Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA)

 - Class of 1923

Page 1 of 166

 

Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 166 of the 1923 volume:

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Y - H 1 , - y f K , xx Nx lags I D .X 'Y lg v ' .XJ L , xg L 'A F' Y: XJ BODY D S X XS l CAI-ll .X ' Q ' 4. , V ,, 53' ',,'f f l.T'24i?1fa xx Q kfhf-1-fQV'j'1'i?5 '!f, , ' ff Kaul-9 uhh -' . fda . n filly, f1 5 fM5f5'f?J5'f 92+ K lf, ' ' f1,.'97?:q:lrb fb ,V Xi KV1 rf' 7? ,su Xp M! .J Q Ll' V' 16 I-II MONICA G1-1 s CHOOL Q6 Q9 1- xyg 's vL 4 . ' W if gi' 4 .Q 4 1 132557K ,Q Q43 Kg, E Q! xl x Q . AK ws., i Q qu., if ' i wa ifgwxi N 1522 I9 ' 5' wi 44-xi 1545 . ' D syn ' - P. -7 uf nk, E 522' 212 Y aw ' 1 ,L ,,.,. , 3 j 3. .fe .Z-X sf 'f.g-1. .15 '.' n tg l I . . Ji wg 5' - fa-X 1 eff ' 'jgn Tx J mg! I U , ' .y f Iii: L ..?, , ' .. : s:, r' gi' v.1?'i'2 35. 3 .uh 1 U . . I A.-: f mv - . -. ,.,. .- .5 ',- '. 4 0' . Q ' A 0 the PARENTS and GUARDIANS of The sludenls of Sanlaa Monica High School X who have conlribuled Q5 so much to the wel- fare of the School Q 'W lhrouggh the ir friend- ly inleresl and allil ude, ,,, ro ,A and who have Qyeally aided the elforls of lhose QQ? Wishing lo uphold lhe honor andhiood name A V of lhe Insli iomlheg NAUTI LU3 of 1925 is he rely dedicaled by THE, SENIOR CLASS 1 XX F. BJXIKN lIl'ilII'iflIll MISS H'l'lH'Il. Nl. KOBINSUN l'il'f I,l'illl'iIJlll 'l'i1lv Page Ds-dim-atimm - lJt'p2iI'lIllt'IllS of School Fill'lllly - - - l'klito1'iul Thr Staff - - S. M. Hi. Good Bye' Seniors - - Class Pl'0llllf'l'y Winter Class - Senior H Class Juniors - S0pll0lll0I'C'S Fl't'SllIlll'l1 Organizations Drama - Debate- - Socivly - Ye' Cale-nflur - The SilIll0lll - Athletics Girls' Atlilvtivs Art - - ,Ioslws - Advertising Contents 0 rl 5 8 9 13 15 16 17 4.3 -15 -1-9 5l 57 63 69 P3 In 91 95 oo 102 10:1 1241 l26 127 I 213 l'11g1 be in 1 Nfl! Departments of School Agl'im'ult11l'fx :Kris and Crafts CUIlllllt'l'l't' lfnglish Hislory Hmmm El'0ll0lllit'5 Lilllgllilge Nllilllllill Arts wIlllllPlIliili1'S IVIllSil' Sm-if-114-0 Faculty HORACE MICHIE REBOK A. B.. Otterbein University. Superintendent of Schools. WILLIAM FLOYD BARNUM B. S.. University of California. Principal. 1916. ETHEL MARGARET ROBINSON A. B.. Leland Stanford Junior University. Vice-Principal. 1915. HELEN M. BATCHELLER M. A.. University of Southern California. A. B.. Leland Stanford ,lunior University. lnstructor in Commercial Subjects. 1920. MARIE B. BEAUDRY A. B.. University of Southern California. lnstrnctor in French. 1920. FAVOLA A. BRATTON A. B.. Oxford College. Graduate Student. Uni- versity of Californio. Head. Department of English. 1908. MARY KATHRYN CARROLL A. B.. Central College. Fayette. Missouri. Graduate. Student, University of Southern California. Instructor in Physical Training. 1919. LAURA MARION CARVER A. B.. Leland Stanford .lunior University. lnstruclor in Spanish. 1900. I A LTER HAROLD CLAFLIN A. B.. Ph. D.. Harvard University. Heutl. Department of History. 1911. CHARLOTTE FRANCES CORNER A. B.. A.Nl.. l niversity of Missouri. Instructor in Latin and History. 1910. RHEA OLGA FEA THERSTON Posse Gymnasium. Boston. Methodist llospital. Indianapolis. liniversity of California Sum- mer School. lnstructor in Hygiene and Physical Education. 1916. WILLIAM PHILIP FETHEROLF A. B.. Muhlenburg College. A.M.. Princeton University. Head. Department of Science. 1908. ARTHUR EDWARD GRIPP lnstructor of School Orchestra. 1911. LILLIAN GRUBE Graduate. The Stout Institute. INEZ KATHERINE GROSFIELII Student. Leland Stanford ,lunior University. Instructor in Commercial Department, 1921. CAROLINE LUCY IUDD Ph.B., University of Chicago. lnstructor in Commercial Branches and His- tory. 1912. NOAH D. KNUPP M.Di.. Iowa State Normal School. A.B.. M.A.. University of lowa. lnstructor in Biology and Botany. 1912. HELEN A. LACKEY A. B.. University of Southern California. instructor in Spanish. 1920. LAURA E. LIDDLE A. B.. University of lndiana. Head. Department of Mathematics. 1910. FLORENCE LOUNSBURY A. B.. University of Southern California. nlstructor in Biology and Chemistry. 1921. FLORENCE HAZEL MACLOSKEY Student. University of Southern California. Foromerly of Los Angeles Library. Assistant Librarian, 1921. MARY LAURA MCKINLEY Student, Ohau College. Hawaii. Graduate. Honolulu Normal School. Librarian. 1917. PEARL I. MALSFAEY A. A. G. O.. Columbia University. lnstructor in Music. 1921. WILLIAM LESLEY IWASOIV Graduate. Adams Academyg Special Student Cornell University and Columbia University. Instructor in Commercial Branches. 1910. SHELLEY B. MILLER Smith Hughes Graduate. lnstructor in Printing. 1918. OLIVE C. A. B.. Syracuse University: Graduate Student. University of Wisconsin. lnstructor in Dramatics. Expression. 1920. MORRIS EFFIE MORSE A. B.. Hanover College. lnstructor in Nlatbematics. 1912. I1uy1t'.Yim' 1. . . . 4 ,f . X v X2 QM HENRY NEWHOUSE A. B., University of Nebraska. Instructor in English and Algebra. 1920. CAROLINE A. PIERSON A. B.. Syracuse University. Instructor in English, 1920. OLIVE POWERS Graduate. Sherwood School of Music, 1921. Instructor in Piano. MARIANNA READ A. B.. University of Pennsylvania. Instructor in Physiology. IOSEPHINE SEAMAN ROBERTS Student. University of California: Member of New York and San Francisco Art Leagues. Instructor in Art. 1920. ROBERT B. RODGERS B. S.. University of Illinois. Head, Department of Mechanic Arts, 1912. ALICE ROGERS Head, Music Department, 1921. GEORGE LAWRENCE SCHREIBER Medallist, Ecole des Beaux Arts. Head, Department of Art, 1912. NATHAN E. SHUTT A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University. Instructor in Chemistry and Agriculture. 1913. VINCENT W. SHUTT Graduate Pomona College. Instructor in Athletics. CARRIE BELLE SMITH Ph.B., Western Reserve University. A. M., University of California. Instructor in Commercial Branches and His- tory, 1916. PHILIP HADLEY STEVENS A. B.. Grinnell College. Graduate Student, University of Chicago. Instructor in English, 1915. GEORGE WASHINGTON STEWART Graduate, Stout Institute. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing. MARY VIRGINIA STORY Graduate. Occidental College. Student, Los Anglees and Santa Barbara State Normal Schools. Instructor in Home Economics, 1917. CHARLOTTE B. SUITS A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University. Instructor in English, 1912. AUGUST P. VEENKER A. B.. Hope College and University of Chicago. Head, Department of Physical Education, 1921. LILA M. WALKER Graduate. Sherwood School of Music. Instructor in Music, 1920. VERONA MATILDA WEGERER A. B.. Colorado Teachers College. Student, University of California. Instructor in English, 1921. RUBY BEATRICE WEIGLE A. B., Leland Stanford Junior University. Instructor in Mathematics and Latin, 1916. MARIE REARDON MATZINGER A. B., University of Michigan. M. A., Leland Stanfor Junior University, Instructor in English, 1922. GRACE E. ELLIS A. B., University of California. M.A., University of California. Instructor in Dramatics, 1922. MARGARET ANN KEEN A. B., University of Southern California. Instructor in Mathematics, 1922. EVELYN KINDER A. B., University of California. A.M.. University of California. College of Oratory. Instructor in English, 1922. JESSICA C. HAZZARD A.B., University if California. Instructor in Institutional Manamegent. 1922. FRANK E. LORD B.A., York College. Life State Diploma. State Board of Idaho. Head, Commercial Department, 1922. EDWARD I. LAURENSON B. S., Utah Agricultural College. Annapolis Certificate of Graduation. Instructor in Physical Training. E. G. BEAUCHAMP , A. P., Ohio University. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing, 1922. FRED M. MITCHELL Student, University of Maine ami Columbia University. Instructor in Commercial Subjects. 1922. DORIS MOON A. B., State Normal School. Instructor in Music. MADELINE DAVIDSON A. B., University of Southern California. Instructor in Civics. FRED MCDONALD ' A.B., Southern Branch, University of Cali- fornia. Instructor in Mechanical Drawing. MARTHA B. PERSONS A. B., University of California. Instructor in Physical Training. Pagv Elven: 'NUICNIAN 'l'. SMITH llurmging lfrlilnr V Hill W. SI'Al'f'lll IfllSflll'.YS xuIIVlllH4'l Editorial Editing a school annual takes more time and more work than many people realize. If the hook is a success, praise falls upon many. But if it is a failure, it is always the editor's fault. This year, more time than usual has been given to working on the Nautilus. The staff has worked hard, and at all times has been willing to do anything to help progress on the book. There are persons who. unnamed here, contributed in many rways to the Nautilus. These persons the staff wishes to thank ta this time, for without them the Nautilus could not have been published. The stall sincerely hopes that this Nautilus is a credit to Santa Monica High School.---The Editor. Faculty Advisers 'Xlli 'Xlll.l,l'Ili MRS. Ii0Bl'1Ii'I'S MR. S'I XI Z E- -1. 'L E- 'I 7 NORMAN T. Nautilis Staff SMITH - ALFRED W. SPAETH - RIRS. ROBERTS ALICE BALISH, AGN AMADA FUENTES WINNIFRED PRIDAY ROBERT REEP, AI.w PAULINE HUME DORIS PALMER - BENJAMIN HAR!-I OSCAR SATTINGER WESTON KIRRIIAM MELZAR LINDSEY HARLAND HENNESSY ACRERIIIAN BRIGGS FACULTY ADVISERS MR. NIILLER ASSOCIATE EDITORS ES ALDRICII - - - YN RUSSELL - Managing Editor - Business Manager MR. STEVENS - - Society Organizations - Debating - lashes - Classes Girls' Athletics - Dramatics - Calendar - Faculty Art Editor - Staff Photographer - - Assistant Manager STAFF ARTISTS JEAN BERENTSEN, LESTER KLEIN, LUCY LEACH, MARION ENRIQUEZ WILNA MORGAN, LUCILLE PERKINS Page Fifteen S. M. Hi Good-Bye lfonrl lu-urls are lwnling yxilh rvgrf-I: S. Nl. Hi. wr' IIPYFI' shall forge-l. 'l'hos0 happy lllPHl0l'lPS lingvr still. We' Cilllql f-flzuff' thmn if wc- will. S. M. Hi. we arv going. Though wc' must part. Nlvinorivs are growing Dear lo vavh lwurt. ln halllvs glorious. If you hut try, Youill ho victorious. S. M. Hi. good-hyv. Swiftly ilu' yvurs arf' rolling on. Many il happy' day shall dawn. May vw-ry' yvar luring huppinf-ss. May you in pvave' and joy progrc-ss. Now with drop sorrow We ll2lVf' to go. Hoping your morrow No grim-f shall know. May joy and sunshine Brighton your sky. Think of us sonu' linux S. M. Hi. good-hyv. I 'inn' Siuufwvri SENIOFLS' .hhhn .9c'c'1'r'l11r V- 7'l'r'11sl1l'z'l' l'rf'si1l011l - l'1'r'1'-1'rv.9irlr'11l SPI'ff'f!lf-Y-TH'flSllI'f'l' Rf'l1fl'Sf'lIIlIfi1'f' l,fl'.NI.II1'II1 lviwf-l'1'f'.vicfr'l1I SUI'l'f'llll',Y-TITIISIII'l'I' Rl'llI'l'Sl'II 11111. 111' l'r'1'si1lr'l11 - I vfl'1'-l'fl'Sfl1ClIf St'FI'l'lll111'-Tl'!'1ISll rw' Nf'pl'4'.w11 fllfl' vc' I,l'l'Xl-1ll'lIf - . l'I.l'l'-I,ff'Sil1f'I1l Awmtn Smmm RIWIQTON CII,I.lIAM Rm HAnl'r1l: NOIHNIAN Smrru XX'Al,'1'+:l: Iioxxm Ach:-ZRMAN Bnuzfp Nlill, IJl'm:kr:l,s P41114 I mlziwn Seniors 1923 l923 l922 1921 1920 l,P1T'l'liRNI PIN - Guunxrik 'l',-num: DORIS I'Al.xn:n Nl MUQARET N .u.l.A1' ALFRED Sxmmo - NORMAN Sxlrrn Anml-Ln Smmm Zum Hxxsox A-X:,Fm:n Smmm - DMN l'mw: - .hw Klaus - Nlmfmi Hmronlm - Ilmx I'mw: :Xl.HlCRT Kuilx Xmm H.-xxsox - Ilrz.-xxI'ov+1 .IOSI-IPII FISIIICR lim Fox XXVll.lll'R CRM' IJ-IE HAMLIN l,Am:m4:r: Huzmis .lmzu XY'r:s'1'sm1'11 limvum WIIITLI-tx Activities W11.1.1AM A111soTT B11.1. Wim 1Ix111:s'? SIIII lf1'r1111r1li1111 l 1111111 lligli S1'l111ul 1l1: JIIIIIDUI' llflj' l!lllllll'1'illl' 131: Stn- ll1'lIf I1'111l,1' lIN'Nixl1'Ilf 141 : li11ys' l,1'11g111' l 11111l1'1'ill1' 141. lm Mm NALIAN1' Y111' MA111: M11 F111up1:'1' 'ro Cin' TI11' Fire' l'1'i111'v 111: Spruzisli lllIll1'l'l1 I-ll Z11r11q11c'!11 121: lliflll-YSi1l 131: .IIIIIIIUF lluy 1'11111l1'1'ill1' 131: Ii11111ilm,1 l'l1l,1'1'1'x 141: l.illi1111 ill ilu' l.'h11r111 Swlmul 1-I-1. Ml-:1.zA11 l.1N11s11x-MEI. Y11l'I1 B11 S1 111'111s1111 H1111 5111111111 in Zf1r11q111'111 121: Ulm' lfluiz 121: ltllllllflli' 121: Sllllllflll Small 131: llllllllll ill You fV1'1'1'r C1111 Tvll 131: Ilfllllfl-llg 13-41: junior' ll11.1' l'11111l1'11ill1' 131: li1'p1'1'x1'11t11li1'1' tu Revl- l111111's Ill'l',lllIIllfi1PlI f.'lIllfl'Nf 131: M111- svlm ill Thr' Pipvr 141: M111111,u1'1' 111 llr11111r1li1's 141: l,ft'Siflt'lIl of M1111- rlgcrx' l.'l11l1 141: E.x'v1'11li1'1' 111111111 1-11: .71Illl'l1'-1'-.Y films! ill The' l.'lIl'i5lllllIX l.'111'11l 141: l'ir'1'-l'r1'.vi1l1'11I of l1'11111il111,x l,lll,1'l'l'S 141: Pri-si1l1'11t of 'l'l111n1l11111'l.' 141: N!lI1l1'lIlN 511111 1-11: Ii11,1'x' l.1'11g111' l'r1111le'1'ill1' 1-113 flI'lll0I'i1'!Il C111111-vl 141. AMADA I l'1:x'1'1:s-'l'oNx' 1IA1cx11ax l'i1'1'-l'1'1'si1l1'11I of llirlx' .-iIl1l1'ti1' Club 131: Twinis .11lIII!I!L'l'f 131: TI'I1f'l1' 12-3-41: Girls' l,l'lIgll1' lf1111111'il 13-41: Rl'fIlil'.Yt'Illlllil'C' In Spring 111111 Fall Cirlx' l,1'1lg111' C11111'1'11li1111 13--41: Twi- nix 13-41: l1'11xlr1'll111Il 12-3141: l.'lltIfl'- 1111111 nf C1111111'il 141: I1',X'1'1'IIlil1l' lioarrl 141 :Cirlf l,1'11g111' l,l'f'Xit1t'IlI 141 I NIllllilll.K 511111 141. 11111111 N 1:11 'I',n'1.o11-SON N 1 1 Gu Awm. 1111115 W'1's1 Scnttlv High Srlmol 111: fixxis - 11111 xfllllelir' M111111ge'r 121: .4!l1l1'Ii1' N, 4. kki1115,2v41f311fff ,il 17 1 F Ag' .J '11 111 ' XQ- :,:: . .. sf 4.1 1 , 1 I 1 M111111g1'r 3 : E.l'l'l'llfil'I.' lftlflfll 131: lflusx l'1'1'xi1l1'11l 141. 1,5311 Q, 1 51' 'i 'Q 11 I Z5 -al 111111K NiH1'l1'1'Il If 1 ut' 'lirvetttv KATHERINE WIDENER Class of '21 NORMAN SMITH-NIONK Moswmo. Nous AND Nlcur Midget Handball 111: Midget Football 111g Baseball 12-31: Football 12-3-41: Samohi Staff 12-3-41: Class President 131g Editor of Samohi 13-413 Letter- men's Club 12-3-41: Inter-rlass Traelf 12-3-413 Junior Vaudeville 1313 Dele- gate to the Assoriated Press Conven- tion 14-1g Editor of Nautilus 1413 Ser- retary-Treasurer of the Boys' League 141: Lettermenfs Club Counril 141. Aum-:s A1.DRx1:H-SIAM BLUE The Fire Prinee 1112 Baslfetball 11-2-3-4-1g Traelf 11-221g Costume Mis- tress for Pinafore 1313 Fashion Shou' 13-413 Thumbtaelf 13-413 Costume Mistress for The Piper 141: Counril 141g Costume Mistress for Vaudeeille 141: Wardrobe Mistress 141: Samohi Staff 141: Nautilus Sta-H 141. ALFRED SPA1-:TH-AL The Flatterer Orehestra 111: Midget Football 1221: Assoeiated Editor of Samohi 131: Sa- rnohi Staff 12-3-41g Kurt in The Piper 141: Tim in The Charm Srhool 141: The Undertaker in The Christmas Carol 141g Business Manager of Sa- muhi 141g Managefs Club 141g Es- eeutiue Board 1413 Business Manager for Nautilus 1413 Chemistry Club 141g Delegate to the Assoeiated Press Con- vention 1415 Inter-rlass Traelf 13-413 Commercial Club 131g Football 141. MARGARET Coovsn-Sco'r'rY Cmizvwrz Fon You Glee Club 11-2-413 The Fire Prinre 1113 Freneh Club 13-41: Tllllllllllllflf 1313 Commerrial Club 1413 Isle nl Capri 141g lfrminie 141. A '1 l'1l.IN ANlxrilzsoxf-l'r:m:x' l'n-:um Du-:An 3 X f.'13rr1rm'fr'i11l lflulr 123 1 Ilnmv Ern- rmnzirx lflul: 443: Tlu- lflmrnz Svlmnl I4-3: l.iIf'rury Club 443. Josmfu FISIIFCR-JO!-f Nunum l.lr:n .1li4lg:z'l lflISlft'fIIllll 3 1 3 : Mirlgvt Ilan'- brlll I 1 3 1 Mizlgvt lsllllfllllll 433 1 Brlsw bali 133 1 lhrtulzy Club H33 1 l,v11vr- lIll'll.N lflub 133 1 1Ull1ll1'll11ltff'.S Club H-3: Clllillll-I1 of lflIS4'blIlI 4431 Prop- rrlx' .'llum1gf'r for Thr CIIIIVIII Sr'lmo.' l 4 3 . H A'r'm: Coz.ua1' HAT l3ox r HIKING XII-I Posnzs Mesa I-'ninn High Srlmnl. Arizona tl-23: Ulm, Club 4331 CUNIlIIt'I'I'illl lflub 1331 Pillllfllll' 133. lh1ssm,1.Ru1s1NsoN 'l'u:m.n-1 Nh: l.c'u'ix and fflrzrlf High Srhonl. Spu- kanv. HUIYSIIUIQIIIII Ill: l,l'0llllIft'f for f.vllII'l'lll'f' 1331 .1llIfl1t'IIlllli1'S Club 3-1331 Ruffin Club 143. GIAIDYS S1101-:MAM:lc GAG l'r's l'r 'ru You The' Fire' l'rinr'v 4133 Chorus 1133 SIIIHHIII' 5111.0 133 1 l.vUIl1I7H'I'l'ilIl fflulr , . :gf 4 .5-4 . - fm Q f as - , X. ,. 1 , XNMQA va .L if 4- ,N YN W' +,:1,1.,-. L +., 4 N yv Y'1au'l1ly-nun' V+ xi S Ad xx 1 .1-1' K' P 7l- N 1' WE' B . 5 Ja I, , A 5 .1 1 Q MM uv- ' sv 1 T , '11 Q ' Q-Q. Aljlx' lh'4'IIfj'-f'Ix'l' I :Tow flll.I,lI ur H1'r:'r I NI-xx H13 tluxr-. lfm: x lA41v,. Luv: 'l'mla l'vri1'n in ZIIHIIIIIUHI 41111 Hll.wL'z'IfrrlH 43--111 lfllllfllilll 1141: S:'1'l'4'I1llx4l'1m'.x- urrv' nj l,l'f1l'I'l71l'VI.N Iflulr 1-11: l.lu'm- ixlrr lflnln 1111: 1IrlIln'n1uIim lflnl, 1-ll Moom - Nloom' ,ll sl' BI-IRIS!-1 You 'nk Yen Iflmrus 411: Tin' lfirf' l'fim-1' ' I 1 1 lH1Illvl'Nill 131: Harm' l',1l'11H1?IlliI'.i Llul: 1-112 .'11u.1' l 1'sI1'1'11f 111. r:N.mx11x Huzmzla Ii1'n Au, Bs Nlul-gl.:-' l1IIIfll'l'illf' 4211 THIVL' if-3-112 f.4'l- 1l'l'IIIl'VIQ.i fflulz 413-11. Xl,l4:r:l3,x1.lsu -Sllorwx' .ll wr A Blu-1-un Ulf llxwm PHIIIIIIUII .'tl'!Illl'l!I1. llnrmlnln 1121: l'vV'4'Ilf'l1 Club 131 3 .fllhlrlir fflllll 13--11 1 film' fflulr 13--1-1: -Sll'illIIIlfH,i! 114-111: l,I'lIf!Il'il'll! lffulz 1-1-1: lxle' uf Lvllllll I-11: lfrminir' 141: Ht'f1!Ilc' 411: Nun- tilus Stuff 1-11: Girls' Hll lmflflvl' 441: Thr' ffflffsllllllx lfuml 1-ll. wvIl,Bl'Il Cr:,xl-'- Glu xl-'I-'ls I XI III.fX'I'fvll41l1xlXN lu YI Is Su llxlm To FINI1 lffrflllhf III 1211 Tl1lr',l.' 4-111 .1l1lIf11'- Illlllirx lflul: 111: l,ilt'l'lIl1 lflulz 111. l',1Ul.IN+: Hum:--Bsczm' 5 Sum Clee Club 1133 Urvhestra 11-23: Par- sons lligh Sehool. Kansas 1233 Maid anrl Pl'0lIIplt'l' in You Never Can Tell 133: IilllIll'lHM' Players 13-433 Commer- eial Club 143: Mrs. Fezziuig in The Christmas Carol 143 1 Home Erononzies Club 143: Martirfs Wife in The Piper 143 Sally in The Charm Sehool 1431 Samohi Siaff 143: Nautilus Sraff 143. N'1m:1NlA XVRIGIIT-IRISH Mx Wu,n lmsu Rosa Trarlf 12-3-431 The Piper 143: Music Club 143: Commereial Club 143 1 Man- ager of Los! and Found 143: Counril 14-3. 4 LEROY ICNOCII Class of '2-1 Nlfuuow 1N'l11.l.r:R-Clluism' I Wm: l Krwzw My Aunt From California 123: Span- ish Daneer in Zaraqueta 1233 Dolly in You Never Can Tell 133: Goddess of Rainbow in Dionysia 133g Junior Vaudez-ille 1333 Bamibox Players 13443: President of Music' Club 1433 lflise in The Charm School 143. Vmoxwm HAKDINC-GINNY 'l'lw1.x French Club 11-2-433 Palisafles Srhool 133: Samohi S1110 1433 h'an4ll:o.x' Play- ers 143: Literary Club 143. ge T-zvmly-I QLL, wr u' 31. V 1 1 .1 ,, , , ,L N ,MW L ,. qw., Xp ., 311' ,liwlll-x'-fnzrr 15, if 1 1 LEE HAMLIN-BOSS HAH.. IIAH.. Tllli G.Avg's ALI. lhzmz I-iff'-l,l'l'.Yifl1'lll nf Boys' I.t'!I,L'lll' 1313 Football 13-41: Foutlmll lfapluin 141: Pl't'Slllf'lIl of Bnyx' l.l'fl,YIlt' 141: J,1'Il1'1'- l7ll'll.S Club 141: l4llt'I'!ll'.Y f.'ll1l1 111. VINIAN H.-um Swrzl-11' .un Low Hunllnglnn l'11rl.' lliglz Srlmnl 1313 lllllsfr' lflul: 141: llomf' IfI'1!llllII1ll'S fflulr 141: Lilzrury fflulz 141: I.lll'l'I1l'-1' Iflula 141. Lrzwls STUHIN1LTONv'STUBl3Y Smnznum Sruuz Nh Gu. Lax .4ngc'lc'.w Higll Srlmul 111: .1li1lgr'I I-'fmzlmll 141. Com MARSH-Bunm' Mx' Bunn f,v0ll1f?ll'fl'fIll Clulz 121: Clow Club 121. HOWARD HI-ixxrgssx'-Hcnvln' Now I Kxow ffilfllll-1' lflulz 131: lnle'4li1'1nl'l1n1 141: llaxebrlll 141: .1IfIfht'IIIIIfif'X Clul: 141: ,4SSlSlfIIIf l'rnp1'1'ly 11,1111 fur T110 Cllllflll Sflmol 141. DOROTIIEA SMITH-DOTTY I Ama' Gm' No Tim: 'ro Hur: 'rm-1 Burris Chorus 111: The Fire Prinee 1111 Gloria in You Never Can Tell 131: l'lll't'-Pfl'Slllt'l1l of A. S. B. 141g Exeeu- tire Iloartl 141: Veronilra in The Piper 141 g Home Eeonomies Club 141 g Banil- box Players 14 1 . Mmm ARET N ALLAT-NIARCE Mun: Hrmlm ri Eastern High Sehool, Detroit, Michigan 11-21: Seeretary-Treasurer of Botany Club 131g llionysia 1315 Class Sevre- tury-Treasurer 141g Viee-Prexident of Frerleh Club 141: Ethel in The Charm Si-hool 141. JACK Wi:s'rsM1T11--SPARm' l A1N'1' Nononfs DARLING Debate 131: Music' Club 131g Clee Club 1313 Football 1413 Baseball 1413 Ilaskelball 141: Chemixtry Club 1415 Radio Club 141g Mathematirs Club 1413 Letternzerfs Club 141g Literary Club 141. WILMA CARR-Blu, l.oNt:soMr: Bwus Chorus 11 1 1 The Fire Prince 111 g Urchestra 121 g Botany Club 131 3 Musif' Club 13-41: The Piper 141: The Christmas Carol 141: The Isle of Capri 1413 Erminie 1413 Clee Club 141. Mumuzn E. WILSON-Mm WIONIH-IRI-'UI. PAL Comnzereial Club 12-3-41: Music Club 14-1. 4 X .X f 44 .J A, J ,NJ .TLA an Page Tzwrtty-ji-:'e I N I Page T'wI'1Ity-si,1' WILLIAM MAWBY-RED Tlzafs N i re HELEN FULLER PM JUST A LITTLE BIT OI.n FASIIIONED Commereial Club H-ll: llome Eru- nnmies Club K4-T. LYLE ADDISON So In EW II ER E Pasadena High Svluml 42-31: Lilerury Club f4'l. LILLIAN RUTAN-LILL BRIGHT EYES Quiney High Svhool, lullSSlll'llll5t'llS 11? : Home Economics 14i. ALFRED SIMBRO-AL MY CAI.. SIIE HAs Smzu WoNInI:nI'IIL WAYS Baseball fl-2-3-413 Letlernzerfs Club fl-2-3-4-lg Captain of Baseball 13-4-bg Football 43-4-bg Class Representative I3-4-bg President of LPHt'fIllt'Il,S Club 4413 Vice-President of Boys' League 44l: Class Vive-Presirlent 133. X xNNi:l.lA lil..-xN4:l1lfIr:l.n -X AN lfuluzm' Nha Nur lfinnvr of Frvslunun Ilvrlmnriliv-n finlllvxl 1 I I 1 Lihrrzry lflulr 121 : Fl'l'Ill'!l lfluiz HSP: Milxii- fflnh ill: The' f.,IlIl'Ill Srlnml 1,1 P. ji-zum, l'lr:a.1m.w 4lr:n .Xxx 'l'lw':. Au Din. ANXWVIIICIRIC lflmrus l2l: Thi' Fire' l'rim'0 123: Sr:- mnhi Slflff HV: .Virlgvl Ffltllilllil 14-P. M Xl nr: HAm'0nn iM Al'DII-I Ihr Mu hu-pn Illixx mf NI:-if fflrzxs Se'1'r4'!1ll'x-Tl'4'1Ix11l'4'l' IZIQ llin- lILYilI IRI: ,JI't'SiI,1'Vli nf Hmm' Hro- rmmirs fflnh UH: St't'l't'illl'j' of 91. S. lf, 445: h.',u'r'l1li1'f' lfmzrzl 1-li. UsmlaS.'x'l l'lx1:i:l: Iioxmla Umm NIGIIT. I.:Kllll'15 Smut High Srhnnl. Tnlwln. Uhin ll-ZZ-Iii: Nautilus Slujf lfliiz fiUIIlIll1'I'- fini l.'i11I1 1-1-I: lfllllliiltlj' l'irIye'l'.s ill: livhutf' 1-li: llvurgi' in Thi' lfhnrm Swlmnl l4P. Li.x1'1i: HAsM:l.l. Own l,l'l liI.I-I Lim, lIUllj'Il'HlHl High S1-lmul Ill: Um' filllll Ifrmn I.vfllif0I'IIl'll 125: Girls' .l.z'r1g1u' ffuiuzvil HKD: Sunmhi Stufl HSI: Thi- Q,lIt'Sf of H!lll1?1.lIt'X.i t3I : llinnyxirl 133 1 . Thi' lflmrm Svlmnl 1-li: Gills' Imrigm' Se'1'n'lrllw' 143: l'r'z'xi1ie'nl of l,ihr'11rV lfluh 1-U. imc Tzvi-fzfx'-.vm'c1z .ii Oligon- uiiiuqgv- -U1 1 1 'Ca- 'C' Page Tnwzly-riylzt I If 4. ' ,1' CHARLES JONES THREE 0'1I1.Ocx IN Tm: THORNINC Clee Club llbg lolanthe 123g Cash ,4urlilur 12-3-41. LORRAINE WOEHLER-LOLLY WHY BLUES Richard Ill 12D: Library Club 14bg Home Economies Club 143g Literary Club 143. HARRISON LEWIS--HARRY BE YOURSELF Pinafore 1333 .larobus in The Piper 1454 Fezziwig in The Christmas Carol 14-Pg Robert Clay in The White Lie' 14-Pg Vive-President of Mllsia' Club 14-P. FRANCES WIDICK-FRITZIE CROONING Clee Club 111g Samohi Smff 13.bg French Club 1333 Commercial Club 13-4Pq Muxir Club 14-I. VERNON COTTER WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE? Stage Crew 11M Assistant Electririan 12-313 Handbox Players 14b. JULIA BROWN-JUDY Pooh LITTLE ME Orchestra 11-23g English Music Club 143. HEIIMAN SACHSE-HERMII: I'm CLIMBING MoUN1'AINs Club 1232 Cass Tvchnical High School 11-23. Rosle FRIEND-CIIAT Rosa or' SPAIN C0ll1lIlQ'l'l'illl Club 123g Music Club 143. ACIQEIIMAN BRIGGS-ACKIE You NI-:II-LII CAN Tl-11.1. Fnutball 143: Lettermen's Nautilus Staff 143. IRENI: WELBORNE--II-:E ALI. 0vI:II No1'IIINc Commerrial Club 143g nomics Club 143. Club 143: Home Evo- Pagv T-Iwrzfy-xzim' Pagv Tlzirly JUNIUS lNlUNSON-JPN!-I I Tom You So Freshman Derlamation Contact ill: Christmas Pageant 121: Sl1lIb'l'SfM'llI'lfIII Contest 121g Pomona lhfrlamation Con- test 11-2-31: Manager of llvbate 141: Exerutire Board 141: Vive-Prvsirleflrl of Managers' Club 141: Midget Foot- ball 14-1g Commerrial Club 141: llc!- lvr Citizvnship lfxsay Contast 141: Salutalorian 141. IVIADELINE DODSON-JACKIE WH!-:N SHALL WH lu!-Il-IT Amlx Bryan High Srhool. Dallas, Texas 111: Library Club 1313 Commvrrial Club 1341: Musir Club 141. RALPH MII,1,r:k Class all 124 Aucl-3 JOY MARTIN LAlu:ulNr: Chorus 111: Tlze' Fire' Priurv II1: Urrhvstra 12-31: Girls' Athlvtir' ,Ilan- ager 1413 llaxlrvlball 13-41. CHARLES EMMERSON-CHUCK Burlwu Tm: Ruwzs 1 Ifwlmzlcl IN1-:1.1.11: l'.x rsm- -XX11.1.11: 'N131,1.11: K11111 I 4'111r'e' Hlglr Svlzunl 11-2-lil 1 l'1'1'vi1l1'11l uf lfulurzy 1.11111 4-1-1: HlINA't'fIlllH LU: lfirlx' sflllfvlfr' LVIIIII I-113 Girls' 511-1111- ming 1111111 1-ll. llA1:1,.xx11 llmxrissx lu l1111o1'1.11 lli.vl111'iw11l Pllyfllllf 4 1 1 1 11111-1'-Ifl11.w.x T1'r11'l.' 1141 1 ,1IlIflH'I1Illfi1'.K fflulz I-U. fyll. N11 Xl1,Nl1xxf Nl1x xf l,if11'1111' fflulr 411:12 l.'111111114'1'1'11ll fffnfn 1.3-All: 'llmir' 11411111 1111: lfllllllfil I-ll. l'Im111N11o l 111ix'1'1:sf f IC111111: I.1.1-'1 A1 1, .'X1.ox1, A1,x1x I 3, :sox -IJIQM1 l.S'I'lil,I.lC I 1 XI I,ANl.l'Nl. ulI.l. lx1.1-,1' M111 NUI vp U11'l11'.w1111 11-21: fllisxinrz lligll S1'l1n11l. S1171 l I'llIIt'l-Sl'lI 121: ,'U11fl1e'11111Iia's fflulr 1-ll: .1I11.sir lflul: I-ll: H111111' hvI'0Vl0IIl- llI'l' l.l11 Irs 1111111 1-ll: Slllllllfli Stuff 1-ll: l.iI1'11- I fl 1-lb N11 za yk B 7 .1. I T5 1,1::,.M,1 1. .fvif -i MA11 I1 'E 39' 1 U - ,if-Ie-1 . , V- -- aww? 1 ,gr 1- an - 4- , ,- .,,-,- gk 'gy' Bag 1 1 A, ' . 'K -iff 1, 5 V 'A fl :f,A N ' R' f ,. 1 eff , ,., . .,,, - -1. . i ' - 3 4. 19 f Q 5 5- gg 34 Page Thirty-two LOYAL CLARK-PROFESSOR Au, Munmsn UP Dawson Caunly High School. Clenflizw, Montana 1,1-2-313 Urvhestra 141. CHARLOTTE JEAN COX-CHARLEY Salaam: Tlmolfcu Sllnmhi SMH 1312 lrztvrrlasx Slvim- ming 13-41: Commercial Club 141: Library Club 14-1. xVFISTON KIRKHAM lr You Dox'T Tmwx So, YoU'm: CRAZY Oklahoma City High Srlmol 111: Thv Christmas Carol 131: Samahi Slufl 1313 Midget lfoolbrzll 131: A livar Little' Wifi' 14-lg Stage Crvu' 141: Naufilus Staff 14-1: Calf Team 1.41. ELIZABETH Cox-BETTY l'Avr:n Do1.Ls May Fl'Sli17fIl 121g Sanmlzi Stall 1319 Trarlr 13'41: Commvrrial Club 141: Llll'I'lII'.V Club 141: The Piper 141. CHARLES W1L11l0T-BARNEY I Luv!-1 Tm-1 LADIES Imperial Valley Union High School 11-2-31: Mathcmatirs Club 141: The Piper 1413 Hanrllmx Players 141g The lntrufler 141. I'1vm.x'N T,n'I.0R w'lIA'l S w'0IC'I'H Cl-I'lk'l'lNl2 IS w 0ll'l'll XV,u'l'1N1: Fun Snulh Pasaflcna High Svhunl tl-2-Jil. BETTY Blcllsrr-BETTY AML:-11. Marr: llranrl Forks High Srlmnl ill: Musfr' Club 42-33: Clure'nr'v 131: Pinrzfurz' 131: Thllllllllflfh' 12-3-4-I: l'irv-l'rvsi- rlcnt of Tlzzmzbmrlfs 145 g lfostrzrrzu Mis- ll'l'5S fur The Pipffr HI: I,itf'rr1ry Club 141. WALTER BOVVEN-WIALT 'l'1Mr: Wim. Tum. Mvlford High Srhool. Ifmh llbg Trarh' 143 3 .l,elterrm'l1'.v Club MH: Vive Prvxiflvnl of Mathc'nmtir's Club 14-I. PAU1.1Nr: BuAcKET'rhPol.l,Y Su M l'1'I'I M li Fresno High Srlmul 11-23: l'ir111jorv 1333 Ulm' Club Hit: Hasvluill 4353 Munagvr of Lux! nnrl Fozlml 14-I: Ser- fffllfj'-ffC'l1Slll'4'l' nf llnnu' E!'0llllIllil'S Club hh, Iiosmlown 'l'lIo1uAsoN--Rosll-3 I llvru 'ru Imxwg Yml pllxllllvllll High Srhool QU: Chorus 12? I,ilt'flIfj' Club 14-P3 lllusir' Club 1-1-T3 Hmm' Er'mmlnif'x Club l4Ig Sarnolzi Silly I-li. lun' 'fllirfuv-i yt' 'l'l1irly-ff WILLORINE GROVES-BILL TEDDY BEAR BLUES Mathematics Club I4-I2 Literary Club l4P. GUY FOX-DINK Pucmzu UP AND WHISTLE Midget Football 14-P: Track l4ig Mathematics Club 14-D: Assistant Property Man for The Charm Srhovl 141g Letlermen's Club 143. JEAN AKINS-SHANEY JEAN The Fire Prinre illg Chorus llbg Ialanthe 12M Clee Club 44-ig Erminie 4433 Swimming 141g Literary Club 14-J: Music Club 14l. ROY ARCHIBALD DUTTON-ARCHIE Flugcxuzs Kelvin High, Winnipeg, Canaala Ill: French Club 121g Junior Day Vaulle- ville 133g Vaudeville 443. OLLIE HICKS Ou. Jm! Orchestra 12-3-4-P. IQSTHER COLNON l3ni:AMlM: Cullixau' High Sehool 113 g Mathematiex Club 143. Amar: HAND WMNA Chorus 123: lalantlle 123: Pierre l'atelin 123: Track 12-3-432 Basketball 13-433 Baseball 13-43g Athletic' Club 13-43. l5r:N.lAM1N HARE-BEN 'l'm1 Hluu Cost or l,nl1vu Los Angeles High Sehool 113g Clee Club 12-3-43g lolanthe 123: Junior Vaudeville 133: MeCamas in You Never Can Tell 1333 Sir Joseph Porter in Pinafore 133: Debating 133: The Tam- ing of the Shreu' 133: Homer Johns in The Charm School 143: Literary Club 143 Q Captain Delauney in Erminie 143 g Conzmereial Club 133g Chemistry Club 143. lhzmzw KAEPPLER NIIGIITY Lua A Ross Houston High School. Texas 11-233 Chorus 1333 Botany Club 143. DOROTHY RILEY-DOT 01,13 PA1. Urllreay High Srhool. Colorado 1133 Clee Club 1433 Home Eeonomies Club 143. ,Q '1'1m-1,1 1 1.--. 4 uuv l'l1i1'fy-.vi.r Al.I1Zl-I CJSTHMIAN Cluxx of '21 HOB!-IRT REE?--Bon IRI A W'1lNlAN Hx'l'l41n .l111'1'q11lrnz' in Pivrrf' l'uI1'lin 121: ln- flIlt'lIfllIl Ciiizvn in The Quvsl uf flllfl- pinvss 131: 'l'l1111l1lv11s Truslf in Tha' Clflll 131: li'inn1l1'll11 in 'flu' Tllllllllg of the' Sllrvu' 1315 Wtlllffllll in You lV1'1'1'r C1111 Trll 131g Ulm' Club 131: .'lx.six1- fmt Bnolfslon' AIIIIIIIQUI' 131: ,,lIIIlllIl'1' 131: Sl111lfe'spv11r1'11r1 l 1'xli1'11l 1313 C0lllII7L'l'!'lflI Club 131: llinu'i1l1li1' in f,llIl'l'II1'l' 1313 11111 Sl'I'lJl1l24' in Thr' fll1flSfIllllS Curnl 1-111 lhlrirl in Tln' Charnl Srlmul 141: .1lfNlfl4ilt'l' nf I.lllNI1'- Ville' 1413 l'r'1'si1l1'11I of lfulullmx' I'llH- vrs 141: llujaix in lfrmiuie' 141: Jlnxf' in Thu Whitr Lim' 141: ,'1l11xi1' Club 141: Nuulilux .Staff 141. ALTHE- luzur-:RAKIM 'l'r:l.l. , rg Wm Chorus 1.21: lllllllllhf' 1111: l,ill'l!H'l Club 141:vyun1e' I:'1'11l111111i1's Clulr 1 l-1 2 llluxif' Club QL I' MAX BOUQUET ,IAZZMAMA l,l'!'hl'Sll'tI 111: l 1'1'l11'h Club 1211 Malhe'n1n1i1'.v Club 141: Clwrzlixtn Club 141: .lnzz f,f1'lH'SlI'll 13--11. FLORENCI-2 WEMPLE-F1,o WIIA1' C11lIl.l1 IH: Swv-:r:'l'1:u? Y Park Rivvr High S1'l11111l. lxllflll I1114 lmfu 111: CfINIH1l'l'l'i!Il Club 141: lini- any Club 141: Home P:l'I1VHIIIIll'S Club 141. Nl num: llfuwr Kms . l'.l'1'l . . .' . A . Thf- lfirz' I I'lIll't' 1 l P 1 Clmrnx ll-.ZI 3 llllllllflll' 120 1 llvlu' in l'il111fm'4' 43? 1 lliurlyxiu 139 1 Claw' Club 13-4? 1 The' l'ipe'r VU: I'll'IIlllll.l' 4-ll: l.ite'rary Clulr 2 l'Iw:1,x'N Hows: I-Ixllzxnnxu WM Xlmw mn SUINIIQUIXIQ Clllt't'll .-lnm' High Srlzunl. Seulllv. lfkzxlzirzglurz ll-2-:ill l n'nc'l1 Club 14-I .Vusir Clul: l4D: fllixx Curfix in The' Clmrm Srlmnl 14 P. Cll.l.1uN SAM: -,lumix , fl ,g Jusr l,r:Aw: rl' 'ro Rh: Ii ' V 1 - I SU-Ullfll lllgh Srlzrml. .'lri:olm IFN 1 Cla' 'L . Club Hi, XLLL,V I Vmlmzri K1lml.r3fS1mR'l'x' XVILI. hill lhzxlmllslau l,c'14'i.v Ima' f,'l!Il'lx't' High Svlmnl, Spa- 1 lmnr. unllxlllllglllll Ill: l rvnr'l1 Clul: 44P: 1,in'rury Club 145g lfamllmx l'lllyz'1's 14I: Srmmhi Stull 141. 1, lilvrll MAm:u !l'o0'l's Q-,iw 'I'mrr. 'l'mn'. 'l'mrrslr: , Ifnlrmy Club 131 3 l'!IlllIl'I'ill1' 131 2 Q 6 - ' , lliullyxifl HSI: .Uusiw Club 14-Ig T110 L A M 5 I'ip4-r 443: Isle' of Capri l4lg The' f.'lIl'lSflIlllN Carol UU. -V f fl W E fx, ,L 'x Vim Q A 1 54. lmlx 1' lu lhlgfw l' 4' fx .. '1 if ,rx J hi al' ,4 , I ,lxw 1 u I 1 J 'N af 4 J , ' Ac 4 4 . . 1 ,xy , . , ., , 585 .ui N. .. -'-1 .- li:f. l1l11'rlx 4 if HORATIO Mom:-xvfNl0nmw l'r's Nun-2 'rn lil-71 l I' IN 'IIII-1 x411IQNlN1. f,'IfIl'h'dIIl1' High Srlmul. -lriznrru 1l-21: l,l'l'l1!'.VH'!I 13-41: 'lluxir' lfluh 141: Tlllllllllfllfh' 141: lfhiwf l':l1'l'fl'il'ilIIl 141: Sl'1'l'4'llll'VY nj Rrnliu lflulr 1 11: Su- muhi 511111 141. CYNTIIIA IWARTYN Wm, Dim: Ilnllyuvmfl High S4-lmnl 121: llfrxlfvf- hall 13Ig Twnnix 131: film' l 1'.vlirul 131: l,iI1lI!l1VQ' 131: lfhx' the' f,',IilIll'.N Rang 131: ,-llhlvlir fflnlz 13-11: .Uu- sir Club 141: :f.wl's Wiff' in Ihr' l'ipr1 1413 IIUIIHII' 1411 Tha' L-lHiYflIHlN ffarol 141: Alix in The' l.'1l1lI'I7l Srhnnl 141: Lolita in The' lxlf' of Capri 141: .'1larie' in lfrminie' 141. Awww CAM: TAKI-1 l'r lfnml NIL Lux .4lI,ift'lf'S High Srlmnl 121: l'1'mi- rlvnl of .llnlhvmnlirx lflulf 141: l'nml4-- ville' 141: lilIft'ft'l'ill JIIIIIIIQVI' 141: E,X'l'l'IllfI't' lfnarzl 141. IAICONA H,4li'l'Nl.4YX-IJPIPI F.-un Ov: Pill-Yft'I'hlII.l' High Srhnul ill: film' fflulz 121: ffhnrux 1212 lolunrhe' 121: EIIFIIS in I,l'llIlvYXfII 1311 ,,,flJl'lll'j' l.lnl: 12-3-41: Samnhi Slnff 141. Fl.m'n BAl.sl.i:Y 1.411155 of 'ZH X 101.414 PENN-V1 I'x1 lfoluzxrznz Bmvs'1N1: Bl'RBl.lCS Al'llll!'IlIv1 of Hnly Nurnex 111: Thumb- ' lurlr 14-1. Dams l'Ar,M1:R---Jllxllmr AlN l' Wu Gm' lfl N Trflwlr 12-3-41: Clee Club 12-313 Bux- lferball 12-3-41: Captain of Tennis 1315 Captain nf liuxebull 12-313 Capmin of lhlxlretluill 131: Baseball 12-3-41g Win- ner of llny League lluubles Clmmpiun- ship 131: Class Vive-Pr'esi1lenl 1413 Presialent nj Cirls' Atlzletir' Club 141: Clluirrnnn of Cuuneil 1413 Snmolzi Slay? 141: Couneil 13-41: Nauiilus Slafl 141 g Cirls' Athletir' Manager 131g Represen- tative tu Cirls' League Convention 13-413 Sleimrning 13-41g Captain of Szrinzming 141: Br1xeballMnnrzger 141. Hizumzm' IVIARRIS- -Bois Rl-:xn 'nu ANI: WVPIPII' Hollyzrnozl High School 11-21: Musir' Club 141: Carnmervial Club 1411 Clzenzistry Club 141. Hrzmzw MARTIN-JERRY Mlssx lllu-vl esti1'ul 121: Clee Club 1313 Library Club 1414 Literary Club 141: Home Economies Club 1413 Musir Club 141: Enlertainment Manager for Cirls' League 141. X IYI HN N i: MARTIN EZHSNOVVBALL Slmsnlmz The Fire Prince 1113 Chorus 11-215 May Ft'5lil'l1l 121g Musir Club 1313 Samulzi Staff 131: Diunysin 131g Li- brnry Club 1413 Szvimnzing 141. N 'l.lIll'l-X'-Illlla TIIELMA CAIIEILN---BEENIE DON'1' FORI:I:1' Pinafore 131g Clee Club 131: Musir- Club 14-J: Home Eeonomies Club 141: Orehestra 141. INEII. DUI:KEI.s--DUCKS l'M Aivvus 1fIIAsINc KAINROws Midget Baseball 1113 Midget Football 1213 Midget Basketball 121g Football 141g Traek 1413 Leltermerfs Club 1413 Literary Club 141. XVILNA NIORGAN CIIILRIIL Clarlrflale High Sehool, Arizona 11-21: Track 131: llianysia 1314 Thumbtaeks 13-413 Secretary-Treasurer of Bandbox Players 141g The Piper 141g Prompler for The Charm Sehool 141g Nautilux Staff 14-1g Direetor of Lenrl .We Fire Shillings 141. HARRISON SYMMI-IS-SIAMESE VM A TwI:I.II: 0'1II,OI:R FI-1I.I.Ow IN A NINI: 0'CI.Or:K TOWN Clee Club 111g Stage Creu' 11-2-313 The Taming of The Shreu' 1313 Clar- ence 131: He and She 131g Shake- spearian Festival 1313 Chemistry Club 131g Commercial Club 12-31g Banzlbox Players 13-41g Drama Libre 131g Bound East For Cardiff 131: Cranrl Opera in Flannagin's Flat 1313 The Piper 141: Thumbtaek 141. FI sus WII,SON HAI'I'INI:ss Hutchinson Central High School. Buf- falo. New York 11-21: May Festival 121: Clee Club 131g Swimming 13-41g Athletic Club 13-413 Musir Club 141: Frenelz Club 141: Track 13-41. KA'l'lII.l'Il'IN H:-:Nunn-Kll-3 You Rum' Winn' I Nlmw QIIIQTH fiom' High School. Svultlv, lf'u.wl1ingIo11 il-2-331 Musir' Club I4-U: llliss llolrvx in Tlu- flhllflll Svhool 443. Iommzmzrz Hucluzs--l,ARm' 'I'm1nr:'l.l. B+: A llm' Tm:-1 lm Tm: Our 'l'owx 'l'oxluu'r TPIIIIIDS il-2-3-4Pg liclskvlllull K1-2-3--1-I 3 lfoollnull ll-23 1 Tha' Fin' Prince KU. HARRIETT Plm--DUTCH x' l.l'l I'l.E lfo'r'rnx Dn1.l.x' Ulm' Club ll-233 1,I't'Sl!1t'l1I of Musir' Club 131. ART!! un Qulsawmzxm'-QI.w1s1E lhnnx Lum: Lrzus llollyuxoofl High School H-233 Tennis I3--1-P. .IOIIN Smmrr- JACK Class of -2-I Adnsyy 1,Ujlt'1'.Ul'lj l Pago l or'ty-two MERRITT JOSLYN LEARNING Lo Grange High School ll-2-3lg Coll Tvam 145. HILLA STOWE I Folwn A Fowl I.r:xF IIl.m'r3n Litvrnry Club 4-I-l: .11Il.Wlf' Club 1-I-P. SCOTT MCCUNE-SCQTTY Fon Tm: Low: or NIIKE Arlelphi Ararlemy. Brooklyn. Nou' York I I-2-31 . MARGARET JARVIS-Nl.-KRGE MARME Miss Whitcfs School for Cirlx. St. Louis fl-2J3 Dionysia 133: ,Inn in The Piper 4433 Fl'l'lI!'h Club 141. CARVEL TORRENCE Dmznuz. Dmznuz Dru Samohi Staff 14l. I'lDWARD WHITLE5'-ED CAuo1.iNA Track 43tg Snmolzi Slafj I3-41: Foot- ball 14-I: Letternzcrfs Club 441. Lurnan Bl-JAUREGARD-BUSTER DIXIE Music Club tl! : lllee Club tl I g Trnrlf tl-23: Samohi Staff ll-21. Class Prophecy It is not oft to mortals given To know their lot in future years: To know if fate has store for them Of happiness or tears. I as a scientist have delved Deep into knowledge rare: Discovered secrets valuable Tried things no others dare. As a result I know such things The world will scarce believe, They think the wonders that I show Are tricks which foolish ones deceive. Hut be not skeptical. I beg, Have faith and trust in what I do, You'll be convinced that all is real Which here I show to you. This magic wand I wave aloft. Will conjure up full clear, This class as twenty years from now, 'Twill in this world appear. 50 let us to a circus tent With eagerness repair, To see what fortune has in store, For all our class mates there. A VISION OF THE FUTURE First we hear the strains of music, but not the usual Calliope, for we hear the faint melody of The Lost Chordw as we near the grounds. We approach the sounds, to find to our amazement that the player is no other than renowned Max Bouquet. He is no longer directing his own orchestra. Now he is playing for his nickles and dimes on an old two-octaved organ. Around his neck is suspended a slotted-tin box on a black shoe-string. We drop a nickel for his dinner, and proceed to the entrance of the tent. A fat woman with three cumbersome children hanging to her apron strings takes our money at the door. It is lVIrs. Dorothea Smith Hanford. She sends one of her children to 'rind the manager, Mr. Dutton. He is dressed in a black checkered suit and a brown derby hat set far back on his head, and a flar- ing red neck-tie. with a huge diamond stick-pin in it. Chewing a cigar stub, he greets us. lltlflt' l7or'Iy-flzrcc ., Mr. Dutton escorts us about the structure to the various sideshows. First we see Gladys Shoemaker, the human hyena. She still maintains her girlish charm, but now you pay ten cents to hear the same yell heard in the old days for nothing. As we meander on our merry way we come to many and various creatures of a more ferocious type such as squirrels, butterflies, cats, and caterpillars. Next of interest to us, as it brings back memories of Santa Monica, is the vampire, none other than Doris Palmer. Among her numerous admirers are Robert Reep and Oscar Sattinger, though now they are the Duke Skilibootchf, and the King What-the- Heck, respectively. Miss Palmer is bedecked in satins and laces with diamonds and jewels on her fingers, and bells and cobblestones on her toes. In the next booth, holding a little session all by his little seven-foot self, is Gardiner Taylor, the Sheik. His favorite wife, Amada Fuentes, is seated on the throne by him. Among those present are .lean Akins, Betty Brush and Marian Miller, all admiring him with smiles and nods. At this moment the court is being entertained by Agnes Aldrich, the snake charmer. Then amongst the wilds of the jungles is found Alice Balish, the last of the line of Hula dancers. Though Miss Balish at one time spoke fluent English, her name is now queen Hot Tamale and she no speik Englishf' ln the last side show is the strong man. Ben Hare, capable of lifting such huge weights as three and three-fourths pounds at one time, and even as much as four pounds. We wish to know what the future holds for others than these, so stepping into the den of the crystal gazer, we find to our sheer amazement that Miss R. Moody is presiding there still, predicting the future. We inquire of her the present whereabouts of Al Spaeth, and learn that he is still going to University, though now on crutches. He has a record now of more P. H. D.'s and A. B. Cfs and B. V. Dfs than any one in the world. Bill Abbott, president of the U. S. is seen touring Tia Juana with his private secretary Ida May Valiant. In the slums of New York, is a church. Not a large, magnificent tabernacle, but a dilapidated hut where services are held, presided over by Deaconess Margaret Cooper. The scene is transferred to someoneis Kitchen, where Norman Smith is seen washing dirty dinner dishes. He has changed greatly since he was the football hero at S. M. H. S. He has a Ubeavera' three feet long, and as red as sin. Then we are shown a small house by the sea-shore owned and inhabited by Jean Berentsen. A small sign is on the door, Fresh Fish for Sale. Hattie Cozart, we see, has turned musician. She is headlining in the Fearless Eve on Main Street, playing a go-to-me, come-from-mei' and a Jews harp, sup- ported by Pauline Hume. Then among those present in the great Santa Monica hubbub is trallic cop Callion Sale. He is seen politely escorting Maude Radford across the street. Now he is nothing short of a dapper ladies' man. Howard Hennessey is being arrested with Julius Munson, for peddling nar- cotics in Pebbly Beach, Catalina. They concealed them in the rims of their tortise shell glasses. Then Melzar Lindsey, now a movie star, is contemplating suicide because of the numerous, too numerous, mash notes, unanswered, he has received. This alone does not seem enough to bring on such a rash act. Ah! It is because he has not the money to pay postage upon them. Thus endeth the vision: We hope you are convinced That the future I truly unfold. We hope that each one may be pleased with his fate, Which for him a decade may hold. Page Forty-four ,JU L-rllvxl AJ ,l m,,':EnZev l92Z3 I're.sifl4-nl - - l'll.s1r: l RANc:ls I'I.l'f'-I,l'l'Nl.fll'IlI - Vim:-I'lucs1m:N'1' lIln.e.w Rvpre-.wnlalive - IWILES Bowmzu Svvrvlrrry-Treusurer - KPIN1' HlT4:m:o1:K l,lC'l l' ICH M If N Rawlins Tilvstou l'L1g1r17m!x 1 L -,Ja . , , Zi 1 E KSiw9'1Zf , '51 fn- ' '.. A U . A xf'. rf., .,,1I' I. if .,A,. , 1,111 K - + My .-+1-, y, AL,,, .rm-, 'fn x1j54M,s5f111z2 L 1 5- -- fi' .a.'zQ 11g11' I-111 I-I'-.I'I..l' NIARJORII-I l,1um1O1:'r11xAX!-11111: TNI.-1111411 5'XIll,lX4L I111cO1 1,11 RAw1,1Ns 'l'11.11sTON TO Cl-l'l' 'l'111x1-3 lixnf. Lu IIAN1111 IANICNN ASIIIIQ lfe'1'lr1'l1',1' High S1'l11ml 11-QI: S1111111f1i Slufl 43-41: T1'1I1'lr l-1I: l.1'lt1'r1111'11'x fflulr 44I: .'ll11tl11'11111If1'x fflub 1-1I: fflrlsx I-IDVD'-l,I't'Silll'V1l I-II: R1'pr1'x1'11l11- lin' In lfw1'11li1'1' lfnurzl I-11: Tirkvl .4IlIliflII' IIII. Ii1.s11: l 1cAN1:1s Mx BOOM Aw II1-31141 'Ill xr Nl-IXI-lII I'411'1' T110 l i1'1' l,l'illf'l' Il I 1 LVIIIIIIIX I I-QI 1 '.'i1l1'11I nf I'.l'l'II!'ll lflulz IIII: ,111 .' ll ISI: f.'fllNX l'l'f'5illC'Vlf 441: I'11l1'- 1li1flu1'i1111 I-I I. LEON ROSOY1-1 'l'As1'1: 'lllli .Im 'I'11x'1 fi1IXIl',N 1'1mx1 LA111111 jllllllllll 1411s ll-ZZI: I,l'1IlllfIl:L' III: S11l11111ln1'1'1111 I4 I . PQTTA LONDON A NIUICIC STI IIllIl s 421111. l'x1: N111 1111 XII-fl l'4l'f'ShlIlllII I,t'l'llIl7llIfilIVl IfO11t1'.wl I I I 1 ' Hr' llllll She' HSI: l,iI'l'l'flIl' nf Tha' lfrm IPII 1 I'i1'1'-I'1'1'xi11z'11t uf l1'11111l1rm' f'l1111'1'.s 131: l'1'1'1lc' in Tlu' Q111-,wr nj H11ppir11'x.s 131. NORMAN RENO Tm N1OIIEs1'x s A CANDLE 'ro Tm' NlI:III'I' C-:RACE SCRIVENER BI:wAnE OI-' HER FAIR HAIR Sardnac High School, New York City fl-2-33 . DONALD UssHER llls 0Nl.X' LABOR WAS 'ro KILI. TIME Midget Basketball 12M Midget Foot- ball 42-3b. NELLIE PII-IRSON A IHEIIRX HEART GOES ALL TIII: DAY Pageant of American Music 11? 3 Music Club l4I. MILES BOWLER HI-1 IS A DEUCE AMONG Tm: GIRLS Lincoln High School flbg Cross Coun- try 12-31g Richard Ill Q33 3 Stage Crew 12-3Pg Assistant Stage Manager 1333 Class Representative 14-J. Page lforty-svtwn 5Tl-ILLA GOOMDAN Nlusnz is Sun 'ro B1-3 'rm-1 SPEEKIII or Tm-1 ANci:Ls St. Margaret's School, Exeter, England 11-215 Orchestra 1414 French Club 1413 Music Club 14-13 Botany Club 1413 Ar! Slafl 141: Nautilus Thumb- laclf 141. iVlYRTI.E DUTTON- l'lrR'1'l.E Some SUNNY Du' Clec Club 11-2-3-41: lnlanlhe 121: Pinaulore 131: Musical Pageant 121: Music Club 1413 Commercial 13-41. Ki-:NT H1TcHcocK THE MAN o' lNDl-LPI-ZNIH-LN'l' hllND Lewis and Clarlr High School 11-21: Samohi Staff 131: Manager of Club 1313 Clee Club 131g Circulation Man- ager for Samohi 131g Class Secretary- Treasurer 14-1g Mathematics Club 141 : Music Club 141: French Club 141: Orchestra 141. RUBY DOWSING Barr:-:ii LAT!-1 Tn.-xx Nunn Pageant of American Music 1113 Chorus 11-2-3-411 Phyllis in Iolanlht- 1313 Josephine in Pinafore 141. WINTER CLASS OF '23 The Winter Class was first started in Santa Monica Hivh School in the last half of 1922. The first class being organized as the Senior Bs? They chose as their adviser Miss Carrie Bell Smith and under her careful guardianship they elected the officers and took their place as a regular class in the school. The cLass started with about thirty-seven members, but when the Hnal exercises were held only twelve were graduated, most of the members waiting until June to be graduated. They were elected able oflicers and advanced rapidly for such a young class. The following winter classes will be more prominent because they will be older in experience and larger in number. Hereafteg, two graduating exercises will be held every year, one in February and one in June. Both will be of the same nature and importance. Page l rv1'fy-i'1'51l1l Senior B Class B1-ntlvy. tfurolyn lfarillo. Dorothy lifrvighton. Lois Davivs. Mildre-tl Dt-ar. Avis Frm-1-tllllan, Be-ssiv llraham. Je-ssiv Kopp:-rl. Lois Mattisnn. Olga hlorphis. Lois Murphy. llaze-l Murray. Margarvt Prop:-r. Margare-t Svliuppv. Mary Shaw. Asc-nath Slankartl. Margarvt Slut:-r. Doris Flatt-r. ,lunv Sloan. lilizalwtll Ftlulvlralu-r. Opal Townslc-y. Hazvl Wassc-rman. Judith Young. Bonita Santlvrs. Perry Sailing:-r. Maurit-e Schimnn-r. lm- Svllalvffvr. wlatson Slivllry. Lx-onartl Sims. Lawson Snell. ,lat-k illlltllllllll. llt-rlwrt We-mplv. Umnorm-st Austin. l.orrn Bivvns. Frank Brandt-nhurg. Paul Bunmly. Cvorge- Carnc-s. liharlrs Craig, Cecil Crane: Rivhartl Davie-S. Maurice- Drununy, Charlvs Clorc, Rowland Hoopt-r. ,lavk K1-lsvy. llaywartl Kvnaston. ,lat-k Kr-rr. Cf-raltl Kerr. llicllarml lmvyn. Stanley lllcllonalml. N1-il Mvllann. Frwl Millvr. Elhvrt Mille-r. Maynard Mit-In-Il. Murray Mohr. William Morse-. Jann-s Munrov. Clifton Optlykf-. William Parker. Marshall Reilly. livid Rice, Yewvll Rycraft, Carl gli' l'tH'l,l'-llilll if 'F E Eff i f' K? it 1 ,1 Q! 'f-2 i:!f2i L 1 1 1 I ' ' ' gg-rw u.e.v.v. ' , , L l'r1's1'11e'11l - l'ir'f'-l'rc's1'rle11l - Sf-rrflnry-'l'rv11sz1 rer Represerzlnliref - l'rf's1'111'11l - VIN'-1'rf'.s1'r1Pr1l - Secralnry-Trvnsu rw' Rf'preser1I11l1'1v' - l'l'a.si41f'r1l - Vfl'6-I,f8Sl'l1f'l1l - Scvrvllzry-T1'e11s ll TPI' R8lll'PS6IIll1ll.lfP - Hovmmw XvIiAl'l'll ,IAMHS ,lows GERALD Kuna IVlAUlu1:r1 Fox Hmm' HANNA WILLIAM NIASON Am I flj'-f'Zi'U uniors 1924 IOZZS - Jun-is Joxxs ,hun WYINNETT - Lomsr: Rm'N0l.ns jvuzu KENASTON I922 .Inn-is ,Ions ,IL'l.IA l'.-mmm Lois Krwvmu. - Jums .lox-xs 1921 - Julrzs Jams - GERALD Rum MxR.l0mr1 S1'r:w,mT - - ,lxmzs Joms l.FITTliRMFIN Wlxs1'0N Oumn INIARSIIMI. Ifmkrzn YI-:wr:l.1. Ruzri DONALD Dllilll, Nl-III. MCDONALD I7 D ff ,, J da fm Q 5 i 1 Ag? m, :lr ' Y A K, f 3 A ,gg LF' wx 14'-In W , junior Girls Ackerman. Edna Alexander. Pauline Anderson. Marjorie Armatage. Thelma lleek. llelen Bt-ll. Beatrice Bt-nediel. Marion HlovverS. Alim- Bootlt. Ke-ona Boyd. Dorothy Braekett. Marion Brown. Margaret llrothers. Mildred Bryant. Gladys Burton. liebeeea Butzin. Lillian Buxton. Flor:-nee Campiglia. Marion Casey. Donna Castillo. fionsuelo Hazel. Neva Connell. Mary Dull' ffooper. Sara Crowley. Florielaurie lfunningham. Eleanor tlurtis. Ellie-lyn Dellenbaugh. llazel Dowsing. Gwendolyn Dumm. Henrietta I-Iley. Mabel Evans. Mina Fic-ge. Alice Ford. Ruth Foster. Mary Fuller. lrene farliek. La Yoon:- floodmall. Naney Gray. Alive Greenfield. Dorothy Gregory. Doris Guerin. Beth Guerin. Edytln- llarding. Gladys llaeni. llf?ll'Il Louise Harris. Irene llawley. Helen llc-msley. Myrtle llerford. Doris llilderman. Mabel llill. Gertrude Hinckley. Flora lloensltell. Z4-lla .le-nsen. Dc-lone Johnston. Ellen Kearsley. Frant-es Kimball. Martha Kline. Norma 1 Langworthy. Marjorie Leach. Luey Lee. .lane t qt lfiffy-four Lorin. Mabel Matison. Lily Mawby. Helen Mcfilure. Virginia McCann. Sybil McCeagh. Lillian Marden. Josephine Matson. Dorothea Mayfield. Mary Miller. Lulu Morgan. Maxine Myers. Lorraine Noll. Myra Nuttall. Marion Paige. Myrta Parker. Julia Perkins. Lucille Peterson. Evangeline Peterson. Lueile Potter. Thelma Power. Katheryn Priday, Winnifred llanyard. Alive Reid. Lueile Reynolds. Louise Rinden. Mabel Hua. Jessie Rudd. Ruth Russell. Margaret Sazendorf. Helen Schneider. Anna Schurr. Sara Sederholm. Dorothy Shelley. Evelyn Shelton. Madeline Skinner. Berniee Smith. Dorothy Smith. Roberta Snyder. Cora Stewart. Marjorie Stevens. Ada Stobaugh. Esther Surface. Esther Taggard. Sylvia Taylor. Crave Wadley. Margaret Waite. Dorothy Warren. Marjorie Wasserman. Helen Wayne. Virginia Weaver. Gertrude Weigh. Ruby Weiss. Margaret Weller. Dora We-sner, Margaret Whittlesey. Lois Williams. Effie Wilson. .le-an Wyatt. Gladys Zoul, Marjorie Q v- -M. Anderson. Claus Armaz-ost. Robert Baker. lloward Baldwin. Hoy Beard. .laek Heard. William Best. Rudolph Brooks. Leslie llrnee. William Bronson. Donald Bunker. lfrle Buseh. llolland Carlton. Bruee Ganlkins. Max Chapman. Lovaine flllarnoek. William Claridge. Easton Clark. Leland Conant. Paul Ifoon. Nelson liralw. Lyall Danslvy. Virgil Dearlmin. Daniel Diehl. Donald Dudley. Ward Dunbar. Perry Farnum. Lester Fritz. Howard Foster. Robert Fuentes. Raul Glanville. William Goodman. .lolm R. Griffin. Gharles Gripp. Elton Hahn. Marshall llanna. Henry llatlieway. lflarenc llallieway. Yielor llawk. Everett llisserieli. Charles llfwli. Wvllllotl llogan. Thomas llromadka. .Iohn l'lumer. Everett Posner. Abraham l'ruden. lioliert Rankin. Ernest Reid. lvan Rhodes. Lawrence lliehison. Paul lloherts. Harold Robinson. Robert lloessler. Raymond Ryan. Raymond Sanders. Ernest Saylor. liulrerl v lfifly-.vi.1' P unior Boys Schurr. Lawrence Scott. Warren Senogles. Arthur Sigrist. Lindsey Shoemaker. Goover Smale. Leslie Smashey. Dudley St. John. Louis Symington. Lee Taylor. Royal Teutseltman. ,lack Tileston. Harry Van Denlmurgh. .lolm WalterS. Walls-r WPSlSlUlllI. Frank Weyhrigllt. William White. Thurston Willianis. Kenneth Winnett. .laek Wraitll. Howard Yates. .Iolm Yenny. Herman Hunter. Sherman jackson. Maurice Jessee. ,lames joltnaon. Albert Jonas. Harry Jonas. James Kaplan. lr-'ing Kinney. jack Kinsley. Merlyn Leon. Garfield Lightcap. Exerett Lockwood. Warden Mcffune. William MeKie. Rolmerl MePherson. James Markle. Albert Marler. Ona Marvin. Charles Mason. Kingdon Mason. William Manle. Alfred Maxwell. Franklin Meek. Anas Meier. William Middlekauff. Donald Morgan. Glenn Morris. Preston Morrison. Edwin Neill. James Norris, Raymond Ogden. Winston Oye. Togo Peterman. Harry Sophmores 1925 l I I 10225 I'rw.vi4lw:l - - hm' IMl.INHN I-I'I'l'-IIl'l'SI'lll'lll Nl un: mm Woonu ul Sm-rvlnry - - .-Km Swgxrixs Tn-nsurvr - - .Mari llmlx lfl'l!I'l'Sl'IIfllll-l'l' - CLIFTON Brmww 1922 l'naw'flf'1:l - - - Hmm ,Ions Sl?l'fl'f!Il'-IVTI'f'lISlII'l'l' -X11 x STI-IX ms RUlH'l'.W'IllflfI'l'f' - JXIAIN Still-Xl'll l.l'I'l l'HHMI'IN Cl,llf'l'0IN lhmwx Wll.l.lul linmxmzx lim liAl.nwlN Wll.l.1AM Gmimzn CAROI.l, Ihzlcm' ALYIN S1:uVxl'1: 514' l'lff,Y-Fljlllf 2 SOPHOMORE GIRLS Sophomore Girls Athey. Helen Bader. Edna Badershaw. Georgia Ballard. Eunice Barker. Elizabeth Barwiek. Theo Berman. Anita Bird. Barbara Burns. Corinne Bushow. lrene Butcher. Eileen Campbell. Esther Cameron. Myrtle Carson. Margaret Carter. janet Cary. Alice Castillo. Adela Chapman. Loraine Chrisholm. Kathleen Chrisholm. Ruth Clampitt. Dorothy ' Cochenour. Ethel Cotton. ,lane Davies. Dorris Dear. Mary Catherine De Haff. Cornelia Donnell. Ellen Donoghue. Kathleen Downing. Nancy Fielding. Adelaide Fleming. Sarah Franks. Joyce Fuller. Mayzella Gallo. Camelia Garrett. Lily Gibson. Ruth Gillham. lsabelle Gragg. Winnifred Hale. Ruth llamillon. Lucille Harris. Elivabeth Harris. Irene M. Hosking. Margaret llayes. Margaret Hr-msley. Dolores lloutz. Shanna lloward. Denzil Jenking. Pauline Jenkins. Elizabeth Jenks. Clara Johnson. Dorothy Kelley. Elizabeth King. Edna La Fresnaye. Katheryn Laing. Adelaide Lampe. Mamie Lawson. Maurine Leslie. ,lean Levy. Mildred Lloyd. Mildred Lockwood. Grace Loftus. Gertrude Low. Geraldine P4 1 1 S'i.t'l4t' Mack. Florence Marks. Jewel Mclntyre. Opal McLucas. Elizabeth Mickelson. Esther Miller, Beth Minor, Frances Moody. Violet Morley. Evalyne Moxley. Honore Mullman. Rosella Murdock. Elizabeth Myers. Eugenia Myton. Ellen Niceum. Ethel Nordskog. Ethelyn Oaks. Josephine Parker. June Picard. Helen Pierson. Elva Pope. Bonita Reed. Carolyn Ridley. Verva Riley. Lois Rivas. Maria Robertson. Helen Sammons. Ruth Sanders. Mildred Sargent. Betty Schick. Ruth Shepard. Mary Aim Smith. Florence Smith. Margaret Snyder. Zada Steinle. Margaret Stewart. Ethel Stout. Bernice Stowell. Esther Sullivan. Lillian Thoman. Alice Thomas. Jessie Thompson. Pearl Trimble. Mildred Trittle. Katherine Tyson. Gertrude Van Denburgh. Katheryn Vawter. Edwina Walker. Virginia Wallace. Ferol Waltz. Belle Ward. Barbara Wemple. Laura Wenzlaff. Louise Westby. Maude Weston. Elsie White. Margaret Whitton. Hope Wise. Elma Woodham Margaret Yates. Grace Yenk, Evelyn Louhill. June 9 .X ww' 4- IQ 4, 1 x 2 5 9 -A W 4 fi 1? 'sv' ' Q '. 9 Y S iff' 'Q 3 '7.-, ' 3 1 L, ,. . W, i'fJSfL' L ff 1.53 151, gms Zn ' 3F',-17 Q . 354' if i Wa. EQ 5 , 'I' if , e I5 ., A K ,, f- N 1 . f, A Q. T ' f 3 M. I 2 A - A ic - X -V? A 4- ' 2 3 D 1 T 1 Q Y 4 is g fx .. Q m 'l. P- V N- P- ,V 'Z I 71 Akins, Mitchenor Allen. Marvin Amo. Frank Balsley, Clyde Balsley. Nelson Bell. John Berghell. Cuthbert Berry, Carroll Bothuyne. Eugene Bowen. Albert Bramble. Glenn Browne. Thomas C. Brown. Clifton Brown. Edward Browne. Richard Buck. Severne Buerge. Lowell Butcher, William Butcher, Richard Carey, Howard Carlson, Lawrence Carson, Jack Christenson, Grant Christie, Charles Cohn. Abe Colnon, Edward Cone, Maurice Conneley, Howard Cornell, Wallace Cowan, Ben Cronin, Leo Dannenfelzer. l hil Darling, Henry Decamp, Kelter De Force. Elmer De Half, Julian Denison, Fred Diack, Arch W. Diebold. Elwood Doeg, Eric Doescher. Richard Duncan, Stanley Dunham, Donald Engelbrecbt, Roy Foster, Loren Gates. Mark Gills. Walter Gingles, Rupert Goodrich. Judson Crenley, George Gruber. William Guercio, Jack Halleck. M. Hayes ' i P ll Si.rly-tivo Sophomore Boys Hamilton, Jimmy Hart. Lincoln Haynes. Lewis lleald. Lawrence Heale, Robert Hfaphy, Ralph Heldman. Frankie Henderson. Willard Hickson, Marshall Reid. Samuel Rice, Ivan Richson. Marshall Ripley, Eugene Rockwell. Jack Robertson. George Rowell. Southard Ross. Goldsborough Rushton, Norman Jackson. Bernard Jacobs, La Monte Johnson. Robert Jordan. Kenneth Kapland. Harry Keating. Vincent Kenaston. Robert Ketchersid, Ernest Kessler. Preston Klein. Jack Klein. Lester Kuhn. Earnest Lasorella. Philip Leavitt. Van Ness Lewis. Ray Lobeer, Carroll Lyman, Harry Schaub. Alvin Schick. Ed Schultz. Arthur Selby. Edward Silvera. Edwin Shields. Walter Slert, Raymond Smale. Milton Small. Fred Smith, Frank W. Smith. Franklin Smith. Jack Smith, James Soper. Clillord Soper. Fred Spohn, Sidney Stephens. John Malone, Kenneth Mason. Randolph McGregor, Norval McCann, Fred Maltbey, Maurice Martin, Craig Mayall. James Miller, Alfred Miller, Joseph Miller, George Mills, Teddy Miller, Gerard Montgomery, Robert Moody, Gard Morton, Lawrence Needle, Eugene Meilson. Arthur Nicholson, Howard Nittinger. Robert Osborn, William Papson, William Parker, Ivan Peak, Frederick Powley, William Prather Pratt. Howard Rau. Jack Stickle, Cecil Sterritt. Elmer Taylor. Oscar Thompson. Sheldon Tommassino, Alfred Torrence, Dean Towne. Albert Towne. Alfred Townsend. George Treharne. Wallace Tsurutani. Henry Tison, Algernon Van Patten, Ernest Webb, Horace Wallace, Samuel Weber. Arthur Weller, Grant Wemple. Lawrence Widasky, Kenneth Wilczek. Rene Wilson. Howard Wison. Melvin Willis. Ed Wright. Carl Young. Lee H. Yuill, James Albright. Louease S' .wi HMA Freshmen l'rv.wllfwl - - Hngu um Su url' IYIAIV'-IlI'l'.Yl.llI'llI - FluNKl.IN SXIITII St't'l'l'llll'Al'-Tff'!lSIIl'l'l' - lflmIN x X UNT!-Ill Rf-pn-.wnlnlirv - .Il'I,I xx me H x uflf N,X'i.1'!j'-j'rr11l' is i3 F K M 'FL - -5-2 . 4 1 1 sf, 7 ,1 gf? tk.. A 2 2 T Al 'wh Q, Z.: H ' SQMJ ,. . y . .- ,TM f .Q Z fn ' 9 Q ?G 5, A' xg NE J WL? 1' we 75' ru? 2 'M 5? 4: - QW. f A' if i , 5 A xg 5 ' w ff 1' f ? ' 5 I FRESHMAN GIRLS Abraham. Ruby Adams. Catherine Ainsworth. Evelyn Alverson. Crave Bender. Helen Benjamin. Doris Bishop, Dorothy Bothuwyne, Kathleen Brindley. Louise Brown. Edith Brown. Maxine Brunner. Elsa Burton. Violet Carry. Brenda Chapman. Mabel Clayton. Evelyn Colman. Clara Crockett. Dorothy Culver. Maude Dear. Margaret Ellis. Margaret lfstoek. Dorothy Flower. Elien Fuentes. Aurora Cale. Bernice Gardiner, Josephine Gaude. Thelma Glendenning. Virginia Glenn. Thelma Goldie. Louise Hamilton. Marjorie Hattaway. Sally Heald, Chorloise Heine. Adelia Held. Sylvia Helm. W'eeta Henley. Lueile Heuss. Marguerite Ilite. Marjorie Holmes. Dorothy lirwin. Helen jones. Vaughine Belle Joslyn. Mary Cieeelia Ke-arsley. Susanne King. Betty Kline. Virginia Lamb. Helen La Salle. Mauryne Meflrea. Helen Mefiullough. Pearl Meliully. ,lean McDonald. Melissa McDonald. Mildred Mc-Minn. Dorothy Meliweeney. Catherine Nlarshall. Virginia 14' Yi rl V- Yi t' Freshman Girls Monson. Rhea Morian. Frances Myers. Alberta Myer. Charlotte Morton. Vistula 0'Brien. Gertrude Olson. Margaret Parkins. Blendena Phillips. Dorothy Price. Helen Reeder. Leola Richison, Helen Bidley. Lora Roberts. Lenora Rogers. Ruth Sehire. May Sehoeman. Carolyn Seddon. Dorothy Sluder. Frances Smith. Mary Stewart. Bessie Suess. Helen Sullivan. Mary Sutherland. Margaret 'l appan. Louise Tilson, Bernice Vincent. Lucille Vos. W'innifred Washburn. Neva Webb. Fay W'eine, Cecil Wilmot. Bessie Vlfilson. lflva Abraham. Pearl Anderson. Norma Benjamin. Rowena Bishop. Mildred Booth. Editha Brown, Beatrice Curti, Angelina Enriquez. Marian Fitch. Mary Hogan. Vivian Hosenfield. Vera Jones, Avo Lemen, Beach Morphis, Mildred Parsons, Virginia Pettit. Mildred Roth, Frances Sehimmer. May Williams. Ora 1.259 A v: lf- -w V 2 Z 4 Z I w C11 Zz. tljlf' Anderson. William Atkinson. I.:-roy llarnf-s. lliee llaird. llulhert lleasley. Frank llc-rtztina. John Hells. George Bird. Clifford liitterlin. Joseph Bradley. llarold Brown. Carroll Brown. Cvorgz- Brown. llussell lirunson. Vernon Bnrks. Arthur Bushnell. Mart Carlson. XValter Chapman. Boyd Corkum. Auhrey Craig. Leonard Davis. lloward Dearhorn. George Doeg. John Dreyer. Eugene Dudley. Willard EI'll'kSUll. Harold Etz. Arthur Fl:-ek. Alhert Foranl. George Fry. Franklin Uerstenlnergvr. Nlilton Graf. Clyde llacketl. George llonderer. Earl llolmes. Lewis llostetler. Gerald lloving. William llumhle. Elwood Javkson. Edmund johnson. Ralph Jury. Virgil Kc-env. llarold Kilgore. Lindaey Kinsman. Clinton La Chemin. Clement La Chemia, joseph Layne. Elmf 1' Leise, Franz Lostutter, Roy Lillingston. Stuart McAllister. Edward Mellen, Lucian Mcllee. Martin 5li,1'lj'-t'1.flllf Freshmen Boys Mrlntyre. .lohn Maloney. Franc-os Maltley. Darwin Maples. Melvin Masner. Floyd Matison. llarry Maulv. Hhapleigh Maxwell. Wesley Miller. Charles Mortensen. Roy Moss. William Murray. Arthur Nolan. ,lolm Norris. Howard Parker. David Power. Richard Prudhomme. Al-len Richard. Marquette Reynolds. Allan Sale. Mark Sanders. Sidnvy Schultz. Edward Schwartz. Stephan Stanley. Max Wade. George Washhurn. Wilhur Whitton. llich Wilstmn. Herbert Wilson. llugh Barteaux. Nlorlott Brauer. Edward Card, Benjamin Chandler. Frank Charnock. Ted Cherrington. Thoma Crotty, llarry Dusuh, Clarenur Earl. Howard Edwards, Bvnjamin Eklund. Elwin Gentillon, Mart-el Gruber. Albert Hogan. Maurice Houghton. llavid Jamison, john Lawrence. Eddy Millcr. George Morales, Marcus Nivens. Francis Rope. Kenneth Shepherd. .loe Thomas. Richard Wadley, Fred w 7 , ., P1 V Y 1 HW? A! LLUMS ., H 1 1 1 J, Y YK, l Alfred Spaerh Armada Fuentes ' ' Miss Pierson Julian Dei-iaaff ,Jack Ke,-,asfon lCXI'1l'l l IYIC IIIIXI lr 1 f K' -1 AKJ STUDENT BODY EXECVTIVE BOARD Wll.l.IASl ABBOTT Douomm Smmn ..,. M mm: RAIN-'Onn ,....,., GERALD Kam: ..,...., AUSTIN G XLE ...,...... MANAGERS .IUNIUS NIUNSON D... , .,... ML:LzAu LINIISEY . ...... JACK HOOPI-:N ........A ALFRED Sxumu ,... ,... AMAOA l uuN1'L:s,,..,. LLL HAMLIN ......,.. ALFREO SIMBRO .,..... REPRESENTATIVES .hex KEN xsToN ...,..... CLIFTON BROWN ,,,..., .. ,IULIAN DEHAFF .......,,, RAWLINS TlLms'rON ....................... l CAROLINE A. IIERSON .,............,..,... HAROLD Bowes and Lu: Y0l'NG ..,..., ,...,.,......Presi1Ient ,...,,..Vic'e-President ,Secretary ........Athleti0s , ,..... Cafeteria .,....,.Deba!ing ............,,....,.Dramuzics ........,,4,.,......Bookstore Student Publications .......,,GirIs' League ....,....Boys' League ....H.....,.......Sen,mr ,........,..,..Junior .......Sophom,ore ..............Freshmen ,..,....StudenI Sales ........FuFulty Advisor ,,,,.,,.Yell Lenders I'uyv .Slmvrty-0 Girls' Athletic Club llmus l'Amu-Ln ,....... , ,... .,.. ..,. ,,.,.,.,.. , , . ,Pl'l'.YillQ'l11 limmmw B1-:N1'l.m ........,,. ,..,.,..l,.,. ..,l..,, . . , , lAi!'l'-I,l'l'Xi!ll'Ill tix NTIIIA MARTNN and IIr:l.+:N CIAIKK ...,, ,, , ,,,St'l'l't'l!lI Y-TVl'l'ISIlfff Klum K. CAmml.l, ,.,.,,,, ,,,...,.... . ,,...,..,,. , . . . Furultv LGttCI'I11C1'1,S Club tlylr' . Awmzn Slmmmu, .. Hnwmm WR.Al1'll VlN1:r:N'r W. SHl7'l l S 4'i'a'llf X'-livn . , ,,l,ff'SIl1t'IlI .. , , . ,,l'ir'4'-l'rz'si1lc'l11 Bmwmw GILLIIAM ....,, St'l'l'4'llll'j'-TFPHSIIFUF .. ..... . ,.I m'ulty Thumb Tack Club Nl:-:1.zAn l.lws1-Lx ,. . Ulf,-.-Ni,l.f,,1 B1-:'r'rx Bm su .. , . , I iff'-I,I'Q'Sfll1'llI HIDWINA Y.-KW'I'l-lli W Sf-1'l':'f11r'x'-Tl'c'11.v11n'r ,lmrjlwllxlc S. Hom-:l:'l's , l ru'ully Radio Club Ru:u.um Crum: ...., f:llAIil.l-IS lllssnnuzll IIURATIO MURGANH Nomzm' B. Rnnmgns , .. , .I'l'vxi11:'r1l , lift'-I,l't'Sillt'lIf 94-rr'1'If1l'y-Trwlsllrcv' , l lIl'llIfAY Pugff'.S'1'7'r:lI,x'-Ilzlu Boys' League l.l,l3 llAXII,IN I'r'1w1'f!wr1t :xI.l IKI4.Ib SINIIIIIH lil-Q--l'r1-.xifll-111 'Nunn xx S un u Sw: wmrx-7'1w1.mrvr' lll-gxm NIHXIIIDI Nl-. Fm-llllvx' Girls' Glee Club 'l'lu- Hoya' mul Girls' Ulm- Clulms husk il vvry imlumrlunl part in ilu' musivul ski ilu- lslc- ol' llaxprif' 'llux lbl'0gIl'ilIIl was il mlvviclvcl Slll'I'l'SS. It has Saul In lu- ilu st IHIWDQIARIIII 1-wr gin-n lay ilu- Ulm' Clulvs. I lim'.Y.':u':1Iy-fulrr W Boys' Glee Club 'Hn' opera. nEl'llllIll9,v givvn by the- Boys' und Girls' Clem- Clubs lmmugllt 1 slum- wrv profvssionul talent. Tlw Clubs also gum' se-va-ral ollwr IH'02l'lllI1S for ilu Sluclvnt Body. x Library Club lfm'l'lr: llASKl'll.l, .,,. ...,,.., .,,.....,,,, ,,,,,,, I ' r vsiflvnl VIINSIXIK N1m:iIr.um:... .. ,..... , ...,... l i1'v-I'1'vsirlw11 xl4R.l0Rll-1 l.Awuwon'rln. .. ,Sl'I'fl'I!II'j'-TI't'llSIlI't'l' Nlmx I.. NI1:KlNl.m .... ., ,. .. ., . .,l lIl'1lll,Y Vmlllln' .3l4 I'1'llf.X fl 1 Mathematics Club sl IX CAI.:-1 ,, , I'1'1'xi1lw1t vm-.ru UU4,l,l'NN Ifl'6'-I,ft'Xi1lt'llf xYII.l,47lil'NI-1 CINHICS Sl'1'I'l'1llf,Y-Tl't'llSllI't'I' Inxlrm lf. l,mm,l-3 , ., . Fm'11l1y French Club f'IlAliI.l'LS UllllfI I'N . . , ,.,. I'n-.viflwn Nh Mu Al lm ' ffll IHJAIIITI' ' .l. , ,, . '-'-I rvsif v Nm ilmmlmlAN Sw-1vmrr-'l'rw1.v1:1'f'r Ninn B. Ih-yu mn , ,. I-'urully lr .Sl'7'1'1:tvf.v1.1' A e J N Home Economics Club 4 P MM lu-3 lhln--01:11 , , , , .,.I'rf-,wiflf-nl lil 'l'Il Nlmxm I iff'-IjI't'.Yi1ll'lIl PM ' l,I N r. Hn Hgh I-1'I 'I S1-1-n'l11ljx-7'r'm.m1'v1' I l,ll.l.lAx llmnl-1 . , I ur'11i!y Band BOX Players Nunn-gm' Ihgl-31' . . ,... .. l'r'vxiJvnl Nl:-1l,z,u: l.lws141x .. . I ffl'-III't'Sflll'Ill wllljli XIURIQKN S1'1'l'l'lIIl Y-TI't'IISlll't'l' OIAINIC lf. Nlmmls I ur'nlt,x l'11g1U.NX':'1' nlx x H azz Qrchestra This yenrls ,lull 0l'I'llI'Sll'il is mu' ol' lllv lniggzvsl llw sm-lwol 1-xvr lmml. ll vonsisls ul l'lLflll llll'IlllN'l'S zuul lms lH'l'0llll' sn llillllllllg lllul il plays lm' prixzllc- Kllllll'4'F llllllllgll- 3 mul ilu- lun' l.Illl'S. School Orchestra 'I'h4- lil'1'lll'Sll'il mule-r Mr. Cripp llus nlzulv ll xumflf-rful alflvzxln-1-1m'11l lmvurfl lwl- musiv. ll llilS 1u'1'mlllml1i1'fl all llu- svluml plays :lull lms gin-n se'u'rzll lIl'0gl'klIIlS lnl llll' Hvllmml. 1lfff,wx-.-fzly'-1-1,.1!1l Music Club Xl umm Nlxluzlc ., ,,.....,. ,Pl't'Sf1lt'llf Amclsux Lrzula .lvi!'t'-l,I'1'SiI!t'lIl lrpswn l uul'N1, .,., St'!'l'f'llIlA-Y'TfC'IlSIll't'I' Nhss Pms ms , ,, , , . ..,,.. ..,.,.. I' 'ur-ull-v Commercial Club NlA1lm:r1 SAT: lM.l-II! ,, .. ,,.. l'r1-sialwrl Iiuuzuu 1:lNll'Rl'1l,l., I iw-l'1'f'.wi1lw1l IDIS lfm:14:ll'l'ux, , .St'f'l't'lllI'-Y'TI'l'IlSllfl'l' l lf. Imran ,... , . , ,,...... l r1r'nlIy l'u31r .S'4 I'r1:lAx'-f1il14 Chemistry Club r . Hn- Ull1'Illi5llW lflulv mls started again this Vfxill' Inv students inn-rc-slml in N I1 me x' sllula-nl mlm haul lukvn hull' il war 4-uulfl join. Stage Crew Q95 In-. lhn lfwmglu Slugz' 1IllIlllg4'l' 4.1.11- lux Nluxnuu-, ,-l.w.xix1ur1f .1IlIIllIgl'l' Ilmzum YIIIIUQXN I','lw'1rir-iurz xlNl'liIl'I4. .luzlwux l.v,wi,s1urrt I','lw1f'iwi11r1 fum' lfiyf lil-Y f Literary Club .lA1tK SNl1l,l...,., , . ..., H ,,l'1'v.vi1lvl11 .lfutx Kr:wAs'l'nN. . , . l'i:'v-f'r'1'.viflvr1r xvll.l.l-XXI BEARD 5r4'I'z'lr11-1'-l'l'r'1l.mI'r'l' Miss BRA'I I'0N , ,. ,....... Fllflllf-5' Botany Club NlCl.l.lI-1 l'A1'soN ,,,,,. . . , ,l,l'l'SiIlQ'lll HUB!-1ll'l' Nl'l l'INlJl-IK., , , I iw-l'r'v.si4l4'rz1 Asm vm SHAW .... Svf-1'vlnf'y-Trvusurw' Nom D. KNIYPI' ,,.. , , I m'11lty j,1lfl4'lfijllllj'-H111 Managers' Club Xllillklt l,lx1m,x l'rmiflf'n1 I Nll s NIHNMM l1'u I'ry,x1'1l1-111 IM lx llmwl-in Sw rwlm x -Tr 1'1l.Sl1l'l'I I If. IJIIKIF l rn'ullx Girls' League 'kwwx If: mu- l'rw.ml4'nl In IIX I'NIKkI It I in-I'f-w.w1'1l1-ffl 1 I w III, ll uhm I. Sl'l'll'flII x -Tlf'll.Ylll'f'! I IIII.l XI. Ihwlcxwwx fxllflllfl JM 'lim' J The Piper Those who were fortunate enough to witness the Student Body play. The Piper. this year also witnessed the consummation of the long and anticipated dream of Miss Morris and Mrs. Roherts to present a play in the Memorial Open Air Thea- tre with full lighting elfects and gorgeous settings and costumes. The results far surpassed the thoughts of the most critical. The Piper, hased on that delightful poem. The Pied Piper of Hamelinf' made just as delightful a play as it did a poem. Paul Conant as the Piper. outdid any of his previous endeavors. The part. a xcry hard one to characterize. was done with ease and a certain lightness which exactly suited the part. A great portion of the success of the play is due to Paul Conant. The parts of liarhara and Michael played hy Marion Nutall and Ellwood Peak. were enthusiastically accepted. Marian in her haughty manner captivated the audi- cnce as the daughter of old Jocohus. while lfillwood as her loven gave the audience tht- feeling that every one loves a lover. Dorothea Smith as Veronika. mother of the little lame hoy Jan. played hy Margaret Jarvis. moved the audience to real human feeling. Not a higher trihnte could he paid to Margaretis acting than to say that she lived her part. Harrison Lewis. the hurgomaster, played his part with that dignity which so he-comes a hurgomaster. and Alfred Spaeth as Kurt the Syndic did well in assisting the hnrgomaster. The other members of the cast included Anselms, the priest. played hy Melzar Lindsey: groups of villagers. nuns. priests. strolling players and children. who all added to the charm of the play. The nuns and priests in the Piper were furnished hy the Boys' and Girls' Clee Clnhs. They formed a long procession, followed hy the villagers. Their chanting was excellent for High School Clee Clubs and added much to the production. l'rrf1r' lffjlflf-X'-flllll' Dramatics llramatics in Santa Monica High School have been exceedingly successful this year. This success is due to three factors. First and foremost is Miss Morris. dra- matic coach. Miss Morris puts originality into plays which adds charm and action. The school owes much to Miss Morris for her work as coach for drama. Second is the students themselves. The school has a large number of students who have great dramatic talent. They show interest, are all congeniial and willing to do their parts well, besides being dependable. Last, but not least, is the executive staff. The stage crew deserves credit for thir splendid work this year. The property man- agers, costume mistresses and prompters have also shown much interest in their work. u THE CHRISTMAS CAROL The Christmas Carol was produced on December l2th before the Student Body assembly. It was cleverly worked out under the direction of Miss Ellis. The plot deals with Scrooge, a cynical old man who holds no faith in Christmas and the Yuletide spirit. . This particular Christmas he is visited by the spirit of Christmas. In spirit form he goes with the Christmas Spirit and visits familiar places, sees what real spirit is and hears what other people think of him. He sees the Christmas of the past, present and future. Scrooge decides he can do more for other people and get more out of life if he spends the money which he has hoarded and saved for years. Thus he is transformed from a hard-hearted and stingy old man into a kind-hearted and jolly old man who tries to make everybody happy. Scrooge was interpreted by Robert Reep. His characterization of the old, selhsh man was all that could be desired from an amateur player. Others who deserve mention are: Melzar Lindsey, Ralph Miller, Harrison Lewis, Pauline Hume, Edna Ackerman, Lee Symington, Alfred Spaeth, Elwood Die- bold, Procter Gingles and ,lean Leslie. PUBLIC SPEAKING CLASSES The fourth period public speaking classes presented two plays, The White Lie and The Ghost Story,', in May under the direction of Miss Ellis. The White Lie dealt with an old negro slave, Robert Reep, protecting his young master, Harrison Lewis, from the hands of the deputy sheriff, Oscar Sattinger. The play, with the old log cabin setting, was very atiective and well produced. The Ghost Story dealt with a very bashful young man who tried to make love to his desire. During the proceedure several guests came in and interrupted him. In order to force them to leave he told them a ghost story. His lady love, however, was the one who was frightened and caused the young man much trouble in trying to be of aid to her. The play ends with the girl doing most of the proposing. Max Bouquets Southland Seranaders furnished the music for both productions. GLEE CLUBS A public performance in two parts was given by the Boys' and Girls, Senior Glee Clubs at the close of the first semester. The first part included a number of miscellaneous numbers of part songs by the Boys' Glee. The second was a musical skit, The Isle of Capriif, given by the Girls' Glee, assisted by eight boys from the Boys' Glee and the orchestra. The program was put on under the direction of Miss Rogers, Miss Morris and Mrs. Roberts. It was the most finished skit ever produced in this school. litljlt' liiylily-jim' The Charm School Those who saw the Senior play. The Charm School, all joined in declaring it the most successful play produced in years. It far excelled even the most san- guine hopes of the east. The Charm School has unusual dramatic moments. The story revolved around a young automobile salesman who inherits a girls' hoarding school and proceeds to conduct the school personally. The president of the Senior class falls in love with him and causes many entanglements. The crisis is reached when she runs away hecause of her love for him. which he ignores. After some dithculty she is hrought hack. the school is put in command of the vice-principal. and the young man returns to town to a new position with the girl as his wife. Marian lVliller as lflise Benidotti. the president of the Senior class. played the parl in her usual graceful and charming manner. She not only won her way into the heart of the audience hut also into the heart of Austin lievans. the automohile salesman who inherited the school upon the death of his maiden aunt. Lelioy Enoch as Austin Bevans played the determined salesman and the reticent yet purposeful lover with eelat. Oscar Sattinger as George Boyd. Robert Coggins as Jim Simpkins. Alfred Spaeth as 'liim Simpkins, and liohert Heep as David McKenzie. room-mates ot' Austin lic-vans. played their parts to perfection. llomer johns. played hy Ben Hare, showed splendid dramatic power in por- traying the character of the old gentleman who hetween moods of mirth and anger added a great deal of action to the play. Pauline Hume in the part of Sally lioyd with her clever sayings and hoy antics was the life of the play. lfyelyn Howe as Miss Curtis kept the audience in a gale of laughter with her clever interpretation of the role of the excitable teacher. while Kathleen Bender as Miss llays. showed the other extreme. the confident. self-reliant woman. lioth girls were reniarkahly clever in their parts. 'l'hc rest ol' the girls of the school were excellent as wide-awal-ze .-Xmerican school girls. l'ugfe lfigllzly-.vi.1' CAST O I CH A liAC'l'lQHS Austin Bevans A,A,,,..,,,.,A..,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,,,,AA, ,,,,,,A L fr-Roy Enoch An ziutoniohile salesman with ideas. which David lVlcKenzie ,..,,.,,i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,A,,,,,,,i,,, ,,,,, R ohert Keep A law student, considered unpractical, though George Boyd ....,.,.....AY.,,,......A,.i,i,,.,..,,,..i,,,,,,,,,, i,,,,,,,,i,i,,,i,,,,,,i,,,i,,,,,,,, ,Y,,,, O 5 car Sattinger An expert accountant, is willing to co-operate. and so are ,lim Sinlplcins ,,...,i,.i,...,,,,,..,.. ,,,,.,,i.,.i,,i,,,,,,,,4,,,,,,,,,,,i,,i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,i i..,, l Q oherl Coggins and 'l'iin Sixnpkins ..,...,Y,...,.Y,..,i..i.,,,YY,,.,Y,.,7i,,Y,.,,,,,,....,,,,,,,,,,,.....,..,..ii.ii.,,,,,, Y..., A lfred Spaeth Who toil not and have never seriously considered spinning. Homer johns .,,,,,.,i,,...,,,,Y.,,,,,,YY,,,,,,,,.,,Y.,.,,,,,,Yi,,,i,,,,,,,,i,i,,,,,,,,,,,,i,ii....iA... .,., l Senjumin Hare is the guardian of Elise Benedotti ,.,A,....,.,Y,,..,........,...iA,,,.......,,,..i,,,,,,...A,.....,,,,,,,,,A.,,,,,,,,,,,...,,,.. Marian Miller the president of the Senior class at an school presided over hy Miss Havs .A,,,,,,,,.,..,.i,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,i,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,i,,,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,i.,,.,,i,,AA., Kathleen Bender who' is loved and feared hy all who know her. including the secretary. Miss Curtis AA,..r,,A,,,,r,,,,,,,A.,r,,,,,r,,,r,,.,,,,,,4r,,,r,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,r,,r,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,r,,.,.,r,,..A. lfvelvn Howe who is always trying to think well of the Senior class. consisting of I Sally Boyd .......,Y,,,,.,..,..,,,,, ......,.... P uuline llllllle who is Muriel ,,,,..,. lithel ,,,Yr,,, Alis, l,illiun ,,,., Mudge ,..,.., , Georges sister, an Gwendolyn ...., llotslew, Lois Kopperl ...r...lVlargal'et Vallat ,.,,,,Cynlhia Nlurtyn ,,,,,,,lda lVluy Valiant ,Clytie Haskell X unnelia lilunchlield lilin Anderson l'tn1.' lfigflziy-.x'r':w'11 Come Cut of the Kitchen Come Out of the Kitehenf' the annual ,lunior play. was produced on Friday eseuing. the 20th of April, to a eapaeity house. The play deals with the trouhles of a southern family. who, finding themselves without funds, rent their home to a northern gentleman and masquerade as his serxants. The play was a success eonsidering the faet that most of the east were inex- perienced. However, there were a few in the Cast who showed excellent hegiunings in spite of this handicap. Frances Kearsley and Lee Symington in the roles of Jane lfllan and Burton Crane deserve great credit for making the play a success. lVliss Kearsley. with her graceful and Charming lnanner. eould not have been outdone in her part of ,lane Ellan. the lrish Cook. who falls in love with Burton Crane. the northern gentleman who rents her parents' home for a few months. Not only was her poise correct hut her voice was smooth and non-irritating as so many beginners are. Lee Symington, despite his laek of experienee, played the part of Burton Crane with that ealm and unrullnled manner so seldom found in the unexperieneed aetor yet so mueh appreciated hy the audience. Among those who should he mentioned for their very eredihle work are lfdna A1-kerman. who played the part of the highly irritahle Mrs. lfalkner: Lincoln Hart as Smithfield. the hutler. and Marian Nutall as Mandy. the old eolored mammv. James Niel as 'l'ueker relieved a number of situations with his deft eoniedy touehes. lflizaheth Sloane portrayed the sull-cy Beth. Vuyn liigflilxi'-riglil CAST OI CHARACTERS Ulnlu lhnigerhelil lilllilS june l',llen!t, lflizulwth llungerfield talias Araniintu! Mrs. l ulkner Vllueker-s sister! ,,,,,,,,..,,.. Corn l z1lliner ther daughter! AA,.,,, M and y ....,Y,A,,...,.,....,A,.,,,...,....,.,,,,,,,, llnrton Crane tfrom the North! .,,,,. 'l'homus Letlerts lstutisticzil poet! ..,.,, Solon Tucker lCl'ilIlP.S attorney! ...A....,,, Paul Dungzertield talias Smithfield! ,.... Clnirles llnngerlielrl talias Brinclehury! ,,,,,,. llamdolpll Weeks tagent of the Dangerli elrls! ,,,, , . ..l rances Kearsley .l,.,,,,l'flizabeth Sloan ,,.,..lfdna Ackerman llorothy Sederholni Marion Nuttall ,,.,,.Lee, Symington ,.Neil McDonald ,.,.,,,,,,lan1es Neill ,,,,,....,.LlIll'0lll Hart ,nnllolmert Nittinger ...,.,.,...Jaek Snell lhlgn' lfigflltki'-trim' Erminiev i'iI'llllIllC,.i one of the most successful comic operas. was produced on the even- ings of May 2-lth and 25th under the general supervision of Miss Rogers. with the aid of Miss Morris, director of dramatics: Miss Caroll, staging of the chorusg Mrs. Roberts directing the lights, scenery and costumes. and Miss Walker. voice coach. The opera is laid in France and gives an excellent opportunity for quaint. beau- tiful settings and a large chorus. The opera deals with the escape of two notorious thieves who. having tied. gagged and robbed a nobleman by the name of Viscount de Brissac, proceed to the Marquis, home and masquerade as the Viscount de Brissac and a Baron. Many dillicnlties arise due to the fact that the false Viscount went so far in his masquerade as to take the place of the real Viscount in his betrothal to the Marquis' daughter. The crisis is reached when the real Viscount escapes and returning to the Marquis proves his identity. The two thieves are put into the capable hands of Captain Dulanney and his men, who return them to jail. The cast follows: Two Thieves- Ravy .,..,.. ...i....... ,I ack Cuercio Caddy ..... .u...... ,I ack McGowan Marquis ...,.,... .... D emorest Wemple Cheveliel ',...... ....... D onald Powers Dufois ......r.. ,, . .,,,,,, Robert Heep Simon ......,......,...,.,.r. ..,,. M ax Caulkins Captain Dulauney ......,., ..,..... B enjamin Hare Viscount de Brissac ,.... ....... A llan Reynolds Sargent ....,....,.........,. ,,,.... W arren Scott Benedict ...... ..,. W alter Shields Erminie ...,., .,.. A lice Ranyard Cerise .,..... ,,,.,,,,,. L ucy Leach Princes ........ , ........... Helen Clark .lavotte ........ ...,.... B essie Friedman Marie .............,..,..,................,........,..,.....r..........,................ Cynthia Martyn A chorus of Hower girls, French villagers. lords and ladies. MUSIC The Music Club has had a most fiourishing year with a membership of over a hundred. Their efforts to raise the standard of music, to advance student talent and to support and promote all musical activities in the high school have been truly demonstrated through the splendid co-operation of those on the Executive Board with Marion Miller as President, Harrison Lewis Vice-President, Lester Farnum Secretary-Treasurer, and Miss Olive Powers as Faculty Advisor. Besides the school talent the club has been fortunate in obtaining the services of some of the best talent in the city, including Mr. Morrison, Mrs. Shoemaker. Mr. and Mrs. Westerbeld, Mrs. Miller, Mr. Mitchell, Miss Freebey, Mrs. Barnum, Mr. and Mrs. Cripp, Mrs. Jackson, Mrs. Levengood, Miss Isabell Nair, Lynn Merrill and Professor Cherviowsky. The following Club members have also appeared on programs this year: Lily Matison. Marion Miller, Virginia Wright, Dorothy Matson, Lucy Leach. Clytie Haskell. Ruth Maher, Caroll Goodwin, Gertrude Tyson and Stella Coodman. l'ag1r .N'im'ly DEBAT Debating - . The debating teams of Santa Monica High School were developed under the eflicient coaching of Miss Ulivc Morris. and with the help of various other faculty mem- bers during I922-23. They demonstrated in all their debates that they possessed plenty of grit. enough of the spirit of courage and self-determination. and sullicient mental alertness to carry them through a successful debating season crowned with several victories. Dc- feats. ah. yes. were presented to us twice. though the debaters fought hard for the Blue and Cold. liut these are defeats only as far as the decision goes. ln choosing and organizing the debaters. Santa Monica High School has a method all its own. Try-outs are held previous to each debate. Any student who is a member of the Associated Student Body and who is passing in three solids is eligible to try-out. Ifnder the management of ,Iunius Munson, Debating Manager, and Miss Morris. Debating Coach. this method has proved successful. It gives every student a fair chance and gives Miss Morris the advantage of selecting the very best of the entire Student Body to represent Santa Monica. According to the Constitution. any student taking part in two interscholastic debates is awarded a debating pin by the school. No student is allowed to take part in more than two interscholastic debates. There are several Public Speaking and Debate Classes instructed by Miss Morris and Miss Idllis. These classes greatly encourage. develop and support debating in the high school. Finally students and people are coming to the realization that debating is as important and is as worthy of as much attention and support as any other one activity in school, and it has received a just amount this year from students and townspeople. Santa Monica High School did not win the championship this year but it came close to doing so. And now comes the old, old story. Watch us next year. but. anyhow. Just watch us. SANTA MONICA VS. VENICE VS. INCIISWOOD December 7 marked the opening of the debating season for Santa Monica lligh School. This was arranged as a triangular debate. The score of the Inglewood. Santa Monica debate was not counted in the League. however. Our negative team sallied forth to Inglewood. Inglewood's negative to Venice. Venice's negative to Santa Monica. The question for debate was: Resolved that the lfnited States should recognize the de facto government of Mexico. Virginia McClure and Melzar l,indsey upheld the affirmative on Mhome groundv against Venice. The Santa Monica debaters surpassed the Venice debaters in many ways. Their arguments were direct and to the point and their reputation excellent. Santa Monica won triumphantly over the Venetians by the unanimous decision of the judges and a score in points of l9l l 'fi to l67. Cynthia Martin and Winnifred Priday strongly upheld the negative side of the same question at Inglewood. They handled their arguments very well. though they used their voices to good advantage and fought long and hard for the Blue and Gold. Inglewood succeeded in winning over Santa Monica by a 2-I decision from the judges and a score in points of I92lQ to 200. Boo--lioo--Whoo! liut it was only a score. l'm1r .N ulclv-licav SANTA MONICA VS. ALHAMISRA The next antagonist proved to he Alhamlmra and Santa lVloniea set to work to win this dehate. The dehaters chosen to represent Santa lVloniea High Qehool were: Melzar Lindsey. Virginia lVleClure. allirmatixe. and Ona lVlarler and Winnifred Pri- day. negative. After some diseussion the question chosen for this delmate was: lit-solved that the United States government should own and eontrol the eoal mines of this eountry. The dehaters worked hard seeuring valuahle evidenee to prove their eases. The allirmative and negative of Santa lVloniea lmeeame elose eompetitors and held many lively diseussions whieh gave them mueh praetiee and experienee. Yvhen Felmruarv lb eame around. the Santa lVloniea dehaters were readv to meet their opponents with their arguments well in hand. and with an almundanee of grit. eourage and self-determination. Our affirmative team remained at home while our negative team marehed forth to wage war in the enemy's vamp. As Alhamhra had ln-en the winner of the dehating championship of this lieague several times in sue- ession. there was mueh spirit aroused and the exeitement was intense lvoth in Santa Nlaniea and at Alhamlmra. The Alhantlbra delmaters lmrought with them some hundred rooters and there was a large turn-out of own our students. The true sports- manship that night proved the real spirit of hoth sr-hools. Alhambra was given the verdiet at Alhamlmra. lvut at home Santa Moniea won lriumphantlv. This being a simultaneous League dehate the seores of the two dehates were averaged as the points to he eounted for eaeh sehool in the League. The result was IOII3 Alhamhra. and l825f6 Santa Moniea. SANTA MONICA VS. WHl'I I'lEIt Whittier High was drawn as the next and last opponent in delmating for the vear. April I7 was seleeted as the fatal day for Whittier. This was a single delwate. thus only one team was ehosen. Try-outs were held and Cynthia lllarttn lhufe .Yi11rIwt'-llllww' ainil 'Xliu' llnlisli wvri' si'l1'1'l1'4l lu I'l'lil'l'4f'lIl Fnnlai Mmniivzi. 'l'lu' fgiuslinn lim' rlvlvaiti' wus: li1'snlu'il llizil llu' lnilvcl Slulvs slumnlil i'4'm'ugg'iiizf' llu' Smivl gnu'i'nnu'nl nl' llnssiai. Ninlii Nlnnivai npluvlmlingg ilu' lIl'glilllXI'. 'l'Iu' Ivunis 1-nti'r1'4l llu'4l4'lu2l1' ull prinuwl to liglil lu ilu' linislifi 'X lzirjy' nnni- lwi' nl hllllll'lllS l'nll nl' lil'4' anul gwp vunu' uni ln liven' llu' clvlmnlm' anul In sluvw llu' 1l4'lvul1'rs llml llu'y wvri' lu'l1iiul llu'in. winning or losing. Strong :irgnnu'nls wvrr' gni'f'so'iil4'4l nn luvlll siilvs. ln l'l'lilIlilll0ll. livrx' wnrmls llvw luvl uncl lust. 'l'lu' sgwviail l1':ilnr1' ul llns ilvlulli' was llu' sinull nss' of nnlvs liy llu' Fsinlu Nlonuui 1l1'lml4'i's. lfvnlliiu lllairlin nsing: lmnl livw' anul Alix-v llulisli nmu' in llu'ir l'UllSll'lll'llX'l' zn'gnnu'nls. 'xl.ll'l' ai xvry 1'Xl'lllllgI4'lilSll inul Illlllly inuvm'nu'nls nl' wailing mul anixivlv. llu' ,lllllQl'H' rvnnrls slnvwml lliul Sunlu llluiiivuis 1'm1ti'ntinn was ilu' lu'tl4'r :incl ilu' inure' ul-lx gn'm'si'iils'ml. 'lllu' svnri' in points lwingg l95l3 Sunlzi lllmiivn. In lfilg Xlliitlivr. lN'l'lCli-lTI,ASS lll'il3Nl'l'i ln inl1'r-1'luss1l1'lruI1's iu'w Illill1'l'llll is ulwuys lllll'iIl'llll'tl wliivli giws In lu'lp nuilx- ing llu' llIll'l'-Sl'llUlilSll4' work ai s1u'c'1'ss in lnlnrf' yvurs. 'lllu' flvlmlvs am' s1'lu'flnle'4l iuun' llu' 1-lose' nl' llu' svluml yvur. 'llrynlits ure' lu'lcl. mul ai lvann is vluwsvn lu 1'm'gn':'- svn! 4'zu'li vluss. lfirsl llu' l rm'slinu'n lvzlllll' willi ilu' Snplmiiim'4's. tlu'n llu' ,luniurs willi ilu' Svniurs. 'l'lu' winning: imnn nl' llu' l rc'sliniun-S0plumiium' flvlmlc' tlu'n wzigvs wan' un ilu' winning lvann nl' llu' ,llllllOl'-SPlll0!' clvliulv. 'lllu' winning: tmnn of lliis mlvluilo' is mli'1'laii'1'1l ilu' 1-lunnpiim lvann ol llu' svluuwl. l'llll'i5llMAN-50l,ll0lVlUlll'i llICl2A'l'li May l wus ilu' tlzilx' lim' llxis flvlmlv. Tlu' qnvslion wus. ll1'solvm'cl. 'l'lnll ilu' gmlii-y nl' ilu' gj0Vl'l'llIll1'l1l lowurml llu' Anu'ria'zin lncliun is jllslilialillfi Dorolliy llisluip. Alun R1'yll0lllS anal Clilliorfl llirfl of llu' l I'l'SlllIlilll vluss slronggly uplu'lrl llu' ullirnuilivm' siclf' of ilu- quvstinn. l'lstlu'r Slowvll. Carroll l.m'lu'4'r and Arllnnl Nvlson ol' llu' Snplunnnrf' vluss airglnvfl ilu' ll1'gIZlllYt'. llntli l1'lllllS pI'0ClllI'i'll snnu' elmng: zn'g:unu'nls and sliuwwl llu' vllivieiil l'0Ili'llil'IgI that llu'y r4'i'c'iwd funn Miss Ellis. 'l'lu' l r1'slnnain tvznn m'urrie'1l ull' tlu' lunrvls by an 2-l volv. .IUNIOR-Sl'NlOR UlCl2A'I'lC jniu' ll w as llu' duh' svt fur ilu' ,lunior-Senior df'l1z1lf'. 'flu' qnvslion wus: liv- sulwcl. 'l'l1ul ai Small Collvgif' is Be'tlc'r Than an Largzf' Cnllf-ge. 'flu' junior tvani. mun- posvd of lillllil Ac'lu'rinun. Lee' Syllllllglflll and llolwrl Nittingvr uplwlcl tlu' nvgatiw wllilf' Wlilliann Alrlmtl. Ac'lu'rrnun llrigzggs and Alive Halisli of llu' Svniors. tlu' zlllirlnu- livv. 'llliis was un inl4'r4'sling,' anul livvly fliscussinn as llu' quvslion zipgwuls In :ill liiggli svluml Slllil1'lllS. Miss lfllis i'oau'lu'd ilu' tvznns. 'l'lu' l re'slnnun tvznn will nvxl clvlmlc' witll llu' winning: lmnn ull llu' junior- Svnior 1l1'l1:iI4' ln flwiils- llu' Vllillllplllll lvann nl llu' lliggli Svluuxl. iii ii iii, l'.1i1i' .Yi'in'1,N'-fniii' ? X cb, , , O . KCYNF W :mill J - ' 3' U - t -SB ,. A . 0 '-ii lt . C A. S. ll. NUXICMISICR IU. I922 llurruhl At lust ll cluiivel YM- were so huppy! None othvr than tht- .-X. S. Il. llop. More uppropriule tleeorutions. illlil WOIlflf'l'lilIl lIlllSll'. lfveryoiie had u rol- livlxinq time uncl ew-i'yoiie liulerl to go home. VW' never kiuws that me 1-ouhl lialw- sur-h un uprourious time ut ll st-hool mluiive. hut ue did. lfxen Nliss Pierson and Nlr. l,orcl dum-1-il uwuy the linw. -' samoQfFQasunAN ' Q Qscapriou Well the- senion'-l're'sliiiiuii rm-ertion went off the he-st ever. More fun! And l still more refreshments. ,lust oodles of ice vreuni. And the freshman were so funny. They eertaiuly enjoyed themselves. Games were played and the seniors just forgot to he dignified. The liI'f?SllIlllllI say that when they get to he seniors. they ure' going to gin' the invoniing freshmen ll Mllflll welcome just like ilu- one they 1-1-eeived. ssmorz TQ. ,, DANCE if '35 SENIOR. Dl'X1liMBER I5. 1922 The Senior danvc' was one wontlerliul ullair. Devorutious. liulihles of joy in thi- form of hulloons. serpentine enough for three flilllf'f'S. and vonfetti that neurly ruusetl u riot. l,u1'kv-spot prizes were given away to the lucky ones. ln fuel. exery thing wus perfect. lu-uve it to thi- Seniors. l'u5ft' .YlIlt'lj'-Xf.l' I ' Q fw?,nANAcaQs' -51, BALL MANAGERSI .IANPAIN IZ. 19221 'l'ln- lllunugvrsl llallll Tlwsf- six follows gnu' us at dm-idvd sliovk ulivn they did t'Yt'l'YllllIlgI all ln' lllt'lllSPlYf'S. livon to serving tln' punt-li and 1-ookivs. l saw Austin bulc' WilSlllllgI tllv dislws illill'l'Will'llS2 lui cvrtuinlv is t'lc'vf'r at tllat. As usual llvd livrr was ull oxvr the plum' lllillilltg vvvryonf' ff-vl ut ll0IIlP. Lucky-spot prizes und 1-onlvttl wm'rc' passed lltftlllgll the Crowd und tlwrc- rvrtaiinly was tx pvppy vrowd lllPl'1'l Wt' all rm'viwtl il plvasunt surprise' wlwn nv mire ullowvd to llillllf' twvnty rninutvs on-rtinw. ' ' mms' - , Q - - GYM f . JINKS Q ' GYM JINKS. MARCH 9. 10233 Tln- girls sure-ly put il on for onv anotlivr. Mort' 1-lvwr skits and good f-nts. We- llt'Xt'l' alto so llllll'll in ull our livvs. You know just lion' wvll wc' like to vat. If thc- lvovs could onlv sw' tht- girls in the-ir voslunws. tlwv would liuve' fullvn uwfullv llztrd. 'llw judges had at lmrd time- awarding the- prizvs. 'l'lw furulty survly did tlwir stntl. if ' ODI-IOMCQE . 0 SKID . Q J SOl'll. SKIP. MARCH 223. 19223 XX 0 nvrt- ullnost in tours nlwn we- lic'zu'd tliut lln' S0lJlltlIll0l'l'F is 1-rv going lo give- al kid s purtv and lliltl Lllltllll tlvvltlt-tl to stew lionn-. wlwn lllvv xxokv up to tln' luvt and vlizu tln- Il2llll't' uns at lrrilliunl lllliillll lmuvv it to tlnf S0llllS. More' originality and vxvrv 'i Q' vlan-r' uns d1'm'ora1t4'd us il' l'rosidvnt llurdinff iwn' to ln' tlu-re-. And tlnng. lli I F tht- rvlrvslnna-ntsl XX v lxntvd to ln-ur tln- de-nr old song. nllllllll' Sm-vt llonnn litlllt' .YIwi-t'-.ft':'t'11 igvd it to at rc-gulau' daulrv. lxlilylllx you think iw Wl'l't'lI-I lllllllly. Uf rourse Nav. is 1' tht l' 1 +30 Q. - 'Wm MUSIC CLUB DANCE MUSIC CLI Ii. APRII, 27. IOZZII vught that the- Music' Cluh waS at studious huuvh. and wt' f'xpr'1't1'cI 'utlwr at 1-Iussii-ul llII'2lII'. Iivlivw' us. wc' IIPVPI' I'llj0Vl'd AIIIVIIIIIIIII more- than wc' tIirI this dum-4-. 'I'Iu-v survls know how to show von a me-Il time. Thv musiv. thx 1It't'0I'2lII0ll5 and thi- l'f'Il'Q'9IIIlIt'llIS 1-oulchlt haw- Iwvn Iwttc-r. In addition to all this too fortune- tolling hooths uftorclvd the fIZlllt'f'I'5 uiuvh vlijoyim-lit. UETTEQMENS I CLUB DANCE 9? I,IC'I I'IilIIN'IIC'X. MAN III. IOZII Uh. you I,1'ttt-ruu'u. you with the- ol'1'Iu'stl'a. the hosts. and tht- rt-f1'1'sIunc-nits. we had thc- In-st timv vw-l'. WWII say the I,f-ttvrrnvu arc- good for sonwlhing In-sich-5 ithh-tin-s. And to think. only om' iuorv KIIIIICS' this year. I J UNIOQ DDOIVI a s 'Q'-I' C It mg I .' JUINIUIIS. JUNE I5. I923 IIN- Inst tlzuuw- oI tht yvzu' was tht- 54-nior Prom. Hurrah for the- juniors It uns Ihr' lwppic-st cIzuu'v of thfx yvar. and they vvrtainly sllowvfl the- Svlliors at won dvrful tinw. ,lust om' surprise aftvr another. S9l'lJPllIIlH'. 1-oufvtti. lucky-spot flallvvs llld N0llfIl'l'flll 1'vf1'4'sI11uf'l1ts. 'Iihfl Junior oIIicf'rS l'Pl'IilIllIy IKIIPIS how to plan an intvrvstiiig and 1-xviting du l'uy1t'.Yil1i'Iy-rig llt'l'. Cale 19 -'zz V COMDILED BY OC. Salt 1111.351 ILLUSTQATED BY Edwlnt-Iamm l'llliAMl3l.l'I TO 'WIC CM,l'lNlJAll What is Ytllll' valllllill opinion of this palst XVIII' ol' l'J22-23? If it is not llvvill- welll' li1lXUI'illllQ'. von onlv l'llIAlllSll thv t'Xt't'llll0ll that provvs c'v1'l'x l'lllt'. 'lllll'0llg1ll0lll thi' SPLISUII proof has lN'l'Il l'lll'lIlSltt'il lltlll' alnll liltlf' ilgillll ol' thi- illf'1'l'iol'itv ol' past YQ'ill'S als l'0Itlplll't'tl to that through wllivll nl' llalvf' just ptlssvtl. With no SIN'l'lill sllplwlorlty lll any ont' fllI'l't'lI0ll. tht- svalsoll has llf't'll llllvcl lxllll ll llvll-lltllzlllw-ll llst ol' 1-lvnts. Tho zlthlvtil' l1'1tllIS. itllllllllgll tht-y hull' non no vllzllllpiollsllips llsitll thc' possi- Iltl- 4'Xl't'llllllll ol' tht' llalsvllalll lf'illll.S Wlllllillg its 501124011 als tllis got-s to prvssl. hull' shoxsn lsllalt stvrling: plilyG'l'S. liglltvrs. and sportslnl-ll Sltlllll lvlHllil'2l Vllll Ill'Utllll'4'. gll4'll has lN't'll tht- vzlss' allikv ill footllllll. llllskvtlulll. ll'llt'li. illlfl llalsvllull. 'llllv llrzlnlzltit' svzlsoll also hzls lwvll Ll rlvvillvcl Sllt'l'i'SS. 'llllf' Slllflvlll Holly. Svnior. IlIIll0I'. illltl olll--llvt plays llzlvc' sholsn tht- WUlltlt'I'l'lIl lilll'lIl that tht- svhool is zlhll- to IlI'0lllll't'. l'll'0tll first to lust. thv SPZISUII has lN'f'll OIIP flmllllltil' lfillllllill illil1'l' dIlUllll'l'. illlll this stats- of ullalirs vxtvllclc-cl lwyoncl tht- llrullllltil' llvlfl illto that ol' llvlllltvs. alssvllllllie-s. and tliIlll't'S. All of tllvsl' llilYl' lll'l'lt 0x1'f'lll'llt. to suv tht- lvalst. 'SlN'l'llllly Ihr' llzlllrvs. Novell' lwforc hzls any YFIII' llitlls-ssvll tht- support iltlfl pop :Iilvn to tht- svhool llilllt'l'S of '23, llalsl. :intl llltiril llotuhlc' ol' ull vxvllts. Mvlzul' l.incls4'y with his Ofillltltl on ,lohn lhl2ll'SlIilll non St'l'0llIl prim' ill tllv grvzlt Constitution f,I'ill0l'il'ill Colltvst. lll 0lllQ'l' l'vspvl'ts thx' your has lN'l'll tlvl-iclc-ally nhl- Uqllill. if not tht- snpvl'ior. ol' pzlst yQ'lll'S. Um' ol' its Illllllllll' lI'lIilS hats llvvll the' lf'llClQ'lll'y of tht- pllpils to iIlt'llllt' tommls lN'l'lvQ't'll0Il. mlllsvcl. no tlttlllll. hy the- nf-ll lllf'l'll Syilvlll. Mlllly tilllf'l' things too Illlllll'l'tlllS to lllt'llllUll. only go to Sll'Q'lllLflllt'Il thv lN0l'Q'g1llllfI stutvlllvllts. 0. C. S,l'l l'lxl:lclc. l'llgf4' .Yiut'I,l'-llull' Ye Calendar 1 llatrli In fvltuul on Fvpt. lfl. ,Xml liairtlly haul iw- r:'ulin'4l it Q lit-l'ni'v mit' nhl riutl. Fun l'1-nlru. 8 .V Ups-:tml tht- gmail ul' fmmtlvull wzlsutt 1 XX'ilh at line' Ill-T loss on Uvt. lvl. is , I Iiiglt-xhtml zilw sliziri-tl tht- sunn- ' gi lfzilt' at we-vk ltitvi' vilwn ilu-5 X Q I llalrrii-tl Imnu- at 27-6 mlvlvut its at Xknicc O xl , Swim-iiir. :Xt this slugs' of tht- . K - tial:-mlur. iw Qhalll nn-iitimt our X X i f f .. . . X I X - lltljlt' Uitt'llt1t11lt't'tl lhmr lil lrvslitvs. who ws-rv lu-yully tw-nw-ixw-tl hy ilu- zilmigltty Ss-iiiuix mt Nm, ZZ. hut the- fimtlutll S1-aisuni mu with us mum- inurn- Wlic-ii at lilili- hurtl lurk tiamwl thu-ill-im plan-1-il mir fuml ilSllll'LlllltIlS ln thu- iltsvurtl as wt- lust nut' lfirwt gaitm-. on Nov, 3 'l'um-. lil-tl. tX situ-1-ss luulzttuv-el this fl:-It-ut Iluvu-w-i', wht-n un tha- Haunt- night. 'l'hi- l'ip4'i'. .'X. S. ll. play. tlisplayt-tl Out' time-sl ilruinutim' l1llt'lll. utul lhiring thr- nvxt tim ww-ks. our tXm-ivitt rivals. lluntingtuti Park :tml xl'llI1'1' in-rv sue-pl ull thvtr li-vt hy nur Santa Xlonirzt glueliutnis. mul lm-ill--ntnlly tlmppt-it lmth gattnvs. Y L 'lhi-ii, last hut nut lr-ast the' vurtzttit iz mv' l 4 P U XXX-lmfte-iw. who timk on V1-tiiw :tml ltigh-un In ai iluul ill-Inuit-. 1-ndiiig in Ll ilruw. lknlluw-il hy the- app:-uiutivr' uguin nl' Our ilmimitisls nn D4-1-. ln mln-it llivlu-its tflirixltnus Karol was sph-mliilly piwltim-rl. XXlll'l'l'lltlUIl thu- N-ninrs lu:-vzllilv rvstla-Qs 'Xml gain- thi-ii' zititiuul ilunw- tht- fami- Nigghl. l'illl4lll,1L thi- Xlutiugi-fs illuh. uliicli XXus tint tu lu' ntltwlnmz tn put uvcr X liig1li-pmt1-rv-ml tlunw- mi Alam. lil that Xlunli- at iw-niwl in thi- wt-iul atiinails ul tht- sl'lttlnl, l'h1-it the' luislwlluull svziwii ln-gun wi-ukly XXith at hw- to ll. l'.. hut XQ'lIgl'LlIlt'1' ugh llziittwl Iirum Xviiim' uml litglt-untill, .Xgalitl Um' twatlms lmliln-tl up until mlvlnuti-tl .Xlltzitnlnrai tu ll mlrztu nn lfvh. IO, linllmtml Um- we-wk lattvr. hx tha' amnuatl l't'mliu'liui1 ul thu' Bvtttur vlziss play. Ilii- tlliatrm Svlt-ml. tiiztkitig at lnig sttwvs- Xml panting lor its wt. als the' bln-s bill. S3-Tl 4 'l'ltv l rt-sltit-s tltt-tt tratiltwl tltv St-ttittrs 3 5' f7Q,g,.,, With at lirst-t'lttss tlt-wltttttattitntt mt L Q Nlatrclt T. fullmu-tl tttu tlttys Itttt-r hy 4, 'i ' L 'l'Itt- :tttttttatl Girls' liynt .Iittx. the 4 K A . - . llctzttls tal ttlttt-It cattt nut ln- prt-svtttt-tl ' 'i ' ltt tltis lfatle-tttlttr. sittvt' the-x ttt-rv ttttt X . RLAr1iQ'l A f Witttt-ssewl hy tltt- ztttthor. Wltilt' lltvst' E T A lin-ttts ttt-rv m't'ttt't'ittg1 in svlttml. D U 6 Out' t-ross t'otttllt'y t'tttttt1-rs tptivtly Q , . . . . W - Won tltt- llatt l.4-ztgttt' Lltzttttptttttslttp lm' ffm att t-xt-nt. tsltilt- tht- tw-tttttitttle-t' tal' tltt- atvk te-uni tmtk tltirtl plum- in the l.t-ttgtw tttwtt :tt M'ttit'a'. atntl tltt-tt f lht- Boys' l.t-atggttv uttttlvxillv mt Nlttrclt I5 zttttl lft t-usilv sttrpttssml 5 pre-xttttts tttttutt-tn' tutttlt-ttllv mt-t' vt-tt tn this setvtiun mtl. tltt- stattt-. ltt tt ttnspttttott nl tltts lieth-ttwlztr. it nntp lit- ttutt-tl tltztl tltt- ,lttttiurs ltatt- not Bt-e-tt tttt-tttiottwl this yt-ttt'. so tu- txislt tu Nutt' that on April 20. at nt-xx tit-ltl of 'ttntzttit' ttltility mats pt'mlttt't'4l hy tht- 5 t- '- zttttv - st - z - bil' ' - Anil ttttutltc-t' tant' at ww-lx latte-t' mt-r t' l't'im-tttlly 1-ttvtttt. N1-ttivv. txltivlt 'Xt tlatt- of pre-ss, svvttts prutttisittg l ur at vltattttpinttsltip this yt-att: sts tltws ttlstt 'l'Itt- lztvt tltztt uttt' tlrtttttutivs tttuttztge-t' hats ' 'twl in tht- littztls ul' tltt- nt'tttnt'it'atl utttte-sl ltrnttgltt lu tts yvatrly vlintatx in tht- ctttttit- Opt-rat l'ft'tttittit'. vttttsittg tht- N1-tt' Ynrk Opt-rutit' stairs tu qttulu- in tltvir hunts lftwntt jt-ztlnttsy. attttl on Nitty ll Mt-lfztr Litttlsvy gttittvml grrvztt lzttnt- 's urztttwy St-mtttl prize' :tml 55500. ztltvt' Whit-It. tltt- gr:-att 4-lil yvztt' ul' '22-'23 'l't-rtttittzttt-tl in tltt- t't-ggttlttr tttztttttt't'. t-tilt llc-ttvr. with tltt- sph-ttclitl fzttw-wt-ll patrtt. 'l'ltt- ,lttttiur pmttt. :tml vlttss ttitt- ptwgt'atttt .-Xtwotttpttttit-tl lay ztll tht- utltttt' 4-xt-nts 'I'ltatt get tn apply tltt' lim-sst- utttl tittis 'lp at splt-tttlitl st-usott. atlitvt' tsltit-lt 'l'he' stvrling St-ttiors nl' tltt' lflttss ol '23 Wort' ofliciztlly ltzttttlt-tl tltvir tlipltttttzts 'Ktttl pztssvtl into srltttttl llislttfy. gg. ne- - ... as- ' stttstttt. :tn Xltty 120 szttt tltv twrk ul' tltt- gl:-v t-lttlts X COM wfgffhf I IIEN I M amor: CJ la x. t' Hitt' lllIlltll't'll Hitt' The Samohi STAFF PHILIP l'l. STEVENS - - lnslruclor in Journalism SHELLEY B. Mm.:-QR - - Instructor in Printing NORMAN T. SMITH - ---- Editor ALFRED W. SPAETH - Student Publication Manager NVARD DUDLI-:Y - - Circulnlion Manager The Samohi is the Santa Monica High School weekly paper. It is printed and edited through the journalism and printing classes, under the supervision of the two faculty members, Mr. Miller and Mr. Stevens. lt is made up of news from different games, track meets, swimming meets, and other athletics, also all debates and plays. It has an interesting editorial column, usually made up of short, but to the point. editorials. Then there is the always important joke column, which has each week good usnappyi' jokes. Besides all this, the paper contains personals and other short news stories of interest to all the readers. The Samohi is all news, and no space is given to advertising. The paper is furnished by the Board of Education, and a student editor is appointed hy them. The copies are given to the students without charge. Every year one edition features each class. A given class writes some of the stories and there is as little news from other classes as possible. The editions are different colors to represent the different classes. The Samohi has a good exchange list, and is appreciated by all who receive and read it. The editor of the Samohi this year was Norman Smith. Norman was editor of the Samohi last year for nearly the whole year. This year he was re-appointed. The Samohi was always full of good snappy news, an dhe was always working trying to better it. Norman had taken three years of printing and one year of journalism, so was well experienced in the newspaper business. Alfred Spaeth, as manager of Student Publications, handled the job like a veteran. He was always on the job and worked as no other manager has ever done before. l'uyr' Um' llznrflrrd 'liuwv , . . A -1 I I 4 Y w V Football Football is Santa Monica High School's greatest and best sup- ported sport. With the opening of school and football practice, the students were already looking forward to a championship foot- ball team. A number of the last year's stars were back, and they really had cause for looking for- ward to great things being accom- plished. And with Coach Vin- cent Shutt coaching the team, many scribes were predicting an- other wonder team like that of the year of '2O. Coach Laurenson Coach Shutt lt is not everything to win, as has been said before. but our hopes were rather shattered when for the hrst time in a number of years we lost a game to a Bay lieague team. And then we lost the Bay League Championship. a championship which Santa Monica had held for nine long years. So one can see that Santa Monica had a rather tough football season, full of hardships and unexpected defeats. But to make things harder to swallow. a number of wise students and a few small town reporters started to knock that most wonderful coach. Vincent W. Shutt. These people did not know under what trying conditions Coach Shutt had to work. First: Coach Shutt had to teach the majority of the team the simplest. and most fundamental football: fundamental football that every school boy should know. And then injuries came in for a share of trouble. Not the usual amount of injuries. but numerous injuries. and usually to the most valuable players on the teanl, and at the most critical times. Under these circumstances, Coach Shutt put on the field a fighting, do-or-die group of fellows. a feat that could not have been accomplished except by a few other coaches in California. Coach Laurenson put in his first season at Santa Monica by coaching the light- weight team. Laurenson was new to the boys, and the boys were new to him. Conse- quently a good deal of the season was spent in trying to get used to each other. The team did not get going until late, but they were always there with the ole tight to the last spirit. SCHEDULE OF GAMES By Maurice Snllinger SANTA MONICA 0-LOXOLA 0 ln a practice game with l,ovola College. the first game of the season. Santa Monica played a scoreless tie. The team was green and did not know the signals very well. so had a weak offensive although the defensive playing was above criti- cism. Smith and Hamlin were the mainstays of the team. SANTA MONICA I0-SAN PEDRO 7 The first league game of the year was played on the home grounds against one of the strongest teams in the Bay League. San Pedro. San Pedro had the big end of the score for three quarters, leading, 7 to 3. In the last quarter Santa Monica put over a touchdown. converted and won the game, I0 to 7. The whole team played wonderful foothall, and fought all the way. l'uyfrU1n'llm14f1't'fllfunl' SANTA MONICA 27slNCLEWOOD 6 The next battle was with Inglewood, who succumbed to our onslaught by the large score of 27 to 6. Norman Smith was field captain. in the absence of Hamlin who was injured. and Smitty carried the position off with honors. The greatest thrills of the day were when he ran back punts. He was unstoppable,', and he brought the grandstand to its feet every time he caught the ball. SANTA MONICA 0-Gardena I3 Gardena beat Santa Monica decisively. They started right off hy making a touchdown. And time after time they threatened our goal. ln the last quarter Gardena crossed our line again, but failed to convert, making the score I3 to 0. Smitty was badly missed in this game, as he was out with an injured shoulder. Simbro and ,lonas were the whole Santa Monica team. SANTA MONICA I9-HUNTINGTON PARK 0 This was a slow game, void of thrills, except for the dumb-bell antics the referee was doing. Simbro did some fine puting. and Hoy Baldwin and Wraith did some nice offensive work. Wliitley. at end, played a wonderfully fine game. SANTA MONICA 6-VENICE 0 The next game was with our old rivals, Venice. Smith, Simbro and Hamlin were the big noises for Santa Monica. These three boys played the most sensational game of their lives. Hamlin was 75 per cent of the defense. and on the offense Simbro bucked the line like a battering ram. Smitty ran the Venice lads ragged and kept the grandstand standing whenever the ball chanced his way. Whitley, at right end. played a smashing game. It was the best he had ever performed, and that's saying a lot. Santa Monica scored in the third quarter, and then played a punting game. Venice came close to scoring, but could not quite make the gaff. SANTA MONICA 6-COMPTON 6 The last game of the year was a 6 to 6 tie with Compton. Smitty scored for Santa Monica in the second quarter. In the third quarter. Compton scored on a pass. The score was then 6 to 6. Compton had an aerial attack that kept Santa Monica guessing. The game ended in a tie, and thus Santa Monica lost all chance of representing the Bay League in the play-offs. , . , . . Y..-...-, FIRST 'I'l'lAIVI l.lCT'I'I'IRll HN l'ug1i' Om' lllnnlwd l'iI7'1' fs? K The Players CAPTAIN LEE HAMLIN played center and from that position called signals. This was Hamlin's second and last year on the team. He was a good field general and a world of power on the defense. lt can be truthfully said that he was half the team on defense. CLIFF BROWN and ED. WHITLEY played the wing positions. This was Whitley's first year, and it was a big handicap, but for all that he was a willing worker and a hard fighter. Brown played a fairly good game all season, but it was not until the last game that he found himself, and then, but not until then, did he show a stellar brand of football. JACK KENASTON and BURTON CILLHAM held down the guard positions. Both boys were new at the game and couldn't show up like experienced men would have. Outside of that they were good, always showing plenty of fight and always trying. PARK!-IR, at tackle, was a fellow that was always working and trying. He has had quite a bit of experience and used it to good advantage. Bill Charnock and ,lack Westsmith battled for the other tackle position, and the way they battled for the position was a credit to both. It was the first year for both fellows, and although they lacked experience they made up for it with fight. AL SIMBRO was really a lineman, but later in the season was shifted to the back- held. where he made quite a showing. At fullback he was a hard man to stop, and was also a good defnsive player. LANCE WARREN at fullback had hard luck. He was a good player, but bum ankles prevented him from doing,his stuff. He was an accurate passer and fine inter- ference man. JIMMIE JONAS played half back, but was really a fullback. He punted extremely well, was an accurate passer, and was good at running the ball. His queer way of running the ball always kept his opponents on the jump. Rox' BALDWIN held down the position of halfback in good fashion for an inex- perienced boy. On the offense his specialty was line plunging, and like Warren he was a good interference runner. HOWARD WRAITH started at half but was hnally shifted into quarter when Smith was injured. Wraith was a fighter and a hard man to stop. He was right there when it came to tackling, as he invariably stopped his man. NORMAN SMITH was all that a football player should be. lVIonki' could plunge the line, run end runs or pass with equal ability. Although small, and weighing but I31 pounds, he was the hardest man on the team to stop. His change of pace was uncanny, and the sudden bursts of speed he always had in reserve was a marvel to see. And the best of it, he was a thinker. He played defensive quarter, and always ran the ball back for substantial gains. He played at his best when he smiled and he always smiled. He must be given credit, because he deserves it. He and Hamlin put the fight in the boys, and the boys would do anything for either of them. Of all the players that are leaving this year, Hamlin and Smith will leave the biggest gap. Their shoes will be hard to fill. Hamlin is a two-year man and this year was Smith's third. This daring two will be long remembered at Santa Monica. -Taken from the Samohi of December 15, l922. l'rlgfI' Om' llzrmlrvu' .S'I :'v11 Fl RST T ICA M SMITTY MAKING A LONG RVN I SANTA MUNIFA YS. COMPTON LIGHTXVICIGI l'I' FOU'l'li.-XLL SQ l'.-XID NTA MUNIVA YS. LOYULA l'Ul.Ll'I1ll'l llll 1 XNIIIILX SIIUNYS SUMIC IIICAL FUUTI 5.-KIA. AFT Basketball Santa Monica 264. Opponents I89l That certainly sounds as if Santa Monica has had a prosperous season, and that is the case, too. The teams gave way a trifie at first, but turned out to be more successful in the end than in all other preceding years. The Blue and Cold teams began the season with several practice tilts, most of which turned out to be victorious. LEAGUE GAMES HUNTINGTON PARK VS. SANTA MONICA With the men in fine fettle, the league season was opened auspiciously against Huntington Park on January I9, on the home grounds. The Blue and Gold H0- pounders kept up an even pace with their opponents, thus giving the crowd much excitement, until the last minute when they shot the deciding basket. Score: IS. MJ 16, IH. PJ 14. The 90-pounders showed much skill and fought to the last minute. Score: 15. MJ 6, lH. PJ 7. The unlimiteds bit the dirt by a decisive defeat at the hands of their oppon- ents. Score: IS. MJ 40, IH. PJ 9. Huntington Park,s 130-pounders proved too much for the Blue and Gold's I30's. Score: IS. MJ I3, KH. PJ 23. INGLEWOOD VS. SANTA MONICA Santa Monica, in the second league trial, proved too much for their opponents. Santa Monica's unlimited quitet leaped back into the foreground after a hair- raising struggle. Score: IS. MJ I7, IIJ I5. The 90-pound skeeters played a whirlwind game from start to finish. Score: iS. MJ 23. IIJ 4. As for our I30-pounders, they couldnit get back on their feet after the whip- ping received by the Huntington Park lads. Score: IS. MJ I3, KIJ 24. Our IIO-pounders took advantage of their preceding victory and gave Inglewood a dose of it. Score: lS. MJ I5, IIJ IO. VENICE VS. SANTA MONICA Santa Monica's Old Rival. This set of games was considered as the final. for Venice always supplies plenty of competition, but all of our teams outwitted their opponents in every department of the games. The tilt with the Venice 90-pounders was a barrier hard to surmount. but sur- mount it Santa Monica did. Score: IS. MJ 9, fVJ 8. Venice's unlimited team was decisively beaten by the steady Hght of our team. Score: IS. MJ 23, IVJ IO. The fray with the IIO-pounders was a glorious one to behold. Santa Monica scrapped from whistle to whistle with a courage that could bring only supremacy. Score: IS. MJ 9, IVJ 7. Our l30-pound team who were hosts to the Venetian I30's, gave them a thor- ough drubbing. Score: IS. MJ 20, IVJ I2. The game was fast and closely con- tested the first half, but the Blue and Gold superior basket shooting, and passing enabled them to come out at the long end of the score, although Venice showed some flashes of speed at times. Ptlgfi' Ulu' llnm1'n'd Tm I ll Ilil XII XXII l XI IXIIII ll I XNIxI Il Xl I 'PICA XAIS COMPTON VS. SANTA MONICA Our fourth set of games turned out to he a complete victory. The Blue and Cold unlimiteds met the famed Compton five on the Santa Monica court. The fellows were in good spirits and Hrarin, V to go. The whistle blew, the game was off. A splendid fight followed, with every man playing to the utmost of his power and skill. The haskets were scored in rotation, until the first half of the game. when Compton led for a minute. Then Santa Monica renewed the fight with a surplus of vim and vigor and the tide of lwattle changed. The Blue and Cold team took the lead, and continued so until the end of the fracas. Score: 15. MJ 25, tC.l 20. ln one of the classiest elota battles of the year, Coach Shutt's rennvweiffhts, P . l . :- with a stone-wall defense, su rerior hasket shooting and Jassine. out-ilaved the l r- l r- l . Compton 90-pounders in every way. Score: iS. lVl.l 13. tC.J l. What's more, the ll0-pounders trounced and smothered the Comptonites. Score: 1b.M.b2o,1C.1 5. Our l30's soared around the Compton l30's like they thought there was a cyclone. Score: IS. MJ l7, lC.l 8. At this time the Huntington Park teams held their own at the top of the list, thus forcing our 90's. l30's and uulimiteds out of the running. hut our ll0-pounders held the lead and entered the finals for the Bay League Championship. SAN PEDRO VS. SANTA MONICA lFinalsi Santa lVlonica's llO-pounder final championship hopes were shattered into hits when the San Pedro quintet turned the trick on the home stamping ground to the tune of l5 to lli. The Blue and Cold team got away to a flying start in the hrst few minutes of the game. hut was quickly followed up hy the rear attack of the Pedroites in their staunch defense. The score stood 8 to 7 in Santa lVlonica's favor at the end of the hrst half. Beginning the second half. Santa Monica took to a lead of lil to T. hut fol- lowed up hy a llcdro hasket and a foul tied us. When the whistle hlew the score stood lit all. lfive minutes more plav was given for a decision. and hy sheer luck of the Pedro team. they managed to slip the easaba through for the winning point in the last minute of the game. Coaches Shutt and Lauernson merits a great deal of credit for the teanfs suc- cess. and too much gratitude cannot he shown them for their untiring efforts. l'ug1c Om' IllHItI,f't'tf 'l'it'clf'i' Track The track season at Santa Monica High School for the past year was as suc- cessful as was possible under existing conditions. Vlfhen one considers the dillicul- ties under which the winged squad labored, he wonders that the track men met with as much success as they did. Undaunted hy the uneven track, the men came out regularly every night, under the supervision of Coach Shutt, to limber up their muscles and straighten out the kinks in their legs. Twelve men stuck faithfully to what looked like a losing proposition., and at the end of the season were rewarded for their efforts with a coveted letter. The names are: Jonas, Kerr, Kenaston. Graf. W. Bowen, M. Fox, Ogden, lVlcDonald. Mason. C. Fox, Gruber and Leon. BAY LEAGUE CROSS-COUNTRY RUN Santa Monica again won the cross-country run, which was held at Inglewood, with eight men composing the team. Gerald Kerr, our famous long-winded star. took first honors, and the other two who placed among the first ten were: lVlason and Gruber. Santa Monica took 71 points, Inglewood, 67 points, and Huntington Park 58 points. lNTER-CLASS MEET The coming of track was in the inter-class meet. as usual the great struggle lveing between the Seniors and Juniors, with the other classes winning just enough points to upset the dope for the upper classmen. From the first event until the relay the meet was in douht. the final result lmeing: Juniors, 63: Seniors, el-6: P. Cfs. HM. and Sophomores, IZM. POMONA FROSH VS. SANTA MONICA Santa lVlonica's beginning track team, with Maurice Fox as the star. lost to the fast and well experienced Pomona frosh by an 87 to 26 score on the local oval. Gruber. our 880-yard man. won by a good distance. while many other of Coach Shutt's men gave the frosh a run for their victory. THANK I.l'1T'l'I'IRM ICN i 7 4 y.. , .K TILXUK SQVAIY VAN NUYS VS. SANTA MONICA ln undertaking the first real track meet of the season. the Blue and Cold patriots walked over Yan lNuys at a track meet hy a very decisive score. Wfith the exception of the discus and shot put Santa Monica won first place in every event. Gerald Kerr and Jonas tied for scoring the most points for Santa Monica. Kerr taking first in the mile. and second in the 880-yard dash. while Jonas took first in the lftll-yard dash. second in the -'IA-I0-yard dash. and also ran in the relay team. llrulrer won the 880-yard dash, G. Fox the .1110-yard dashg Kenaston the pole vault. and M. Fox the lrroad jump. Relay fell to Santa Monica. BAY l.l'1AGUli lVlliE'l' 'llhird place was what the summing up points gave Santa Monica High School in the annual Hay League conference meet on the old rival's grounds. Inglewood was the winner of the meet, with a total of -WM points: Venice came second with IST points. and Santa Monica netted Him points for third. Santa Monica was figured as a strong contender for first place. hut under cir- cumstances our fellows did not get what was expected of them. Maurice lfox was the sensation for the other schools when he won the hroad jump with a 20-loot 0-inch jump. while Bowen and Ugden took second and fourth. Santa lN'lonica's relay team sprang a surprise on the Venice relay squadron. when they nosed the Yenice four out for the extra fire points, thus winning the Hay League relay cup and tying the former Bay League relay record of l:f55 held hy Inglewood. POMONA l'lfNTA'l'HAl,0N Ml'll'Q'l' The track learn which competed in the Pomona Pentathalon composed of M. Fox, C. Fox. Spaeth. Parker. Jonas, Graf and li. Kerr, of' which three more supposed to compete to make a team of ten. did not show up. These entrants took fourth place. and were rated as first on a percentage basis hy fans. l'ug1t' Um' lliiriflrrd l ifIt'ru Baseball With only three of last year's lettermen leaving the team, the prospects for a really good baseball team were very bright. Then, also, these three vacancies were filled by players who had been substitutes. So, virtually, this year's team was the same as last yearis. Santa Monicals new coach, Mr. Laurenson, had charge of the team, in place of Coach Shutt. He is a very capable coach, and is well-liked by all the athletes. It is very hard for a coach to come into a strange school and try to select men for the teams. Although there might be plenty of good material to choose from, not know- ing the fellows makes it very hard to select the right ones. One thing Coach Lauren- son does is to give his players confidence, which is a great help. With a better knowledge of his material and the same amount of confidence, he should turn out a winning team at Santa Monica High School next year. BY MAU RICE SATTI NGER The practice games this season were good. Santa Monica divided two games with the Manual Arts team, defeated the crack Los Angeles nine in one game and lost another, and held the powerful San Diego team to a 3-2 score. SANTA MONICA 6-HUNTINGTON PARK 4 The league schedule opened with Huntington Park as the first opponent. Hunt- ington Park offered no real competition, and Santa Monica won 6--1. SANTA MONICA 8-VENICE 6 Venice faced Santa Monica the next game, and was defeated 8-6. Bowes started in the pitcher's box and lasted until the fourth. By that time Venice had a lead of 5-0. Bowes retired in favor of Yuill, who lasted just one inning. Then Hanna stepped in and pitched a remarkable game, allowing but one run the remainder of the game. A batting rally was started in the sixth, three runs being driven in. In the seventh the good work was continued,, five runs trickling across the plate. The team got wonderful support from the bleachers in this game. SANTA MONICA 4-CARDENA 5 Gardena gave Santa Monica its first setback when it won 5-4. The game w 1 played at Gardena, on the most miserable field in the Bay League. SANTA MONICA 6-REDONDO 2 Redondo came next and met defeat 6-2 in one of the slowest games on record. Santa Monica used three pitchers, Charnock, Hanna, and Bowes. SANTA MONICA 5-INGLEWOOD 3 Inglewood was defeated 5-3 in the next game. Yuill pitched nine innings. the only game of the season in which one pitcher worked nine full innings. It was in this game that Berry got his batting eye back again after having been in a slump all season. He was knocking them all over the lot. SANTA MONICA I-SAN PEDRO I4 The San Pedro game was a nightmare. The fellows were completely off. San Pedro got six runs off Hanna in the first inning. Yuill took his place in the second and held the position until the seventh when Charnock went in. Santa Monica had a total of eight errors. The final score was I4-I. SANTA MONICA 7-COMPTON 6 The last game of the season was on the home grounds with Compton as our opponents. This ended in a 7-6 victory for us but it was a nip and tuck affair right np to the ninth inning. First one side was ahead and then the other. and for three innings we were deadlocked in a 5-5 tie. Bowes, Hanna and Charnock were used. Page Om' llumlml.S'i.r1vi'1r 71 2 'L Z I , Tennis On March I, Mr. Veckner issued the tennis call and Yewell Rice Icaptain-electt. l.arry Hughes, and Art Quisenberry, veterans of last year,s Bay League Championship team, responded. In addition, Tileston, last year,s fifth man. signed up for the school tournament. J. Doeg, Eric Doeg, Bruce Carleton, and A. Dennison were another quartet of strong contestants. For the first match of the year the team was composed of the following men: Rice Icaptainl. Hughes, Quisenberry, and J. Doeg. Captain Rice selected Alhambra. Valley League Champions, for the first match of the year. SANTA MONICA I7--ALHAMBRA 0 On the last Saturday of March the Santa Monica squad downed Alhambra decisively on its courts. The match was reasonably hard fought. proving that the vetcrans needed conditioning. The results: Rice ISanta Monical defeated Houser IAI I-6, 7-5, 6-2: Hughes ISanta Monica! defeated Anstedt IAI 6-2, 5-7, 7-5: Quisenberry ISanta Monica! defeated Mills IAD 6-I, 6-2: J. Doeg ISanta Monica! defeated Pote IAI 6-4. 6-4. The doubles were easily won by Santa Monica. Rice and Quisenberry easily outgeneraled Houser and Anstedt 6-l, S-6: Tileston and Hughes defeated Mills and Pote 7-5, 6-2. SANTA MONICA 17--HARVARD MILITARY ACADEMY 0 After a week of strenuous practice the Samohis defeated Harvard easily. Quisenberry was the only man to encounter stiff opposition, but, as usual, kept the slate clean. Rice and Hughes played brilliantly during this match, and were invincible. Results: Rice IS. MJ defeated Castellonos IHJ 6-0, 6-3: Hughes IS. MJ defeated Ward IHJ 6-2, 6-2, J. Doeg IS. MJ defeated Knight IHJ 6-4. 9-7. Superb serving allowed Rice and Hughes to race through Ward and Robert of Harvard in two short sets of 6-0, 6-2. The second doubles brought forth a bitter struggle and only after two sets of ll-9 were played could Tileston and J. Doeg be returned the winners. Preparation was made during the week for the big match against U. S. C. Frosh. SANTA MONICA 13-U. S. C. 4 Santa Monica upset the dope and defeated U. S. C. on our courts before a large crowd. This match brought forth excellent tennis and the team showed im- provement. H. Mosier IU. S. CJ defeated Rice IS. MJ 6-2, 6-2: Hughes IS. MJ defeated Wood IU. S. CJ 6-3, 7-5: Quisenberry IS. MJ defeated Irwin III. S. CJ 6-3. 6-3: Tileston IS. MJ defeated Chatteatette IU. S. CJ 6-2, 6-3. Golf Santa Monica High School got off for a good start in golf for its first year in this sport. Because of the lack of a course not much interest was shown in the out- come of golf for this year, but Santa Monica has a team that is capable of winning the state championship, which, with the right training, may be possible next year. Bud Miller. one of the golf prospects. won the Junior Interscholastic Golf Champion- ship. and with Kerr, Gruber and Bothuyne left for next year. a championship is likely. Four golf matches were played this year, the first being with Long Reach in which the Blue and Gold team was beaten in a hard fight by a 2 to 0 score. Then Santa Monica, out for revenge, took on Long Beach in a return match and upset the dope. Santa Monica won by a big 2 to 0 score. The next two matches was with Hollywood, in which old S. M. Hi chalked up two more victories. Scores: 2 to 0, first match, and 2 to 0 in the second match. Page Om' lllmtircrl liigflzfcctl 'l'l'IN NIS 'l' ICA M L ., .. A 1lt1I.l 'l'l'l.X Sl Girls' Athletics Cirls' Athletics is at last a vital factor in the life of the school. Every one admits it, for this year has brought success in almost every line. During the year almost two hundred girls have turned out for school practice, and their enthusiasm and hard work have helped to build up athletics to a point of decided efficiency. The awarding of letters to the members of the teams for inter-school competi- tion has done wonders in bringing the girls out. Good material has been found in unexpected places merely because the girls have taken enough interest to try their luck. The most encouraging point in favor of good teams in the future is that the under-classmen have taken advantage of all of their opportunities. Miss Carroll. with steady work and good coaching, has hacked every team from start to finish, and has turned out some championship material. The girls realire that without her coaching and encouragement very little could have been accom- plished in comparison with what has been accomplished. Alice Joy Martin. as athletic manager. and Amada Fuentes and Doris Palmer as sub-managers of the various sports. have cooperated with Miss Carroll and the teams in every way. Theirs was a hard job with little reward except the satisfac- tion of knowing that they were working for the best interests of the Blue and Cold. It is hoped that this year a solid foundation has been established for girls' athletics which will aid in their development next year. as well as in the following years. ln a larger sense, it is hoped that the sportsmanship of the girls this year will always characterize girls, athletics at Santa Monica High School. BASKETBALL Prospects for a successful season were never so bright. Five of last yearis first team girls were back in the fight. and much good material was on hand. The girls not only lived up to expectations, but by far exceeded anything that has been done in the past. Not that the season was an easy one. for every game was a fight from start to finish, in which no pink tea work had a chance. VENICE 14-SANTA MONICA 27 The first mix-up was with Santa Monica's old rival, Venice. The team put over the same annual stunt. featured by speedy team work. Santa Monica gained a safe lead from the start and kept it till the last whistle blew. VENICE 18-SANTA MONICA 20 The next time the team met Venice. it was in a return game on the Condoliers' courts. Their improved playing worried the Santa Monica tossers a little, but that was all. The score ran even twice. only to take a sudden jump near the end. giving Santa Monica the game. REDONDO II-SANTA MONICA 27 ln the tangle with Redondo on the home courts, the end of the first third found the score 7-6 with the visitors on the big end. When the play started in the second third. the team began to look alive, and the result was a decisive victory for the Blue and Cold. HOLLYWOOD 24-SANTA MONICA 29 Hollywood was out to repeat their walk-over of two years ago. Santa Monica was out to turn the tables. The crowded bleachers were far from disappointed in the game that was put up. Coach Shutt summed it all up when he said. It was the hardest and fastest game I have ever seen girls play. l'rn1t' Um' llmztfwrl Ttcciily 1 x NIAUXIY II XXI I Xklxl II XII ANAHEIM 22-SANTA MONICA I9 The only thing which marred the scoring of a perfect season was the three-point loss to Anaheim. The Blue and Cold sextette allowed the visitors too big a lead in the first third and it cost them the game. After they found their legs, however, they dug in and fought harder than in any game of the season. and very nearly brought home the victory. It was a sad looking group that turned in their jerseys for the last time. THE PLAYERS This is what Miss Carroll has' to say about the players after having worked with them continually for several years: Doris Palmer, mostly known as 6',Iimmy, was a speedy, accurate forward. She did her most brilliant work during this season. All she needed was a chance at the hall. She usually wore out two or more guards in every game. Nellie Papson was another Senior who had excellent tactics in eluding her guard and moving to a favorable position. She had excellent teamwork. and great skill in shooting baskets. Agnes Aldrich, better known as 'gAggie, was the best jumping center playing for Santa Monica in many years. She almost invariably out-jumped and out-played her opponent. Amada Fuentes made a wonderful team-mate for Agnes. She was always depend- able, steady and speedy. This was her fourth and last year. Carolyn Bentley, otherwise Betty,'f was as fast and tricky a running center as ever ran circles around her opponent. Alice Hand's work with the other guard was unexcelled and she had excellent tactics of offense. Her lavinv was fast and she was a good fighter. This is her third year at guard. Julia Parker, captain, had wonderful offensive playing coupled with defensive methods which could not be beaten. The opponents didn't have a chance with these two guards defending our colors. p.U-9 BASEBALL The line-up of the baseball squad promises to make a winning team. Most of the girls are experienced players, and they should find little trouble in cleaning up everything in last ycar's style. Nothing really definite can be said. however, since at the time the Nautilus goes to press, no games have been played. Tangles have been scheduled with Venice. Hollywood, Redondo. Inglewood, Compton, and Glendale High Schools, so there should be no lack of excitement. The girls have a great disadvantage when it comes to ground space. Things are so crowded that it is difficult for some of the heavy hitters to stay within the limits. The team as it stands to date is as follows: .lulia Parker. C.: Alice Hand. I'.: Doris Palmer. lst B., Alice Thoman, 2nd B.: Elizabeth Jenkins, fird B., Marion Brackett. li. H. li., Alice .loy Martin, L. S. S., Vivian I-Iorgan, R. I7.: Pauline Brackett, C. If.: Rowena Benjamin, L. F. SWIMMING The second year of swimming for the girls began rather badly, but at the time at which this book goes to press, there are hopes of better things. Coach Elmer Orr has coached the girls in what little time he could spare, and he deserves a great deal of credit. The management of the Venice Plunge also helped greatly by allowing the girls free admission to the pool on Tuesdays and Fridays. Hollywood was the first opponent of the Santa Monica team. The team was unfortunate in that three of their best girls were away at the time, but the team put up a great fight against big odds. Although the squad was quite badly defeated. it only spurred it on to harder practice. Page Om' llumfrcu' 7'u'v11Iy-Iwo I IIlS'l' l'!.XS:'II!,XI.I. ll XXI 4, Ha JL-0 '-an Q' .ef Gi when 'Cnr X -..L I.XI.XIlN1l 'I'I X XI The meet with Venice was hard fought. According to Old Mother Dope. Venice should have completely whitewashed Santa Monica, but as it was. Santa Monica lost b ya 75-40 count. The highest point winners were, respectively. Doris Palmer, captaing Alice Balish, Julia Parker, and Hazel Townsley. Katherine Widener was one of the best swimmers Santa Monica had, but she was obliged to leave school, giving the team a considerable handicap. The rest of the team was as follows: Nellie Papson. jean Akins, Margaret Wesner, Betty Bentley. Ellen Myton. Margaret Wadley, Vivian Horgan, Winifred Gragg, Eunice Ballard. Isabelle Cillham. and lflsie Wilsori. A large majority of the team will be sent to Pomona to compete in the meet there. There will also be a return meet with Hollywood, as well as several others. INTER-CLASS ACTIVITIES In almost all of the various sports, inter-class tournaments were held prepara- tory to the choosing of the school teams. The winning teams were awarded numer- als. and the girls worked hard for them. ln basketball, the Seniors ran away with the honors with a clear field. They had first team girls, and one second team girl, so if they hadn't won. they certainly should have been ashamed of themselves. The ,luniors ran them a fairly close second, however, with the Sophomores third, and the Freshies last. The Seniors winning numerals were: Nellie Papson, Doris Palmer. captain: Agnes Aldrich. Amada Fuentes, Alys Hand, and Alice Joy Martin. Volleyball has never been an inter-school sport at Santa Monica. but there hare been inter-class teams for several years. In an exciting series of games in the annual field day the Juniors showed some pretty work, defeating the Sophomores and winning their numerals by two points. The line-up was: Marjorie Anderson. captain: Mabel Lorin, Hazel Deffenbaugh, Marian Campiglia. Marjorie Zoul, Mar- garet Murray, fffhe Williams. Bernice Skinner, Julia Parker, Betty Bentley. and lfvelyn Shelley. The last three mentioned. however, were not eligible for numerals. At the same time, the Juniors won the Inter-class Field Meet. The swimming meet created lots of excitement. The Seniors were the big splash, beating their nearest competitors by a margin of 56 points. Those receiving numerals were Katherine Widelier. Alice Balish. and Doris Palmer. lhmr' Um' llumfrru' 'lirtwvily-four 1 L 'PICNNIH 'l'l'I.X.Xl TENNIS 'lihv tvnnis tvani this vc-nr has a hright outlook. With lfdnn At'lU'I'Ill2llI as lirst vlioiu- for singlvs. und lvlubel Lorin as second. the Bay LPLIQIII4' Clmlnpionsllip should conn- Q-usily. Aniudu and Aurora Fuentes have Splendid team-work in thc- doulmlvs. and no douht they will do their share in winning the honors for Santa lVlonic'a. As in thc' ruse' of lmsfflmall. no nlatclies have been playvd as yPt. hut all of tho raivqm-t swingers showed what they vould do against outsidvrs during thi- svuson lust yPill'. The Dudley Cup Tournament. thc' Pomona Meet. the South:-rn California Clnunpionsliip 'l'onrnaunent. and the Bay lmuglie' play-offs. will all sm- Santa lllonivu : 'l-v'e-+1-lite-ml. Also. tlwn- will lw several dual meets with othvr sm-hoolx A l.Flll'II1 XY. SPA I-I'l Il Stud:-nt l'ul1lis':1Iion lw1lHZlfl'l'I'. ALM- II Y mars l'u5f.'Um'll11ml1'r1l 'l':n'l1lAx'-ji:'U Art lln- Art vlalssvs. unch-r lhf' 4'1ll'1'fllI QIIHIIIIIV1' of Mrs. liolwrls. url mslruc'tor. has flmu' scum- xuulxhwllllly hm' work for IIIIS yvzlrs XZIIIIIIIIS. Ilw url studvnls hun' nll lll lllillly xwa1'y huurs Ill m'rh'r1n make' Ihr' url work of Ihr- NRIIIIIILIS lhv hvsl that us yvl Ill'4'll f'mlll'iln1l1'1l. lfspswizllly tht' mark ul' l,f'sl1'r Klivn slmuld lw highly mmmm'ml1'cl. This lad Klivn has wm'kc'rl .clay ufivr day fur il IHIIIIIIPI' of monthg :making l'ill'l0UIlS. illllslrzltimls and posts-rs for Ihr' Nautilus. Hu has INDTIII' lhe- lvrunl uf llw url mark and Ins prmsv should ln- muvh. 'l'h.- Iirlilnr .ul l-hm' lu-rush-r up-Lv ul 1.. Ills hrs! dup' ul sn-hrml. lhnffr Hur llznlfifvwl I-Il'l'7lf-Y'.Yl.l' Spaeth-Why is a Nautilus like a girl? Smith-Everyone should have his own and not borrow someone else's. Toot-Jones must have money. Tootsie-So must I. Introduce me. Abbott-Is Dot a good girl? Hart-I should sayl Why, she's so innocent she thinks Scott Fitzgerald's Beautiful and Damned is a picture of a river. Miss Suits--We take Miltonis life to- morrow, come prepared. Smith-Peter, as you stood in the doorway saying good-bye did it ever dawn upon you that- Wraith-No, I never stayed that late. A school paper may be funny, The school gets all the credit, None gets any money, But the staff gets all the blame. Life is a joke, All things show it, I Look at a FFCSIIIIIHII, Then you'll know it. Chauffeur tafter an accidentl-Are you hurt? Butcher Boy twith baskett-Where's my liver? Farmer-Joe. where are you going with that lantern? Fisher-To see my girl. Farmer-Why. I never took a lantern when I went to see my girl. Fisher-Yeh, and look what you got. E. Gripp, in cafeteria-lVIr. Lord he hit me with a piece of soup. Our Washwoman--lVIy brother takes up lfrench. Spanish, German, English and Danish. lVlac--Goodness! How does he study? I thought he worked. W. W.-Study! Laws nol He runs an elevator. P!lg1t'f,l1t'lllllldl't'II 7':w11ly-vigflzl Gerald Kerr-What are you carrying that umbrella for? Willialil Abbott-Might need it over the week end. 'LWhat I wantf, said the pompous ora- tor, aiming at his opponent, is good common sensef, Exactly,,' the whispered answer came back, 'gthatis just what you needf, Wfhree hair nets, please. g'What strength? Two dances and a car ride. Ruth-I don't like to ride with you. Your driving is too reckless. Ruthless-Yes, we've had some tight squeezes. haven't we? She lplayfullyl-Let me chew your gum? He tmore dittol-Which one? Alfred-This storm may put the light out. Are you afraid? Alice-Not if youill take that cigar out of your mouth. g'Have you ever read 'To a Field lVIouse,?w s'Nol How do you make them listen? A city and a chorus girl Are much alike. 'tis true, A city's made with outskirts- A chorus girl is. too. A country doctor was asked by his neighbor how to cure a ham. The doctor thought for a while and then replied: Well, you see, I'd have to know what ailed the hamf' J. Kenaston-Aren't you losing flesh lately? Snookie Ogden-Yeh! I just got a new razor. Oratory-the refuge of little minds. the curse of large. I get the hang of it. said the convict as the trap sprung. g 1 1 J THI1 VILLAIN House hlother-- How do you know he was following you? Co-ed- Because he kept looking around to see if I was coming. .r Qi- 'X' 'Pi STOVIC-PI PE STUFF ln the spring a young IIIHIIIS faney turns to what the girls have been thinking thou! all winter.-Reeord. Minister-- Would you like to join us in the new missionary movement? Miss l92ll- I'm 1-razy to try it. Is it anything like toddlingfw N' L 'ii' 411' ' A MIHACLIQ Lawyer- Judge. I plead for the dismissal of the defendant. He's deaf. Judge- Not granted. He'll have his hearing in the morning. N 'tl' SI' 'lf THE SCRUPULOUS LOVER If gleam of stars and moon and sun Could eler be blended into one: Would they he hrighter than your eyes. Whose hrillianey I highly prize? They would heloved. I surmise. Should bolted door or prison liar. Or deserts stretching wide and far, Keep me from you, so sweet, so good. Could distance dull my hardihood? Dear one. I must confess it could. 'K' 'N' 'W if' He-Wlliere did they go for their honeymoon 'f She-Niagara Falls. Heels that place still running? HEARD IN THE BACK OF A FORD If. A.-You ought to join the army. J. IJ.-What for? IC. A.-To learn what arms are for. 'X' 95 'If Mr. lylason-What is the half of eight? lylary-Sidewise or on top? Mr. Mason--What do you mean? Mary-Well, half from the top of 8 is 0. and half of eight sidewise is 3. N -If W if 'Ilhehna-Brevity is the soul of wit. I.ouise-Then my test paper is the funniest thing you ever saw. je t'adore! Oh, shut it yourself! 4-5 if if OIL X irginia. did you have your hair cut? Nirginia--- No. I washed it and it shrunk. -DE '55 +5 Ile-I spent last evening with the one I love best in the world. She-Didnt you get tired of heing alone? 1 Y W. R. PARKS, Ocean E thank every High School Student for any patronage g i v e n us, with the hope we may merit a continuance of same, and sincerely trust each and every one of you have had a successful school year in your studies and that noth- ing will happen to mar your com- ing vacation. Santa Monica's Largest Department Store MONTGOMERYS 1408-I0 THIRD STREET Park, Largest Stock of High School Suits in ih B y D t K Sing a song of street cars. Seats all lined with chaps. Four and twenty ladies Hanging on the straps. That ffirlis dress reminds me of a T' . good speeeh. ' Howzzat? l,onff enough to eover the sulfect hut z- z- .l short enough to he interestingf' Neil Duekels tahsent-mindedly pieking up a hair hrush instead of a mirrorlQ Craeious. how l need a shave.-fBeav- erl. The new night watchman at the ohserv- atory was watehing some one using the lxig teleseope. ,lust then liegorra. he said to felly sure is a eraek shot. a star fell. himself, that 57 0h. look at that man with only one arm. Hush, he will hear you. Doesn't he know it yet?,' 75 Soph-Anything new in todayis pa- per? Fresh-Yes, the date. Hereis a snapshot of my girl at the In-at-li. Snapshot Hoy-Thatis what I call an exposure. He saw her stepping from a ear, And up to her he sped. May l help you to alight? I do not smokef, she said. Inspector-Where were you married? lmigrant-l-l-l--l donit know. Inspector-What, you donit know where you were married? i lmmigrant-Uh. I thought you said why. Bowen-Are pancakes healthy? Coaeh-I never heard of any heing siek. Al-Hungry? Hal-Yes, Siam. Al-All right. I'll Fiji. A pug nose sometimes gives a fellow a dogged expression. Young Man to Father-Youill see more excitement for five dollars at a football game than you ever saw hefore. Father-Oh. l don't know. my mar- riage license cost five dollars. Miss Keen-Glenn, have you worked your last geometry problem? Morgan-I hope so. Preachers say strong drink is our worst enemy. But the Bible says we should love our enemies. Things are going to smashf' said the thug as he fell down the elevator shaft. Love is like an onion-we taste it with delight, Hut when itis gone we wonder whatever made us hite. A. B.-Wliat is so rare as a day in June? Phi-A Chinaman with whiskers. Speaker-l look into your hright and shining faces. lVl. Nuttall-Wl1ere's my powder? Ben Hare-W'e move that l adjourn. Marg-Dick has winning ways with the women. Owen-Yea. He won four bits oft of me last night. He-+My father was killed in a feud. She--l wouldn't ride in one of those cheap cars. Hairdresser-How will you have your scalp treated, Madam? lVlrs. Xander-Darn Carefully, please. We Extend Our Hearty Congratulations to the CLASS of '23-A A 1 .niftz First Runstylesn Just Released From the Designing Rooms of Society Brancl-Fashion Park and Frat-Clothes We Carry the Biggest Stock of Caps in the Bay District Just Wright Shoes-Styled for the Young Man We Fullerton Campbell FOR MEN AND BOYS OCEAN PARK W. R. PARKS 0 n Park, Style Headqua l f Young Men Benedicfs Children's Shop i , We clothe the future High School Students. W 1 I w i . ix Buy a doll for your little sister-a toy for brother at our shop 11 t l' w i i : l i 309 Santa Monica Blvd. Santa Monica, Calif. l l' f r , V - - l'l'll.lCAN Pop-Havenit you any ideals, young tlleard in the hack of Z1 Ford! man? H. A.--You ought to join the army. Son-Gee! You ought to see them, .l. l'. - fWhat for? Dad! lf. A.--To learn what arms are for. B0lSlllfXVilllIlZl go on a sleighing CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE party? Counsel-Now, where did he kiss you? Plaintill-e011 the lips, sir. Counsel-No! No! You clon't under- stand. l mean where were you? Plaintiff ihlushingb-ln 'his arms. sir L lit lllllll! ie ll W :WWI 4 R ' 'lwalilfalw 213 Sa rf u , . ,W ., G. B. Johnstone I422 Third Street 41 Market St.. 1 Phone 2327i Phone 635 03 Phone ZI377 1 Viki-YVho are we gonna slay? Say there. hlaek man. c'ain't you play honest? All knows what cards ah done dealt youf, Classes Fit the Eyes, Become the Face. i and Are Comfortable 'i DR. w. A. LADY Specialist in Fitting Glasses l nta Monica Blvd. Opposite Majestic Theatre 1 li JOHNSTONEYS MARKETS i BUY THE BEST-IT PAYS y Venice Seventh and Montana i W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of Jantzen Swimming Suits for Men and Women CD. G. TULLIS l 'avsimiff ll l 1426 THIRD STREET Santa Monica California W. E. Gillham The Real Live store for correct line of Shoes and Mens' Furnish- l ings. Packard Shoes none better. Selz Big Six, greatest value for the money, 56.00. Shirts, Sweaters, l-loleproof Sox, Hats, Caps, everything in the line of Mens' Furnishings. ' 035 303 S. M. Blvd. Phone 21178 Santa Monica, Calif. W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, Day a I e are eg' I VICTROLAS I XHCTOR.RECORDS l I I KODAKS I FILMS l PRINTING AND I' DEVELOPING 1 I SHEET MUSIC I I' HARMONICAS l l INGERSOLL WATCHES l l Denison Music Shop N l l 328 Santa Monica Blvd. i Opposite City Hall , l ll ..-.,.-f-..s He., se. QQ. l A MIRACLE Lawyer-Judge, I plead for the dis- missal of the defendant. He'S deaf. Judge-Not granted. He'll have his hearing in the morning. What would you Say, dear, if l put my arm around you? asked the inex- perienced youth. At lastf' responded the lady fair. A TOSS-UP My heart is with the ocean! cried the poet rapturously. You've gone me one hetterf' Said his seasick friend as he took a firmer grip oII the rail. l hear you had a pretty SllCl'9'SSflll banquet at your house last night- Yeah, a couple of our alumni are revenue oflicersf' Prof.-What right have you to Swear before me in Class? Youth--How could l know you wanted to Swear first? nd Night Store. Open until 9 P. M. A BANK ACCOUNT with this strong institu- tion will be of great help to High School graduates in getting started on their careers. The Old Reliable BANK OF SANTA MONICA BRANCH CALIFOR IA BA K Head Office: Los Angeles Resources over Fifty Million Dollars For Thirty Years on the Corner of Third and Santa Monica Boulevard SPORTSMANS IIEADQUARTERS -A' fill 0 I Wag' t, f IQ. X Lb? I B ycl . C Ammunit l .:iTZi Ll Z I Outing Clothing Gym Suit I 7: ' H! R Tennis Rackets Rvstrung r Q vvf, I 3 Athletic Supplies Tennis Go d gxi H . Fishing Tackle t ' iv? N .f I Q M as S. IVI. Sportlng , I I ' L I I I I Goods Co. !I!'IlI'iEIlIllljjjjjygpiumllqllsul ...I mulnwelunnli---1lu,my'asesssilsblyiwllllii A W H ,,,,,,,E,,E,, ,III f' an I ' ' sql. SlmbY'0.f IS HE A Second and Santa Monica Blvd. EMF Bmwn'-B no, THATS A PLATE N HIS AND l lE'5 DQYING- I S DISHES FOI? HIS GRAIXIOIVIOTHCDQ I Phone 22798 SANTA MONICA, LAL W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Day and mght Store. Open Until 9 P. M. lim llPgillIllllQI to miss my llllSllLlllLl.M said lVlrs. Murphy as the rolling-pin fl grazed her lIllSllilllflqS lwad and hil the X wall. Hal l will fool these lilood-hounds 5 yell cried the villain. and slipping on a ' pair of rubbers he erased his traeks. ' Z1 'H h .4 i . . emr at lle limpressiyelyl-I learned to dance Jeweler while attending Colunihia. X She- ldesperutelyi-l wish you'd al- 1 5Ch00l Pins and Rings lend the Vielrola nowl Sailor-Ahoy there, mam overiioardl ' l'aSsenger-wAl1oy yourself! I was on thi- wrong hoall. and this is as fur as my F' 1 ticket lakes me. ll Class, Said the new teacher, HI want L A you ull to he as quiet as you can be-. so xx quiet that you 1-an he-ur a pin dropfl iq Silence was golden. Small Bass Voice in rear of room- l.et 'er drop. I: i . , l I4 Pier Ave. Ocean Park l'lum0r-llow s business? ' xi.-ki.--elif-mi. li For SCHOOL or for HOME. l STANDARD SCHooL SERIES li ll No. 200W and No. ZOI M-the smallest size, convenient to carry around 1 with one. l X, No. l00 and No. l I0-the regular size of composition books. l No. 767 and No. 9108-Standard fillers in all rulings for loose leaf note i books. lQ ii lr '23 li THE STATIONERS CORPORATION l 525-527 South Spring Street, Los Angeles M W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Largest Store for Men and Boys in the Bay District On the 'Threshold- l To the graduating students who X1 stand upon the threshold of their ll careers. We extend our congrat- 'N ulations and best wishes for their success in whatever enterprise 1' they may follow. il I The Oldest Grocery Firm in the l Bay District l JOHNSTON CIROCERY i COlvlPANY ll Phone 23235 1412 Third si. Santa Monica Sieplpen Cgareg Q1nnqJz111Q J E W E L E R S 3x We Teach Your Watch to Tell the M Truth l ll ll l 3 405 Santa Monica Blvd. +I , V -- - - V v - ---- Waters Furniture Company if1 Ll T Complete Home Furnishers ONE. PRICE-THREE STORES . U. ., Ocean Park Santa Monica l39 Pier l429 Third Sawtelle 364 S. M. Blvd. l The Home Bank with the Personal Service The . Citizen's State Bank . of Santa Monica l Officers: R. F. lVlcClellan, President P. Dudley, Vice-President Dr. W. S. Mortensen, V.-Pres. T. M. Perry, Cashier F. lVl. McBurney, Asst. Cashier l E. B. Kinney, Asst. Cashier l Santa Monica Ocean Park l awe-, .ra l W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of Florsheim Shoes 1 Y ,1 -f Y--1-7 Wllia-fn., , , W., .--.lg i l ,, . ll ll Californ1's Most il QUANDT l Interesting Store l ---an INSTITUTION HARDWARE .3 pl in Southern California l F .- 3 K -1 --5 4 or years, the name B. H. Dyas 1: Co. has been synonymous with all l ll Y l that pertains to Sports and Athletics l l l in Southern California. N WN l Your Alma Mater has seen lit to l ' ' l make this Store its source of Sports l , W and Athletic Equipment. Our earn- est desire is to serve you, individually, N in the same capacity. l l l l :l l A wx II Nl W rg ' 'N it . Q Q . l 5 Phone ZI l56 p I AUTH ATF QILTVTE l 1 . ti l ll Tl1lrCl Sli. Santa Monica Los Angeles, California. lx 1 l ,, il w W l' V ll l SUNRISE SWEET SHOP N Our Own Make Candy-lce Cream--Pastry Our Aim: Quality-Cleanliness-Service ly ,R Opposite City Hall Santa Monica , Y pl l rosli+Surwyii1g u little? SCENE-A BU'l'CHl'lll'S STAND lfligiiivvi'-Nol Surveying ll lull- Boss-Here. get ai hustle on. Jimmy. Snur Urrl. break the bones in Mr. Williunisonls -lf chops, und put lVlr. Sinitlfs ribs in the l5iluiiu'fffAi't cvrtailily is at drunk. but basket. hi' svvins to have acquired il lot of polish ,Iimmy-All right, as soon as l finish while ut collvgv. sawing oil Mrs. lVlurphy's leg. l'le-lc-in--Yi-s. an sort of liquid veneer. -H - ---- OWL, YOU BLIGHTY lllury haul u little yacht, Hi--I wonder what makes he-r eyes so She suilvcl the biillows blue. wise. Wliviivwi' Mary wanted eggs Him-llerliups their pupils went to Shi' nuulv ilu- ship lay to. night school. KNEELAND 61 MAURER MENS APPAREL ' HART SCHAFFNER at MARX CLOTHES X OPP. POSTOFFICE SANTA MONICA, CALIF w W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Largest Store for Men and Young Men in the Bay District Phone Zl I I6 Telephone 61257 1 A Arthur E.. Jackson W. P. Fuller as CO, M ' tit Pianos P i V .h M. Vlctrolas aunts, arms es, lrrors, Resilvering and Glass Records Cor- Main and Ashland, Kodaks, Stationery, Typewriters, Ocean Park ii Victor Victroias, Pianos, Players, 1 N Grands, New Edison Phonographs E. T. KALLGREN, Mgr. i ' 5 1404 Third Street Prompt and Cheerful Service X Santa Monica, Cal. ii CHAS. A. TEGNER i REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE 4th and Santa Monica Blvd. Phone 2t7l6 Santa Monica, Cal. l'vctsf'l'l1ut person mistook me for a FatherfMy daughter. that is at wry llt'iIll1IlllilII. pretty dress you have on. liul the skirt l'lu-lmu- Huw was that? doesnit match the- waist. i'c-tt-Hr' said that I won the Brown Daughter-But father. that isnit tht- llc rlny. waist. thutis mv! STORE FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN i H A M B U R G E R ' S i Ocean Front and Pier Ave. OCEAN PARK, CAL. W. E. JONES FURNISHINGS - SHOES - BATHING SUPPLIES 2708 Main Street OCEAN PARK, CAL. i I V W , A L , 1 W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, Style Headquarters for Young Men to ik? fl ,,, Norman Smith-IT HAS TOUR WHEELS, A GOOD HORN, AND WILL co DOWN ANT HILL IN THE COUNTRY. Henry HALL ---ir THE GAS TANK is FULL! ILL TAKE IT. Al'l'l.ll'ilJ l'lYDllAUl,lCS Desperate Suitor-l'll gixe you il quail'- MiXit,v,A fl-ivnd of mint, fvll uslwl, ter. luifldy: if -you ll get mt- ai lot-lx ol in thc' luithtulv with tht- water rumiing. YW! StSff'1'F lliuf- . 'l',-ixil., ,Did HH, ml, UW,-flm,'g Q bmull Brotlier-llflzilw it ll tlollur uml lytixit,-Nolwz luckily ln. Slvpps with lll get you the-. isholv lmnvli. l know his mouth open. l'lW ill? tmllw ll- ii W W , Si A Drug Store Complete H,,,,,L, of l . , l T AVIUIUIIIIH-1' li tl Your Doctor's Orders Are Filled Witlx Q 14IdKZ,c,,.fl'j.c,d l l the Greatest Care l i tl T tW0r1'f11I11df.s'0 L l We feature Christopher! lce Cream ' T l lf it's not right, we'll 1 lx make it right Y tx 1 i The Store of Personal Service l l ll l l l 1 , Good Hardware N C. H. Nlansheffer l l Housewares ll l Druggist Y , i l Corner Seventh and Montana N lg 1 l Phone 2 l l 30 Santa Monica, Calif. t l C 0 m p a n V i 407 Santa Monica Blvd. l H. H. BALTZER, Mgr. l Phone Zl I64 Santa Monica it 5 i i W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Day and Night Store. Open Until 9 P. M. ffiilelb Qmy5WlEWfl5elW Santa Monica The BOYS and GIRLS OUTFITTERS High School Suits Featured at 51325.00 We Challenge the Values You may he certain of the most friendly welcome when you have occasion to drop in. Call, when you're passing by-this is your shop, and we're always happy to see you. R62 -R ROBERT GOTTLEIB Headquarters for BUSTER BROWN SHOES W. R. PARKS Ocean Park the Homerof all Natironall Advertis d G d y , FOOTHILL ACREAGE AND HOME SITES 1 SANTA MONICA TO HOLLYWOOD ALSO SANTA MONICA HOMES SEE JOSIAH A. BRIGGS. JR. 745 Saltair Ave. Westgate Heights 502 Delta Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. Phone S. M. 22942 Phone II936 I TT T T YT' ' Ti I 'TTT HERE'S WISHINC YOU WELL AS YOU STEP INTO THE NEXT THING. I I Mood 's Dru Store y Y g I I430 Third Street I AT SCHAUB'S MARKET I 427 SANTA MONICA BLVD. I Watch Schaulzls Ads. Big Money-Saving Specials Every Saturday I Phone 2I453 We Deliver And right in the middle of the floor '23-What you taking this quarter? she hegan to shake-ia '26-True Stories, Pelican. Police Ca- 'l'lN- missy! zelte and Chaparral. Drop around some No. the shimmicfi evening. CALIFORNIA How did Colgate and Williams come Benevolent Old Lady-What do you out in that game? want to he. my little fellow, when you I understand it was a close shave. Urow up? l P Little Boy-l wanna he a man an' wear The Mayor says that if the tramps donit long pants like Dad. quit kickin' about the gruh down at the Ii. O. L.-And what do you want tu new jail he's goin, to throw 'em all out. lie. little girl? -T- I,ittIe Girl-I wanna he a lady an' Alice Balisli-Wllat part of the hody wear short dresses like mamma. is the fray? iii- lVIr. Knapp-What are you talking Senior Ito hold-up manl-Shoot if ahout? you please: l wear Paris garters, no Alive-Why, I read that Ivanhoe was me-tal ean touch me. stabbed in the fray. 1 I H.FRlEND8zSON I SHOES FOR MEN AND BOYS R 424 SANTA MONICA BOULEVARD, SANTA MONICA L, . . . L.. .L Y . - . .. A , ,YYY V II I WITHEREL PAINT 8: WALL PAPER CC. I MASURY PAINTS-WALL PAPER-ARTIST SUPPLIES li 1 I0'7i. Discount on Art Goods to Students I ' 204 SANTA MONICA BOULEVARD Telephone 22702 11 W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of Florsheim Shoes I I II I I I I I I I In II I I I I I: I ,I -I , ,I Il , I I I I I II I -Hudson--Essex Motor Cars- 1 I We wish to extend to the Fac- ulty ancI Students Our Courtesies Phone 61787 and Services in every way. I I I Remsbwrg Motor I IrWin'S Company In BAY DISTRICT DEALERS I L 3rd and Santa Monica Blvd. Sales Room I V U 1 I X Our Prescription Department in P I E R A N D TROLLEYWAY I I charge of registered pharmacists Ocean Park I I onIy. I I Quality Service Satisfaction 3 Stores Venice Ocean Park Santa Monica W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of Hart, Schaffner 8: Marx PITTENGER'S DRUG STORE A. A. PITTENGER, Proprietor Prescriptions Carefully Compounded FREE DELIVERY Pier Avenue and Trolleyway OCEAN PARK O. A. Kirklie H. D. Peck A. Bernarcl O. A. Kirkelie SL Co. . FUNERAL DIRECTORS and LICENSED ENIBALMERS Sedan Ambulance Lady Attendant , Phone 6l I02 202 MAIN STREET OCEAN PARK, CALIF. W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Largest Store The Berkley Co. Dry Goods and Notions Furnishings for IVIen and Women I4I8-20 THIRD STREET Quality Service SiIvernaIe's SEASIDE PHARMACY Cor. Hill and Main Sl. Eastman Films Prescriptions for Men and Young Men in the Bay Distric! l l t l, . l Phone 63166 Savings Checking '- Accounts Accounts l ll Q The Marine Bank .E X N of .t 'i Ocean Park tl X , Savings Accounts Solicited l A Satisfied Consumer 4' 1 t fest Paid V r . . p ' n e l l Santa mantra Bang Gln. l t t l l V lllargaret Wadley-And you have stud- Hen-'s where l put one over on yon. if-d ahout all the inventors? said the salesman as he put on the cus- john Stuhhington-Oh yes. indeed. l0lIll I'-S hat. Margaret-'llhen tell me who this man itll Nllul- llmldlngi 15- Senior-The people of Santa Monica ,V W aren't what they used to lie. l'lill'Illt'l'-hhvlll Well! Did you ever l.'l.t,ShiCsH0k come? lnilk hefore? l'. lVlorris+No. hut l've had lots of experience with a fountain pen. Senior-They used to he children. Oflicials of insurance companies are very sincere when they wish their patrons good health. llecky Huine-Wlould you spend an hour and a quarter with me tonight? 0. C. Sattinger-Tickled to death. but l don't know where I'll get the quarter. Smith-lt nexer pays to hurt a per- son's feelings. Spaeth-Yoh. l donit know. The den- Wc object to a woman being called a skirt. There is iery little reason for it. llsls malw good momiy' No high school fellow is as good as lVll55.5 2lll D f'5 lY l'l t'1 PW lm he tries to make his teachers helieve or 'Pnl Vrlnfe- W l as had as he tries to niake his hest girl Dlfk lV'I'l'fWcll. l ve nexer heard of lwlipw.. a IIIHIIQS t'0IllllllllllIg a crune alter he was i.. . lynched. l'owley-We hadnit been hunting ten ----'dv nlinutes when a rahhit lay dead at our ldleachcd Blonde--l think Sannny is feet. the dearest hall playerl l'lc's so polite. Hooperfwhat did he die of? Second l.ikewisefYes? W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of Jantzen Swimming Suits for Men and Women , W WW r6 fw-fs: of-14 ggi'-CHE QE K 1 99 ' -.. - ao ff- ll P PDP P0 Xxx Q7 por Par 'RED Ifzrm Tnzunruo Fon A canons aovwrnr mid' lgillllhlll-fxvllill is an implic-cl von tract? P4-url -l dmft ROY-'lslllf' out. now llunlcs. 'flu- omv missionary work. W. R.P Sopli.--l sf-e llivy canned llie clean. FFPSl1.-Wllll3ll 0110? know. Sopll,-Tlw sardine. l'iw'ry one who Clm'sn'l re-'s ai ine Cllillll'C to do Bus Driver-Faro, Miss? Marjory-Tliank you. , il ii y. if Il -4 I Applaud the Class of 1923 3 I. ll for their efforts X and successful termination of study y May success be your reward. Q 1 Lee H Youn i - g i Santa Monica Bay's Leading Grocer E i ARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of all Nationally Advertised Goods 4 I 1 I Yea, Samohi Votes 0 K OH I Imperial Ice Cream -T11 e I'IIIi'0l'l.fL? De.s'.s'crf.' It makes ai wicked hit with the girlies-and IIILIIIS what a good ice-cream is bought and paid for, ain't it, slimmic? XVhen You Step Out, Be Sure to Step In for ll Dish of Impei'ialait's the cream of ice- creams! Jim' Sanmln' Fa-zwrilr' Dv.i'.wr'l Imperial Ice Company Ocean Park W. R. PARKS, Ocean P rk, the Home of all Nationally Advertised G I Y. Y. . III WI First National Bank OF OCEAN PARK I Capital Paid Up .. ..,.. 550.000 Surplus Profits , .. .S37.l I 7 OFFICERS I-.. J. Vawter, jr. .. ,,,. President , Il. R. Cage , Vice-President I R. B. Ilarris .. .,,,,, Vice-Pres. and Cashier I j. C. Ferguson , ,,,, Assistant Cashier DIRECTORS I C. H. Mellen john Stein M. H. Wagner i Xvalter L. Mass E. j. Vawter il Theodore Clark james Chalmers II, R. Gage R.B.llarris 3 I Interest Paid on Time Deposits I Sale Deposit Boxes for Rent Your Patronage Solicited Corner of Marine and Trolleyway I X OCEAN PARK CALIFORNIA WI Cllolly--Wlieu I was ai lmoy the clovtor said if I clidrft stop smoking I'd lwecoinf- for-Ivlf--inii1df'd. Miss Keen-Well. uliy flitlllll you ship? Phone 623 I 4 IEIEIEIEIWIEIRII'RrIEliIEWI lifI5I!?5fIilEI'3.fl3iElgiEl3il ' I I I 1 l-lalf the beauty of flowers is in , the arrangement of them and this , is what makes our shop distinc- X tive. IN Taste and careful arrangement II have made us many customers. 3. We furnish complete Floral I Service. EIElmXIEIglXqXIE?!l?fllij LfIM!llE!lMIQf..ID!I XI FIIBI XI ' 7 Hart s Flower Shop N Phone 2I I54 I434 Third Dot Sinitli-My! What fine voflee you have! A. Cale--Yes. l put vverytliing l own into the making ol' good vollee. Dot--Oli. that accounts for the taste. . 7, ,LLL ,ss . . I A. GLENN WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER Fine Repairing 129 Pier Avenue OCEAN PARK. CAL. BYSHE ART SHOP We offer you our congratulations on your graduation. Make our store your headquarters for graduation presents. We curry a full line suitable for the occasion. 330 Santa Monica Blvd. Tel. 2I7l9 WE Fir Tag POQETBOQSASXELL Asgrusriasrj 7 Steinart s Shoe Store 207 Santa Monica Blvd. SANTA MONICA. CAL. I1 W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of Phoenix Hosiery for Men and Women Olive and Fifth Phone l i323 Official When You Want High Class Portraits go to Murillo Studio HFORMERLY HEMENVVAYH Auditorium Theatre Bldg. Los Angeles Photographer for Santa Monica High All Work Guaranteed Satisfactory Owned and Operated by WINFRED S. SMITH PHIL L. JOHNSON Special Rates on Graduation Pictures School I know a man who is so dumb that he thinks that: Newport News is a newspaper. Rex Beach is a pleasure resort. Block and tackle is a football play. Hay is an exclamation. Vaudeville is a town. . , -Mi 7 m-li Willis Business College , Every Graduate a Success l I JUNIPHER BUILDING , Third and Santa Monica Blvd. Phone 21069 KR. E. and Edna I. l college the past year: Leighton Dudley Marjorie Evans Katheryn Foster Elfreda Kratzer Margaret Luce Grace Noel Doris Reid Theodore I... Scrivener Esther Belt Thomas B. Christie Marie Coleman Harriet Clark Miriam Cannon Brock Darling , Martha DeMott Martha Davie Valerie Wilcox 1 lane Roth I stole a kiss the other night, My conscience hurts, alack, I guess I'Il go again tonight And put the blamed thing hack. Don't make fun of our collee. You may be old and weak yourself some day. Son-Papa, who was Shylock? l,apaiShan1e on you, son, go read your Bible. When a man becomes so well acquaint- ed that she tells him Now Stop! he is fairly well acquainted. W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, Largest Stock The following list of S. M. H. S. students are attending or have attended our Santa Monica Parker, Ownersj I Dorothy Evans Effahel Fugarcl Vivienne Johnston Charlotte Lee Dorothea Lockwood Margaret Loftus Mildred Moore Angelina Musitille Ethel Merrill -' Isabel Nielson Ruth Parker . Clark Prediger 1 ,lack Roth ' 1 Frances B. Roberts Florence Riley Ruth Sherman Marion Tilson ' Ethel Thomas l Wli. i26 lcomforting room-matel- livery man has his troubles. C. E. '26-Yes, and three-quarters ot them wear skirts. Squire-Did you send for me, my lord? Launcelot-Yes, make haste. bring me the can opener, I've got a flea in my knight clothes. Slle-Wllat are you turning the speed- ometer back to zero for? He-I'm going to see how far I can go with you before I2 olr-lock. of High School Suits in the Bay District i Phone 61306 R. N. Booth, Mgr. . m C. R. C. Baking Co r W i THE WHITE1 BARKER BREAD i Bakers of R UHNiWi11ii5ilmiiiiiiiiili.i1..riHiUUYW:iiii3NNNWH1NilrAl1,.i.l-EM!!MHWU' Dry Goocls and Ladies' ' Furnishings 3 .1 'wi1H1 11Hii 1 The Store That Stands Between X You and High Prices N 1 1 r i i i i 161 MARINE STREET Ocean Park California j Commercial Trust Savings BAY DISTRICT BRANCHES Pacific-Southwest Bank T. H. DUDLEY, Vice-President and Managing Director Santa Monica Ocean Park Venice Member Federal Reserve System W. R. PARKS, Ocean P k L g t Stock of High Sch l S K the Bay District X2 f' J If I y fb I TY. 01, I . 'J X The M O del S hO p Y ,n 1 1 wmMlIIM',, M Mwwgmwmr A I W , FINE I , W , -' ' If 1 I ,I I I I SCHOOL I for the Boys and cms and an the I RINGS 1 1 rest of the family at the right I , I prices. PINS N I STATIONERY , .2 I DIAMONDS - I ' WATCHES pr I V MEDAL5 I I R. D. BECKON, Prop. I TROPHY W I33 Pier Ave., Ocean Park, Calif. CUPS I I, g I I .Og I SILVERWARE I I I g ENGRAVINC- ' I I I Santa Monica Branch E EMBOSSING I I' DESIGNING I SECURITY TRUST 3: I I SAVINGS BANK I Fourth Street and S Santa Monica Blvd. I J'A'Meye's8lC0' II- ll Santa Monica, Calif. 724 S. I-lope St. 1-1 LOS Angeles Commercial, Savings, Trust N I 'lWllfl'P1s1'll00I U I I W Talk! MN! I-lead Office, Los Angeles h Interest Paicl on I ' Savings Accounts Safe Deposit Boxes For Rent I ' I l, Yarns 1 Chilclren's Wearing Apparel a Specialty K. O. B. GIFT SHOP Matilda D. Kennedy I W 224 Sam... Monica Blvd. SANTA MONICA, CAL. I II Phone 2I2oI I E. P. NITTINGER p PLUMBING, HEATING AND SHEET IRON WORKS I348 Third Street SANTA MONICA. CAL. I iI'sI IIIt'cliI'al Stuclvut IIIotiIIg1'I'ossf-II l'lI'f Sll- -would yoII Carr' to go Io il vyvs of his paI'lII0I'I-AIP yoII going to IILIIII1' Sz1tIII'day night? vu! WlIt'I't' you are looking? I lappf'I'-kS1II'c' thing. Svcoml Mvtlivall SIlIllt'Ill-Willy. of l rf'SlI- -.We-Il. would yoII lvuy your Iivk- I'0IIl'S0. els from INF? First MI-diI-ul SlllflPlIl+-xVI'll. yoII hold -L lliisa-at tlieu. Dr. CIIIIIIII-JIISI think. llw I'iIgI'iIIIS -i-+ livvml Oll salt IIIPHI for six lIlllIllllS. I lltxill' Jiggvrs has left lllv lowufi Iistelle Pierson--Wlly, liiutis Ilflllllllg. YI-S. tluilis ulmout all II0 left. Iiw Iivvml oII t'iII'lll for I7 ye'aI'S. xl Sporting Goods Fishing Tackle I BICYCLES I August R. Avril ' I Phone 6I I5I-2935 Main Street Ocean Park. Calif. W' THE PALTSADES PHOTO STUDIO A. K. ETZ. Proprietor l PORTRAITS - KODAK FINISHING - KODAK ENLARCING - VIEWS - FILMS Frames For Any Picture y III-I I3 UTAH AVE SANTA IvIoNICA, CALIF. I I in -iT T E TE AT E E Ti E W E I The First National Bank in Santa Monica INDEPENDENT I Il YOUR I-IOIVIE BANK I A I CLAUDE C. HAWORTH I I Lincoln Z 1-'ordson J .l l I CARS - TRUCKS ' TRACTORB M 2I0 Sam Monica Boulevard SANTA MONICA. CALIF. w W. R. PARKS, Ocean Park, the Home of Hart, Schaffner 81. Marx , SYX ii. FL.. gx ku ,un X If .- X, F, I lx .. .- A . , -, , ,1 .A r X zfrmf liijhl-V-Uglllf u . Signatures Q 'A A x XM x ' f QNX K ,i Q ,ffm Q x 'f 3 A C Lf W J y X X j f gc, I - KEY! J x X ,' I M K n L I P 1 1. - f t-14, If I , I , , . ., -J 'Z4?,, 'ff Autographs .XX Q10 5 V 3, I D I'-V'-fnx I ws ' V f,-,.,,LL--M ' 2 Z ,. , Q. ,f' I u f M x,fgfofLUN V' M-A fu A 75 N1 x ' ' ' ' ' '77 X X, N , 1 Heartiest Congratulations CO High School Graduates May Success Crown Your Future Efforts. Santa Monica Bay's Finest Store Welcomes You. Chas. S. Robinson SANTA MONICA BLVD. AT FIFTH Fine Tailoring, Knox Hats, Exclusive Furnishings ENGRAVINC. Ti-:ours ENGRAVINC, co i P P L- 1. . ' ..Y..Vf ' ' ' I ' ' hmm, was -ff' -, - :4g: 'f fm'-4-:'v:,:mx'fa?..':',.r,u:fQs' .-..,1-- , -A--,fv 1 '- H -LrsvvF'::'f anim: pixma'


Suggestions in the Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) collection:

Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Santa Monica High School - Nautilus Yearbook (Santa Monica, CA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933


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