX X XXXX X X XXXX XX X XX XXXXX X X The Zeta Sigma Literary Society JOHN C. CARRINGTON During the past scholastic year the Zeta Sigma Literary Society presented a fine argument for its existence. The debates were never more spirited and aroused great interest among the students. Many an embryo Patrick Henry and Daniel Webster thundered to the rafters in fiery argument with facts mar- shalledin long array until the audience was almost overwhelmed. A feature of this Society was the special programs given in the hall before the entire student body. These programs were varied and interesting and at- tracted much attention. A Declamatory Contest in April, judged by members of the faculty, brought the season to a close. The officers of this society deserve commendation for their spirit and energy, and the hard work they gave to the organization. Captains of the de- bates brought some of the same vim that marks the football field, in spurring their fellow debaters to greater efforts to win the several debating contests. The Faculty Sponsor, Prof. B. H. Meyer, deserves much credit for the success. of this work, which included not only debating but also training in public speaking and declamation. ' ' 'O1FFI'CE'RiS ow frrrilai sool'EFrY Presldent --------.----------- ............................. ................... .......................... R O J BERT Niarr, CAATPB ruin. V109-P1'GSidGHf -,------'--- .............. I fRANK GRANGER HUNTRESS SG01'e'ta1'y --------------.------ .........., J OHN cr.tAieoRNE CARRINTGTOX Sellgeankat-A1'H1'S --------- ----..-.................................... ................... . J OE STEPHEN CAVAZ05 M Elltl B ER S HI P J' Akers S- T' HELYGS L. Pawkett L. Anderson WV. Hindes WY Reiuking J. 'Campbell J. Holt N' ROQJGYS R. N. Campbell F. G. Huntress J, RUSSQ11 J- C- Ca1'1'1H'S'C011 W. Jeclermann J. Schumacher J.. S. -Cavazos P. L. Johnson V, Siegel- G- Davis R. Marlow .I. Sorell J. Denike VV. lVIoCaleb H. Spencer 5- 591211513 D. McKellar ' VV. spr-ingu.11 - 5 U H11 J. McDonald iw. SD,-iugayll W- lfoster J. H. Light L, W, Vatu Mem 3' Iiufenif' T- S- Lightliiouse W. Von Friedrich ' ames E1i211ft91'S011 V. D. Wedegartnei' . ierce Page Thirty-six I u 5'nQB'i3W 1 'f lIl wil' 'Nu - VSV ' 2-rf? -' 'Nb F-'Grigio P .iff X '-'ffl'IW---if----1+-:M-W-r .-- ---u mglqlggqglylqygp f' hx -N ' -U.. is ' 1 N..-. ,' Ill' 'V' ll-- S ' 2. I ' Q-- 'HHWX' ' '- -- X-4 fm'f !!!!5---IIIIllfilzkmnlllllliiliiiliiwlilniulll - Q Q QM!! Q! Y WA I I H ' - ' A ' ,'T,AC-I. V V . . .. . , . . 1, ' ' . . - H , H - i!j 31T! 'lT ? '31 fl? h T-P1 1 ! fff,fx.ff'ff,ff mf, ffl! ffff ,ffffmf ff!! lllllllll W W H, Hflfnfg .ff 01001 l f ' 7 - ' A' ' fffffggyfffyffffyffffff444fffg,f.ffffffffffff444g,gf1f .14 ,WM , - ,epggi-pf.-.1f,f,. - , , V l .V .. , : . i fm , 5 Ml, ,1. . , A During the year training was had in the following. Winning teams and best individual speakers are printed in capital letters: DEBATE Resolved, That, the Presidential and Guhe1'natoriul Elections Should lie lleld the Saline Year. Aff.--Ned DePuy. Joe Cuvuzos. Neg.+-li.Xl,l'll llAINlCS, XY. Foster. Resolved, That the Present System of Society is More llesirahle lfroni the VVoi'k- ing Mans Sf?ll1CiDOiI1f, Than is the Socialist Order. Aff.-JO1-IN SORELL. J. Scliiiinziclier. Negxmell. llodgzes. J. Russell. Resolved, That the l edei'al Government Should Legalize the Manufacture und Sale of Wine and Beer. Aff-ROBERT N. CA3lPl2lCl,l,. l i':inli lluntress. Neg.-Joe McDonald, Ned NVez1the1's. Resolved That Capital Punishment Should lie Aholisliedf' Aff.-JOHN C. CARRINGTON. .lohn Pieree. Neg.-3lcC'zileb W.. James Campbell. Resolved, That ai lfedeiuil i7GDlll'IlllGlll of liducntion with a Secretary in the Pi'esident's Cabinet Should llc lisizihlisliedf' Afff-RlCle1.XliIJ .X'l'KlXSOX. Neg. -Alcliellqir. .loo llolt. Page Thirty-seven ,HNKQS ag?SQ?VqVi'iiXf ev 1 .gr as ' ll Illll I i . .lf l L2 4. w ill i n g-.-Illllllilliil ff . Illli 1- - gi an s iii!-'Pillai ef es,-2525! .1 1'-5 i ii . . T 1 IIHIH 1 Ill w .a,,11.. N ,g l 4 ' f f ff 711111111111011111111m1111 II ll I A ' ' Resolved, That the Child Labor Amendment to the Federal Constitution Should Be Adopted. Aff.-RALPH HAlNErS, P. Johnson. Neg.-Walton Springall, Francis Springall. 'fResolved, That Open .Shop Should Be Established. Aff.-NED DePUY, Jack Denike. Neg.-R. Marlow, T. S. Lighthouse. 'tResolved, That the Philippine' flslands Should I-Iave an Independent Govern- ment. Aff.-G. W. DAVIS, V. Steiger. Neg.-L. Pawkett, I-I. Patterson. Resolved, That Congress Should Enact Farm Relief Legislation Embodying the Principles of the McNary-IH-augen Bill. Aff.--RALPH HAINES, Richard Atkinson. Neg.-David McKellar, W. McCaleb. DECLAMATIONS AND HUMOR Poem , Richard Atkinson. Discussion of Current Events , J. Campbell. Jokes, Springall, W. The Flag , W. Jederinann. Thinking , P. Dublin. Jokes, J. S. Cavazos. When I 'Like to Study , Walton Springall. SPECIAL PRrO'G+fRiAMS TI-IANKSJGIVING The First Thanksgiving , John C. Carrington. Presidential and 'Gubernatorial Elections .Should Not Be I-Ie'ld the 'Same Year , Ralph Haines. f'Value of a Literary Society , T. S. Lighthouse. Memories of Our Fathers , Richard Atkinson. Landing of the Pilgrims , W. Springall. The Flag , Ned Weathers. , CHRISTMAS il Christmas Greetings , John C. Carrington. 'fLittle' Italian Rose , L. W. Van Meter. Is There a Santa Claus? R. N. Campbell. -Christmas Spirit , Wal-ton Springall. The Perennial Kid , Richard Atkinson. H. ll VVASHINVGTONUS BIRTHDAY 64 D Resolved, That Congress Should Enact Farm Relief Legislation Embodying the Principles of the McNary-I-Iaugen Bill. Aff.-JOHN C. CARARINGTON, Robert N. Campbell. Neg.-Walton Springall. Francis -Springall. ' ,DECLAMATORY CONTEST :The Dying South , Richard Atkinson ffirst prizel. Spartacus 'to 'the Gladiators , Ralph Haines Csecond prizel. Fall of Quebec , Ned Weathers. vEmn1ett's Defense , Walton Springall. The Curse of the Liquor Traffic , L. W. Van Meter. Regulus to the Romans , John Pierce. WINNERIS IN THE DECLAMATORY CONTEST Richard Atkinson-First Ralph -Haines-,Second Page Thirty-eight 1 . T,.?L.x.5's'-i'Wq-.Viv-17 '11 y Y ' ' in El, , -- V Zi' ., , I ,, U, in 'W' ,-HM ,-, 'ON - I I -1 . ---1 La:-.9 . '- ' . -' ':::ff-sag. its-Q' - p Illwnwllllllllllllmawg.tu .-.I ki A ...! 9lY2i..iq?iIIlllllllllllllwmwlllm E! ll.:,1 an 5 lg Q Q all! ll f.. - 3 E 1 y nn I - Will . ' - U' ':. mcg. I f E f ' 1 1 IIH M. H IT. MPH-5 i-il 3-,-E-:J I i, I '. fff,f,' f!ff,-,f.,,f,f ,ff ff, ff,,fffffx,f,ffff,l,'1f, 111 'ff ljyfyfl WIHI lIIWWIHIIIIWWIWIHIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIHHIIII ' 1 g ' ' 1 f f ,ff,,,,f,l,,i 4,,fi..,, f.,f,l ,,,M,,,,,, ..I,,.,, ffwfffffgfff wa, Why is Wallace Green? Is John Speedie? Is Arthur Lowe? Is Richard Eiser? Is Jim Graham? Whom did John Pierce? Where are the Harvey Mills? Who rings ............ Bell? What can Seth Searcy? T.hl By F. G. H. and J. C. C. Four Walls -Study Hall. Blue Heaven -Saturday. Dream Kisses -Wroten F. Girl of My Dreams -Nape Rogers. Black Bottom?-The Arm- ory. Together -Captain Henion and Lyle Doyle. Keep Sweeping the Cobwebs off the Moon -The Janitor. Forgive Me -Ned IVeathers I Scream, You Scream, We All Scream for Ice Cream - The Boarders. Henry's Made a Lady Out of Lizzie -Nuhn. Melancholy Baby -Drei- brodt. Who Knows -Exams. D ' Vi ' ' Rain -For the Drill Period. So Tired --Friday afternoon Highways are Happy Ways -College Avenue. Is Jack Light? Where is Terrence Light- house? Is Robert Nuhn 12 o'clock? What is a Van Meter? What is the thing that Ned Weathers ? Where are the Ralph Banks? Has Gordon Catts? Has ..............., Liberty 'Z Jazz St, Louis Blues -Prof. Cul- ver. Without You Sweetheart?- Frank Huntress. Falling in Love -R. N. Campbell. Brolienliearted''-Van Meter The Man I Loye - Captain Henion. Mine All Mine --Cl c o rg 0 Wroten. Diane -Al's R o ot H e e 1' Stand. Among My Souvenirs -The Three Hockey Cups. When Day is Done -3:-'15 P. M. Varsity Drag -Main Aye- nuc. Doll Dance -Burleson. Hot Feet -The H o c li e y Team. Baby Face -Rougeaux. An Old Guitar and an Cld Refrain -W al t li er and his wreck. Two Black Crows -Camp- bell W. and Doyle. Pugr Th iffy-n in 1-Hrrfrxs.. fl ' LA' 55 E-mi li 'JP' Q39 rl ' I l l ,lx f La l Gif lllllllll , ii IIII ll ' 1- fi !.. m . - lllllllllllllll ll l iv, A.. f 7 jj J 1' 'jf ri 1yglfiyfWWWfyWfffVffffffffWff7ffff7ffffff7777ffffU7'777 '-'i--1 ..,-fm. M-,, f. ' ',,, ,,,, ,R J , J IHIH III I ., , , ..., A' 'W-2 X., . ,.. . Lf LJYL fffjjff E P4152 Forfy ' .- W. ... - , 'fir , 'Q9?H5J'erf 2:2-www H Q K In Illllilllllllll ' kv A '-f -l - -'ll' . ..- .' .nlllxxlllllll .-4 IF I I . pa, .gmefff 9 jii-Illllillilmll lillllll QV , , 5-:Q 'Bng'1jAg7lq,g-egg, ..-J:-. f ff f fffffff fffffff ffmfwffffffffffffA' 'Ala f, ? Dil J Q E 5.2 GoR'G4exc1nger -'LV' lhzgf I-orlv-nn 1:wfs'-': 'wfv'- w' N2 VW ' 'sfI Wa2 ?':1s2:gwgz452:'I IIIIIIIUIIHEQW lullwnwlllllllllllln?-Wg.Qn L-A W.-MmHwhfmfllllllllllllillmmwllll ..,.,-. M-. - .... -- . ' ,V Q 3 it it Eagwjff 'Pl if H - I . f7 I f 'ff f,fff7 ff! 7f 'fl V X, X 1 A V if -' - T. M. I. Military Organization in Competent Hands. Capt. Henion's Service Creat Asset to R. O. T. C. T. M. I. is peculiarly fortunate in its military detail from the War Department. 'Captain Karl E. Hen- ion, United .States Army, is an of- ficer of marked ability-and more. He is pre-eminently -a leader of boys, enthusiastic, co-operative and sincere. His work on the drill field, on the athletic field and as Commandant of the School has al- ready shown such enthusiastic re- sults that he has made himself in- valuable to the school administra- tion. Capt. Henion was born on June 2, 1895, in Buffalo, N. Y. At the age of five years he entered the public schools of Buffalo, gradu- ating therefrom in 1908. Business requirements then ne- cessitated 'the moving of the fam- ily to Cleveland, Ohio, where they have since resided in the residen- tial suburb of Lakewood. Capt.Henion attended and grad- uated from Lakewood Hi-gh School in 1912 following which he enter- ed Case .School of Applied Science, taking up the study of mining en- gineering. In the spring of 1917, when the greatsocial upheaval, the VVorld War, caught our country in its maelstrom he, like thousands of other college students, volunteer- ed and was ordered by tl1e YVar Department to attend the First Of- ficers Training Camp at Fit. Ben- jamin Harrison, Indiana. Before graduation from the camp, he was given an opportunity to be exam- ined for a commission in the regular army, which he successfully passed. Shortly after graduation from the 'training camp he relinquished his Reserve Commission and was appointed a 2nd Lt., and 1st Lt., 'both on the same date, in the Infantry of the regular army. . I-Ie experienced the many duties of an officer of that time, doing whatever he could and was ordered to do. In 1919 he was assigned to the 23rd Infantry of the 2nd Division, part of the Army of Occupation in Germany. 'He later returned to tl' ns country with the 2nd Division and to San Antonio. 'In 1922-23 Capt. Henion attended and graduated from an eight months course at ge Infantry school, -following which he returned to duty with troops at Fort Sam ouston. In the spring of -1924 he was ordered t-o foreign service in the Philippine Islands. Upon arrival there he was assigned to duty with the Post of Manila, where he served f0I' two YGHFS HS Adjutant of the 31st Infantry and Post of Manila and Plans and Training Officer for 'the regiment. 'His two year tour bein g up in May, 1926, he returned t tl U 't d .St t i , station he likes best, .San Antonio. 0 le nl e 3 es md the 'Captain Henion, in 1920, married a San Antonio girl and has two children I-le is a member of the Sigma Nu fraternity, and of the S-hrine, Masonic order, i I Page Fo rty-fwo I VA' N' 25lI'lW-'zwiqgsssgae-ramrssugull Q? rfflwfifffiifslll?-N919-:M l il I Illiuawnaiuiiiiinnaw l vt I Q! 1 4E HH . IZ 22:1 IFE:-Jziegil-:insulin gl K - f I Efvff 5 -'EEI 15215. f Q e it 1 1 -I - f ff! ff 1 f f ffffffffffff ff! XL 'rf . 'f SERGEANT CRAGIN'S ASSIGNMENT TO R. 0. T. C. COMPLETES STRONG MILITARY STAFF HIS LONG SICIIVVIFIC IN Tllli l'NI'I'lCD S'l'.XTl'IS .IIUIY Sgt. J. E. Cragin was horn at Lawrence, MilSS1N'llllSl IlS. and attended the llllbllf' and high schools of that city. For four years he was a nn-inher of St. B1ary's Cadet Corps of Lawrence. He enlisted in the l'nited States .-Xriny in Noveinlier, 1917. for duration of the World War. llischarged in lioceinlwr, 1241s, Character excellent. Enlisted February. 12120. special assignment to 22!rd I'. S. Infantry. joined Co. C. 23rd Inf.. Fort Sain llonston. Discharged. I-'eln'nar5'. 154322. Cfharacter excellent. Re-enlisted February. 19221, assigned to West Texas Military Acadeniy, as Sgt. In- structor in ll. O. T. C. l'nit. Discliarged l e1n'nar5'. 11126. Sgt. Cliaracter excellent. Re'-enlisted in grade at lfort Sain Houston. and assigned to ll. O. T. C. l'nit at West Texas Military Acadeiny. ner Par. T. Special Order No. T., lldq. Nth Corpg A,-ea. 1.-0,-t Sain Houston. Texas. Hated Jan. T. 19215. Page Forty-flirw X7 Il W ' N' ' Ill RU! 'KJ L If 'I' rl, yu ' v ov ' '-fvrr 2-rg' iguggi lllllwiwllllllllllllmjg.1n .l 'L I was-3 ri.. ' z : ' I . - I , , D, ,, , - lllllllllllflef ' 1 ,iiunlsw1i.:'..mwjil111111u11lgl1 pf., XA, X -'-.112 I, -e uh. nigh . ll' n I Tm--. ...-.....s,,....Y,...,.. - .-S. . , ,, ..., . 1- 1 . -59: fl E Y- gwvi' . l! W1-:'1 i 'ij f f ff V f f A M XSLT 4 f 'H Military Department The Reserve Officers Training Corps is organized under authority of Sections 40-476, National Defense Act, as amended. This Act provides for the establishment of Senior Units at colleges and universities, Junior Units at colleges Cessentially military sfchoolsj and Junior Units at High Schools. The primary object of the R. O. T. C. is to provide systematic military training at civil educational institutions for the p-urpose of qualifying se- lected students of such institutions as reserve officers in the military forces of the United States. However, only stude-nts from colleges and univer- sities maintaining senior units and class M s-chools Cessentially militaryj are eligible, upon completion of the four years course in military science and tactics, and one advanced R. Ox T. C. camp, for a commission in the officers Reserve Corps. Othe-r schools CPublic High Schoolsl maintain- ing R. O. T. C. units, do not provide as complete a course in M. S. Sz T. and hence their students are not qualified upon graduation for appointment in the Officers Re-serve Corps. Texas Military Institute is an essentially Military School, and is rated Class M by the War Department. ' Due to the many changes made by students in their attendance at schools and subject to other conditions only a relatively small per cent of the stude-nt body are qualified upon graduation for appointment in the Officers Reserve Corps. Nevertheless, it is believed that however much the stu-dent may fall short of the necessary credits to 'qualify for a reserve commission, the training he receives here with itsattendinrg result of bet- ter citizenship amply repa.ys the government for the expense involved. We recognize the fact that all mein are creatures of habit and that the habits we form, good or bad, se-rve to mould our characters. We know that, in order to be a success in life, we must have self-discipline-discip- line o-f mind and body, and it is largely through the acquiring of good habits and overcoming the bad ones that one is able to discipline- oneself. The Military Department of Texas Military Institute endeavors to accomplish its mission as outlined -by the War Department, but it also feels in so doing it is helping to better equip the young men, who come under its supervision, for their place in :civil life by delve-lopin.g a strong, healthy body by means of well regulated and systematic physical exercise, by de- V910lOiHg in thai-3111 self-discipline and qualities of le-adership, and in teaching them to have a high regard for duty, honor' and country. O Page Forty-four I 'm i H, 46' ,.. I t'f3l D v-'Herbal of- -ug fl lui . lIlIll.lllW ll XJAX 3 F Fi W Q :, l!lll7'5I4En-E-III: n asa fzwvgmll jg: lflllflllmlllllll 0011 , ' in f f nf U' ll nu . . COMPANY A WROTEN, F --------- ....,...... ,,......,......,........A................ C 0 mpany Conmmndm-, Cupmin TAIJCOITT, B -.----.------.-- ........... I St I.1eutenunz. Isl Platoon l,vg14lQ1 WEATHERS, N --------- -.,... 3 INI I-IPIIIQIIZIIII. incl Platoon I,1-mlor -..----......... .......Y........,..........Y...,......,.,............,,.....,.,....,,,,, , , mlsl SUl'gQHlll FIRST PI.A'l'OON Von Rossum, If., Sgt. Morris, R., Corp. XII-F1111-lr W, McDowell, O. Roberts, R. Huy. I Hindes, W. R. Hyslop, J. Searcy, S. Von F1'ied1'ich, A. J. Graham. J. Cope. Sorell, J., Corp. Lighthouse, T., Corp. Keirlel. A. Il. Johnson, P. L. Rogers, N. Van Cleve, C. V. I,yIm1'ook, II.. Sgt. Campbell, XV. Lewis, II. C. Weclegartner, Y. IJ.. I'w1'GGIJOl'I'l. S. D. Kainer, H. J. I3l'lIllSOH, S. W. SECOND PLATOOX Fuentes, II. WuIII1e1', AI. Cf. Sierm, A. SHI Hays, S I Yorell, T. IG. IIQISCIIIII I In-inIun,, XX. S Xlvlis-I vl' li If. 1mf.A..I. Banks. Il. 'I' SDVIIIHZIII. If.. IIUVII. I 'alla-If 1' Davis. G., Corp. Lowe, A. fi.. Sgt. levy. A. Nlzlclrigul, Il. AIICIIISOII, Il. Ii. I 1lt4-1-won II. J. I elcIe1'. J. S. Iioclney. J. Il. Smith. Ostermaun. H. V. Shearer. J. Al. llnnallfy. li. U. Ikohart. NV. I-I.. Corp. Weston. W. R. Pagclfnrfy-fi1'c 1'I.e2'.?W - -- :- -' E . it 1 ,l , Q, 9 4, ,, . ,ug qu .fl A fe Irlj ., ' N I Y I Il' t' F' ' -A Il' it A542 I X 0 X ,010 I I f f ., , '- -. . V' 'ti 'i--x .,,. L., ' A V . A q'f!q 4 faq 'ff P ,.',. - .. -. A- H rc if f ff f mn f nllwlzilllllllllnffllzmlu 11-14- VIIWFIIIIIHIIIIIJIIHIIII f W ' K 1 COMPANY B CAVAZQS, ,S ,,.,,,,., -.,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,..,,,,,,,.., C o n ipany Coinniander, Captain VAN METER, L, VV, .,,,,,, ........ 1 st Lieutenant, lst Platoon Leader MAALRLOW, R ,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,, ....... 2 nd Lieutenant, 2nd Platoon Leader TBRYANT, R, E ,.,,.,,,,, ............,............................ . .................,......................A.,............... l st Sergeant FIRST PLATOON Nuhn R., Sgt. Warren, J. McDonald, J. Gonzales, E. A. DePuy, N., 'Corp Spencer, H. Patrick, J. D. Steger, V. Paschal, F., Sgt. Wakefield, C Russell, J. -Schumacher, J. Schultz, R., Corp. , Emery, A. E. Anderson, L. H., Corp. Johnston, W. W1 Sierra, F. West, W. Pawkett, L., Corp. Light, J., Sgt. Green, VV. A. Rougeaux, E. W. Falley, L. B. q 'SE-COND PLATOON Haines, R. Jenison, E. T. Linn, T. E. V Fleischinann, C. Akers, C., Sgt. Vick, A. J. Reynoso A. Levy, L. McKellar, D. H. Karotkin, B. T. Boyd, M. D. Speedie, J. C. Foster, C. Knickineyer, R. F. Canieron, O. WV. Fouts, F. Chandler, B. S. Barclay, S. A. Pierce, J. T. Searcy, T. Parish, C. W. Jederniann, W. Hutchins, G. H. Safir, N. b Ducat, J. R. Bownian, J. Page Forfy-six UI ll' 'wfvvui I f.'2'JT5 7'9-ws! 'WL'H - W PM uf! aww- ' -ww - ll Ry 2' ', .- .ll A 3-so 2 .mu .W 5sa ..,, r :':ilnliEIlrlI . F1 I' A' 'qflni ' Fi I 3 ' ' lllillllx ' vi, .... . FP A - ' Qgg g A nglv-lv T'i'gK+mS:i-: IIHlllHIHHHIIIIIHHIHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIH HIIHFI 1 Q V I ' lfffffffffgggfffxlf!AfLfffffL40!ff1fffwff,ffffff ' f' N i' wx ls' X by u H .QQQMPANY C 55+ 1 R' HODGES, H ,.,,,,,.,,.,,,.,. ......,. Q iflbi..- ....... A.,,.A,, C Olllllillly' Coininzinclvr, Czlplzlill BURNETT, P. A ..,.,,,,, .......... .Tit ......... ......,..,..., A,.... 4,.. ..,,....,,A. 2 1 1 1 l l,lOllI0llill1l I-IUNTRESS, F .,,.,.,. .. ........... K .3 ........ ,,,.A,,. .,...,..... I J lzitoon Sergeant Benclioff, VV., Sgt. 'fl .X Rice. J. Liberty, G. 1 Caclenhezul, E. Dubin, A. X mys. cf. Kahn, J. . GX Stool, W. MCG-owan, A. J., Co? Acevedo, L. XX! N ' Bevans, B. Zimmers, F. R. Givens, T., Corp. Reeve, R. Russell. W. Mendive. A. Dublin, P.. Corp. Campbell, ll. Hill, G. D1'eib1'odt. H. Mears. 15. Act. Corp. Sliearn. C.. Sgt. 'G if 4 Steger. lf. .IX XXL X Huclspotli, A. ll. . X Dyer, J. - Cults, G. ll. llvnmitl. 31. ,-c Bell. ll. Ulm-i'. V. ltunwomly. 1' C'0rnc-ll. li. llnwlf-s, li. O, Rlanvss. ll. llurlvsmi. ll. C l'lllf'llll1'lli. I-. Iloyle. I.. Page I-'nrty-wx' n V V Yi, Xu I :QRxq.'s4ll5iQ! xx' Q A Y 'Ill -ol!! is A f,. gnu' Q.. 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X ' .gi fav ' ' 1 gui:-f - , M m7 ff ff, f ' . 'ag' QI' . fw,'f1'H'?55'l'Fli?f,1 If ' 1 ' kin- 4 ,L ' W - L 3 ii r .'f77 7' -Q'- A ' Wh 'I A 4 'A :mn ' A 'mu I A .IAA 1--L ' ' V L, l' YY X X fffffrf ,ff'7,',f!fff!ffQf ,f'!,f!1'fff7fj fffffflf f 'f ff ', , ,L f ff 1 1 Q.F'L.EiSHF 'T Page Fifty-fwo ' lm? 4' 'QQQIV ll qu qqv V , W ,' , H Mx lllIllllW '5 :L fl 'I 'l:::lIu lllll I X 1 I muuunuluu ..,.u ill! 1 i .- :Q 1 , - ' is if . nnmx ll -1 SHIP f f ' .- F. 4- -3' ' -' lil- , 5-V ' 'H' jf!!! f f Ill I Ao ' '-.-.Is ' ff, xi' F.WR gf .l ., -rv, , S?B iiU NsoN - -X. W uhm . 'xx- w. E.POl2TE Q y Coxxcr-4 K-0 , as N PASGHAL' A J. RUSSELL P-?L'1 Fiffj'-Yhlvc' xv- 'LW X, . fy 1 ' 1 . i - : ' ' :fi ' ' ' W Mix YN f Rf. '-1-we f Lfwf'-wf 1r4kW22+45f4a2-pf:'I 1 'F' E' wxxslfi EX 1 ',' WMA .f,d.j A .fl , I J'--JK l-,I?-. , if W I NP' X3g5f511 H P 1 VIN -f. - , fifflrq , Q1 I ' q 'il : Y ,' Lf UI l I x g? J SN Ti FU M 11' I wi'I'L'ig1T'1lr?1?Q fu 7 M .ups - 5. .,.!i!filll,:e4 - 1- 4!-7115, .!.,. ll',l N J, n eun 'fu I . Fi - T , 111'-I fl V l ?, 1 ,f7,:fJ.f-f gg,,,.,2f 3 H. L. ' I I Jul 1 ff f 1 fff ff Wf H135 g p g' :M IX Ll F Z' Lv i wfi , he 7 '53 ' f 1 V , , , i 1 l T. M. I- Enjoys er Fruitful Year In every respect, T. M. I. has enjoyed a fruitful year. In its military ac- tivities, the school has excelled as never before. Under the efficient instruction of Captain Karl E. Henion and Sgt. jack Cragin, the drill team made rapid progressg and, in the state-wide competitive drill at the State Fair at Dallas, was the only San Antonio team to place, securing third place among the schools outside of Dallas. Returning to lo-ng hours of faithful training, the team en- tered the city competition on March Z, on the anniversary of the Independence of our great State. There the time spent in preparation on the drill field. striving to make every movement perfect, had its effectg for the judges' de- cision was, T, M. I. first! The City Championship Cup returned to the West Point of the South. On the same day, the Relay Team ran away from Main and Brackenridge in a thrilling finish. Members of the winning team are: George Wroten, Seth Searcy, E. Gonzales, David McKellar, Frank Wroten, Hector Fuentes, john Rodney, and Carlos Fleishman. The Tug-of-War outpulled and outfought its opponents, and led by Captain Frank G. Huntress, brought another City Cham- pionship Cup to T. M. I. Second in importance only to the company competition was the individual soldier competition, in which T. Nl. I. won high honors. Ned Page Fifty-four we-'e1:v '1:' ' V F' A ' -'iw---'- sv--me - -- all I Ilwrwl IIIIlIlIl.m'wg.au .Q..i A A ...! Hle2fa: Illllllllllllllwuwll 1 . as U 51 as gg ' . llnni . 15 55 ' - i uinui. 'gg Aw ff f ' - - ', -gli f -- -. ,.-.ff .1-. e -rf. 1. . L RIF' X554-. ' T 'I ' I lu I '-L Y: 'fff'f' S. Weathers, a cadet prominent in many activities. won first place. Gnlv a shade less perfect was L. W. Van Meter, who brought home third plaeefes- tablishing T. M. I. as the outstanding military school of San Antonio. Among the other sports especially successful was the Ice I-Iockev Team. Academic Hockey League Champions for the third consecutive year. the team set an enviable record in defense of their title. Led by their star captain. Frank Huntress, the team went through the season with but one defeat. scoring 28 points to their opponents 15. The members of the team. which was under the able coaching of Sgt. jack Cragin, are: Frank G. I-Iuntress. jr., captain and centerg Belknap Talcott, right wingg Lawrence Pawkett. left wing: Thomas Givens, left defenseg Ned DePuy, right defense: Robert N. Campbell. goal keeperg and jack Denike,' sub. The T. M. I. Rifle Team climaxed a successful season by winning the City Championship. In the annual match against Main and Braekenridge. the five- man team wrested the Challenge Cup from the last year winners. making the fourth cup won by the military department this year. Shooting in this match were Ned S. Weathers, scoring 158 points out of a possible 2003 F. Von Rossum. 157g George I-Iutchins, 155g V. Steger, 1491 and R. H. Madrigal, 143. The total score was 762 out of a possible 1000 against 751 and 700 for the opponents. This victory marked the last conquest of a fruitful year: and we end with the prediction that T. M. I. will enjoy many more such years. -JOHN C. CARRINCTON. 5777715 15 i '. if ix EE lI l it .,.. - ,, ?,, ..,. A fx , 4 .4 Y A sr. as .., . P,1 f l'1i1v-ffl a x 'F X!-xr X Vi. g- - 'A .'1'-if-ICQ 5 -.N -, Q N49 X'vEIiwv'4H'+aJ'f7'f.3-fsff 1 ' ' i ' slxf'-' ' V 'KV 'swf ' i I fl' - 7: - li i I Q . S Y ,f ff, y,'Q,L,qQt.i 'fd rT 2jli?iIiI i 12 1 ' - 1 s' . ll' il 'liw z1t.::2ma2'!'i. new '7 ':Ti5f3if1l i i i ll .3 1 air K . r x .at ft5y,r'ffT'P pi1g ll , N lllmul f .U.? V g,-. ,.?. ,mmmwm any lllnng-'I S Hmmnlnls ,I QViQfghEH'ii:fFfnQw 22.55 ' 1 H 1- w 1r1. ' ff I ll WJIHIW 0 f f lmulllll .,' f.r,, !.1f ' :f: -lg: - . ' , Af, I ' f f f 1 f ff f Page Fifty-six Il TSW bl U' Qkuq N X a f- W. nmlbxmzigfq Tv 1 A ulfgyg 53.13359 6,-gall Q X W S In ullll Ijfilxg ,,,,,,ll -I, IN l mg F' ' r 'G . ' f 'rs U- ' 'WW f'-l.l.'fiIlEllal 3? QiifflliiillFllllivllillllll lm., I , I , , YQ? ggE'fFtTI'79'B3l fl- ff ff fff fffffffffffffffffff fff ffffffffffffffffff'ff'fffffffW ff HW .A 4' V3 f wxm x' Q. In . EN A ' IQ --xx ,C1T' 4 , 'FW , J ,f g X. - X ,Q ff- if ,- 'X ' -,Q f Af! , ,. hive, X.. I V A 2-.r W,-511, I, 'rr - f ' ' p f. X K Xa' 4' fa' ' K' -ogg? rift Fix 1 ,I 1, ' . t -A ,fv S yf L ,f u-gt Q A N -Nz- ,f ,- ' ' 1 2 . , S Q N05 X1 , , 1 , I k J , ii L V Tv . J , V Q! 11.5,--t i ,g ' g ' I '-K - ' FWROTEN -f- M -- , ,,lf,,g. Qi , - --lf ' ? N.-.f w- ' Q-Y V , ,A jf, . 1-urls, 2 TV' I ., i . 'iff T- Q 'L .TA1.,.x-1-in-Sw?-4 3 f f D LYBROOK f X - ., fe - I 1 6 K P. DUBLIN , X' I g 'W 'L , f - gv-m'--..- J , x '- A r- Xiu' X AVN llfihrx ' , ., --dw ,, R . 'x , . l ff. my X X 'N J-, S . iff l iff: ' ff X X, tg ,-Q 3 ex X Ax I fx? ' ' 2 a -, - L' L x , A L , i Y 001, , LH Uh N : ff ig ' .-mf. ' pw. g 5, . 1 1gl.!T,f'--' x L NC v.D.wEDEGA12TNER A ' , Ay, Q1 . 3 V eg ' A f R.EscHU1:rz W. ECEXQQEQTER xesiix 5 - . X- .gfisyf . ., X, , wwe Pggr l iffy-S1 1'w1 n.- 'vs-. '-- wg'-lf , ' 'XX' ' V if A If ffa-O-Q5-433 .sv I was ,:.,.5-3g.,'i,gs5-S,-gusagoh. - w W- . ..2fqq5.25-M517 -'fl' Q ' ',Lu!-in . ' i 'NW ' 'uv gf- ,Sl Ill ' ' A A . 'ZWMMM.-----I-IIIIIIIIIIIIMNPI! ' fglvlwfwffisbgifffffggll fl l---- .LQ ,I u I P- nf ..,, ' . 11- :X if lf' fTj'vfy.'a-Fig'1 jH!!H?'.f-in, ff!! f f- K 'f wfwmrfrf ' . . Y F , K W ,,, K, 34f54414f44f1z4fzz4fzf11ffzfzzffffffnfwwgffzzzwwzwg15:eigfmfgni,ifqewziiMimixs jS135zffa'gmgWLQM W f W N W f 0 W 1',4,,Q.fi. 1f,2,..g1 11115 -f 'f1i -'fv-' ' 'L' 'wr '--fwiimfff' L mifdin- -fl .317 ,. ' 1 :7ffffXfffffffffffffW!fffffffffffffffffffffffWUXXXWWfff777ZfffZ7 ' M- '-U- L 107 Y , X , ,'9fZfffZ177f' ff ,jyf f' 174 S 2 Page Fifty-eight Y If . J Y V I V t A L' ' - 1 Q' f . ' f 1 ' -nl l Nlllllll fffu ,. . n .NB in. . . kv M, llun.... i! ug 4 A A, - .1 qn 1 l:iuu gl I 4 . V.. gi VL-an 'CTTfT v1:1JL1 n-T7 ' MU '....'5'f'V ,N .. -' f -F LJLJ H - ,Q :Ein 1: sffv: n rs ,iw :umm f: EA' 'E 2 Qllfiiill EUNIS IIEEKIKII E: F.,v . 'ff ,mf fffff f 'f' ,J .7ff'L!, -1Z?4'f1,'H127Sfz-L , 'N.':f,f'jSJf-2i1,' f . 3 . , A f,,:-Wx N- ew:-efn'E - I f .Qeiffff U - H- 1 1 ' x-ix-SL 'ff i'f'f?T fb 'Q' f , If f ,ff WH' ' g-'- -7-,WW - -'A -'W VW 'ff!f'f'f'f'f'ff'X7!,f'ff,fff!f,ff!f!ff,'f',f ffff, ff f 'f'fff,'. fffff - , f, f f I ' . 3 3 xii i-'X 'K .f ' Ny , 1 QJ.DENlKEX R CAMPBELL' - .323- F 40 i FHUNTRESS CAPTANN 1 N, i Q1 ,ff W , -. ., W X N x A . i Q1' 1 L .PAwKETT KNICKFEYER Lg Pagr Fifiy'-nine Vxf ., -.-N . i::.,IiQ' M111 1 XY' gs., 5 ,,,. -a- - wrs'u'Ql 'V- 'Ulu an Q A5 1 si'-t S ?2 f'f::a'L 1' Qff +w .g FFII5f If ' M ' M- ! 2I2'f4'g.f4 5 c ' ' L 4 M t - M F' I 1 53, fn uulnlilll . ,. ' If I an If f Q W-5H ! f f f ' fsfafggia if 'wqgigzaae jdg g- a fflffv HW IH Ill Ill IIIIM U- I' d::l?il:1 ? :?rZE '-an-' ' 1, f Z, ,Q of, f GIVENS Page Sixiy I ug5v'71:gg1 e1 'f1Sgvu-ugm--r V N ff' ..M , .. ,a,..,,.,,,,,,,,, .,,. mm llllllillihiigf Q IlynmllllllllllllmwgMl gA X 1 ' 'llllll , V Hp L ,. . H , -.- , i- If llll I ll ' ' ' ,Q Ill I as A ' FF . SE' 2 Z' ua pu ng nm ,yfgwvw-Y IIIHIIHfffff0,IWWllagwgyllgglmllmylggym K A if- isis' ri I F91 1 fffff fffff If f , nf f 1 f f If .ff ' ll X f A ' 1 'w 1 X X I Fill 'W ' ' ' Zfffffflfffff zz f, fff num f .,,...,.,,A-U, L TRACK L. L. VAN METER DAVID MCKELLAR J. R. HYSLOP L. C. LEVY J. 1-1. RODNEY H. OSTERM.-XX H. G. FUIDXTES O. CAMERON G. I . XX'ItO'l'l'lN N. S.Xl I li Although made up mostly of inexperienced men, the track team, under the able instruction of Coach Erney, has won places in several meets. Members of the team are: H. Fuentes, H. Osterman, j. Rodney, G. Wroten. 440 yard sprint relayg H. Osterman, H. Fuentes, G. Wroten, and L. Van Meter. medley relayg L. Levy, quarter mileg j. Hyslop and O. Cameron, half mile: G. Wroten. H. Fuentes, D. McKellar, l00 yard. -f '?' - , 'V ' 5 N- . .-lf . 4 -xg. Q . ...LQ jx AK. e,': h 'K r U Sanken? at' .pf E ur. X . . .-. . V L A rt 7:39 ' X ' Lal ' x, 2:4 elal gi t X f' lg' - Y 5 8 U' ' ll .Sy . .. .. J O X 5 o K 4 l' Page Sixty'-om' ,if w-vu-rn -vw VNIIQQQ A f 9 A '- 1-. If -.f:rw m,l: ' T lllI5.!2'3.w,le-Willy .xx wywlpq 11,50 P any ' llllllll ' ' ' P i 1 ' ful vsve'f'fHll': i...-'ull' . Q t ' l n I z fg lyhi ' fu ' 7 V, 'L 'i' ,, ii 'ijeyf l 711111111011IMIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIMIHllJlIlIllJIHMIMlllI0f V.. HA fi . , , B .,.,, 1, , p Us ' , Ml, tum! ' . W,7,,hHW,,M,M,,,,,, A- - - , ,M p i A . .1 ffl!! WIHIIIFHIIIIJI llll IIHJ RELAY TEAM The Relay Team won the R. O. T. C. Championship of San Antonio when thev defeated both Main Avenue and Brackenridge in the annual competition on March 2. The team is composed of: George Wroten, Seth Searcy, David Mc- Kellar, Hector Fuentes, john Rodney, Carlos Fleishman, and E. A. Gonzales. Alternates: William Benchoff and George Davis. TUG-OF-WAR TEAM The Tug-of-War Team, captained by Frank G. Huntress, jr., won the T Championship cup again this year,.outpulling Main Avenue's Team, which had previously defeated Brackenridge High School. The members of the team are: I A Frank Huntress, captain, Lawrence Pawkett, Ned DePuy, Walter McCaleb, Stanton Brunson, Robert Nuhn, Harvey Kainer, Elias Rougeauxg alternates, E. A. Gonzales, Raymond Schultz, Lewis Falley, Leland Anderson. A T. M. I. CRACK DRILL TEAM T The T. M. I. Drill Team, besides being the only San Antonio team to place in the State-wide competitive drill at the State Fair at Dallas this fall, won the City Championship. Competing against Main Avenue High School and Brack- enridge High in the annual junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps Field Day, the team came out victorious, bringing home the City Championship Cup. COMPANY COMMANDER Frank Wifotent Captainj -i lst PLATOON LEADER J. Steve Cavazos Clst Lt.J M 2nd PLATOON LEADER George' F. Wfroten Clst Lt.J - lst -SERGEANT ............................................................... R. N. Campbell fi PLATOON SERGEANT ........... .....,,......,, I-I arvey Mills lil PLATOTON SERVGEANT .......................................... J. C. Carrington Q -SECTI-OIN LEADERS fGuidesD 1 J. B. Talcott ,Q H. Hodges A. .Lowe 331 R. Marlow if F-IRST PLATOON ii R. Nuhn D. Lybrook ' R, Schultz N. DePuy - G. Davis S. Hays id J. McDonald P. A. Burnett Ccorporalb E. Rougeaux ill L. Van Meter fciorporall J. YVarren P, Johnsgn L L. Pawkett L. Anderson F. Springall j S- Searcy J. Light T. Lighthouse it E- RRY L- FEIUGY W. Bohart F. Von Rossum Ccorporall J. Patrick ' 'SECOND PLATooN C. Shearn A. McGowan. L. Levy in VV. Benchoff R. Madrigal A. Sierra. ll N- Weatihers P. Dublin XV. Jedermann E- BFYTHM fC01'D.J F. I-Iuntress Ccorp.J E. Pascihnl pr B. Morris L R. Roberts A. Emery A C. FTGISCDITIHHII W, .Springall F. Fouts J. Russell F. -Siequm T. Linn V. Wedegartner Coorp.J W. Johnson G, Hutchins Page Sixty-two .zz illllllillllllll lil! 1 1 .. '51 fin FEE wa-EEEFT' . ll nnuu YWFJIIIIIIII pg U lll'3 fil 'lll ' llllllllllIllIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIFHIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIN f If 11 115-2gq,!lE5:'fu llll Ill f fe I 1 IIH I ff! lf!! flfgyfffff. T. M. l. Movies By J. C. C. and lf. G. lli . .llzirrziclis l,on1lon .Xfter Midnight .. The Maul lIo111 ',,,,,,1 .1,. .. llrill lwrioil Old Ironsicles... 1,1. ,.1..,.,1. . . ..,,,111 .. .. . Prof. Ciilwr Rell Hair ,,.,. ..1.,,1 . . ...,.,,....,.1,.,,...1 .,1.., . . ,.. lie1l West ....... 3lexic:1n Pele zilins Seth Senrvy The Gaucho .,..., .. .. l.. .Xnclerson .. .. . . Xzin Meier ..l-'rainlx Wroien Tl1e llig City ....... West Point ......... ............. lt ....... .......... ....,.....,..,...........,............,,. Phantom of the Opera ........ . .. .Zixnnn-rs Spring Fever ...,..................., . . . In-nm-11 ...llnrni-11 :incl Nh-ilowain Two Arzihizin Knights .. . . llziiley' Helen of Troy ..................... .. . The Thnnrlering: lelercl Voinpuiiy 1' 'The Covered Vkizlgoii .... .... . .. .. . School llns lflesh unrl the Devil. Sl'lllllllili'lll'l' :1n1l llnlrhins Love .................... . .....,.. ll, N. Clllllllllvll Seventh lleziven ......... .. Coin1111-111-mm-111 The llivine Woinzin. ..... . . .. .. .. .. . .. .Kviilvl . . ...Yon llossnin Unknown Solclier ...lohnnie Sorrell und Kiiickineyi-1' Sorrell and Son ..................... . llen Hur ................................................,..... . .. . .....XY. Cuinphr-ll Sliepliercl of Kingdom Coine. ...... Prof. llonclnrzini Patent Leather Kid. ...i..... ........ . ...lmvo l.yhrook The Devil Dancer ..... .. ..... llnrli-son Student llrince . .. f'2ll'l'lll3Ll0ll The llorilln .. .,............. .. . . lloyh- C111 Zlllll the f'1lllHl'X' WY. Vaiiiiplwll :xml 'l'. Sl'ill'f'X ' 'l'hell11i . ....... ..... . . . l'iilll'lllll'illl Pity Clone Wild .. ..l.illll't'l lla-iplhls Xlelropolis... .. . .... li. O. T. V. The Wiznrrl .... . ...... ..... l 'roll M115-1-1' Gentlenien l'1'e1'1-r lllonile-Q li. N. Vaiinplwll The Noose ......... .. .... . . . liuinl-1' Sadie Thompson .. ...... .. . I-'outs Tell It to the Marines . Sl'l'!ll'Sllll Vraigin Ten Cominainclnients... llc-invril List Twelve Miles Olll .. UH' l50llllflS llnvle T0lll'S C'11l1il1..... T. Nl. l. llnilrling llurheml Wire .............. . Nl. S. :Q T. Blain llower ......,.. lio11!l zi11x Lost llaittzilion ........ . T. Ai. I. Vorps . .. .. .. Vnpt, llc-nion Lust Conimzincl ............ .llllllllj', lionfly. :mil l'appy The l'nholy Three ...... ,. .. Wziltlivr. Zlllllll4'l'S. mc. Rookies ............................ The lllncli Bird ........ . .. . We.-s1o11's Var The Dove .. .......... .. ....,. Fails Spnrrows ,... ...,.. . .. .... The Fish Hula ,,,,,,.,,,.,,.,,..,,,.,,, . . ...l.inn l,r-xvis Mare Nostrum ............... ..Tl1f- Swimininz Pool Camille ..,,,......,,.,.,................ ..... . . ..... Famho Barclziy When ll Mun Loves ........ . .... R. X. Camphell DilllIG'S Inferno ...i.........., ........ ..... T . M. I. Pazf Sixty-flzrrc yf'ff . I... - E E , ,S .. - X ,mx V , ' V ,. q-vw n-1.6 ,gpg-2 qglun . K' ...ill . 5- F.: 5- I 5 X ' ' - 'F N - I an np: .1 1111111151155 Qswllllllllllllllll Hill ff'.i llllmiiE'Ei? Sll w-S. XJ f.v.1J !1-e:f:,:f. ef1.?.filIlllIIIlllllllzmi. Ill il, il il -il Lil. il X-'M fig ' Sw :'5'i 7 . iw ?fi: 'mi s i gawk' EW E I fu .M 2 rig . i 5 -.J '- .- ? -' .-i. -.. --.11 -.1 -1 i : --i il 1l - l.. - ,4 DORMITORY ' x SA S E is MS ' WE Q . Q .55 N- 51 N. N EIN ani 'xl , fl: K4 . 'g'f'x , fl , ' 31,1 ' R ' .1- ' '9' far.--: .. 5 : 'i f r Q i -,Q flier ' E iw . T. Q 'fix , ' N X x Q X MIHIIHIJIMIIIJIWIHIMHN X N H r----w :xnxx .I 1 I 1 o Q nv. 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A my ,I ' 'af if fx f ' mafyifxffmfffffffvf.f,1Wfwf f -I - 5 ,nfonzo M I I afuxx ' 3 V ,,A, X my 'L K INK: KENNETHWIHER M COL JUDSJN CHAS CALVIN nussuc LQ JOE BILLIE HUNT MA STAPPER CHESTEQ SLUUER X I F X ,N'EL SON' row DJXTHUNR Kms CHAS- H01-MGQEEN i Pxggr Symfj'-' 7 v --K, -- -- . ' RX 35 - f41 '7f rU' ''1''FA7i??2 'J'Q7i??f5A'E1 L-15 W 555' MHAkXgbfJm-'wmmlm 5 N El' F' l AQ 'ijfxl xx X, 11 'Lm11,lfsw,,l 3 'ff A1 Ili I feta QL? fav- if : 'Fai yr . -- X ' X75--2 IQ 7 ,FP - All U7 1 4 3 3 . 4 W E ggji 34 of :Lg iff :VFX I 'G L HIIIIIIHIIIHIIIHHIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII aaamhuanllllih 'Hia lfr . 4 , N ' lihull- - --'- -2- Vx' ., -- f -. A x ,u IIIIIIQIIIIIJIH K ll lfi. 3,5-25 Mldlr E A A . 1 4 ?gslll?'m1.tS? an - 1113m-1f1x1g 23:14 'ff f lf fl,-C'f!f .,f' ff. , . .J , F f -' ' ' ' A 1 'Z lf! AZ 254: 31 ii' no ' g' Qnra - aim 'Q Q wifi ' li- . 3' A 'U 3 if fvl ggJ ig:s gAl ll lllllll' ua 1 HI M ll 0 f MHHIIIHIIIHHIIIHJ E ' A U' 1 Q 7253 I dll f nf IWHIHW 1 1 A ' ' fl -' 'A' A . The School Year in Retrospect KENNETH WIMER Glorious day! September 12, 1927. The day marked the opening of the second session since San Antonio Academy and Texas Military Institute tfor- merly West Texas Military Academy! were united. Boys from many sections of the Western Hemisphere came together to take part in the school program of play and study. As soon as classification was over, football claimed the attention of manv boys. Coach Fraker had some fine material and turned out a good team. Al- though we did not have the city's champion gridiron gladiators in every man of the team, we played clean, hard-fought games and won a good percentage of them. Armistice, November ll, was the first school holiday and was celebrated with zeal. We went to Houston Street in a body and watched the parade in which our big brothers from T. M. l. showed that they were soldiers as well as scholars. We were highly honored on Friday, December 9, when General J. H. Reeves of the U. S. Army paid the Academy a visit. He inspected our ranks and de- livered a short speech on some elementals that build character and nations. Academy boys will remember the General as the father of jimmy and Dick, two of our boys. Honor sweaters were presented to the football squad just before Christmas. The fellows appreciated this gift more than words can tell and have been busy wearing their big, white 'A's ever since. Some boys evidently adopted a new motto of Flunk early and avoid the rush! But they soon kicked out of it and made fair marks in the examina- tions just before Christmas. Then the Christmas holidays rolled around. Hip! Hip! Hooray! School let out Wednesday before Christmas and took up january 3. Everyone had a good time and wished that Christmas came every month. Next, basket ball claimed our attention, and we kept two courts and four basket balls in use a good bit of the play time just after the holidays. While basket ball was in full swing Major Schoof of the Canadian Mounted Police paid us a visit. He showed us relics from his collections that he made in Africa, Canada and elsewhere. The boys enjoyed his interesting talk on his travels and escapades. Quite a few spreads and feasts were tendered the dormitory boys during the year. First came breakfast at sunrise in Brackenridge Park one balmy morning in Gctober. This was relished keenly at the end of a hike from the school to the park. Then came a Mexican supper at the Original Restaurant in town. After the Christmas holidays, a supper on Prof. Bondurant's lawn and another evening spread in San Pedro Park. opposite the school. completed this part of our program. In looking backward, we find that there is a good bit to remember. The year has meant work, hard, honest work. as well as much play. In the gather- ing of ideas from books, we have formed ideals that will go with us and guide us through life. Now we are at the parting of the ways. Some of us will return to the Academy next fall. and others will enter T. M. l.. our brother School. just now the motto of the Seniors and Seventh Graders is: Meet me there in September! Pau Sixiy- Nx X X .TV Rfgxqmll l4d4YHtU + - A . t 'N-at-. t. wt f 'lllll lllF.Q!lIIIIII ....... N 0r i - ft' ' ' - 'au - - ' f- r QT- ' . ' - ' 11 t-J .q uri- L-iii! , X lv- 2-'ll I ' - . X . E . fl lg f 11.-mil... 3' ' i :Q ,z -79 4. agQ:: I pg 1: f 'oz- 5 :-'ls' E 1 A -'fr -f 312. . Egg: EM Eng!! jlgxeml Q , :hi lg u ll' il J We 4,2 365 7 E W N- f.1 +'X .- ' Tl V177 21 ,QV iii I H 4 U 0 'S 06 'E Elw- W ' ji 5 Q . 'F : , ' . ' 1 : : if 22325 'TQKQW 7 -five 1 ,, TI-IE LIBRARY 5 ami 'fl . 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K ipp'-,Z - II' V ,XI II 1.1 ', 'I 1:15-Ig? ,i '1 ' 1 1 . , 11 ' 1 W 1 'I,,'f111g,f 11.1 ' I 1 I II 2 1 I 'II 1II 1, .I 'muh ' ' 1 ,QQ 1 1 ,I '1.j'A 1 L' K ff ' F ' 4,94 I 1 Xkilfu Q jg ,1 1 1 32 ' F ' l, .II II,f1 X -N-N y ' I A ,Xi 1, I ' WM9 WWmMffQfffS0XwWYM1 W1W'm 1,?dvfA,fgQf7 1 +g14wMwLm+qQ1g W I , ,. ZJLKFV' I1 P' 'iii X I IXUQVS '1l:-,Al . H11rmfJf 1w1w 1 1w1mw 11 1' Im 4 W'TM'1 HI 1' 1 Q f 1. ' 1 1 111L 1'C f ' ff W' if' 1 1 W1 X I uf ,,,.. - R .. ' ', D, gli! I-T by I T. 1' W ,,......----.., f ia' ' 1 C ,-? 'i' X A SX 'V' 1' I 1 1 ,1 1s1aa11 '-f'1- f m 1111H ff' 1 1 1 WL, 1111 1i'f'V ,' fx - I N V '41 f'1,'11 ,' S xk .1 ' '1 1I I 1 1 1 F '11g1lmI1.1 1 FN, VW, ,I11 1 1 1 ' 1 1FfIi'1'11111'11 1 ' 1- I1 1 F1111 XI, JI! LI l.?1'jI' I IiIl1:I1I!! 1 f I I I ' 1 111 5511 111 1 ffl. I,1l:,I,-fi '1'I1'b ,JM 1 .1111 .f,,' 1' .1l1I 1,II.'l, 55 III I I I 'K-Lffgf I1j11ffQHI1Q21IF!:1i5 5.' .ff' Ig1 ,.111IjI , II.III,l' l 1. 1I11I1I1'IIIIII,II I A.q, If 11 711, 11.111 1 .f . IJ11- - 1-11-fm 1 I f 151 1 1' '11Y71 1l1111 .l41f'f . -11 kg -Q E, 1:1fy1'11111111.1 '. -L1-' --N f . It .II QI III. 111,111 - 1 Im I:,yI,I,,g I ,IIg5iI1 3 IIII-IEIIIIIIIIIZIX1 I ,I,. IRI IL ,Q,,l HL'f:2'1 '4 -- Cl- y'7 in C-F, fflAfT I1 A5111 In-Il111g11Q1111W11UJ'f 111 17 ' 5'T1TiEE22,fL2.5Ta, ffl fQ3lff1??'5f'fn-' x if 1 1 hwv '- ff ff-Mewwwk f WMJ LASSEWW M1 1 11 1111111 1 1 ov0s- II., .43 L., 1' 'I I I if ff, qmaif A . ff' A5igNgi?'.' , ,fnfq I,...,f -72, WD ,xy . I :Him ,I I '. 13,IIil'.- Ygrf'-f'fI', gui fr 'TMI 1 I W. iii 59 IAIIIIIIZ 'Lili 1 I, i'?jQxQl1 g ..,f5lnMX ' 1 1 F'Yw 9-if 1' V ' 4'TQ .. '- ,' 11 Q Q1 'n?-W Q. : .II I Jgf ,A II wx ' Inlll IIII IIIIIVII .I 1 If III 99f4'IIW'q'f--.- f--A, 1 if s 1 -1 - W' ' -' Nmigijga f ff 1 I, N w'm 'f1 ' 1 J 1 I V 1 I I A II I 5 ff AAF I 15 'W x 7 'V -- SAN NO L X U' R M? A R. Q Q -11 QM PJL'f'.qf1'I H- ffm' M X ,.' yfrxr .T varzai II S'-'g ' j!,1' U HE .li ars -v.,.5 h G B lf? f Xxxgt 1 WfW'QQwQ?wHl df- uw 'w ' ' 1. ' ' ' 1 V 'VIQ TQ-'L'1i'I 'MEI , -Ii. USQJ ' I' h . n . 'If I II if EWQUI 1 H Il 'if1i' ll '. lg- 11111 ll l ,'innm ul f 10 nliI!!.'!'.'llm lb L X --1 :U U - 9 ilrllnl, ... - jf! II X X!! I lk. in-sr ' ifzilrfllllb I I li ? I In ' HIGH SCHGOL EIGHTH GRADE FIELD FRANKLIN HOUGII JUIIsoN MARTIN. ORR PARISH, VG. STARNES, C. WIMER, K. If we Work upon marble, it will perislig if we Work upon brass, time will efface it, if We rear temples, they will crumble into dust, but, if We Work upon iinmortul souls, if we imbue them with principles, with the just fear of God and love of fellow- Inen, We engrave on these tablets something which will brighten all Eternity, - DANIEL WVEBSTER. Page Seventy-two I '!E.fr1:wT : '2 ' U-vw VR' f ' -' zzz: 1 p IWIRIIIIII II ff..Q--mmlhiaiwlllllllllllllllMrk!! I llllllllllltiv Illl l- - 1 X. we I 4. ... . W-. . , , . .ali iam p cfffw h if N '1'i3.fi hiiiiwizlflitgifmvifilf X' 'l X fWW'f'f ' -. Vik' Y ' I' -Liv' ' ' 1'11.'L 1,.ifcffffmf,oef,cfy,ff ff ff A cl I ' fm.f,ff,ff1, ffzfff,fffffff CLASS PROPH ECY M. JUDSON It seemed as though I had heard a great noise when I awoke and saw a calendar on the wall in front of my bed. Instead of nineteen hundred and twen- ty-eight, it was nineteen hundred and fifty. What a lapse of years since I lost consciousness! By my bed was a man who, when I awoke, told me I had been asleep for twenty-two years. , The next week after my strength returned, I strolled down a street in Los Angeles and saw on one of the windows of a skyscaper the name of Mervin Franklin. I knew in an instant that it was Mervin who went to the Academy with me, back in 1928. , Stepping aside and pressing the button for the elevator, whom should I see but Cecil La Beff, the operator? - After a short talk, he asked me if I had seen Mervin and I said that I was on Mervin's trail just then. ' Leaving him, I walked down the corridor to the door of lVlervin's office and knocked. Mervin came out. He looked the same except he was a little taller and thinner. He asked me how I was and what I was doing. He was interested to learn of my long lapse into unconsciousness. I asked him if he had heard anything of our classmates. He said he had been,all over the United States and had seen all of them, and so l asked him what each was doing. He said that he saw Tom Hayes in New York running a famous theater and that Tom was a Wall Street magnate. Then he said that on his way through Pittsburg he stopped to see one of the world series games, and who should the catcher be but Frank Field. After the game he went out and congratulated Frank who said it all came from baseball training at the Academy. I Then Frank told Mervin that the pitcher for the Yanks was Bobby Reeve, who had won world fame and he too laid his success to Coach Fraker's training at the Academy. 1 Next, Mervin said he came through Chicago and who should be the greatest opera singer but Francis Steger. After the opera he said he had gotten the idea of singing from hearing Lieut. sing with Sawyer as the accompanist. Then he came to Tennessee and there he picked up a book in the hotel and saw that it was an ancient history written by Professor james Martin. Shades of Prof. Roe! . ' The next place was where he saw Cherry Parish. He was in Oklahoma trying to teach the Indians the manual of arms and the art of keeping in step. Going through San Antonio, he met Calvin Starnes on the street. Calvin said he had a studio on Houston Street and was taking all the pictures for the Academy. i ' Next, he went through Sinton, and there found Charles Orr in his labora- tory. Charles said, he had discovered a substance that if put in a capsule and eaten at meal time would satisfy the appetite half a day. Then Mervin said that down the street Kenneth Wimer had a chemistry laboratory. Kenneth had discovered aliquid that would dissolve anything that it came in contact with. Kenneth said it would be all right if he could find something to put it in. - Then I asked Mervin what he was doing for a living. He said he had achieved great fame by finding the fourth dimension. Thanking Mervin for the information, I departed to my hotel. Q Page Seventy-three r 1 ,,- 'Q PHN5 ' I f! 4n Zfa 95 u Nu -Q... si v rt' Illlllllllllll ': 2 i gf ' 9 A -:ff where.: Dali-:!!ll1ll Q Jlu'lIlwms.1f tl-eww-wiwjjl ,lfmmt:f.a2.l5:ninilllilxulnmgni J . -mMHMn..N, 'JTNIQTJETF4 :FIM N Q QTTTIIAIIATTL I. - 51fwyv'?' s A T t 'A T ' SEVENTH GRADE ENWGXELKE FISK FLETCHER FROST, JOE FUENTIS V 'GEMBLER GARANDSTAFF HILL, C. V HILL, D. HUNT ' KING LABEFF LACY MC'KI2StSA'OK TVIIERS, H. NEYVNANI . PELTPHREY, J. D. .SLUDER ' -STA'PP.ER SUTTON THONIAS, G. zUEHL,N. Aggressive fighting for the' 1 'ht ' th ROOSEVELT. lg 1S e noblest sport the world aff01'ds. - Page Seventy-four Q ' V T Q3'fL!'i 'W'3F'52'5-5332? T-'iitgilill g 1w4!1f-W f 3'sij125 ff'-tw?-H1'9.b.1af:!.uIA W 'J Q'giQ5g:32k:22'S??fmR'fW?F31 Vw qi, mia RRR, EET Ihmgiggmg svn IIIF-,kg annum v -' fz '- :- . f ff , 1-1: ,.Y,M .'?1:w'1f:-IBHf13lT,F.E ' .Hmm ' E E N W E E T H f M1.Me-L fm-Q,mwiW ' TT '-'-EW-Wwwffffvv f 1 ff, ,1 1 -r N CP-' K ' b.'Ua1'...- X ff 1 2. ff N . if ,gfzaiglev-A -flfgfq' it TTY-.'-- .144153J, l ,, ,, 14.5 ,,,, ,, 1 1 1 SIXTH GRADE U BRKOWVNE V CORY O OnV'INfGT-ON DGPUY DURIN 'GILBERT GREEN, T. HOLMOREEN HUSISMANN, E. KAROTKIN T KELSEY KENEDY MANGUM MIER, A. MOORE OCHSE ROBINSON RUSSELL SAWYER WHITE The price of accomplishment is labor. -ONE OF THE OTHETR WI-SEI MEN. Page Sevenfy-five ll -1- 11 nv-1 1 III QQ Xu V N 'I'll'7,,l,lIlj1fi no--945 1 I 'A'- 'llI Y fn 1 f,,:2',g:310i'w- Q ill W W'?-954342229 M.::.Nwf In . Il iii li. Z! J rvra um J? ' J bf 'zwfxfi Q . ,I,g W'Ht fT f'fi7 f W 777f7 7 f ff ff W1 I-1 .4 . '- f N, 1 ,',,- f 3'f ?'f?1T'T5,'-,?:a,. -:gf .09 f:-f--':- -xl: 1:J:'5jjfiiTf f- '4 am::t f X A ' .cf Y X 1 - FIFTH GRADE BASSE 'CARDENA-S 'CARNAI-IAN CARRINJGTON OOLIAS ' FROST, JOHN GREEN, R. - HEWJSON HORN, J. HUSSMANN, R. F JOHNSTON MILLER . NAST, R. SCI-IERJR STARNES, R. ROSE-NMAN, KB. V TONVNJSEND In life as in a football game, the principle to follow is: Hit the line hardg dOn't ' foul and d0n't Shirk, but hit the' line ha1'd! -ROOSEVELJT. Page Seventy-six 5555-Tf'f3lQv'n-N 'w: ' - ' ' ff ' V Y ' 5 it 'P . 1 'BLS v 'f-'f lf'5 1-'Q-:Ju 1 K , is XX H! lmllnsl l l pgngu IIllllllllllll0lllll!lllll1 I Ml V ggi, .- gg WL, i fii ' ' llHMIINIIIHIIHHHWWHIMWJIHWIIHHIIIIIH H , D , I ,T-, . ,. X 0 W llllll Il 1 ' f Hwy, FOURTH GRADE ALLSMAN BECKMAN CUTTER DAVIS ESTRADA, M. GREEN, L. HUTCHINISQN JA-CKSOIN NAST, W. PELPHIREY, C. PHILLIPS THOMAS, R. WIMER, C. There is no excuse for being small when we can sit at table with Napoleon, or walk with Emerson, or have midnight suppers with Shakespeare. -VVILL DURANT. Page Seventy-seven ' if , A , - , X ', , .. . . , .. . ., . W-as-s-w's2e1 V' S '41 YS2w22f'1.fa1s sf-I d. -1- ,.-- . L - , V Wx' 'lu , v r -- HW -'-v,:r.ra1a,4-r lwla- :fs-fa ' 6- :. MII 'iig 5 VI- IW.. .-:?IZ Sf '---1. ,., vi fl I--'- I IIlmw.,winllll:nlu:ee.QgI..miili A A I :mamma S . MII L. 5' 4 d b F i ....'nl? f A. 'U' I i A ' 1 H l fi IWNIIJWWIJIIIIIJWHJIHIIHIJIIIIIIIHHIIA ' ff!! IIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIWIIHHIHFWH I u Q Q Ol i ' W - Bu5.'f'i'.ia -4f?- 'ai' 1. 711111111011IlllllIlllllllIJIIWIl0llIlllllW00lll0lMIll0f HA, ,. , . . . I , L , - , X A, vlllliillllllllmlllnlnil A V ' A 2 THIRD GRADE ASEOOND GRADE BODET BECKHAM HITOHMAN BOGAN JARMON ESTRADA, J. PARHAM HORN, H. PENN KEMMERIER ' REEVE MAZUR SMITH THOMAS, REN. WVARE ZUEHL, L. A man is like a tackg he can only go as far as his head will let hin1. -- JOHN R. I-IIXON. Page Seventy-eight X f I N GAP mnnuuuu llIlW..mQIIIIIlIIii'ffEQ .f i M' QB2T2IQ6IllIIlllIlIllIIl 'lfknwlllm my ll .. 1. , , . - 1 4. I- - ' . 4 . ' 1' ' vhg' ' lm' 4 ,- w -ff 0 ' I W I ' - A . 111 L L IWW W V' ' f 1 IH IW FIRST MONTH:- BASSE HOLMGREEN SECOND MON TH- BASSE I-IOLMGREEN VVIMER, K. . THIRD MONTH- Y BA-SSE FRANKLIN I-IOLIM GREEN KETMMERIER MAZUR PELPHREY, C. FOURTH MONTH- BAS-SE CARRIINTGTON FRANKLIN HO LVMGREEN KEMMERIER MAZUR Most Popular Boy in Scnhool Second Consecutive Year HONOR ROLL PELPHREY, C. XNIMER, K. ZUEHL, L. FIFTH MONTH- BASSE CARRINGTON CORY FRANKLIN HOLIMGREEN KEIMMERIER MILLER MAZU-R PELPHREY, C. TIOWNSEND ZUE1-IL, L. SIXTH MO NTH- BASSE HOLMGREEN KEMMERIER MILLER MAZUIR PELPI-IREY, C Page Seventy-nine ' .r.- ---. If ---- . -. - 0 - V If . NW? w'zn1lIwaf--,z----- ww 21:-'-:vm--nl ' -,f lv' g.. ,wt2'4-sm-AMER-X 0N f if IFQkrb2:arm.42Qvesweweg1 I A g '2Mfi+vF .riwnigfylll 1A Nl JIVQIIIQ I lHI 2.ilIIIIIIlIlIII5?Qli GMIMs A A A fi 1 1 U -In ev FFMFH . tl I' ' -Q Wfziff-1 VllllllllllllIllIWIHIIOIJIIMIHIIIIIIIIIIJHHHIHWHIHQ .i if n w 'Q , , 0' W W WWW' VIHIIHHIIIIIIHIIIIIIHHH I HI f ' 1 100 1' , -. V f If f fm! IIIIHIIIIHHIIIIIIIIHIIHIHIIMIIJ ALAMO LITERARY SOCIETY PARISH, G. ........ . . .. . Y.,. Piesulent HUNT ,..,,,...,,,.,... ...,.. V109 Piesident STARNES, C. ........ ........ .....,...,.... . .....................v,.... S e cietaiy Allsinan Frost, John Pelphrey, J D Ball ' Fuentis Penn Basse Gembler Reeves, D. Beckman Gilbert Robinson 'Carnahan Green, L. C., Rosennian Carrington Hill, D. Russell G V Cardenas I-Iitchman Sluder Covington I-lussmann, E. Stapper Cutter I-Iussmann, R. -Starnes, B Davis 'Hutchinson Sutton Dubin Karotkin Townsend Estrada, M. Keinmerier WVare Field Lacy WVl1ite Fisk Martin VVime1', C. Frost, Joe Miller Zuehl, N. Newn-am Page Eighty Xf' l!n o dull 1 v f in gvv,?Bl,r-any gngwrxglll -v 'gun - -- - -5- - h - f - 'X f xl ....,.' ,127 , ' ,, , ,,,,, un' all f nnummw mill zu 1 5 , Y Q ,U ffl .E . , A1471 . . Q- ll1II1111iq1101110111111111Qnplnllffflyqfqflnffyllqmsf 4'SEf1g5rfv ffg m qjggi I f 1 A Q , , ,,, ,, 5 IIIIIHIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHH llll' ' Illi 1 f M - . -I f 'ygg,,,W,,,,,,,,,,,,,0,,,WH0, if . g' i 5. in li I I l I l i , fn l 5 l if 3 l a :E .DAVID CROCKETT LITERARY SOCIETY 3 JUDSON -------- -- .............. President Q FRANKLIN ---------- ..... V ice-President H3 HOLMGREEN ........ ...,................ .I....I...., ,....I.... s e C leafy 45 gg Bodet Hough Orr Bogan Jackson Parham Browne Jarmon Pelphrey, C. if Colias Johnston Phillips Cory Kelsey Reeve, W. DePuy Kenedy Reeves, J. I Engelke King Rose Estrada, J. LaBeff Sawyer Fletcher Mangum Scherr in Gammel Mazur Smith Grandstaff MoKissack Thomas, G. 3 Green, Mier, A. Thomas, Ren. l Green, T. Miers, H. Thomas, R-ob. Hewson Moore West ' I-n11,o. V Nast, R. wimeiglx. Horn, H. Nast, W., Zuehl i Horn, J, Ochse N i Page Eighty-one U' ' -a 'ewes sa-4 g: ' ' Q' Jl?:fswf':1-' '2'f-'f,22 'GFI QFA-axes, N, f K vllllp wpflfdqc.-s-1 . ' 'UH 'bail 'fi M mm X ' 3 llmn' Xu' llllllllllliftiiii' 'W Illlwalwllllllllllllii-P-rggQu -as A A f..w U.m.,g.........IIIlIIIIIIIIIIImum!!! f'1j:-LE-1 1 Mfr 5 .,1i cw . 74 f Qglfxmiff lyfffff 177 ffffffffffW77yffffff' Qffffff flyf X f 'E w 7iWf ff?f7??7'77f7i17i7777777777Wff7f2n - 'WZz'fQfyfi?Z7Mz7 fWfffaiwmmmmm f fff A A Page Eighty-two I UIQ! X V' X' 1 , Ill' 1 iff! -5451 3 f 'HQFQU f . 2!! Q' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIH II IN ,,A .. ,. .. A, .-':T5f'jT3.4H vigjm, - f f f f f ,,, n -- :. 1. .'., . -' -i A . H4 :sl .. i. ,,. .- .. ' , HIIIHHWHIIIIII 1 lmn 101 lllllll 1 r ' T ' ff fffff f Ill' f Il ff IHIIIIIIHW Most Valuable . . . Most Popular . .. Most Handsome . . Most Industrious . Best Dressed . . . Best Soldier . . . Most Dignified . .. Best Athlete . . . Best Singer .. Best Nattired . . . Best Scholar . , . Best Swimmer .... Biggest Grouch . . Biggest Feet ..... Biggest Gold Brick Bigest Baby ...... Biggest Shiek . . . Valedictory . . . Salutatory ..... Best Ad. Getters. . Hall of Fame .HJUDSON . . .PAR1sH, G. ......KING . . . .FRANKLIN ...JUDSON ....M1ER, A. ...JUDSON . . .M1ERs, H. ....BROWNE ..'.M1ERs, H. ........BASSE HUSSMANN, R. ..........oRR .....HoRN, J. . . . .PHILLIPS ......KELSEY . .STARNES, C. . . . .FRANKLIN ....WIMER, K. . . . .KING-CORY Page Eiglz :beau- U'Q'l i'-Y!P'L 'l l . ' ' YC V 4 I' !lfI'l27-5i '! 753 '5Zf5!'? I I ' .f s1a f Q lgflvalfziafzti-fafefwaffiif mei-'RL A W lf'llllWEblfQl:s:sr2e WN!Lf A A ,lfamwgwllllIIIIIIIIIIMNHll w .. ., V . , ,E , - . Y -- -,T .-.--,f,,-fi-'f-fee--1-1-fr-A -fn-f-Q'-1-r---1---fffur-+-1-1 -: ' .,, , '- ,, , , , , a 'w -- - N N N , , ,, .... ..- it -.-i .gl .gl 1-1- -ii --1-1 l l ll-X4 . 4+ , ,Q gggd Ski? ,-as fr, -4 A Zi, ' Q EW? Elf. EHLM : 1 TI? Q 5 2. :ig :S-Fjs E1-aug '-L20 A L' A4 ..J- --1-1 11-1 1-11, 1 7li. 111 f, .E A iam item E543 z'55'5h, J 772334 SCENE OPPOSITE S. A. ACADEMY mmmmmm W' L EE Eh H ?2' -22 wig Nj N MS - .VN Ii? 'g4QQ -WEB Y ffl A -4 isa 'U'-V1 ifmgf lx Silk. ns' G , -.rf-,Q ,1 A ..f.. 'wQi? '1 5-25: i f ,a 4 gift ' aq mxq me Qi? wif xy., my S n. X 1 Ti 'L .,, X XQQ X A E X01-N :CX E if x f N M :N EE Ev ij! 21 :Lg ,X 5 x. -1 --'1-' --- '-4----- -- -w----M - ..--i--.V --..A ,- ,V v,...,A. xwm-. N1 W W mio: 44 nl.: NE. E gig!!! gn f 1t12 5fg:11gix4w : in lfplalg f 11 Q kg! v bu 55, 1 555 1 IMIHIIHIIIIIIIIZIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlllIllIIfllM f I 'I II dll A Q 7 ' S A ' W V ll 0 X IHHHMIIIIIIIH L ILITAR fw www-avian QL Ill qqv I ' f 974,114 !l' p'4i,9A6 w!,, ,qu , Iigggfggiv 3. 4 4 Wi' nggififgsgiaxiflk .PP W e S VI-XV Q31 p - ' llllllillillllll 174+ un . '! Ula: it ea 5 sglllmllraa 1 sl mit!! !.U ' V E :,v Y' 1 ' , ' 1 3 51! f 1 ' i I i ' 'J ' N E , p f fff fffffffdf . W Nl 0 I l l The t Military Department In order to develop the physical vigor and manliness of the students and to sharpen their mentality, a course of military training has been retained in the junior School. While the training is not as rigid as that of the Senior School, it gives a boy in his early years self-discipline and respect for authority. The course encourages initiative and gives the young boy confidence in his ability, at the same time that it develops a feeling of patriotism and respect for our nation's flag. 1 There are many students in every institution who take no active part in athletics or in physical training courses unless these are made compulsory. Practically all schools that maintain a course in military training allow no option with reference to such a course, but make it compulsory for physically fit students. The profound wisdom of offering such, a course admits. of no debate in the light of recent events in our country. No institution, educational or commercial, can adequately attain its as- pirations without a system of discipline, and the military feature in the edu- cational institutions has ever been considered a valued complement to all other disciplinary agencies. Moreover, there are manifold advantages accruing from this source that will accompany the recipient through life, and enhance his value as a citizenand a servant to his generation. The value of this training cannot be estimated on a financial basis. The physical benefits derived by the participants are invaluable. Such training adds materially to the virility of theboysg .it teaches them self-reliance, self- respect and obedience-essentials that are absolutely necessary in this age of uncertainty. Page Eighty-six ,355-2.- ei:-l ' ' ' 1 'J iv rw.. I -- ww- -was suv - liW..Msilurniiiuiu.aWgr.. .ti N A .tfmaigwauinuillllllinwiwilI M ini 5 ,- lie E .ga gms! an I 1 I IAAP Q u - ,iff 'g ill ,, A ' f' I I llllllllllly 1 W I0 ' ' ' . I 1 1 1 1 1111 1 HHWIH F THE STAFF W. T. BONDURANT, Commandant Lieut. Orr E l Capt. Judson Lieut. Franklin Capt. Parish, G. Lieut. Starnes Lieut. Wimer, K. A i xilfii Military 'training in you-th does more than make soldiers-it makes men. It 1 makes a boy upright in mind and body, trains him to be obedient, alert and loyal to the flag of his country. Page Eighty-seven - sea,-wxii I llllllskib ., 43.62-N-AMS s' - Q' ww i 4 V V s' it 5 ll?.5L5' ?'5.: f -' Y I I ,. ss-ff-s.: ' an 'W ' .- 1 ' ' 1. It N' 1 - 'aa A . ..-4 'I' '-. Z lf'-- : M .J 5 'mf' llllllllll llm l x A ,ll ..eilli1lme..... 'ml J I i 5 I 1 L .9 I f a 1 Z A .Iwi .. .l,-21.1 ni Ji a. Y ' ff f'3 MfvL , ' Q 1. 1.L1,L-if i' f , : -W. , f. ' ' ., 1:': -'- ' - 1 A ' , , NON COMMISSIONED OFFICERS SERGEANTS Mier, A. lMiers, H. Holmgreen McKissack I West Basse Sluder s CoRPoRALs Znehl, Broivne Frost, joe Frost, jno. Stapper Pe11Jhrey', J? D. Kenedy Wimer, C. scheff Pelphrey, C. Ball Carrington f HThG'1T10111G11t I heard of America, I loved herg the moment I knew she was fighting for freedom, I bgurnt with a desire of bleeding for her, and the moment I shall be able to serve lier at any time or in any part of the World, will be' the happiest orrein my life. -JLAFAYETTE. , .im ., Page Eighty-eight 1 hw-Tzifvtrgzg 's'W '- l L ' I V I Q' 'el -A, , I' run - -v , u--5-wg 122 2 ' .si . '--- . ---- fww- -i --- f Illlnwnwlnluunn....WN.t...M.-it f5.f armWarll1lIllllllllwfwr L -I Ili II I YI I I. 11, I I I., I I I I ,. II I. 'I I I EI I I I I I I I I II I I I I I I I I I X I I S is il IE:-lan:-I' I' N, . IQFE'-I I I W I I ' ,Q gf , -' 1 .- 1 ' - 1 . I, .f.,..- 7'--v2 .:.. V I -. f f ff . , f f f A .. ' ff!!! f',v fffff ffffffffff THE MILITARY DEPARTMENT Quartermaster Sergeant-'HUNT Buglers-PHILLIPS, REEVE, CUTTER, HORN lst SQUAD 2nd SQUAD 31-d SQUAD Zuehl, N., Corporal Browne, Corporal Frost, Joe, Corpoial Covington .Sutton Russell Lacy Ochse Y Sawyer I X- Hough Frost, John Hin, D. Field 'Goodwin Fisk King Gernbler ' Hutchinson COMPANY HAH . ff' Senior Captain ................................................. ....................... J UDSON lst Lieutenant .,,,,,.. , ,,,,.,,,,,,..,,,-.,,,..,,.- ORB 2nd Lieutenant ......, ..,,,,,..,,.,,.,,,,,,.,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,..L,.. S T ARNES, C, lst Sergeant .......... ....... . .........,........,,..,,,,,.,,.,,i,,,,,,,,.,.,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,., 1X ZIIEIR, A, Line Sergeants ...,........... li-IOLMIGREEN, McKISSACK, WEST Robinson Fuentes Granclstaff Tlioinas, G. Newnani Beckman Ann SQUAD 5th .SQUAD , Corporal Stapper, Corporal Martin I Kelsey Hill, C. Cory LaBeff . Engelke Colias -Reeves, J. Hussinann, E. Dubin Horn, J, G1'een, L. C. 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X A 'I 1'rf?..i' A V f 1 OUR, CAPTAINS BOBBY REEVE-Hard working, brainy quarterg received much praise from his op- ponents after each game. MIERS--The true heart of an athleteg never beaten until the game is overg instilling this same spirit into his team mates. FUENTES-High point man in every igameg' lat real leader, inspiring his team mates with his fight ' and ability. LaBE1-PF-Fine swimmer and finer fellow. A real leader for the swimming team. Page Ninety-fwo U T:::gswQ:'-vi,-Lcvggll QITI1' 'M ' V W ur M , rv ,,-...S-nr ,ggiggg i llwnmllllllllllllimg.Qn sA x ff.-Q--Mm .WIllllllllllllllmnwllll . F ij i . 2 . .5 , grill? sl 10000100010010000l0l000l0100mM0000m0 3 . ' I :T A ' T '--W 'ue-W ' Fi... ' Z , 1000 M01000 W1000lml0000m00 00 00 1 s A 1' 4 -W - - 0 ,ill . I , wmvfefaa--fffwffM+wf .. - . 4 l , . , Q The Year in Athletics A San Antonio Academy has enjoyed a successful year in athletics. From the first day of football practice, when about thirty men reported, it was ap- parent that athletics was to be one of the principal interests of Academy boys. Several letter men from the '26 football team reported to Coach Fraker when the first call for practice was issued immediately after the opening of school. Capt. Reeve, B., Rose, Hayes, and others formed the nucleus around which the team was built. The loss of such men as Levy, Patterson, Parish, C. W., Eiser, Speedie, and Linn was keenly felt, but there was a wealth of new material to replace them. Bevans, Covington, Sutton, Russell, Grandstaff, Miers, H., Hunt, Frost, joe, Fiske and Liberty soon demonstrated their ability and became regular squad men. White, small but full of fight, became Coach's pinch hitter , filling in at most any line position, but showing up better at end. The schedule opened with a victory over the big and powerful Argonne Heights eleven. The score was 6-O and the game was hard fought from the first kickoff. Hayes and Rose starred for the Academy. Other highlights of the season include the overwhelming defeat of our old rival, Lukin Academy, who were smothered under a 32-O score at Lions Field Park. Bevans, Reeve, B., and Miers, H., starred, while they were in the game. The scoreless tie with Floresville junior High, played before the Wilson County Fair crowds at Flores- ville and the Curtain-raiser game with the St. Mary's Fangs , preceding the St. Mary's University-San Marcos Bobcat game at League Park were other high spots of the schedule. Most of this year's stars graduate, and next year's team will have to be fashioned for the most part from green material. The opening of the basket ball season found not a single letter man on Page Ninety-tlircc s 5 s Q V Qu 121395. all T, IIlwl?252af'il?:'-5' amp uv' -:- :em-: 'a1ewtw lfe'5tEv -WTF llllllwif'.irillllllllliilw-:i' Qln iWi5 N A ,Mmym9B2-iawlrllllllllllllIIMNIIII - U B .Q Q, 9 'Q MQ QI . 1 -.. 921, , , 111111111111111111111 IIJIIIIJ 11p V I' .ll I -A U. , gal. W W 1 U p fl I 110 ll I IM y X , , 'L 3' ' f 1 If ff fffffffffdf I If I hand. There were, however, several experienced new men who reported and the squad soon began to round into shape. The graduation to T. M. I. of Bevans, Liberty, Reeve, B., and LaBeff, C., further weakened the team. But with Fuentes, LaBeff, R., Mier A., Hunt, Covington, Fiske, Sutton and Mc- Kissack on the squad a strong combination could always be put on the court. Inexperience, however, told and we dropped two hard games to the T. M. I. juniors. A round-robin tournament between teams selected by the faculty members was another feature of the basket ball season. With the coming of spring weather the baseball men reported to San Pedro Field for training. Capt. Miers, H., pitcher and shortstop, was the only letter man to report. He is the Ace of this year's mound staff, and is likely to do the bulk of the pitching this season. Covington, who plays first regularly, is a pitcher of much promise and should be better next year. He is sure to see pitching service during the season. Field and Miers, A., catchers, Hunt, second, LaBeff, shortstop, Grandstaff, third and Frost, joe, Fuentes, Engelke, Russell and White, outfielders, make up the rest of the team. A schedule which will include the T. M. I. juniors, St. Annes, Mark Twain junior High and Lukin Academy, is being arranged. Other sports at San Antonio Academy, which come in for a large share of interest are swimming, tennis, and ice hockey. The proximity of the Crystal Palace ice skating rink, and of the San Pedro Park tennis courts enabled all the boys to play tennis and hockey whenever they wished, though there were no regular teams in these sports. Daily swims in the San Pedro pool were a part of the program during the warm months. Page Ninety-four 'vvwwi 'ur ufqnl gg NW -ffiw l lu I- I us? , l QA ,cya llll IIIIIIIPIWQ- sp fi a s r nummmu L JW- .amrm.g.a.:llmIIIllllllI' .rg l f N A, ' W L Q 'Y' HI H T ' f L .U n 1 I, E L 1 ' tit . IBM P L 1 THQ U - -N I llllllllllllll 1 E Sl t EgmJ : ' I 0 E M ,I I , fe . V A .I Ad ., I ,. X I ff 5 I 5 I I I I 1 i r WINNERS OF THE A . . .. FOOTBALL REEVE, B., Capt. HAYES ROSE MIVERS, H. BEVANIS HUNT ' 'GRANDSTAFF FROST, JOE RUQSSELL COYVINGTON SUTTON . FIS'K ' LIBERTY I . BASKETBALL A FUENTIS, Capt. 'CIOVINGTON LaBEF'F, R. -MIER-S,' H. MIE-R, A. MCKISISAVCK BASEBALL MIERS, H., Capt. COIVINGTON FIELD HUNT LaBEFF GRANDSTAFF FUENTILS MIER, A. WHITE RUSSELL ENGELIK-E FISK Page Ninety-five gxvauxn Vlxywll 111 X x A 'fl Illiligilzgyb, Q: MFJWYEEQE 'WMI I TqlIIEf45235i'nZ'1ff 1' Y-HNF' 'T Ill 'J',t l:' W I ' If-'S 'v-'uh 1 '- r l 'U ' ' In 'llf' ' V F, xl' I' I ' -' l ' Q7 P'? 9'2 I ' I wfie-' 9' JJ- Nix : 4 GA ' 4 , J .7 .hfiglg-31's-gg!! f N .-L2 t' .jf fi --. ' ': -ll, It-I D 'E 'iisfl' .ftfvpu :ffl mb' Q 1 umllllt mlllbif.ailllIllllllllnE?J Qll Ns5 N A .mi-Qmmgufghqgwmllllllllllll,llltM dt, -L 'I . .Jif gg ' Q 'V -T231 , 1 3, E mu mu B qwnujlmur, QV. , +1 1 1. WN v - -. g ,' it Eff f 74!'l!l!! ll?!!!. A ll!!!-. I .. gig. B154 ff? v 1 . -- X ' if Ilinihi ' A1 ' A I ' f f f f fffffffffffff ff fffffffffffl ff! If f ,,, ,W fy - Page Ninety-six If 1 X I Y 5,7 Agri: l m! X if X ,I Q 4 ll ' I i. g J, l U .i1 ii llllillllllllll . ICB HIIIIIIIIIIIIHIII IIIIIHJI Q Il 1 0 03f fg'5Z+,4,i,f.5,g,s7. 5,,,?,,5:E, Q i f , , , ,I I, . - .N , ll U 4: ,. .--. - I. .. 4, .. ,, R ug-Aw, I A -:A A V h - 4 Q 11010010111111101100110W1011000101m11111111111nu 'H 'f x- ... . ' Y' ' f Q Hll qlll ' WHIIIIIHHIH Y1h6Sf07'6 ' T and Academy Students 71020. w 5 9 ' FR K BRG .e Q .g........g..g..g. Page Ninety vez asf-N-a s-sg?-'rg 1 lugsgggwezqe I :'t '7Ls+2. J-wi.: 4 m r V 4 f .-W fi 1.1: l A A ,lfhmagwwunullzlnlluwwill I. -. Ql Q ,1 gn 9 gf ,-1 U N -.n ll Q' , l I , W ' P' Q II IH IH A., N,-1. A - ZA .21 3 - . . If :Ll L ' -1912.9 ' f , Illllllllllllllll U, 1111104 EIIII, A 1, A 1,,, - wfnv p RL , I f f f 'f f f' f f Hfllllllflhlll' All 71' ' ' A , I . A -- I 111 ff ff 111 1 11 1 W IWIIIIIIIIW with ll Teputatiow, lmown since 1,878 Z A GSP TS ' 2 FOR ALL OCCASIONS Q BIRTHDAYS, ENGAGEMENTS, WEDDINGS ' ANNIVERSARIES, CARD PRIZES, ETC. 2 IHAMONDS x Q 'WATCHES I SILVER CRYSTAL . POTTERY LEATHER Athletic Trophies CLASS EM ELEM S and FRA TERN I T Y JEEWELR Y ERTZLRSERG Q. . Swellryj Oo., Af the S6911 Of q h HOUSTON STREET 15716 C'l0'C70 C'0vWn.e'rSt. Momfs SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS f I Page Ninety-eight I 6 'i'i' 'i i'NlY'L ll ' ' 'ln N w fd -- X, Q - ---I 1, 'qv ff p y pap- ' -wr' N001 -sr.-r lo 'll IIIWZLIEQIIIIIIIIIII Ii.....zQ M N A fm. kEIIIllIllIlIl lIl F'22IINlI I ll V Q , f f M f A O. E, f IIWHIFHIIIIIIIWIINIH 1 ll I f A' , A ' -f S f '-A ,, ,,,,, ,, ', ,II f M j ff Q. lrv, , ' W A K ff ' fy ' N1 ,KRUTIHAX lf '!l I I :IW A V , 5 M Wm f? f A ' '31 . - IH Nlxfw f if Ei ' WU, Q1 HQf 1wglg3I4O lQ A O !,,f,f3,,f U 'rf I df- ,ml 17 X5 Ez PS fm X A , ' I R L' b w A W. 11 m..11'W PAW PAIQQ 1 T: kmlqnllul I Wh R Pl H'-MILE ,All D Mf r' YI NA A A ' Q . N H A A f in A SAN ANTONIOSS N LARGEST AND MUST POPULAR FURNITURE INSTITUTION WHEN YOU HAVE GROWN INTO MANHOOD READY TOT FURNISHA HOME .... SEE US! W OUSEHCJL the Furniture Co. Corner . 9 Q Q 9 it We S et the Pace WEST COMMERCE AND ST. MARY'S STREETS g..q..g..g.-g..g-.g..q.-gugug .....g.-g..q..g..g..g.-Q. .....g.-Q..g..g..q.- gag.. -g..g..g..p..g..g ..q..g..g-.g..g.-Q..g..g..g..g. P Ixty X , 1 wr.: -.-44g:.-x- f X15 M245 WA f,,.,3-iw? Q mffffmnazwd II lwwfzffen - ,..... Lg II 7U -1:4-44 . EL , 5? -'4':::!rf , .fi',.7?3':'.'g - ...I - IIllmug-,hggllllllllllll5gg u Sl5 4f..L ENMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIZmmlllin 1 U f!! vases' . . ll Q' ' n w lu Q, . uw u ,- 1 w vu IIlllllllllllllJIIIHIIIII0IIMIIIlI0l0lllllIllIM01lllIlJf A , ffm, if, il x ' 1 f V . fff V f ff f l I00l fff llallllullhhlnlnllnllda Ill 1 ' Il ll 1 1' ' 2' O ' ' f f fff f IIIHIHIIIWIHIHHIIFIHMI 3 Q !........ Q , o Q O O o ' A. B. w'mA1cLmY, T. 'vvgmm nA1sATT, J. F. BOnAuz,, President Vice.-Pres. dk Treas. Vice-Pres. 85 Sec' y. E I ' 5 P . Q ' o 5 I ' 5 WHOLESALE GROOERS I DIST1-uBUT1OA1z1s OF g DEL MUNTEU 5 Brand 2 Q FOOD PRODUCTS Q Q HOUSES LOOAQUED AT SAN ANTONIO UVALDE KERRVILLE z E LAREDO4 FREDERICKSBURG Page One Hundred Ulhr .kregg Q ,ff IIIEWQ 1 X' HIW ll f JN ufgmizpz 1:1541 ll ,gasp 5, gli: I P MW ' 1 llllllll .Tluiw W. ..,.. . -. .O . Q' ..., , F W W ,I ua, RCF' 1' Qs 'T N -5-Qwm,24,-zaaaffirs I !.-5-'gi' :,: 4'-I 1 , -g.,-ownnuunllll Kun' Q, mlnlulliii........Wwv..ML L .... IIIIlIIIIIlIlII mmH fi5IfQ3li5i5 QQiIfIi5E A WHWWIHIIIHIJ0010101IWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll 5 1 , ' - ' ' , ,my WM HW, ,My X HMWWWM :W xx!!4!l! ll' ,E!Q!, ' if ' em Q 3. , f ..-QF' EWG- fl- 4 gf - .C 1' 3 I up f f ' . , W' Q, A - V. 00, fW WlllWf R- 33 III ,u1gg1'1L3 5:0111IJIIWHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIlllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllIIN 1 11- ' , U Q 2 a 5 TEXAS 'STEAM LAU NDRY LAUNDERERS 0 Z CLEANERS AND DYERS For Parr't1jc'wL0mf' People TEXAS STEAM LAUNDRY , 205 - 215 LOSOYA ST. PHONE CROGKETT 4500 WE SERVE T. M. I. 9 7 6 Q 9 Q..g..g..g..g.-pq..g..g..g..g..g.q..g.- Page One Hundred Onr i ,.'S', ,jf UPWUI' f l K3 y'!,i-'gif' .-,rl I I M lllIllllW o'l L 'Tl 0l?W'xx 'In' - LQ 1, C in nl.. iHlll,,..- - , Qfrgg 1. A X-,g-gg! V pl ,.f-f ggupgnn. I N' I 'm .? l , w:,,,, . ,-5 x, 5... . .. . , s., n -- Iv. 1: ML' 'fuwvjmqp 1, . - ,-,vip m-L Q, 'fmldy :, ,:' an ,L .5 w ffjxvf X X f f X Z WITH COMPLIMENTS A -to the- m. T. M. I. AND S. A. A. B L U E B 0 N N E T MR. AND MRS. FRANK G. HUNTREISS AND SON A FRANK, JR. LQ.. 'LIQQffQQQfQQL,... I V A' Q m If mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 1 , 1 M A I a 3 - fu I 'I I .. R. .4 , ' I - ' . I I ' IIIIIIIWMIIHWIIIHIIIIHIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllIIH 0Wl IlEOIllWll0WIIWIIIHIHHIIHIIIII IHI 0 ' 1 f I0 1 , ,, M ,, , IH 5 Z S THE HQME. oF THE STEINWAY PIANO Q 5227- ,I f, . 2 I g f igiis i f A 53 'ELI' 'gh . - . vel IIN Ill Ll UI Illia-i f 2 5 f i. , !1!ls 14lSIIi 'lilljkuw 6.1.1 R 'HI 3 , ,V T ill' In :ai :I sa :' 2 ' 2 H Y - Elf III.-am I 2 GTO-GGAN CORNER, BROADWAY at TRAVIS STREET 9 THE SOUTH'S GREAT z MUSIC SUPPLY HOUSE 2 World Famous, Standard, Nationally Known and Nationally Priced 2 Pianos Phonograph Records Radios Band Instnunents 5 Phonofgraphs Music Rolls E G-525,000 LIBRARY OF STUDY MUSIC THOS. GOGGAN 84 BROS. BROADWAY alt TRAVIS STREET ESTABLISHED 1866 62 YEARS oF QUALITY . 3 0 . Qng.....g..g..g..g..5..g..g..g..g.-6 Page One Hundred Three ful 'rf' as STQIHPX I' 2125, iql. l ?H I I ....-.-...,lHlllf..4,:, I- I!! .. ' ,,,,, -..-, .. .Ev ' 5115-7 '-'---I -kllfvsnefifale 1 annul- I I WWII III-Im I , gg, I , I I .Egg 3 r Aa? W , 'I ,, -f-E I Along Ina Hmnwau Q 2 5 3 THE STUDENT OF TODAY IS THE BUSINESS PER- 2 SON OR THE MANAGER OF A HOUSEHOLD TO- E MORROW. NO MATTER ALONG WHAT ROAD 2 YOUR LIFE WORK TAKES YOU, THE COUNSEL OF A GOOD BANK WILL HELP. SELECT, THEN, E 3 EARLY IN LIFE A SUITABLE BANKING AFFILIA- TIONQ GO TO ITS OFFICERS FREELY. WE ARE s 9 . ' ALWAYS INTERESTED IN ADVISI-NG WITH YOUNG 9 I PEOPLE REGARDLESS OF THE SIZE OR NATURE OF THEIR PROBLEM. 9 , THE COMMERCIAL SAVINGS I SECURITIES 2 BANKING SAFE DEPOSIT ELINVESTMENTS 3 - TOTAL RESOURCES EXCEED 'FOURTEEN MILLIONS Q Q . 2 5 2 3 I 5--0--I-0--0--0--0--0-v .............,.....,....... ..,............... .......,...... .... ...........,..,..,,,: Page One Hundred F I ?1'T ?I5?3'i!'.?Ki1S-'U I ' ' V Cv Q'Z1',Warafgv'nPv-Hw1 3 raazfaz-w,:f+ -2 gI,gll IIWINIIIIIIIIIIllmWg.In .QI A. II22:.qmIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMNIIIII I I I I I I I I I I I I : ' -- H mil I F1 qw, ., , ,,- ,I V,,,,,, r MEL I H ll, ur - 1 ' ' WU'f'fff'f 7f f f'', fff'fff f sf,'T5i..-W!! in QV ,I lf3'm52 2f x N' 'K ' gk 5 W ' ff ffff.fff'fffff,ff, ' ' 11gJ54a:E'i1 f1f, 'fLfxfffxff,f,f,f,f.ff,f,' ,'ffffff 1 f 'A ' NL Q ff if f - f A ,' fffff.ffffffffffffff 2 S O Q , 5 A U 1 li' N4'i?Q5fl , , . 1 'liz Y. . ' w5bJh-fTiii Li? Q ,nm ' 2 COMPLIMENTS ' 1 OF E o V 1 N z BREAD AND CAKE I V Page One Hundred Five ,,,.- ,dai ,',,.i.. ',,L..,l ., . - ,Ng 1 YL 4 U -1 f , v' .-an - WZ. .fngagf in mu-L' '!1ilsU'2'Q!xJ!Qh!.llg 1--QR his--ll umm- , Illlwf.MllII!IllmIiaf?:--newgmsm.:-4 L fm.MMQBMWIllllllllillllllmhwlll , i 1 E 1 w V f i I 4 1 A E l l -,w.-.,., . J , Palm fm 1.1 wwf- UH T5?g1'i:55E51Mkie W F W nf.--'r 3 f A . 4 Ei 4. Q 1. . A A - Af 7 Il ' 'f?z.f5i,111mfnfffiff:ex,f N'L-ff:3QFWaPElMF!Ji1 f ff W ' ' '- - gL '-Q. I ,UV ,V -f--- --f 5' 1:,.f T - 'atffgzz I f X I f H f fflfwf ' X 1-VJ I ff f ff X , ffffff Q I -NX Q ex .X 3 -Q. z r NRM' TOBIN HILLXMK' SHEET METXDHAWORKS BOYD, Prop. A Q ' , f O I O Z 9 GALVANIZED IRON AND COPPER OORNICE ROOFING, G-UTTERAL AND GENERAL JOB WORK ' I I O Q 2 . A 9 Factory, 1401 Burleeson St. Office, 515 St. Mdrtin Ave. 5 A Phone Cr. 1574 Z 1: 5 5 z 0 x Y 5 S s ! 5 6 -,. 5--0--0--0--of-0--Q--nu--o--0--Q.. ............ Page One Hundred Six -DT 3'i- 'i V '1 I A V R, if IP,-, 1 if-1--v-4--wx 535' l'fA'fL2Il A A O s . E Lint? ul ilhlll H- ' X , -- . F I , K ' ,, , , H A, . X, fbgd ,A ' ' Q, ,, 'Q !f3i? i4.'4- X W .I . . A f f ff f 'T'H3.42fffT44E5fTf?i'E?N' nf 3 'fm mm H - -ffffffff fffnfnffn .Q Q.. h K.. A .4 . . 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F ,ff If 55' 5 : ff' ' 3 a P 3 : ' 2 1 llIIlIlQ'l' - 0 3 4 In U I s Compan N 0 1 3 2 I B U 1 L D E R S 5 O I H, ? 1,5 2 I QF E 2 CHICAGO 2 . v 5 - 4 3 1 2 3 SAN ANTONIO Los ANGNELNS 5 n 2 3 E ffffxj 5 f' - , ff . 9 x ' Q fb 0 Q XX O 2 - 2 Q - E I o c o 0 o o o 0 o o o 0 o o 0 o o o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o e 0 0 o o o--0--0--no--OuC--0--0--I--OvO-'O--O--0-'O--0 0--OH Page One Hundred Seven X 1 0 um X - 1 -y qv 7,p,pV1 41.11, ,,? 5 1- ll I .. .,.:f- X-ezfswawwu Sf f X I MM ya' ai 'vw-:::f.Nnrf Hmm,Nunlll1lnulgH- Mmvmvrw.qW....IIlIlIIIlIII!IImwill . :' -'-'-0 ' - ' V n -- 1 T 'L? 'T' -Wwllnunumzusxlulf N QX c 'ig-f - ' Us .-.ct-'Y-1 B .7f'X'Lfq'P P 'E VT, V 0 f 1 f f A X A,i,. ',,.EgQ tl1. ,uh I f , A 1 0 0 ? 5 O , When Better Automobiles Are Built : Buick Will Build Them Q SAN ANTONIO BUICK CO. 3 k Henry H. Bryant 3 O . 6 5 E 0 5 O gn..-Q-4.-Q...--q..g..Q-.g.....g..q..g.. Page One Hundred Eight I V N Q'fiw,-gggwmw,Wefgeaggffeegg... 'ffQ 3'fEillll 4 .Q G P , llIllllllltmiwwnnuu....fm-WMwst M - -F ilm. ll ! A :f I 2-ggrs gj illll ll ,yu . H,,i 5- - , ,XE V gif' E A ' A l I ,Q 1 TNQ! , W IlIllll0llllllIllIIl01I A i ll I Q. N ,,- Hin H i f 4 ' K -,III I IIIHJIIIIIIH I . U I, . , , P- , ll 1 r I ll A , W Z X ll fmnll 0 e o--0--e--0--0--0--0 0 0 Q o o o o Q 0 o o 0 s o o c o Q 0 o o . u 0 z - 2 o 5 0 3 o 5 o 2 o 3 o 0 an Angelo - Has ' 2 o o 0 o I o ' 1'l6l'l Q o Q ' z o V o Q o ' Peo le g o 0 ' ? o g o o 0 o o 0 , o o 0 o o o 0 0 0 l o 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 s e 0 0 0 o 0 o 0 0-0--I--0--OH0--0'-0 0 ' ' Page One Hundred Nine +aazgS?4,sQL42 'X' 5' Q'4E'W3'?52?Z5'Wfs.1' - il' , ,,,., ,,,., , ., , , , I . V if .... U I ,- ,-- .. . 1..?,.t..,5g4:4v'g5g,:ll! A I viz, gas- .w 1 K X: 0. A L ' 4 ir' if , , np .N u......'fQu0ll L --'ml' MHS in L 1 G L 1 i al u sv 0 emma '1 . . il n vi g ii u nj: jl vu Il i v e F31 L f - we fi? 01001110HIIIIIWWHJIIHIHIHIIWHIIIll 5 v1 11111 Vllllll 1, 111 1104 on , ,I f ' i.?1f111e . ' - 1 f.11 XM!! . . , ..:. . ' ' - ' L 1' ' ' 1 X X X XXXXXX XX lllfll XXXXJX Hllllll J 1 VIIIHJHHIHIIIIIIHIIIIII f 1 0--0--Qu 0 l 0 O 0 0 0 O 0 O O 0 9 Q Q O O O O 0 O O O 0 Q 0 'OUONO'-Q'-Q-'O O O O O O , ... 9 2 v 1 Q i Q 6 1 Q 5 1 z e e ' - O 5 I 4 I I I n . O 2 K 0 I X 2 a 2 W I 1 I ? 0 - X - 2 fe A ft l , ' o . O f ' o 1 O , 1 I , X N' Q P' I o 5 0 1 0 :X x 1 w , 3 9 x 2 8 X if t 9 5 V 6 t . D ' ' v A 6 'QE Muonvf ' nm t RICHARD l .. X J 1 , EQHIJQQHM IRIICHAIPAID IHHUJIUJN UT PARBJ' A NEW PERFUME FROM PARIS Four new captivating orleurs for each of the four loveliest of feminine moods. One for Romance, one for Adventure, one for Gaiety-and one for Sophistication. Each caught in an exquisite and Provocative little chalice, of a color suggesting the mood Partfcuziire. Created in Paris, and Pre-1 sented lay Richard Hudnut. Come in ancl lift the Stoppers frofn. each of these Cllafnling Pefitfyacons and sense Ineaylins of each subtle ffagfanceu v . aug..Q..Q-.Q--Q-.Q-.Q-Q-.g.....g.g g 3 . . . . . . . . . Page One Hundred Ten lIllIIllllWK' ' Q55 :Iw i ,,,1..,,3. , , T, , B. , I .XKVIQE K muk f, 4' ,4 I , I , I X mummuw H , I tk! J fm'id w iN'Illllll I Ill I X rv- A - 1- ul ' kagi w f Ev .Ta lg -EM T, ., ll ll ll A I ' The-T33 :ws -.. . N-2263 - . -- f , vfff:1'.QE521Hf-I .T 'L, 5F'P41x'iJ- ' Fi ffxigfie-A. A A A- f f 1 f 1 f , ,ln I 9 1 A : ! l . Q 2 o NATIONAL BOILER WASHING OO. OF IL1L1N01S ' . 2 6 I O 2 . CONTRACTORS 2 9 RAILMVAY EXOHAN GE 5 CHICAGO X .gugugng-.g..g.-g..g Page One Hundred Eleven 3 E ' H V X f 1. u vswfvn 1 qu qq I ' 'V VfPIlf1-11 ll 'P ll -A - . T w Ipmfwzffqwh .mf- 1 1-cz. zz. -:ff-we V N sf ff 1' T' A Q3 '?--11 -. Mmisrlll H- G :mit-QA QW A I 1 .A .,. 'p'5 pq A ,- W 'fe' Tl 'E 'K Y 1 0 IIIHI 111 Hlllll 1 ffffffff 1111m1mv11111111111111111111111 1 'I an Us 1 -I 1 or 4 or ' A 114 .,, 'Vt ' -'f 7- ,,. I ' ua .. . ' , fffy' 11111111111111111111111011111111011111011111111111111111111111111 :L 5 1? ,MA - My A ., - - - f-' ' A, . . ff' ' 1 I 1 VlllllllllIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIIIHIII 0 1 II lllll 1 A A 9--Qu Ngugngng.-9 0' '. '. g . 2 i 5 2 Y 5 SUCCESSFUL MEN TODAY 'WERE E Q SUCCESSFUL BOYS YESTERDAY. , 2 Q 3 , MORE THAN FORTY YEARS 3 ,C A 4 A 5 OF STEAOY GROYVTI-I, SWIFT 8: COMPANY R. D. COLEY, Mcmageo' Q SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 5 Q . ' 2 a....-Q-.g..g..g-.guguQugug-.Q-.Qu Page One Hundred Twelve 3 .1 2.51 5 N - - ---.. I IIIIIIIIII I AM' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH .IU C 4 I lui nlllllll 11101111 llll W x l y Illll A1 f1fZff,f?Ef4sAq2f,,i.S5g,n-T -i'-312 . f f f fl W? f f ' 4 ,,, ,, llllllllllIllIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlllllll 1111 ll , ' -f , ,, , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,MW,,,,,0M :ug 5 e a SALLINGHS STORES Panic Foods . . Efficient Servicio N E. E L. ' S . -for fine dvlamomis, w'at1c1h.es, siloefr cmd X ' gifts! 1 ' ' 223 EAST HOUSTON STREET SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS ' A 5 5 z ' X . 0 9 3 g..g..g.-gag-.Q..g..g..g..Q..g..q..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..Q. .g..g..g.....9..9..q..g.-0.-q..g..g..qg..g..g..g.-g. .q..g..q..g..9..g..g..g..g..q..g..g.. ug. 6 1 2 AFTER YOU FINISH YOUR ACADEMIC WORK YOU WILL e BE READY TO STUDY Cl-IIROPRACTIC 4 In Selecting a College in which to study Chiropractic, you inust be sure to get the best One. The T. C. C. offers a course in Cairo- practic with a full-time faculty that cannot be equaled anywhere. Remember, you are entitled to the BEST. I A 5 g Large clinics, limited classes, personal instruction, delightful pefople from everywhere to mingle With, reasonable tuition. Catalog upon request. TEXAS CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE SAN PEDRO PARLK SAN ANTONIO, ..... TEXAS g I gn...gugugugng.-Q.....g..g.-gpg.-Q. 6--Q--g-.g..g..g..Q..g..g..0..g..g..g.-g...-. .g..9..Q.....1..Q..g..g.. ug. 5 . FRANKLIN BAGS. ' Wholesale and Retail D DRY GOQDS SHQES WITH COMPI,IMENTS CLOTHING anti LADIES' READY TO WEAR OF A FR7IEND 512-514 XVEST COMMERCE SIT. SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS .. .4..gn5.-Q.1Q-....q..g..g..g..g..g..g -3. gugugug. . . Page One Hundred Thirteen ,b,. .,.... A ,,,,., -. ,. ..-. .,.. ' I-N1 - VN' I'?Jfgl'lw'2iwl7 ?G31figj?f?g'iLz'L524U I . llllllliii z A A Q . l , UU Mil . H A bl Q f l . 'l l I 1 s an A ', ' 5 i nu. in ,H x M Y.: L.- n f ,.gM -,1,g:,, . , - N V A , ,f ,F V fl , f f f ff! iff f f f ff! ffff f ff f I I I ff ff I f f f lllnllllhiiilliid 'llllll ' I I I , .g.-q..gs- . L G. N. WOOD I rv COAL Go., INC. Establisllcd 1 895 l 1010 IVEQST ASIHBY PLA OE I ,Phone Wloodlawu 1000 L W -Qng..g..Q..g..g.-Q-.9..g.-...Qng-.9.-pug.-q..g , I VIIIING ' r I A REFRIGERATORS I I cmd v I li y . EYREE ZER C O UN TER S for - l OOIMMERICIAL PUR!l?0SE1S I .3 Yam c-cm't beat ai Viking l 405-407 S. ALADIO ST. SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 1 . il,- l . 'l . 0 '! . I , From the standpoint of safety, high grade Municipal l I s X: l' 2 lj.4, I ..,: 5' i ll? . ' llll i' ' ' fff WOODLAWN DRGUG STORE C. L. Munford, Ph. G. G. S. lVI00'1'e, Ph. G., Props. Woodlawn and North Flores SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS ..g..g..g.....g..g. .g..g..g..g..g..g..g. ....g..g..g..g..g. 4.4.- KNOX NURSERIES TREES, ROSES, EVERGREENS 1020 NAvAR.Ro ST. At the Bridge Cr. 4848 ..g..9..g..g.-Q. 4.. ..q..g.....g..g. .g..g..g-....g..g..g..g..g..g.-g..g..g. .Q Q-4 rNvES'r YGUR SAVINGS IN . 'rnxns MUNICIPAL BONDS I Bonds are considered Ioy many investment experts as sec- la ? ond only to United States Government Bonds, and in ad- + dition to their safety, they command a broad market, pay ml a steady income, and are tax exempt. We deal exclusively in Texas Municipal Securities, both ll? l buying and selling. A list of o-ur latest offerings will be pgg I mailed upon request. Lgf! I - J. R. PHILLIPS INVESTMENT CO. 5 Ifncorporalterl 124 ' I. 1414 ESPERSON BUILDING 21141 . ll' 5 HOIUSTON, TEXAS mil! : 3. , , Q wi 5 il V2 . 155 5 9 7 I 50-C-v0--Q-.g..g..g..g.-I--qug-.Q-.Q--gng il: ' ' Page One Hundred Fourteen fr, .M V ,l 5! : I Y UI 70 -vu-zgftr ag :QQ fvbgggwqpafgggg ,av grin!! w 51 I get f N -- W-.m.?.f f I els f it -I nnnwuwn if IIllm.mnnulunlni'i?5 Ili N A ll 1. AUC + fr 1' IllIlllllllllIIIIIIIHIIIIllllqlllllllllfflllflfflfflflllglfgjl 'if-Ti.,?,?? i f V H, D 1, , b 4, , ,, ff100100111llllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIHII 'f K --- f ' ff '1 Hllllt l ' HIIIIIIHIIII WHWQ 1 ,fmvfnfonzo SKZWMQ B05 0 07 ' Wzlzmry and Dress wearf W new mafemzls lam! .styles vm 7010 ,quzzriem I or In fopsf snofs w HOSIERYNNEB-5F51 E,-XSTiHOUSTON STREET Cadets rgfzr 50 ,. ff ,!, I-d . 0 aaa .,... gag.....,.....,..gun..g.....0..............Q.....Qu9..,..9..9.....Q...,-9--Que--o -o--o--o- akland - Pontiac Officficbl Sales, Sewicef and Distvmibuvtiow ' ALAMO AUTUMGBHQE CUMPANY 0 Navarro St. at Augusta . Cr. 4225 AUTOMOBILE ACCE S S ORIQES ....9--9.3--!--9..9 9--9..9..9..9--9--o--o-0-ons--ov-on -Q -- -' -- -- Page one Hundred Fifteen ww Quinn NN .: ot- 2-:Ni ' llllllllll u n a Nunmulnlu... - , .pw U wiv .'-.' I Q. , , ' ,' ', - VV YJ yr - , ,lv ,gm - qwv',Jf :I' ,I -' lj 1 ,..,- .,.-- ,,-,4.. C U i -fl I il Q' . , - l '-H T A 1111111111111110111111111101110111111na1111110n10010101 j j 'fTnf O'5f1 I AA f fff fff fff f ff ff ffffffff fff f IIlllllIllllllllllllllllllll 1 11111 'lllll 00 f 'f f f f Eff ffff ff f WW 'ff M W f of .....q..g..g.-gugng.-Qug.-g 0 , , A , ! Home of 9 IN SURAN CF Q HART, STCfH'AF1+'NER 8 MAR-X 1 4 and Fine Clothes BEOKMANN az CO. 2 . 2 FONIBY GENERAL AGENTS CLOTHING CO. 5 SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS Duerler Bldg. San Antonio, Texas I 3 Z S 9 .Q-.g..g.-Q..g. .guy..QuQ.-Qug..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.- g..Q. .g..g..Q..g..g..g..q.-g- .g..g..g-.g..g..g..g..g..g.-Q.-guy.-Q. .g,. ng. . O 2 DELEHAXNTS PAIGE ' JONES 5 ZEOLITTE XVATER SOFTENERS PRESCRIPTION Rapid Rate-Upflow 3 5 Zero Hard VVater for Your 9 Home, Factory, Laundry Q Alamo Helghfs , CHEMICAL CO., INC. Q San Antonio ' ' Texas I'I3,1l1II10lld, Ind. New York, N. Y. . O 2 O 'CNC'-O--6-'O-'O'-CHO-'I-'lv-In -0-'O--Of-0--Ou .000-.gnQ.-g..g..g..g..g..Q..g. Q--Q Q..g..q.-Q-.q.-Q-.Q-.Qu ug. g - 9 ' 4 GOOD SHEPHERD TE M LAUNDRY A AUTOS CALL FOR AND DELIVER PACKAGES TO ANY PART OF THE CITY Your Patromzga Kinolly Amweciated f TRAVIS 7053 PHONES : L CROCKETT 197 2600 EAST MONTANA -STREET 9 guy.-Q-.g..g..g..g..g..g..g.-0-.g..g.. Page One Hundred Sixteen lwhnmlllllllllll A A1'.uzeoQer' msgs, fi il' I . ' 'f f 0 I f ll lllllllllllllllllllllll Lpg3a'fTF5eI i:i ii i,-im? Y T 1101a11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 ' Y' 'A 'W' 770 IIHI M100 IHI 1 101111111101111111 IHIIYIIIIIFIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllII Illll ' WHERE COURTESY PREVAILS . lsr F I Over 100 1301321-1't1I1CI1tS T .W I INR H A la Exilim Wx G HW AXUj X EFI' fwilll ml YT .Hillman ' VTDV 221 If my iq WEEE Pl wqvllqmqpl EMU ufylmpmmilifgm x X FP' piytiwl M an nz ml mmmmm I U1 dmxlmmvih minimum -AEM.. I ul' If l ll' x x ll l l .iTIMIII-II.gs. X !', ' N' 0,4 ,fi ' X 'umm 4 54 ,fi F,n9.mfi IEA M Wqmllltphx 'M H IL 'a i ff' ' Pl J ll if l . .Ili It vi I I p 'I' ' .f-- n'A l3f xlflltlixlw W WW X WN WWW'1 l 'lillP1lIfl Mf,laea1EEmEil M llS I n L f. : ' I .I- l glut R . UW.. .W . I Q Q :..-fue, 1, 15- -,--4 ,.,. ' - I uv I JH 1 ,, .wg -m .-,Lf-1'f:'r' - - 3-351ggi-2:afaimffaaiaaaagigiiiiia iu ii iiiiii-I. I gg5 q2Q'Qf ,'ff:: 3',4.I.f,f' f 3 - -X , . - - -55:5-.aa :Jn V - v' ,Q 'imp' I x 8 'X ? -Cav? gd' 'A I Pub' 'G'-' . r Q A Egg 6 I .1 , 4- G 1-1 - -I , , 1 ' K I ' SM ,Fl L -D U .- ,., - me it I AN INSTITUTION CATERING TO EVERY BODY AND EVERY HOME WheI'e the spirit of friend- ly service and the policy of energetic value giving af- ford real opportunities for the shopper. IC-onnnercial leadership is earned, not inherited. The public rewards a store in proportion with the service it renders. Our leadership is an example of the peo- ple's appreciation of our usefulness to the coinniun- ity. - JOSKE BROS. CC. Q GUARANTY STATE BANK ' . CAPITAL fB300l,000.00 . . SURPLUS 2B300,000.00 . . . . THE BANK Q WITH HUMANS I INTEREST SERVICE SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES O O I I O I I O C I I I C O O C O l O O O O C O O O O l 0 O O O lvflgagevcgllgIiLlQl1grgd Sgventeen A iw... ..,, . -,, .--- .,-. - v 'I O f A VEJ I V'71IllW-57 !7 '?5f5fG1'f5'f l A I HT... W.. 'nm s-'wer-'or I ei- IHQETEHMQQEERRIE ' ' Z' -fff-if? MEN!!-'a'!!'lI I W ' 1llLE...,gMe..I :ze-Q .p. Y MWEEEEEEIHEHHEHEEI. IEEHEEEHHIIIEIII .qu fu . E01 1. as t1'f1il5!'lls'4 41 !' 5 5 - ' 1 ' 1 , . ' .f' E g 'L i A , 1 1 2' I 0 1 ' 'f 'W IIHWWIWIIWHWIHIHIFIHWHHI .9.....g....- ..g..q-.g.....g.- g..g..g..g..g.-gngn FREE PLAN ER ICE LOANS EOR HOMES SPENCER - SAUER LUMBER CO. 203 Fredericksburg Road V Woodlawn 3624 --Q--Q--gugngugugng..qugug..q..g..g..g..9ng.-Qnonq..yup-Q.-Q-.g.....g..g..g..9..,g..g.....9.-Q..g..g..q..g..9..g..g..g..g..g..g..g-.g..g.-Q.. SAN ANTONIGSS FINEST E EURNITUEE STORE 221 - 225 'WEST COMJIERGE STREET Kff?'1f?EN w FURNITURE COMPANY COIVIPLETE TIOBIE FURNISHERS Q..guy...ug-.9-.q..g..g..g..9..g..g..g..g..g.-Q--Q.-Q-.g..g..Q..g..g.,.g..g..g..g..g. .gugug-.Q-.5up-.g..g..g..g..g..g 5 SCHRUEDER ELECTRIC CU., INC. 119 BROADNVAY Next to Lockwood Bank E EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL 4642-Croclcott-231229 C 3 augug-'gag'-9--guy...-.g.-g..g..g..9.. f Page One Hundred Eighteen ,.. ' .n L.,Q-1 -.,' ' I I -' ':::,? -Sit -V259 ' : Q ' , llW..NIllIlIIlIlIl....WNe.auM.-.11 K A :5.f a:2Zi.,gwIIlIllIIllllllllwmwllm n T, , J: l:i!fl:,., , , N ,mg nn ai11aIf,f11H1I46l6f1 I 'I' ' 23 X ' IIIIIHIIHIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIWIIIIIIIIHIIJIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllll 1 - ll il ll' K-iq!! Q A iw 2131061 g g gli I- E r 1' I 2 A t A ' III 'I IIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIllfllllllllllIIIIIIJIII4' ,-,,,,, . nl . I' ' ,i fl ' - , .- Lab, -. ef: Al- . X H I I ' I IIHIHIHIHII H IIHIIII X X X X XX IIIIIII SMITIEVS STUDIQ , ' E'uer'yb00Ly's Ph0'togfra,gpheof' MAKER OF LIFE-LIKE PI-IOTOS SAN ANTONIO EAST HOUSTON STREET Boys, While at home, d0n't forget Papa Smith S 6 Au Photos 'IIYL this Amman M6661 by Us 5 2 . cr. 2566 616.2567 'A cr. 2568 BROADWAY PHARMACY PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS Q Broadway at Mary D. Alamo Heights SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS I Qwjcllwslt DeIl1l1Jeo6'y S9'I U'l:0'6 in thefC'ity ? IICOMPLIMENTS OF 5 is gli. eww , Ax HOUS . 'Me ' I I A I '- CLEAN ER 6 M 96 '- ....,.,......... ....,.,.,...- 1 senanma A' 'E I Page One Hzindred Ninefe A I - --1'-H fu 'Q . ' ' ' ' X X' ' VIJ II '?'fll'lW'5 '7 :'.i?lZ1f','Ii I Illllwgggigllllllllmgm .L f,..2 nmzmixmlllllllllllllll ...nh l .u as . In In ig! Ill! Q.-sg gn M ..,,,NNm Q.. -flm Essen, J, N ff: sq ,I . lglgziifitijijii A a l, V .fi A - 1 1, ' 3 L I, '17 ,, Q j ,7 A 11111 IIIIIH IIH Wlllll ', iJpQ.. , - 5.91, I n-, g n Q f llll I ll IHIIIIIHIIIIIIHIHI A ll R 0 1 1 7 ' . I WI 1. IW! I 0 K' . xx A 4 .,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,... g ..g..g..g..g..g..g..Q..g.. q.-9.-g..g..g..5..g..q, .g..g.....g..Q.....g-.g..Q--0--0wO--O'-Owing AMPICOS - - PLVAYERS 1 - 121ANOs Omckcup 1560 IJHONOGREAPHS - .SMALL INSTRUMENTS SAHEEKT MUSIC A W ALTHALL MUSIC COMPANY Alf . r A f 217-219 XVES-T COBIDIEJR-CE STREET 4 Al SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 3 C 42 I, Ghickering, 1VI211'Sl1Zl11 K: Vifendell, Brewster, . . . . . . . Grands zmdUp1'ights A N XVCSTGPII Electric Auto-matic Pianos GREENWOOD PHAfRMA.QY A 5050 BROADWAY CR. 5577 PHONES CR. 10141 Q! EAST FREE DELIVERY ,ff . . 3......... A 117 J ABURNETT AND GOSLING g I I EX---.-wf ' A, a CE! Q A ' 5 6 BONDS . Ommdzfw Bmldfmg gm jnffbggo., Tgxag 5 X Q WITH COMPLIMENTS A to the T. M. I. AND S. A. A. BLUE BONNET I A ,. A A ' . JUDGE AND MRS. R. N. CAMPBELL cmd son. 'ROBERT 2 c--o-10--o--o--o--o--o-0--o--0--o--o--o 0 ......g.4...........g........,..,..,..,.,, A Page One Hundred Twenty Ill 'ww J' I... --.-gm.-S2321 ,N Q' gwyg5y451.z, pq, ug.. f-Au I 1' gg. Vw .V A--'E--up--Ag: -- .... f, ' Illllwwlllllllllullamfwwg.0.fwSM NA . . n ,, l.-, A ,, .gen-exif' ., ., ,gp!AElsl.,lull :Gnu VM , xpgxn A . my 'ng-wa , W WWTF! 'JW ffv'f77ff,f.ffff' ff i ' if' A 1 E.: Exif? ' 75f f ' ffff ff f fr:V. ,.ff,'!.-'y.fff'.f ff fi .1 fffflff I I AA X 'limi I I I f'f'!f'f'f'ffJ ,'- .' ffff,!,ff',ff!ff X f .9..g. No Jobs too 'Small None too Large Estimates :uid Plans Furnished LOUIS OUSSET Geozemil Contrac tor' di: Budlldier .Q.-g..g..g..g..Q--Q.-gngu png--Qug.-gnguy..g..g..g..g.-0-.g..g.. Q.-Q-.gng..g..g..g..Q..g.-Q.-QnQ-.gnQug-.gn3.q..g..g..Q--0.4.-Q--p. SAN PEDRO PARK TOURIST LODGE Has 'Dining Room, Cafe, Soda 9 Fountain, Ladies' Rest Room, 2 Q Gentlemen's Club. Furnished and 3 unfurnished cottages, convenient 3 O 1 . .D to Car Lines, Swimming Pools, 2 PHONE XVOOD il, 810 Playgrounds and Ice Skating Rink. EA-SY LAN 9 714 W. Myrtle sn. Tel. or. 10138 831 W. Iiings iway 5 OWUGYS3 Sqn Alito. . an S XV. B. Speegle XV. L. Hovel - ' ' F. W. Hovei ' CKING ousn MARKETS WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT GRQGTTETT 8329 ' OROCKETT 4937 CBOUKETT 8041 ff I I --0--Q-mug.-...g..g..g..g.,g..g..q..g.. g..g..g.7f!g..g..g..g I' , THE YV O- OL F :Sz MTAR F CO. i 2 , A SAN ANTOlNIO'S FINEST DEPARTME T STORE Our Eoiefy-Day -QBMSTTLNGISS Green! Quality - eirowe - Coowtesy J g.. Q..?fg..g..g..9.....g..g..g..g..g..g. .5g.....g g..g..g..g..q.-9--Q. LQ--o--Q--o--Q--o--o--Q--0 YO R SAVINGS ' In fg tz, teed first mortgaage notes in denominations of 551000 , 350 .00 and S1,1000.00, nettin -en per cent in- ! terest, payable semi-annually. V . Wiivinn - RICHARDSO ,AND COMPANY ' Clncorporatetlj , INVESTMENT BANKERS Alamo Life Bldg., 202 Jefferson St. S2111 A11f011i0s Texas Q.-gag..gag..pq.4..g..g..gn...Q..g..g..g-.g..g..g..g.. .- .. .. .. .- -. -. Page Ork undred Twenty-one Q5 ,gb-,.,-.-.f,..,.,.L--.,-. wg- Xl - V O J in 4 IIIIIWHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIE-Eagawk-4 A A H N 'iff Em, I 4:2 V i'7': w.,N xv ,,. 'ie ,Q A Fai fum lr F mp I p 'I-fffgb, 4:,:z,.' A I ,AL ,jf 7 f ff f f W 7 X f fi ' ' M 7 X X ff! ff! f Oacltlllae omlcl LaSalle automo- biles are the highest tcleals of emftfmcmshflp '1 6tS'Llll?:'I'L'Q from the school of experience, coup-- lecl with that of study cmol skill GOAD MOTOR Oo. Distributors DALLAS AT LEXINGTON g..g..g..g..g..g..9.-Q.-g..g..g..g-.g..Q..g..g..g.... .Q--guy.-Q-.g..q..g... Quick Service Free Delivery THE PARK CLEANERS ez DYERS Max Raglmid, Prop. FANCY CLEANING, PRE SSING AND DYEING Phone IV. 183 23111 N. Flores St. Q.-Qu.. ..g..g-.g..g..g..g.. ug-.g.....g..g..9..g.. ..g..g..g .g..g..gnQ..g..g..g..9..q..g..9-.g..g..g..g..Q-g..q BURLESON TIRE OO . COOPER CORDS New Home 607 No. Alamo Cr. 2767 Meet Me at the Gunter Hotel JOHN WILLIAMS OUTFITTERS F OR MEN A Goocl Place to Tfracle g..g..g'..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g.. MARUOHEAU-GRIGG OO. CANDY -Gfockgtt 8497 719 So. Flores Street LIBERTY FILLING STATION Woodlawn 5813 2602 No. Flores Street N elghbofrihtoiocl Ser'o13e'e Sta-tiofh for N ealghborhoocl Trade CARS WASHED, POLISHED AND GREASED GAS, OILS, TIRES AND TUBES Gomes Oallecl for' cmd D61l'l'U67 66l Come in and Give Us at Trial - lVe Give Service with il. Smile WE .SERVE T. M. I. I--0--o--0--o--0-o..,..a..g........q..g..... ....,...........,..0.., P e One Hundred Twenty-f ug..Q--g..Q..g..g..g..g.-g..g..g..g..g uf- N.. gag. I V If Q' W! l lWz?'1g'f2s:aQv'-fer un GI-Xb . . .sg IllllllW 1l, Illn-..... Nw - - mill - lx. fl, F C HR.- nl!! I I I1 III- lalllll ,mag , l , -1gmJ'li'- EYBEQHEF fieifk' - i . . g A f. f f ff ff fff, A new f,f,, 5 Phone Woodlawn 4004 1422 N. Colorado Street BRANDT IRON WORKS OIQNAMENTAL AND MIS OELLANEOUS IRON WORK STRUCTURAL AND REINFORCIANG STEEL CONTRACTORS EQUIPMENT THE ORIGINAL A MEXICAN RESTAURANT ' 115 - 121 LOSOYA STREET 5 9 ug..Quang-.Q..Q..Qng..gngnQ.-9.-Q.....g..g..Q. .gag-.Q--Q-.Qng..9..g..g.....g..g..g..q.-Q-.Q..g..g.-Q.-m4..g..g..g..Q..g..3..g.-g..g..g..g..g..Q-.Q R. S. NIARLOW, B. S., M. C. Sc., D. C. We A OHIROPRACTOR A GRADUATE FAMOUS PALMER SCHOOL- 'f' AT DAVENPORT, IOWA 11h113W1u A Om' Equeipmemnt is the best, vin-clwoling the X -Roxy 11, lj.. huh We me Wommfuz NEUROCALOMETER 504 Eager Street Phono Mission 1374 ',,.U...Q.....Qng..QnguQngnngng.-Q--...g..g. 0-0-'ll-l -'O-'O-O-'DUO'--O--KO--I --O-fi'-O--0--I--0'-Ov Page One Hundred Twenty-th 'O 1 . - . - - - N- Sm -'451f'52- S ' !i05fa5J0W V ' -- ,,, -., -1--. 1 ,---- .pu 5 f ' n - 1 -- xr E, gxl' 'U uv 1 I I' al l ',i7 'b:5E'f5F?f,fg.g'u'I I 0275?-R-,:5. l.Q-A-.SL 2-.Q Sr . 0 f e A- I . 1-:J 7, 1,1-A .-, ' a .wg-,gill Tl J! ,.' ILQSQSEZT- Weis:-+ !!L ,MEAEaagfgeeaulnnnllllulnlnmwrx 6 FL V- .f I FIIIQQ1 ll F!! ,I .ve ' I ' If -- ff A A .. I anna. -sun n nun. Q-.Qug.-Qug..Qng.-gngpg-.gag--0-.g.-i..gag.-Q-. O 'O' O 'O' 000' 0' C O' l O l' ful . 9 . Q Established 1884 I Crockett 4515 A. H. SHAFER CONTRACTING HEATING AND VENTILATING ENGINEERS PLUMBING AND ELECTRIC DEALERS 829 North St. Ma.ry's Street ' .gn...Q..g...g.-Q-.gugug..Qugng.4..gng..9..p..9.-Q-.g..g..g....-Qng... BRQWNESS BROWNE MOTOR OAR OO. E 341 - 343 St. lVIary's 2 Crockett 7200 Us 2 HUDSON - ESSEX AUTOMOBILES I -0--lug.. .g..q..g..Q..g..p..g-.quQ..q..g..g..Q..g..q..g..g..g..g..g.-Q.-g-.p.g..g.-Q..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g g.....g-.g..g.. .9 E GBT RBHDY FOR THE NEW YEHK! 'CALL A FAMILY COUNCIL--ON SAVINGS Impress upon the members of your family that savings means independence. Set aside -something every Week for the future. -We Will help you save liy paying you 4075 interest on your savings, com- II pounded semi-annually. -You are invited to come and usessour service. x bl is Safety Cozwtes Iirowxgtnesrmx FROST NATIONAL iYBA'NK OF SAN ANTONIO I . Q-Q.-Q..Q..g..g-4.4.4guy.-Q-.g..g..g..g..g.. .pq..Qug.-...Q..Qug.-Q-.g..g..g..g..g-.g..g.qng.. Page One Hundred Twenty-four .f --mf- ggi-Jq,.gLx..,u,,,',., 1.,,V,:..'I ,. - h . 4 'N J N Xf fl Q' 1, I V Wal.. ,,..,.,...,.,,, -,,L .,iJ..u,u IHIIWI. Illlllllllllmwgmnwsl N 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 3 ! 1 1 1 1 i f l egs- - S , .V - I ,MA S galil!! ll ' :ff 113 .1 .. 1 ' 1 5 lf? 6 A L A 'fff 'H-5 Qf ' i : A ' A ii? . llllllll0 f f 11,1 f 1 , , ll Il A Ill nm ' ' ' ' , , , WWW, B O R D E R A FOXTONE PICTURES MADE ONLY BY FOX KODAKS LOANED AFREE F XS 4 OWNER X7 zo9 1 .ALAMO PLAZA Qngugf- ugnguq FOR BOOKS POYVERS BOOKSTORE 3 507 E. HOUSTON ST0 Cr. 1336 2 ' x SAN ANTONIO, . A ,VX TEXAS .JOHN F. -FENTIMANATRLJNK Salesroom Mzmufacturing Dept. A OVAA V g 1n 321 ALAMO PLAZA 501 NORTH CHERRY SAT, -QL Phone Grockett 6066 11110116 O1'0cker.6 5158 'QTS ' TRUNKS AND TRAVELING BAGS S Repairing 01, Spercialty Som Antomo, Texxas ! .-Q-.Qugug--Q.-Q-.5ngng-.Q. gugngu Q--Q 0310--Ovlvvb-'CHO--I--0-'C-'O-'I'-ef-9 Page One Hundred Twenty-five X -gk.-5,15-QS:-5 F' ,,,,,,lg-Z355114652' 1 IIlW.w111lll1mu.... H - M-1 U U -ll ' 'f Ng E -.',,,, -. 4, - l I - -QQ 11111111111 111111 IIHIII 1011 f all 1 ,5 tA . f , f Wy W'MW -' ' f A ,f ff fl WlllllIIIHIJIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIJIIHIII 3 - rw A I H Q 3 Sw N my P QI NAAQS 7 M, AANS A Q T li Eff! cjadgzzaffig Ei A A ' Ofj 07' S 'V l 224 BROADVVA5f' ' A 5' SAN ANToN1o.TExAs Y PAL.MER'S DRUG STORE Phone Wooodlawn 330 SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS PAIGGLY WIGGLY SAVES HOUSEWIVES MANY DOLLARS , PIGGLY WIGGLY SAN AN'T0N10 CO. POHddT ty I wi W:T'mg IlIIIllIllIIfIl NMI , ,.. A I if ,I I1ll!!I I IH , , .ss Al . , , .ri I f I f ..g..g..g--9.-Q-.g..Qu0.4ug.-lug.-guy..g..g..g..g..g..g..Q..gug.-Q-.g..g..g..g.............,.,..,,',,.,,.,,.,,. .. Q.. on. 0 . . . . ...... .......... WILBERT 84 PELPHREYJNC. Funeral Directors INSTANT AMBULANGE sERvlcE CROCKETT 2323 714 BROADWAY .g..g..g..g.....g..g.-9..gngugng.-g..q..g..g..g..g..gng..5..g..g..Q-.g..g..g..g..g..g..g..q..g..g..g..g..Q-.5.4-....g..g..'......... WHEN YOU HAVE FINISHED AT T. M. I. YOU WILL BE QUALIFIED TO' TAKE A COMPLETE BUSINESS ADMINISTRA- TION COURSE AT DRAUGHfO'N'S UNDER CERTIFIED ACCOUNTANTS WHO HOLD I UNIVERSITY DEGREES. SEND FOR FREE LITERATURE. ' X V Xxx 'f ffx QW! - , j Q A ' f SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS , 211 NORTH ALAMO CROCKETT 5858 CONGRATULATIOLNS To The 1928 GRADUATING CLASS Best-Wishes To The INSTITUTE AND ACADEMY From the man who furnished your milk for seven years from his Registered Jerseys JOHN LEDBETTEF? 9.....gag........g..g..g........g..0... Q..5..g..9..g..9..q..q..g.-9--Q--ona--o--o--0--o--ons--0--of-o--ou0'--o--0--0--0--on Page One Hundred T U I wksvuxmx x'4g'2H S 5'4Wa'59oE? 59 I A .. , ..-- . -. - .. f - V 4 up ,v f 1--1--'r -- raa:+::,1r4v42I'lll pl IT' Lzvrwwsml 31 lg? 0 I -'Q I . -ff ' ,I--ffmffee riwmemlll N lwlllwwkl e:1'15sw'e f f 1 U U . f 11 ll. , 4. 'w i l 'TEL 111111111111llmlllllallfllllla11111llllllfmnlllalllnllllnq Q w estin , A it ll I I f fully ZIIZH Z 0100011111111711101111111 ' 1 'll 11111 f 7 V f f f f ff f WVWW' W PAIIL G-. BAIADWIN 2 907 NORTH FLORES STREET PHONE CROCKETT 1020 5 TIRES - BIIRESTONE - TUBES V OILS, GASOLINE and ACCESSORIES CARS WASHED, POLISHED and GREASED Aeouclelmy Boys, I am still one of you! Come in cmd see me. Q..Q..gn......g..g..g.-...gag..g. ...ng-.Q--lg.-Q..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..3- g..g..Q. g..g..g..g..g..g. FRED HUMMERT CO. WALL PAPER, COMPLETE LINE DU PONT PAINTS, VARNISHES AND ENAMELS ' ART MATERIALS AND PICTURE FRAMING, DU POINT BRUSH DUCO FRED HUMMERT CO. 517 EAST HOUSTON STREET 2 Q-.g..Q..g..Q..g.-Qngng..Q.-Qngug.-QuQ.4.-Qng.-gugngnqug..q..Q-.png-.g..g..gugng..g..g..g..g..g.3..g..g..g..g..g..g..g..q..g..q..g guy. Q .g....... 5 C , . Crockett 611 Crockett 692 We believe in helping local dealers - - - - - FERD, STAFFEL ENGRAVING co. t 1 L , SCHOOL AND MONOGRAM THE FEED AND SEED MAN' : STATIONERY Manufa,cture'rs of I CiI'lIillg 02lfl'dSTI'FilV0l'S and Dealer in Tallcys, Etc. POULTRY SUPPLIES 222 Losoya. Street , 321 East Commerce Street CNext door to Palace Theatrel ! 9 i.....g...........g..g-o--o--o--o--0--0--0--0--o--o--0--0--c--e--o--c--0--0--Q.. .............,........ ..... ..,..... .,...... ,.....,.. Page One Hundred Twenty-eiglzt I ug ' , o E u t N -- .ln I Illllllllh gleam-eklf -elmnlu m -R .nllllllllllllllll 1 . .Y ,, H: l iq : q ' ! , 111111 11111 lllldlllf f ,ll I I. , , I, fx., .W F F f m f ff f, A ,, 11101011111111n11110111111111111111111111111111111 - - . ' f f 1 '0111y1y1,1,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Une cf gmc most fsegiizfshaizefhi graduation from W ollege. Img There is no better Way of recording this event than by publishing an Annual. W t X f Successful Annuals are l ,,V r f X fl K the result of right or- X fl b Samzation. n 4 W F, 3 It 'Service Annual Build- UU ll l l 1 'H 'i 1 H int sth 2 i 7 18193-SPO e 1 fp r3':-- .1'1 2 21 1 f successful Way for you. Z l xl Write today for E I W l 'smiiicr ENGRAWNG QUMDJXNY HLLUSTRATORS Q URIQNATQRS G DESIGNERS DRINTIENG PLATES IN UNE GDR MORE GUIDES ua AVENUE c ga s-Wm sais ANTUNM .ilu Y Y Y 111- , Y Hlll s 'K' 'B ti- W W' M' ' llllllllllllll l A . ., .. ,.... . .. 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