Schreiner Institute - Recall Yearbook (Kerrville, TX)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 186
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 186 of the 1936 volume:
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His father, a proud old army officer, had always wanted to move to Tennessee, where it was his desire to start life anew. On his death in 1806, Mrs. Houston complied with his wishes and moved to Tennessee with her nine children. 7 fl N 1--1' ' L- 7 fm W W my '36 Trhe- Sifwolfarvh of 5i1wzm-fc Irvsibfufzfa !Ka1fwif7Ke,, Ummm, Zkoxcgfoaf Unlike his industrious brothers, Sam disliked work. He soon gained a name for laziness and wasilooked upon as the black sheep of the family. Because he did not fit in with the farm life, he was put to work in a small store by his older brother. Being thus cooped up was even more distasteful to him, and he ran away to make his home in the village of friendly Cherokee Indians. When his br came to take him back with them, they him dressed in Indian garb and lying on the bank of a river reading the Iliad. Because he thoroughly enjoyed the naturalness and free- dom from restraint of this kind of life, Sam refused Q return to his family at this time. ,-N' In a year when Texas and Texans are foremost in the minds and hearts of everyone, it is perhaps difficult to choose but one from the many who made possible this, our Centennial Year. The roll call of the past is filled with proud and honorable names, and yet, perhaps, none has a more personal and imaginative appeal than that of The Raven . Sam Houston, an embittered giant, came to Texas, as hmany others did, to forget the past in an adventurous present. His fall from the political heights he had attained in Tennessee, a fall resulting from an unfortunate marriage, brought to Texas a man of great moral courage, keen insight, and shrewd statecraft. His story has been chosen as the leitmotif of the Recall that the members of the graduating classes in this Centennial Year may take new hope and in- spiration in shaping the destiny of the Texas of today. Cmnjlmflzz THE SCHOOL CLASSES FAVORITES SCHOOL YEAR ATHLETICS TAPS Although he had been known as a lazy good-for-nothing and had frequently been in trouble at school, he revealed an un- usual ability to master such subjects as aroused his interest. Hence, when after about a year among his Indian friends, he was forced to return to the settlement to pay an old debt, he hit upon the expedient of opening a private school. This project was much ridiculed because of his earlier scholastic difficulties, but he made a success of his undertaking and discharged his indebtedness within a few months. Dwiiwnm If - ' fi ' ' niwgfiilli f f W ff 'KM X A if 4 M W H KX 1, fi r y+2k5,'0h ' or r 1 I fs t Q XXX f lf' ji K X L rl Q WJ Ill! lvss-74 X X fi X W,-tr:-rziirxls lllwf N f N QQ fir ,ffl if iii' ' 'l X XNX livih 'A i fi 4 rx ,Ah gn - Qt -A Rif f, ,4'145,fsfyiasirgic ' ,,'r, Wlmll, ' ' e ,M ,ZA 'i.iim'i'Vf lik-.e'?f -zzz? I' W fsrif-sfifgl ei ' W A , K' fjjl, ,rifs!if!if3fj' 0 A f M41 4 r 5 X wil' At the age of twenty, Houston joined the regular army and was soon promoted to the rank of lieutenant. Later he served un- der Andrew Jackson against the Indians at Horse Shoe Bend, where he gained Jackson's favor by his reckless courage and dar- ing in leading an attack in which he was severely wounded and left for dead. x , Aww A 411 ' To T. M. HAMMOND A research scholar,a patient teacher,and an inspiring friend, who has macle richer ancl more intelligible the world in which we live WWW T.lv1. H AMMOND .Xi 'xx ,X Thoroughly disgusted with political interventions in Military affairs, Houston resigned his commission in 1818. He went to Nashville, where he studied law in Judge Trimble's office and passed his bar examination after only six month's study. He then opened his practice at Lebanon, but he stayed only a short while, being elected Attorney-General of the Nashville district. 1 pf'-if-'f' ' f mbfx 1 f , 'X' , f gi 4' f ll 1 1 f IN MEMORIAM A. C. SCHREINER Public benefactor and beloved citizen and friend. Loyal and capable Presideni of the Board of Trustees of Schreiner Institute, I Born September 18, 1862 - Died November 19, 1935 ' u TITS School ni' 'i' Houston at the age of 33. QQ E ku ffff J z- me 'fic 1 'mm I r Q' Y' ' Q . v f 1 Q1 ' f PYL '.T1f 'F.+z Q' ' ' A ' A M , 17' 4, ., ' A . ,S 1 KL 1 Y r ,-my-A X, F! 0' Q, 0. .- -,.'- .Q sw x W W' X Q ,- -f .., A. wg, ,. f R .Q x NL K 4. M -'V - M, 'ww if Ni: zkfign.-fTi'Wz4f, ,yviiii ' Y ' A I Q 2 if- A 'vmegmhgy ,:fsp.f- -N 7 - , L .L -A 5 4 N 4 'N' if ,wp Q, 9, ,K N. , Awww NQLK MQ, . ..,,..k, -mg 5, 6 K. BU K - - 5 K ,wtf As f Q f. ,gil 1 ,111 .. .:.v+Mg,,c.,,-2--Q gr, 5:4 -H -. Wwkxigr 5 'ff?4Ks:.:i . .,4 i ,, K A gk , L 1 --1' N y .f W Q 551 i ,zgfw 5' 4f?5M if5f5 .1 Zv- s ,gh fifL4'?3- Y W -i V... 2 ,K 'Km qw,- ' . M . , X.. M- .v ' '2, . M., 'I B 1 .4 1 V' sn Sn Ei , U ' fs f 1 if sf fig' I F L4 Wil QQ. iininmmmnf . , . Y lg i i lguel I I Y. Q -Mei-. -Y WV-Y:1V,?ii M.-4 fir V .i ' 'i U Vi I V i iw 1 H III ii t ' g ?L xl WW iii i CML VQSCCYLXZK ip W ' i I 1 Administration and Faculty up Li? HHH H15 In the election of n rew ac son M36 1827, Sam Houston, protege of , 6117716 9 G 66 A d J lc d th l tion for governor of T tim REV. B. I. DICKEY, D. D., Vice-P1 esiclent of fha Board of Trusfecs BOARD OF TRUSTEES TERM EXPIRI NG 1 936 MR. H. REMSCHEL .................... ....... K erfrizille REV. B. O. WOOD, D. D .... ..... S an Angelo MR. W. A. FAWCETT ................... ..... K cfm-ville TERM EXPIRING 1937 WMR. A. C. SCHREINER ................. . . .Kewfville MR. W. SCOTT SCHREINER .... . . .Kerrville HON. JULIUS REAL .................... . . .Kew-ville TERM EXPIRING 1938 DR. J. B. WHAREY ..................... ..... A ustin REV. W. P. DICKEY, D. D .... ..... J unction REV. B. I. DICKEY, D. D .... .... S an Antonio ?Deceased. 1 'X ff! .N TT.. if ,,, .Em ,, i. , 'E ',' , 1 ,Nam : ...., p p urru u ,, i M X X 'Vw Racer!! J. J. DELANEY, M. A., Litt. D., President TO STUDENTS OF 1935-36 Closing days of the school year bring us to one of those stages in the educational development when we contemplate the work of the past nine months from various important angles. The graduates look forward with anticipation to the various paths of life their careers will take them as they depart from Schreiner. The undergraduates' angle is that of ob- servation-observation of those occupying the seats they will occupy in another year, two years, or three years. Another angle from which we may contemplate Commence- ment is that of the faculty-the viewpoint of the men who shared with you of work and play in healthful proportions of each, and who watch intently the graduates who are now leaving the institution and who will achieve the degree of success by which the work of the institution will be judged. So, it is with great confidence, therefore, that we commit into your keeping the honor and name of Schreiner and trust that through your Works great credit will be reflected upon the institution as Time unfolds. 'srwgffa if , 'Magi 5 K Qx'zfYi-Q X at ctw U1 is 'jill M. D. BRYANT, B. A., M. S. Austin College, University of Illinois. Zoology CHARLES H. CORNWELL, B. A., M. A. N. T. S. T. C., University ol' Southern California, University of Texas. Eduvatian and English. R. C. DICREY, B. A. M. A. 7 In Austin Collvyzu, S.M. U., University of Texas. 1l4athvn1ali0s ERWIN F. ERNST, B. M. S. M. U., University of Chicago, Bush Conservatory of Mvnsic, American J Conservatory ol' Music. M usic MRS. CLAIRE ASHFORD ERNST, B. A., B. J. University nf Texas, University of Wisconsin. English JACK GRAVES T. C. U. Intramural Athletics iii. Faculty J. J. DELANEY, M. A., Litt. D. King Colli-gc. University of Virgxinia, Columbia Univvrsity. I,7'1'8ll'ICl1f WILLIAM GALT MARTIN, B. S. South Carolina Military College, Univm-rsity of tiuoriia. Univvrsit 'Fe-nncsseu, University of Virginia, University of Chicago. Dvang Biblv and Ilisfary , C XVILLIAM O. GREI-Jn, B. A. Davidson College: Captain, U. S. Rvsvrvv. Comnzamiant 'NJ Ric? ' :If jj' 1 . 'J v v , . M-.--+7 .-g 2 3'r:::5Zi5:vLfeg'- !i 'Y'.'.1,l1ii2 ffi.' ff-v:ff:a'.e.Je::' wir v-1'-H--::.,z.. f- ff 'wf'- '- ' 1 N , 1 1-lii!1 r ii w K i ii ' A, .44.u4.L. .M L. vfffi 1 ffffy-ff' , ,M .x!. M ,- QA -,Vg H my ff M my?7li5y6yif.,cz vi ,L A 1,4-1 1 Hjiili ' , X J Q f f . 210 ,x,,.LQbx Lila--1 ,' 'Lf . ii 1 Fficiuiiy H. C. GILSTRAP Univvrsiiy nf Toxin .illliflfv I7fr'vl'lor Joim A. GU1NN, B. A., M. A. llnivvrwity nl' 'IH-xus, Univa-rsity of lh-itll-llrurxr. ff4'l'lllt1Vl uurl lfraylisli T. M. HAMMUNU, H. A., M. A. Univvrsity fri' 'IR-xais. Univm-rsity nl' Culrwzulo l'l1J1sic'x and M11ll1wmuliz's. I . '1 4'.K.Af1 - ss v-fa. 1 Xi li I I 1 .L 3 'X Q ...fi U S4 ff .L+ . .. . WJ X X. A murky'-', ' V L1 Nikk- . fgj nh U uivi-rsity of Chivapru. S, ' , X .Ap f 4- . I 1 m IRVING H. HART, JR., B. A. Universiiy of Texas, Iowa State 'l'4-:wha-1's Cullvm-. M7-wks English, and llislory kr' -x T. C. Moomr, B. B. A., M. B. A. Univl-l'sit.y of Tcxas. lizwinrss .iIIHlf7!iNfI'!lfi01l ,fx . f .f ' .2 XX if A944 di. if-!,f'VY'-g,pfx, fx B HAL C. NORMANU, B. S. Univs-rsity of 'll-xus. Iu'11gi'n1'1'riny Jos:-:Pu W. SAM'ui:Ls, B. S., M. S. University nf' Alabama, University of Chic-mm. f:lll'HlfHfl'jf F. S. SPRINGALL, R. A., M. A. Austin Collofzc, Univvrsity of Virginia. llisfm-11 nrlrl Cinirs X J. ROY Wu1sEN11UNT, B. A., M. A. N. T. S. T. C.. Univursity ul' Texas. i History, Economics and Government C. 7 , . 7 F JK 2 1 . I ' S J f N, fi ii X RQ Faculty WILLIAM M. VVILCOX, B. S. A United States Naval Academy Mathmuatirs and Spanish JOIIN D. NVILLIAMS, B. A., M. A. University of Texas Spanish J. D. JACKSON, M. D. Washington University School Phgfsirian. F. H. JUNKIN, B. B. A. University of Texas . 'I X' lfvyistrar vo' 553 FRANKLYN T. FII-:LI:s, A. A. Schreiner Institute. Assistant Rvgistrar JOIIN H. HORN, A.A. Schruim-I' Institute. B0o1.'l.'C1'11cr ELIZABETH A. HARPER, B. A. Texas University. Librarian ELI-:ANOR B. HOLIISWORTII, A. A. Schreiner Institutv. S1'r1'rtaV!f to tht' I'r4'sirl1'11t. MISS SUSAN AGEY Divfitian MRS. NINA EDWARDS Mississippi State College fnr VVOmen. I Srlmol Nursc, Classes F E H E E fi 11 1- n L 4 fi if 2 , ga 3 E 5 2 v f: 7 3. w .v SL 1: S IS 5 f 23 5! 2 2 3 E 3 1- ' ' n W 5 E .. fr 5 . gi E s 1 L E' .- .- e 1 5 3 3. .,, 5 N f f' -f ? 2 -- 1? I f , Y' ,,,r-'- ,,. ,,,.. 22 f? ' 1-7 -' X.. Cf X- ' I. firm! ,E X Overcome by adversities, Houston resigned the gov- ernorship of Tennessee and returned to live with his indian friends. pe ,. Lf nnhmmnm KVM R,-f2CLC!LZlK W-. College Seniors f Houston made his first tfrip to Texas in 1833, but stayed only a short time. 11936 ,liege fl ii? if f. V . V ,X , if uf! v , 1 K y ix College Seniors T. C. BOURLAND ............. .......... ........ S 1 LTL lslllllfl Corporal, Company A Treasurer, Phi Theta Kappa: Mountaineer, Editor: Recall Staff: Cardioid Club: Tennis, '35, '36: Basketball Reserve. WALTER S. BRADLEY ...... . .. .. . . . .. . .. .Conroe First lil!'1ltl'7lll7llf, Adjutant Glee Club: Pre-Law Club: Officersi' Club: Vice-President. Pres- Schreiner S. S. Class. CHARLES F. BYARS .......... . . . . .Plainview First l1iK llf!'7lll7lf, C0llllIG7l.ll B Mountaineer Staff: Recall Staff: Officers' Club. JOE BYRD ............ . ..... ..Winleo' Haven Corporal, Company C Engineers' Club: Cardioid Club. A ' '.. . l 1 f JAMI-is T. CANNAN ........ .. . .. .... ..... 1 lngleton Swmlizrl l.i:'14I4'nunl, Hand Glue Club: Urrhestra: Dance Urehvstra: 0t'l'im-ers' Club: Presiflent, Engrineers' Club. Svronrl l,i:'1itr'm1nf, Hand Officers' Club. Jour: M. CARLISLE ....... . . .Kaufman JA J. FLUYII CARTER ...... . . .LorIg0polc, Nebraslcrl f'or1mrnI, Com 11111111 If Sewreant-at-Arms, Bryan Literary Snviety: Seeretary-Treasurer, Pre- Iiaw Club. RUPERT T. CRAIG, JR. . . . . . . .Athens SI'l'1ll'l1'Ylf, Company! H Gln-e Club: Sergeants' Club. IRBY L. DYER ......... . . . . .Bm-slow S1'l'1ll'llIIf, Cmnpaufy H President, I'hi Theta Kappa: National Treasurer, I'hi Theta Kappa, WHS: Editor, Mountaineer, '3G: Business Manager, Recall, '36: Debate, YRS: Carmliniil Club: Bryan Literary Society: Pre-Law: Sergeants' Club: Tennis, '35, '36, Captain, '35, C. KINNEAR EARL.. . . .El Campo i Company H Glee Club: Pre-l.aw Club. i Y W College Seniors .lmxiics A. liivwmms. . . Srwgmull, lfunlliurlrf .l Ml1:I,v1l.I.i4: Ifliimms. . . Fo rim 111 I, Hu ml l':irrlini:l Cluls: lfuullmll R4-si-lu 5: lfnritlmll, Wifi. Mu,'roN EVANS ...... f'oi'pu,'r1l, f'omprlrHf 1' lic-will Sl:1l'l': l'l's--lmw Vluh: Tn-nnis, '35, '3lli: lfmxllml l .,f BILLY I mu:1isoN .. f'orpur11l, Ifcuul , ., -4.1 1 ,f 1.v iff! . . .,K'l 'l I'l7iIl6 . .Pluzfrr lg7'0'1l'II1l70U!1 l livs1'l'vv, '36. . .,Su,r1f1e1'so11 ., ' 4 9 v ri I , LEE ROY GRONA. . . . . .lim-willf' Corporal, Hand Orchestra: Pro-Law Club. HARRY W. HAMILTUN. . . . . .Cotullfi Corporal, COHIIIGTUI .l Enginvm-rs' Club. GILFORD HEATH . . . . .Normfmyee Company B JAMES HORN ........ . .... .. ... .. .. ..Mf-Alley: Srrg1'a1if, Company C S4-ci'x'tzll'y. Phi Theta Kappa: Business Mzmzuprvr, Mnuntuim-1-rg lflilitor. Recall: Cardioid Club: Bryan Iiilc-1'm'y Sm-ivty: l'rv-l.:iw Club: S1-rjzeants' Club: Sz-1'rvtzwy-'1'rvasuror, Snphmnuri- Claw, First Sm-nu-stvr. JACK HUNT ...... . ............ .. ..... 1VIom'oef, Lu. Major, Staff Mnuntainecl' Staff: Recall Staff, 0l'c'l1s-:-:11'zl: Ilzuuw- 0i'm'hvsll':i: Officers' Club: Honor Council. '34, '35, GASTON JOHNS ...... . . .Hfrozmlslrofro Srrgwant, Crmipanyl A Basketball, '35, '36. Captain, '36, Ss-ryxvzlnts' Club. W. Me. ' - 'elif 4 -' if 'Q 5 H xx I lf i.. .4 be me l x... College Seniors ALVIN E. KRAUS ................................... ,fl ustin Second Lieutenant, Company C Cardioid Club: Officers' Club: Vice-President, Sophomore Class, First Semester: President, Sophomore Class Second Semester. JOHNNY E. LANGERIIANS ................... F7'6ff6TlCkSl1'M,Tg Corporal, Company B Football, '35: Basketball, '36: Basketball Reserve, '35: Football Reserve. '34: Track Reserve, '35, L0U1E LESLIE LEHNB. . . .... . . ..... Fort Mclfarett Captain, Company If Scholarship Club: Cardioid Club: Officers' Club: Engineers' Club. Second Licutzfnant, Band Pre-Law Club: Officers' Club: Football Reserve, '34, '35. SLIE LIPPMAN ................... ...... S ch ll,l67l,l?ll'l'g Up, ROBERT McC'ULLocu ....... . . . . .. . . . . . .. lin nd Nlountaineel' Stuff: Orehestrui Dunee Orr-hestrzt. .Corpus Christi r W1LL1AM D. McMA11oN ..... .. .Longview Corporal, Coznprnlyf B Engineers' Club: Golf, '35, '36 DAVID Rusn MCMILIAIN . .. Q. ........... Portland fj0Hl1P!17l!l A Pre-Med Club: lfootbzl, . '3 , Sergreunt-at-Arms, Sophomore Tuoivms P. MCPEAKE ..... . . . . ......... Ingram Captain, Cunmaizgi C Officers' Club. ISAAC JAM!-is MAY!-:AUX .... . . .Kerrville Corporal, Com 11411111 .l Footlxall '3-l: Sergeant-:tt-Arms, Sophomore Class, First Semester. f ?'m.A,fQy TRUMAN MELCH1-:R ....... . . . . . .Port Lavaca Corporal, Conlpunyf C Pre-Med Club. l. ,:i ,.1,, ee if ,l ,i ., 1 U4 ll J ..,.....-...-..,, ,.4. , ,,,,2i.l-ww l K R' L l ...... ,.....,. ,A ,,,,,nn,L......J '. ........,,f., mn. 4 i T' . ' Effort illliil it I WL ,kno I I: Recoil ii 'll Ju, lil College Seniors TOM Mo0RE ...... ......... . ........... . . . .Dale Company C Scholarship Club: Debate: Cardioid Club: Parliamentarian, Bryan Literary Society: President, Pre-Law Club: Football Reserve, '34. PARK MYERS. ..................,.................. Austin Sw-ond l.irute'nant, Band President, Student Body: Honor Council: Orchestra: Dance Orchestra: Pre-Law Club: Officers' Club: President, Pres-Schreiner S. S. Classi ifumbfiii, '34, 'sac T.-ack, -35. HERBERT NAssoUR. . . ...... ........ . . .... . . .Lockhart Company B Phi Theta Kappa: Pre-Med: Cardioid Club: Los Mfmtaneses. ARNE NELSON .,............... ...,............... M EXIA Swgvunl, Company .-l Phi Theta Kappa: Cardioid Club: Pre-Law Club: Sergeants' Club: Pres- Schreiner S. S. Class: Football, 245: Basketball, 'tifiz Football Reserve '31: Basketball Reserve. '35: Track Reserve, '35, C. J. NIEDERAUER .............. . ....... Austin Second Lic'ul1'nant, Company C Cardioid Club: Los Montaneses: Uffit-ers' Club: Football. '35: Basket- ball. '36Z Football Reserve, '5'fl: iiasketball Reserve, TIS. GEORGE H. NORTHINGTON, III .... ...... . . .... Egypt First Svrgcanl, Company C Honor Council: Recall Staff: Sergeant-at-Arms, l're-l.mv Club: Sergeants' Club. HORACE PATTESON ..... ..Smiley Sergeant, Company C Sergeants' Club. RAYMOND E. PECHACEK. . . . . .If'latm1.in ' Corporal, Company B 1 Engineers' Club. K. A,--. . xlfj 2' J 119-JC! 1 BEVERLY POOLE, J R ................. ....... Cotulla Company B Mountaineer Staff: Orchestra: Bryan Literary Society: Secretary. Los Montaneses. EARL PRESTON. . ........ . . .C'l1ildress Sergeant, Company B ,j . Pre-Med: Serizeants' Club. ' 4 as A5 7 f --:ge 111 iioao as 3 AA.. M A .A .... , ,, , -K -were w ww E E H .1 ilaillilr ' ' AWA 'A .K f fff 1' F-Recoil! owfrf, VERNON W. ROOKE, JR ..... First Sergeant, Company A Mountaineer Sports Editor: Recall Staff: Vice-President, Pre-Law Club : Sergeants' Club. TOM MAYFIELD RUCKMAN. . . Corporal, Company C RUBEN ALFRED RUSCHE .... Corporal, Company A BERRY SA'r'rERwH1'rE.... .. ' Company B Debate: Bryan Literary Society: Pre-Law Club. BERMAN SHIELDES . ...... Captain, Band Orchestra. Dance Orchestra. J. H. STARKEY ......... Corporal, Company B Los Montaneses. Pea Ti l Owl gin . . . .Houston College Seniors GEORGE WASHINGTON PULLIN ............... ......... T aft Sergeant, Band Honor Council: Phi Theta Kappa: Cardioid Club: Sergeants' Club: Football, '35: Football Reserve, '34: Basketball Reserve, '35. RUSH H. RECORD .......... ......... .... ...... C h i ldress Sergeant, Company B Phi Theta Kappa. Vice-President: Recall Staff: Scholarship Club: Debate: President, Glee Club: Cardioid Club: President, Bryan Literary Society: Sergeants' Club. ROBERT RODGERS. . . . . .Quanah Company B Scholarship Club. Karnes City . . .Kerrville . . . Victoria . . . Tyler . . .Kerrville 'Ps 16' 119256 , -if ee Y x X, J 'AQ A-YM 'Tail-1 X .ifflliffigjfvi Y- AQ -mv-Q -hi X - .-..ii I Vlr-'N WNV XXX ll YQLQULKK XXX lxwx f xii ixbxx X V College Seniors MARTIN STEIILING .... S1'rg1'a11t, Company .il Carilioiil Club, Pre-Law: .. .. . . . , . . .Kerrville Sergreants' Club. C. M. STEVENS .... HUIJSON C. TURNER. .. . . . .Clelrzwne . ... ....... . .El Campo Corporal, Company If Glen- Club: Urvhvstrzx: Prvsiilcnl, P11--Mx-il Club. RUSSEL VERNOR ......... .... .... . . .N eflefrlanfl Corporal, Band Orchestra: Dance 0rc'h1-slrzli Emrinl-ers' Club. JEFF L. VINING ...... .. .,.... .. ..... Mercedes Svrgvan t, Company B Mountains-er Staff: Rn-Pall Staff: Glue Club: Cilfllllllll Club: Surge-ants' Club: Engineers' Club. WALLACE WADE ............................ . . .Houston Srrgffant, Company C Glee Club: Bryan Lit.ei'zu'y Society: Sumreunts' Club. FORBES VVALLACE ..... . . . . . . ....... .... . . . .Cisco Sriry1'a'nt, Company B Vice-President. Sophomore Class: P11-simlunt. Bryan Liu-rm'y Society: Semzeants' Club: Vice-Presirlunt, Enprincers' Club. HOMER J. WILKINS, JR. .. .... Bay City Corporal, Company C Glee Club: Secl'etar'y-'l'reusuVer, Pre-lVle4l'Club: Curilioifl Club. C0LL1s WOODWARD. . . .... I'em'sull Company C ' Y KX ' CQ 71 kk A xl ' E M ll 36 J bg X if Q1 . .,,,.,.. .. .,.. . ,HW . ., ..., ,M 4, 5, ..A..,,....... ..,..... .....,... I 1 . .. ...,,,,,,,,,, ,W sg-- .L CL X U. H, ghnmmr. ..... -..N ,V.,, w ill I , 5HH, l B f U i ilriiiillit 6VfWffW f ii il lliqi College Seniors DECKER WOMACK .............. .... .... C o rpus Christi ALTHEA Recall MATILDA c0-Ed MARTH A Co-Ed JOHN A. JOHN D. M. D. BRYANT, Faculty ,Sponsor Tig Captain, Company A Honor Council: Cardioid Club: Officers' Club: Engineers Club. AMPAR0 H. CASTILLO ............................. Kerrville Co-Ed.Clubg Los Montaneses: Bryan Literary Society. HELEN H. CONE .... .. .Kerrville Co-Ed Club. Evans .................................. Kerrville Staff: Mountaineer Staff: Co-Ed Club: Scholarship Club. MARIE REAL. . . .... Kerrville club. L. STARKEY .... .,.. K errville Club. GUINN, Faculty Sponsor WILLIAMS, Faculty Sponsor l 'is T Wk, 6 1 i Pwqfskiv '7 F 55115 gf? ww X.,'i,: QAQQ 1 U 1 js.. rm P f tlnlmmmmr' al., A wif- ,V , ml- - -f.AW-xiy - N f 4 gd, . ' , wg.. ,H 1? ! ,, f ,F 5:-sq, , 1 .,,v.u,,g-, W , A, ,- H MH -I - ko S College Freshmen -'-. , ,-'.u1lm1lfl A gym' in to U lm, L1118 , 4 f I fgl f y flfwlf I. m I'l 1 U 1 B Muff 'el , lull all 'rfW7 '1f11fl1f1uV wwe ,nf H gffqytlli H Xb 4 llllllltljwlf FTM Ull lH'1i! 'lIlmM.HlIH,fxfr' .ww fllP1l'WVJ H 'T 'll' 4 lllpv W X flw Us w ll gt, M W A49 gif f . fx H S ml 'T-N l A .'f ll ' R Q-'UW Wo Lil i X I 'f. 5:21-.Vx 3 3 I llllflll ' . f ' inmn WW , 1. X mf 4 h-g:5AjggiL h Q25 V: N' , Qllllrlfluum, ff ,f-1-ff -in 1 f-:-'fj:- ,111 23 4' ZS- Q'-S The little group of courageous Texans at San Felipe, who were attempting to form a government, wel- comed Sam Houston on his return to Texas. He was given command of the small Texas army. H936 - ...- -41:--':'.:f:4:z-wrfgfmlfr-'-....--..:.-i. Lzru.. -.:::::.s:: 11,121'1?F:il'.'.Jf6?!'?'f?5' fl'ff'fef::t'.-Aw: is iilg-neun. ,Y L1P41'1'n- vid, P ' k............l.1...............L .A.....gL,-.LLQ ..IL....Ii..,.L..Ll: .',1....IlA.l.I....X1'...L' .' 1-...l,.ILZ -iw 'X W my ' jx 6-. H V1: 'f'f f' W f W V IUMA-. '-wr L. T. ANDERSON, JR .... HUFFMAN BAINES, JR. .. STEVE MACK BAKER .... RICHARD JAMES BANKS. A. B. BARKER. A. Q 19.4. ERNEST BARKLEY, JR. .. CHESTER A. BARNETT. . . LEWIS WILLIAM BARLOXV .... College Freshmen . . . . . .Houston .. .San Antonio . . . . . . . . .Junction ....,,,,. ouston Kif4'. '1J67' . . . .Bishop . .. . .. .. ..B1wnet . . .LorIgepole, Nelz. 1 f , A BARJVTIYFT. . 2. . .n .............. Pettus JAMES E. BAYLOR ......... . . . .An-76-rzwizo Spvings JAMES R. BODTIIE.. HENRY Y. BOURLAND HAROLD C. BRASIIER. .. DELNO BROWN ..... HERBERT A. BROWN. HERBERT R. BROWN. NATHAN BROWN. . . ..,,r ...... . . . . . . . . .Sweetwater lj I fy 9 , . . ......... Port A0111 un' . . .San Antonio ..........Iwum . . . .Mont Belvieu, . . . .Sanderson . . . .Kerfrfuille V. l -' 5-J J I -s J JJ A A 4 -Z7 J 2 DARRELL C. BRUMLEY .... . . .Edinlnwg LEE ARL0 BURNHAM. . . . . .McCamey 4 W I ' I HC? Qgc? I W 1 ff vs SJ ,w D A .S ' CNA UID x f .hx , .X .Nt X7 Y -L-ALM tuylplwjv ,J x VX y3giLQ9A, .M,...A4,5,v,,.w.l.,mL.,,.v2., .1 ....5,,:2,.:m,.N..1.,.,.v,,........Q. ..+,g,4:n,.: ,x X W ,. ,, ,,N, ,I , I X ,. ,limi , , ,,,,UmU..,i 1R,..,,,., RH, ,.,r.:.:,.....L-.E, iv- ,N N L. ,XT X. J ,4NgQ,,,+ N .,.qjg,w .1 Wy ,V College WAIJIJY T. BURNHAM .... JouN BUTE. ....... .. . I, H Li'fG'4f'f' - I CHARLES L. CARPENTER. . . ROBERT L. CARPENTER. .. FRAN K CARROLL ..... CRAWFORD CA T ..... .... .... ELMO i ' ..... .... .... Mei EKQH NDL . . . .Houston .. . .Houston ,Smithville Marathon . .Beeville Berlumont Longview . . .Smiley JAMES E. CIIISUM .... NEAL CLARKSON .... BERRY C0Lv1N .... SEYMOUR CRUSE ...... 5 FRANK R. CUMMINS. .. En CURTIS ....... .. THUMAS W. DANIEL. .. Www I.. T. DAVIS, JR .... G. W. DAws. .. ALBERT T. CO0K, JR. . .. CHRISTIAN M. CUTIIAM .... . . .Bandera . . . .Bastrop . . . .Kenedy .. ...Laredo .San Antonio . . . .Romrlyor . . Vlfoorlslzoro . .Mur1y, Lu. . . . .Vernon . . . .Kerrville . . . Throclcmorton its lfiffr 7 ' Il CRL f ' tl.. vi In QC f vw .af-Q HQJKD Vcc ab D H A- - 1- ALA, u,,,,,,,,,MMALL:',i:. .... .. ..... .. , Q ' -' -'M NI I HI IN I Q wt' 5453519 1 .I 1,f I G 'WL-1fi:.f.l ff! llg TED R. DAWSON ........ CILTON DEBELLEVUE . .. CAPE G. IJEXVITT .... MAURICE DIAL ..,. FRANK DICIIEY .... N -RiCHARD LEE DOBIE ..... EDWARD H. ELKINS .... CLYDE E. FARTIIING .... if-rf SS is WILLIAM L. FRICKXL. . . L .... .... B ayside BUDDY GARRETT .... . ........ ..... .... S e aly LEE ROY GABRETT. . .... .... S ealy XX 5 E EES WILSON GENTRY ........... ...... .... J 1 motion WALTER GERNAND .... ..... B eaumont ROBERT COPE GIBSON.. .... Vernon DEBOYCE GIBSON ...... WILLIAM G. GILLIS, JR JACK GOOLSBY ........ JAMES ROBERT GRANT ..... '7 WALTER C. GUINFSTBEAM ..... ........ R I ....Cameron . . . .Crystal City ...........CTOckett , If X ,GU . . . .Depart . . . .Ofrange 5 Wx. X WRX X A4 J M936 Del VM ESQ ' if U N College Freshmen .....HOmlo . . . .Kerrville . .... Houston .........GTofuetOn South San Antonio .. . .Snm'mit, N. J. . . . . . .Angleton . . . .Clemville M-V f X 3 NN I up P' . ,CE-- T 5. .,4.K1 . ,,... . ..... LvK...l .'.-. .i.. II...-. .v.v i Y- .!. 'TI T ' WV if-lb:-LB N N ,I 'IWW MM College FI'eSI'1mSn GEORGE E. HAGGARD ..... . ALTON W. HALEY .... . I r'.4,I TOM L. HALL ...... ....... O verton EDWARD HAMILTON .... .... S an Antonio PECK HARDEE, JR .... ........ M art FRANK HARWOOD . . . . VVILLIAM HAUSER .... ........... FRANCIS W. HENDRIX ....... . h. mpg. .Mexico City, Mex. f k,:J5' I.. - I' , . If Ln. 'Q .lf . ' f ff' W!! ...Jefferson . . .Oakwood I,' ...Ju If I4 ,. ,ff Y WILLIS M. HENRY ........ ...Mont Beloieu THOMAS PRESTON HEWITT. . . . ..... Houston CHARLES HIGHTOWER ..... .... B artlett BILLY HODGE ............... . , .... , ....... A ..... Mission J 11 A .. EDWARD HUDSON iZfff':fX'f':'. . I . ............................Floi'esvillc ANDY HUNTER. . .Palestine WYRICK IRWIN ..... ....... f . GLENN JACKSEJN ..... .... C orpus Christi i JAMES JAEGGLI ..... ....... M oulton I 'N F LESLIE J ARVIS ....... . . .Woodsboro x . RICHARD W. JENKINS ....... .... .... H o uston B . H936 'Af ' ML I , A. ' 1 'QVC 1 rig kf ff:--1. L A nan. e eee A A W .e naimil EIIAE 1 I W A 1 A+ + I JIM WALLEI1 LEE .... . . .Houston JESSE J. LEE ..... . . .Houston DUKE LESLIE .... .... E dinbufrg GENE LOCK .... PAUL LOWE ............ .... D enison , DUN ALLEN MCCASKILL .... DARDEN MCCOLLUM .... CLAUDE F. MCKINNEY. . BAYARD MCMAHON .... DOUGLAS MADDUX .... C. M. MALONE, JR ..... .....Houston I . Recall! I I-II121lKf??wf . uh wi' ' lt 'llln College Freshmen DICK JOHNS ......... CHARLES F. JONSSON. JOHN H. JUNKIN .... JOE MAX KAHN ...... WILLIAM KELLOGG .... HOWARD D. KUETTNER .... THOMAS LANE. ..... . . ROBERT B. LA SELLE.. W .Kerrvz N . . .flung M cCamey . .Beeville Longview 01 6-M . Oakwood H906 G5-gil 7 x-.xx , it 55' dbg 75 ........................McCamey . . .... Crystal City . . . . .Hufrlingen . . . . .Hallettsville . . .. .Houston . . .Comfort .......Lane City Chappell, Neb. Q I -f - :Q -f-, A ,4 V A R I AA-A M Ziff College Freshmen SAMMIE YVILLARIJ MARS!IAI.I.. . CHESTER MARTIN ........... . ROY MATTHEWS ....... . . . JOHN B. MERIWPITIIPIR .... ... CHARLES T. MIIDIJIIEITON .... .. FLOYD A. MILLER .... JAMES H. MITCIIPILII .... . SIDNEY A. IVIITCIII-ILL. .. I A 35 ,fa V , . Lf H ,IJ ,fd I . . .,.,! '. ' N . . .Kewwillc . . .Kewwillo IS-an A ntonio Q f Nfwogrioches . . Many, Lu. .. .Houston . . .Kerrville . . .Galveston 14 1 ,SN +-1 'P QEWNJQUNORIJ, III .... A ND MOORE .... 'HENRY B. NABERS .... FREDERICK T. NEEL. . . FRANK M. NEWTON. . . DOYLE R. NICHOLS .... CHARLES 0'RRII-:N . . . JOHN E. PACE, JR ...... .HI 9 If I HAROLD NORTHINGTON. . . JOSEPH D. NUNNELLEE. . . . .. RAYMOND HILL O'BRYAN .... . . .Richmonrl . . .Richmonrl . . .Clzilrlress .. ..Men11wl . . .Cr1mm'rn1 . . . .Ke1'0'1'ille . . . . . .Egypt Brackettville . . . Houston . . .Amarillo . . . Conroe VISA .I ,....,..... ,... v,., . . u4P3..?ENN'-Q U .... gig-ATf,,..l vhrl , .5 V:',l.- .v.-.. . . X I I. I 77 M - If: , 1, ' 'K fffffff ff U' I' uw lynx 'dt Warm College Fl'9SI'1I'Tl9I'1 JACK PEEBLES. . . . . ..... Denison S., ..,, - we HENRY SHELBY POLLARD .... .... F alfnrrias fl' RUDOLPH D. RADELEFF. . . .... Kerrville THOMAS RICHARD REED .... .... H ouston JOE REID ........... ....... D ublin A' STANLEY RHEINER ...... .... S an Antonio RICHARD FLOYD RILEY .... .... C atarina RICHARD MCADOO RILEY. FRANCIS FRANK RINANDO. .. . JOHN CLARKE ROBERTS .... J. D. ROSE ............ GEORGE SATTERWII ITE .... GROVER SEIDERS ....... IRVING SHAPLEY ....... DAVID FREDERICK SHAW.. WILLIAM SKINNER ..... KENNETH .L. SLACK .... FREEMAN SLOCOMB. . . . . . . . .Austin . . . . .Beaumont . . . .Crowell . . . .Kerrville .. . .Crockett 4, ...K . . . .Austin ........Houston Monterrey, Mex. ........Refugio ......Pecos . . . .Cameron .Li W HK it !!.,,., . V'. -Wim .v... v Fir... .v... .rn ......-. . ',v. ., vlr ixvjiiiierig. .. . U .QQXJJJJ-l-157 W wXMTrw ' Xxxgjry N HJ 1' CollegeFresl'1men EARL SOUTHERN. . . . . . Sutherland .Springs CHARLES STANDH-'ER .... .... A ustin ROBIN STEINIIAGEN .... .... B eaumorit PHILIP STI-:RL1NG .... .... A nahuac DAYTON STOCKTON ..... . . . .... Fort McKavett JOIIN B. VANIIOOSER, JR ..... ........ B eeville RICHARD SWAYZE ........ . . . .Kerrville FLETCHER E. WALKER ..... DAYTON H. WALKUP ..... GI-JORGE ARNETT WARE ..... HARRY A. WATTS.. ..... GROVER EDWIN VVATE MAN. . . . . --9 .. .Ingram .... .Mexia . . . .Rfllls . ...... . ........ Pierce ....... Pettus LEROY WELLBORNE .... ..... ...... . . Sfm Angelo WILLIAM W. WENDTLANII. . .... Shiner JOHN D. WEsTBRooK, JR. . . .... Rule J. P. WHEELER .......... .... A ustin I 1? N ri CHARLES WILKINSON .... ..... M enard L. GEORGE WILLEY ..... .... L yford 2' . .ff A A ,,A ,...- 1 I .4 ,. . ,, 1 11 T M so - LV.-A- - fu af., - -D ef 'Q Q .L f iw on , E . . . slglgwnmv V! WW .mu .. .....!:bm,,, iff- A - A eeee vi. I A ,, A A Ilnnmmi A I me A r 3' Q X, I I I - f ff l .- .. X f?,CCLC!Ll,l, I K. f f lll ,1 College Freshmen ELMER WILSON. . . ..... . . .Kerrville LESLIE S. WINCH ..... .... L aredo GEORGE WINSHIP ......... ...... , Segovia . THOMAS ORTH VVOODRUFF. . . . . .San Antonio JAMES YELVINGTON .... .... H :mt RUTH BUTT ......... .... K errville LAURA PATTON. . . MARIA PERSON LUCILLE PLUMB .... LENORE RILEY .... ORA RUSSELL. ..... . ELOUISE RUTLEDGE. . . DORIS VVHITE .............. . . . R. C. DICKEY, Faculty Sponsor CHARLES H. CORNWELL, Faculty Sponsor T. M. HAMMOND, Faculty ,Sponsor HAL C. NORMAND, Faculty Sponsor .. . .Junction JULIE ANN JACKSON. . . .. Kerrville Kerrville Kerrville I R .16 wee . . . .Kerrville WX I, . ,, N-C: ! IIII I I T I II ll I I ' AE I IWXXIIF l11'Wl CEM MMM II I j High School Classes i n 1 2k-I ul '1HmI lImm Ill 'N I wiivfg- QQ 1433- s qi II 0 ,+'d 5 II Q X ' I E 21, .. Il Ts it I Vtllfnx wig ,I,! I :gg L 4: ' jx - ,T 5 Mmm? - IB ' J .III e -If 1, ' II-P .WI SIII , e FIf ': f-P 7 ,,.II I-I' X' NBII .61 .IIII:':'flf' . , f' I Ji' IIT' XII -..f. .,:'5Q5II jg I f.g'gl,,q-WWI. ff If . ., 5 S I V J I 'III ' ' X k' K if '. I I. Q 'l 1. II' V' L '1 ' fine? -,QE 2' ' V' 1 I 'vfi iff' milf' H ,III.a. ,. I mf' . I ,.Ii I ' K xi 5.6 I 'ff' 753- I . , '01, ' .- fi , A X73 J ji ' , , y ' gm . - he 5 : ,.5.g,,.I, ,, I ,.3,... Qu, - I : -1-f f.IIIaaI1 X U7 H' I IEEE .Z-. ifiai-E561 ' ' ' I P '12-l :J , N ' ,II ' M 5 IIIIIII QE QQ uit N 1 l 1 llllll 1 'W Ego r' Hn i S E , fr lin' :Mgr Q ff Q E Uliffil' fl A II H A 'I Ol :III 'Ir' K HI rzl . I Wh -II ID I - . . ?f-Size, WD w.'4'i - 1 -2- - 'III III..Il . I,n,g. xl' -qfli 'i li' ' ': '46:,-, it V ' . ,,,, 1 g1h1.'f1'g3ggi..L x ::ff:.g ,fQZ7I-W g - + Realizing that his meager force of untrained volun- teers alone, stood between the invading army of Santa Anna and the people of Texas, Houston chose to retreat. H936 X75 ' K I LA , 1 F i Svrgeant, Com paw 11 If Company C Football Reserve. '35. H. F. BRYAN, JR ....... . Conlpanyf C Corporal, Com pa :I gy C Svrgwant, Bum! Los Montana-ses: Serire-antS' Club. ROY D'UOI.I:Y. . . ........ . . . . COIIIIPUTIII C MYLIE DURHAM. . . . . .Houston Cbnipunif C CARI. FITZGRRALII. . . . . .Mont Belvieu Company! .fl GUY DOUGLASS FRRNCII, JR. .. ...San Angelo Company fl HOYT GRAVES .............. . . .Bf4ILIl7VLU'IIf Compa1l.y A Football, '34, '35, Captain-elevt. LARUE HARALSON . . . . .llenismi Company A Football, '35, OTTO GRIEI-I ................ ....... . . . . . .Sim Angelo Band Basketball, '36: Dance Orchestra: Orchestra. FREDERICK A. HARRORIIT. . . . .Monreo-Teil, Mex. Company C 'F' STROMAN HARRIS . . . .. .Tuleta - Company C 'V Los Montaneses. ,, XS HARVEY HARTGROVE. . . .San Angelo .OH Company B Y 1 ,f U High Sclwool Seniors Honor Council: LOS Morxtanesesz S1-rgearits' Club. MIIITON MORRIS BASEY .... . ....... . . . Football, T231 Haslu-lbzill, Ali, Iiaclx, Mi. HOWARD M. BUSII ......... ... ... Glee Club: Bryan l.iterai'y SOI-ix-ty. WILLIS COWAN COBB ........ . . . VVANLISS ARMSTRONG ..... . ....... ...... I Yu ri A ngelo . .I-l ustin . .Ric'l1monrI S4111 Ilnfunio . . .hawrlo ...Hrnlston X High School Seniors N. I.. HAwRlNs,.IR ........ . . . . . f'nl'pm'1ll, fum pri H rf If S4-V331-:ml-:ll-Arms. Glu- Flulng Sum:-I.n-:ulmg PM-s-S Ulnssl l mnluxll. '5i3. CARRo1.l. Joxlcs ......... . . f'un1p11llff .I l mmlh:lll, TCT.: lizulwlllull, 'SNL flHNl'I l,l41r:1:.. . ..,.. . lfzrnfl GIJALNN 1.l1T1v1AN.,. l Irsl Srrgfwlnl, 1of,f,nn,f ll S4-1111-znzxlx' Club. I+Il.l.ls MUINNIS. .. f'onlp1mff If FRANK S. M+'Kr:NNm'. .. .. f'olrrp11nrl 1' . Crystrzl City . . , . .Temple 1'hI'k'lTlt'l' S. S. ...llfnison . .Houston . .San Salma, . .Houston Q I f I Q pf ' --r I 1 ,Zz l I BARTLETT MANN . .......... . . . .Hun .4 nyelo Sn-and l,iv1llc'nanl, f'ompunJ1 .-I 0f'i'ic'e-rs' Club. ROBERT MARSHALL ...... .... . . .Montw'w'1f, Mex. Sl'l'll1'l1'Hf, Comprlrlgl C Los Mnntunusvs: Suu-gn-ants' Club. VVILLIAM Y. MIJRRIS, JR. . . ...Ix'm-nas City Y Com pany H RALPH NOONAN, JR. .. Company If BYRON LERUY ORVIS. . . Conlpungl B Orchvstm. GEORGE PERKINS. . . Conlpanll .1 L m.! l Lfg ' l VHRNI-1 D. PHILIPS. . . Cumpany A Bryan I.itcrary Society. HUNTLEY H. RANDALL.. Ifompunu A Tu0MAs ROGERS ...... . .... ... . ... l'ompuny If Football, 'Big St'l'H'l'Hll14111-IxI'lT'l?i, Sm-nim' Flznss. . .Hondo . . Wcflslz, Lu. . . .Beaumont 4 . . Waco Son Antonio . . .Kerrville ,ve y. x V r K . , ., ,1 W1I.BUR TAYLQR. . . Vmnpullyf K' Fmrllulll, 'Ill THQMAS B. XVARIIEN .... .. .. . . . f'orpm'u1, f'nnlpanff .I liryun l,ilvl'z1l'y Sm-iely S. S. Class. 1 l.us IVluntanvsL'H: Svcrvlury, Pl K1-11.1.1-:Y Wmss ....... f'nrpm'al, fvtllfllllllljf 1' XVORTII W. VVOODY, JR q X' Rf: A ' q,' ,W T, Hugh School Sensors A. J. ROSENTHAL. .. .. vt 11 Companff C GEORGE SIIELTON . . . Mzfllunrl Company C JOHN S. Su-:Lsx1. .. I 1114110 Compmzy A .v VVAYNE SMITH.. Pale stznv 3, Conzpuml C Xt ROBERT W. STEAKLEY. . . Sher man Conzpangl B 'x . .Austin . .A ustin 'os-Schreiner' Eflinlmrg . . .llllll7 li'L N E Q N KE X Uuplain, Stuff Officers' Club. . ' . 1 W . '- I.ERoY A. WooL1.E1'r. . . . . . . . . . . .... Tmnpzco, Mew:- l'ur1mr'ul, C11m1n1ny1 .fl X HVYZIII l.ilel'zn'y Snrivty: Los Muntzmeses. Jmm HEARD ......... l'nnrpunl! .l MRS. CLAIRI-I ICRNST, Faculty Sponsor J. ROY XYIIISENIIUNT, F'r1z'11lfy Spunsuv' Housto P ,X N . ....,.A.A. N T 'Mr' W 6 . .A To eq W .-E l iam s DNN ,D H f f C D lllll . , A ejlll 1' UI1deI'Cl6SSmSI'1 JACK BLAKER ....... Jon N W. ROSWELL FRANCISCO Bl-:RMEA JOE CLAYTON ..... JERRY DAVIDEK .... BRUCE EIIVVARDS. . . EDWIN C. EKSTROM .... ZACK L. FELDER.. ws ff ..... .Bellaire . . .ban Antonio Matamoros, Mex. .....Sari Angelo ......Boling . .Corpus Christi .,.......Dallas EDw1N FORE ....... JOHN W. GARROW. .. QUENTIN GILL ..... HAROLD GRE!-1R.' . FT. . GREEK E. HARIJWVICIil4I .... A. W. HOWARD ...... FREDERICK JAIIN. . . MAX A. JARv1s, JR. .. SCOTT JOHNSON .... HERBERT CLAUDE KELLY. . . A ALBERT E. KENNEDY. .. H936 . . . .Corpus Christi .... ...Houston . . . .Silverton '. . .Crystal City . . . .Fort Worth .......Wall Mon tcrroy, Mex. .........Troup .Corpus Christi ....Ho1lston . . . .Kerrville XYY., ., 19 I YYY, -. , .. ...., ,... ...-...--,.-. . -If L ,L .-.L...L1.. .. il . ' Q , x. , ,Jr J1M RUTLEDGE .... .... EGBERT V. SMITH .... .. ,... JIMMY WAI.l.ACP1 .... RAY MUN VVATKINS. ...... . NVALTER NI-:ELY XVILLIAMS. . . . ROBERT ROY YAEGER ..... T. C. MOORE, Faculty Sponsor IRVING H. HART, Faculty Sponsor H. C. GILSTRAP, Faculty TS-ponsor VVILLIAM M. WII.COX, Faculty .Sponsor F. S. SPRINGALL, Faculty Sponsor ... . . . .Snyder ,f ff ' 't'W'FFF' V 'V 'rf J , , ,ff , www ' ,ff UndGfCldSSmen JOHN MARLIN KING .... TERRY LUKE. . J. W. LYONS. HAROLD PAGE. PAUL NEWTON. GENTRY R. PAXTON. . . , WARREN PILCHER .... ARTHUR M. ROBERTS .... l N , RL-lflw L, Y . . . . . . . . .Austin . . .Clziloquim Ore. . . . . . . .Denison Elizabeth, N. J. . ....... Austin . . .San Ylntonio . . .San Angelo . . . .Levellfmd K. r T .-- . . . .Paris . . .Houston . . .Austin ...Austin 4' ...f Hebbrovlville 'Q ,TSX A fi, ig..- , ws Q my Favorites 5 4' Ii H E E 5, 11 i I' fi 53 c 1 . f I Q1 2' E ii I f if fl L-1 5' ?. 5 ,. .P Y a 2 ey' :Ci lp I 94 ga 5 F' 'Q Q S i i Wy 4 ui 2, F Si fl 1 UU Sam Houston was married on May9,'I84O, to Miss Margaret Lea, in Marian, Alabama. I I f S4 Q. 't i .Miss Mrqinia Mcjoweff Dallas, Texas .Miss Qorofhy gforzz McAllen, Texas .Miss graze Jackson Kerrville, Texas ,ff , .Miss gfefen Sawzaers San Antonio, Texas Heafjqshv Gofvin Most Popular Cadet W J 1 V, 'W X School Yedl' a V! LIL? I I -i.II4I3II,I A II 1 , I I . .- I-j II ,AI AI. '--II? I1-'gl fI'.I-i,',,63,-'I I, - - f .-AA1 ' H ff - 1 'fc '-fi A A A A A s - ' -'AA -5 A -4' El -Q. Spf?--A-Af --1 . - .4245- , . - 1-2 - ' I ' ' -3 Af ' TQf'f'1' U Jim- -f- '- if' ' 5?- -III 'I-wb gI II A A - - .I IAI.,-.A IA.3:i,fQA,-99 f'-ga -I-I .- , ' A 'II AQ, f .IIFIA6 ' --A. 'fig 7 Inf ' -' A ' , ' -' '. ' PII . I A., 'f' A - - v Y ' Ai. xx' , 'A 9 '.', .AI ' II. I. I-III., IIKYIIII. 1 NI II -.1 Y, I ,Ay III,gIAIA,II-I II III IIII , II.:AEIi. QAAIIIIII . III?I,I,I,IA.IIII AI: EII ,I IAQ? A FI A A I I -IIIIx Q- II :III II'-AAIIIrI,I.II I I I4 IIAIIQI IIITIII IfAII:IZII2.'lI I. I I,' A II 45, .I, I .IA - 1 AI. 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A -v A- - .A 5 - , A IL.- ' fa. A- -- . - A - A-' ' 1 f'-'AA -A : Q ' L ' .Ai-1: :' ' A' ' .545 1- -' , I 1 '- A ' - A .' H: I I -1.-1 Af- ' , f . . A , . I -II, ' V ' '. 5: 4 ' . - 1 N . ' 'fI f ' ' ., -s' A .. -' A H Q, -A N- j I : A A .2QI.w1'.f'E ' -1 - , A- Q LIAQ A -3.4, 1 - A r A. 1 3, Iv A '- -sa'-'riff -ss: A'-'I a - f 'ff- Ip -7 IgIIg:I-N . A' ig A f 511 A II Af 1 I' R A, - f A ' ' I'g,I .I -f ' ..IIgIg9. ,.A K' ' ' A . A 7' -gf ' 5. . , V . '. ' t . . I .- ' -, A 1 - - - I II-IIA-5, I A - - if -a,.,. I I I A. .- AA A !sIv',I +1 A, I -M A .,- Q- i 4 - QQ- III , - I, 9 I . .AA A Ag ' 'Tig-A' .1 -. ?- 'TI -- ' ' -f- H -. f V I ' V' r 2i3 'Y i 4i'-T .-f'g -.:f'i -rfv4 -- - 'O V WT-. ' W ' ' . ' A-g.+ :if'is - - ' - F use f:f.1rF'51,l- A .Ag 1 1 R f .LLB-wf-Ai- ' 2 Some time after the battle of San Jacinto, Santa de Ana was captured and brought before Houston, who had been wounded. U ' ' , 4' FW 1 ,W-aaa b eeee A l eeee mn: if FM? WQLCZCJLXHK Organization Q ,,,... wh Efwvlw 5 , f JMS' M g X 4'-T'Xw wg I Wx gy Q fi I . ,N AQ 4 .4 fy 5 , we QQ 1-if ' r Y? - 2 5 'G TF il -MTWR' ,- W R 1 5?-fall, W fl if -sq Pi A' 'J , xy' Xp- ' W, ,ll ,M 'fx if Fx -no ww ' W Us F v - , 1 1 gf:,.w- ' -' Krew - f mf if-4-ifef if E. - 4 lv: fl! UI ll' Y' ' A' ill,- ' ll' 'f Q- NSE? 4g1,- if--:L'45' r X: K' lQ,,'w1'E .- f K ggi: wi si- -- ' W l L I X ml wif! Q EI - N 'Cx fm-A-:fx-eww V vs- H, if-.3 W, A ,gg h. xii: ' f Q2 '-is-' l Z--J' P ' ? Qugj' V' , . 55 - 4 X6,--'LV v- 'Q-,, 2 ' 'fn - '1 W' vr 3 f J X-1. -j 1 X-rf. 4: - Z X L, x H: xx . 5 V, 5 V Y.,. XX' 4 f ., JI N ,. W :ix I. fi' ':-EQKWTHZ J,-.-xg' , , , - nv. ., A or e N .nw X rw . 1' 4 .44 USS-ilk XV X37 f4'.5lfW 'S 5- Y Q-,gr , f yo- ff .As ae, M-. -- ' ' QM-fi .,,.oX ' J ' . f y ZXfX2 During the battle Houston received a severe wound and was taken on the little tramp steamer to New Orleans. . H936 Flora . 'ig' fiif yya . i-i -,',','.A f.f,: :g:1' ',',' A D - 'Ww Fteccftlif ' ff f I Tor' Row: -Armstrong, Schreiner Hall: Hodge, West Barracks: Myers, Cottages. BOTTOM Row: - - Pullin. East and North Barracks: Northington, G., Hoon Hall: Womack, Dickey Hall. HONOR COUNCIL The Honor Council is an intermediary committee between the faculty and the students. It serves in a number of important capacitiesg but the most important is that it handles all complaints of the student body in the way of petitions and the like and presents these complaints to the faculty. This results in efficient self-government by the students in a desirable way. The council is composed of six membersg one is elected by the students in each area: namely, Schreiner, Hoon, and Dickey Halls, West and North and East Barracks, and the cottages. To be elected to the Honor Council is perhaps the highest honor that can be conferred on a student at Schreiner. It means that the cadet body has faith and confidence in the student's integrity, honesty, and good judgment, and that he is popular as Well. The Council is a very active body, and uses its many powers and privileges capably. It has justified its existence many times over. Oi rose I 'Nr if ' l' X V 'W .'.', 'fff ',A :'2'.. . 15: ','. ., '.'.'.',' 'iff- 1 '. :1 A ' ',A. ANBTFQ 1, We Uiccotlff 1 .-3 lb Tm- Row: Boothe: Boui-land, T. C.: Dickey: Doble: Dyer: lfricks: Gillis. Mmnm Row: Goolsby: I-lamzarml: Hardee: Harwood: Hendrix: Horn: Jenkins: Nassour. B0'l l'0M Row: V - Nelson: Pollard: Pullini Radeleff: Record: Roberts, J.: Sterling: Williams. OFFICERS President ......... ...... I RBY L. DYER Vice-President .... . . .RUSH H. RECORD Secretary ..... ....... J AMES HORN Tfrcaszwer ...................... T. C. BOURLAND The Alpha Upsilon Chapter of Phi Theta Kappa was organized under the sponsorship of .John D. Williams six years ago. As a national junior college fraternity, its honorary membership is composed of college students in the upper scholastic ten percent, and passed on by the faculty. The chapter has been very active this year. It was represented in the national convention at Independence, Kansas, by Irby Dyer, who was elected National Treasurer at the convention last year: Wash Pullin, official delegate: John Roberts, freshman delegate: and Herbert Nassour. The Social season, including several banquets. was climaxed by the annual dinner just before the Senior Dance, May 8. nv-vvzi XM Trix 7 if. x' x 4: 116 0-gr X af., QQ lm i ---S ',A1 Q' i 'A- ' rg A A' A I. - A 7liiillil'i ' -Q-'- i 4 A'A' ir 'TW React!! s l c . E TOP ROW:-Boothe: Bourland, T. C.: Byars: Dyerg Evers: Harwood. MIDDLE Row:-Horn: Hunt: Jackson: Luke: McCulloch: Poole. BOTTOM Row: R- Rookeg Shawg Sterling: Vining: VVellborne: Cornwell. . . . . T. C. BOURLAND Edztors-zn-chief. . . . . . IRBY L. DYER Business Manager ..... ............ J AMES HORN Faculty Sponsor .......... CHARLES H. CORNWELL Nine of last year's staff members returned to Schreiner this year to take an outstanding part in the publication of the Mountaineer. As a semi- monthly school paper, it tries to cover every phase of campus life and is sent regularly to all ex-students and parents. Outstanding features of the year were The Sport Spot, by Vernon W. Rooke, Jack Hunt's Campus Chatter, and Julie Jackson's Co-ed Close-ups. Excellent book reviews by Beverly Poole and fine editorials by the staff proved to be interesting and worth while parts of the paper. The paper serves as a means of journalistic training as well as to provide the students and parents with school news. sw rose fl f I il d ,',,l...g:a:wQ '. - ,.,n,lWg,,:.:::,xmw . , .,,.,........,..,.........., H .,,J,J.l..?,.:--if A I' Y .,i. ii-I .I v i,:,i'1r I ii- ii , I:l': ll:'i' iI.:gw:'w I I-wi. III - J? V Tor Row: Bmirland. T. C-1 Byars: Dgver: Evans: Evers: Horn. l4o'r'ruM Row: llunl: Nm-thimzton, G.: Ri-cord: Rookug Vining: Junkin. Ed'if0l' ............. ..... J AMES HORN Business Manager ................. IRBY L. DYER Associate Editors VERNON W. ROOKE, JACK HUNT, JEFF VINING, RUSH H. RECORD, ALTHEA EVERS, T. C. BOUR- LAND. Cartoonists HARRY WA'I I's, GEORGE NORTHINGTON, BILLY GILLIS. Faculty Advisors MR. JUNKIN, MR. HART. MR. WILLIAMS. The Recall staff is composed of members of the student body, selected by the Editor and the Business Manager, who were chosen by the sopho- more class from their number. This year, assistant editors were chosen so as to give representation to every phase and group of the school life. Mr. Junkin was in charge of the financial and advisory end. Mr. Williams and Mr. Hart contributed much valuable aid which was greatly appreciated by the entire staff. The Staff wishes to take this opportunity to thank the entire faculty and student body for their whole-hearted cooperation. 4 'I I Iwi lltifvf mc In' .aff :av ,-,' :Uv .',',A .'.' ,,.. UI. I. .. ::':'.:I,i.g'l 'Taka Hgccqgfgf 'J TOP ROW: fBarker: Brasher: Burnham. W.: Clarkson: Dickey: Evers: Ferguson: Fricks. MIDDLE Row: Goolsby: Haggard: Hardee: Harwood: Hendrix: Jaeggli: Kuettner: Lehne: Moore, T. BOTTOM Row: Northington, H.: Nunnellee: Pollard: Radeleff: Record: Riley, F.: Riley, L: Sterling: White. SCHOLARSHIP SOCIETY The Scholarship Society is composed of those students Who, upon graduation from high school, were presented with scholarships under the regulations of the Texas Association of Colleges. Boys, in order to obtain this scholarship, must have made the highest grades among the boys of their respective high school graduating classes. Girls of Kerrville and neighboring cities who enroll at Schreiner as day students may also be eligible for the scholarship award. When a student who possesses one of these scholarships enrolls at Schreiner, his membership in the Scholarship Society is automatically active. Members of the Society are encouraged to continue at Schreiner the same high standard of achievement they have maintained in high school. The Society has no meetings, and no formal organization is attempted. The advantage of the Society is that it tends to encourage the continuance of good work in college. Proof of this statement is found on the honor rolls, where a majority of the members of this society are found at the end of each grade period. H9256 if 'pf A,-A- A----- -Al- ,-.-- 1 , A A -A' -1 -,1.-.-.- ,. il . 'A- as A-.A ! Hg :g7g --1+Qgq,.-4w wi 'Vw Ream!! ff' I . -4' , . ' Ton- ROW: --f Brasher: Moore, T.: Record. lgZ'rT0nI,,H9'6Y:Y -2t'ai'Hffxvl1ile, P.: YL-lvington: liar' 14 9 ORATORS AND DEBATERS Sponsors, MR. HART and MRS. ERNST Work in oratory and debate began early this year. Jimmie Yelvington was early selected to be Schreiner's entrant in oratory in the district meet held here in March. At the meet Yelvington carried off first honors and was announced state junior college champion. Tom Moore, Perry Satterwhite, Harold Brasher, and Rush Record as the debate squad made several trips to San Antonio and had a number of home debates throughout the season. Late in the year Satterwhite and Record were chosen to represent the school in the district meet in San Antonio. They were defeated, however, by Westmoorland College, who later won the state championship. With the prospective return of Yelvington and Brasher, the speech prospects for the coming year look very favorable. ' ff rose f f 1 ' l gn ..--'- v v H YY . 5... I..V, . .. .!... ...v. . VQIV ... . .i ,,,. . ., hnlw .FI lu M 'Me Rcccftlffff N 2 Mfr, ii 'Ulu if R TOP ROW: - Irwin: Smith, W.: Kelly: Turner: Earl: Grant.: Gillis: YVatkins: Cannan: Hawkins: Newton, F.: Bush: Slocomh: Wade: Shaw: Vining. BOTTDM Rowzrv- Wendtland: Bermea: Jarvis, L.1 Wilkins: Middleton: Leslie: Cook: Craig: Bradley: Haggard: Jenkins: Hodge: Record: Junkin: White. OFFICERS President ........ . ..... .... R USH H. RECORD Secretary-Treasurer .... ..... B ILLY HODGE Sergeant-at-Arms ..... .... L EE HAWKINS Director ........................ JOHN A. GUINN Under the able direction of Mr. Guinn, the Glee Club got an early start this year and improved steadily. The Club held regular weekly rehearsals during the year, and during the last semester a number of special rehearsals were called for the purpose of preparing for several special occasions and the final concert at the end of the year. The first public appearance of the club was before the Rotary Con- vention held in Kerrville in May, and it also appeared several times before the student body at chapel programs. J- ----Ve Yi iiiklkji 7 4 15 lgisii. ai 1,Q ig vii df as H906 ss H2913 X --,,..k. V, .... z ,..x,.,. '. . ,..! . T,,Z.T.U,:.,T.i.T..T.,i..T.T.le......,i.ll'kWF:?j,..eT,....:m'vli-vY yWji,I3l?lfW We Hccmw X Lvl ,Lf W ILL ,1 rf!- ,Pvt J, , V M V M I AVK: V , f D I i - i 5 Ll-:I-'T T0 RlllllT2 '0I'ViS1 Vernor: Poole: Turner: Watts: King: Shields: Hunt: McCulloch: Myers: 0'Bx'yan, R.: Matthews: Walkup: Grief: Cannan: Newton, I . SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA The members of the orchestra are selected carefully from the student body by Director Ernst. It is composed of members of the Dance Orchestra and Military Band who have the most talent. Practices were held regularly twice a week, and several times during the year, they played for chapel programs. The orchestra played for final chapel during commencement week. and gave a concert for the parents on the night of May 26th. Kaffe 3, V- vi Xin.- , , J 'M- genital , 1 icic irfilaaise eee AAA Nile A iti 'Vw Rfzccftlif W LEFT T0 RlGliT2'Gl'l6fI Vernor: McCulloch: Cannan: Huntg Shields: Newton, F.: Myersg Watts: O'Bryan. R. THE DANCE ORCHESTRA The dance orchestra was organized in 1933-34 under the able direction of Mr. Erwin F. Ernst. They opened their third year of organization by playing for an all-Schreiner dance in thc Schreiner Gymnasium shortly after the opening of school. These dances continued to be held semi-monthly throughout the entire year. Various out-of-town trips were made by the orchestra during the year. The most outstanding was the trip to San Antonio during the centennial fiesta, where they played at the St. Anthony Hotel. The most outstanding occasion of the year was the Officers' and Sponsors' Ball on May 9, 1936. The orchestra includes Jack Hunt, drumsg Berman Shieldes, llarry Watts, Dayton Walkup, and Robert McCulloch, saxophones and clarinetsg James Cannan, Raymond O'Bryan and Frank Newton, Trumpetsg Otto Grief, tromboneg Park Myers, bassg Russell Vernor, pianog and Director Erwin F. Ernst. Mr. Cornwell sang with the orchestra. :XS 4 7 Xp Q M pn M ll 9.56 ...FIV ..,..,.. 'M .... ..... l W. .v,V,,. S... . uerijrq .',.,V.' N I .m? Hr::H-TA Ag N will W fl' FEM fiecodff A . G Y Toi- Iiowze Cookg Fax-thing: Gibson, C.: Goolsbyg Matthews. lVllIllll.l'L How: Mi-lchtr: McMillin: Northinglon. H.: 0'Bryun, R.: Preston. B0'l'TOM Rowzr Ramloleff: Russell' 'l'ur-m-r: Wilkins: Bryant. OFFICERS P1'68id67Lt ......... . ......... CHARLES H. TURNER Vice-President ..... ...... R OY MATTHEWS S9C'l'6tfl7'y-T7'6llSZH 6'7' .... .... l EARL PRESTON l HOMER J. W1LK1Ns Sponsor ........................... Mr. BRYANT The Pre-Med Club was organized in 1926 under the sponsorship of Instructor M. D. Bryant, and since that time has grown considerably in size and importance. The club elects its members from those students who maintain an average of 75 in their college courses and are interested in gaining a practical knowledge of modern medicine. These members are elected on the basis of character, leadership, and scholarship. Besides the regular meetings of the club. its members make several trips during the year. The most enjoyable of those made this year was the trip to Austin for the purpose of attending the meeting of Pre-Medical students from Texas Colleges, sponsored by Alpha Epsilon Delta, honorary Pre-Medical fraternity. During the year several prominent doctors spoke to the club. On the whole the activities of the club are instructive as Well as interesting. A 'l'ss. gf 'C' . lifes eph, 3.1 f 3 none X...3ssW lbgl-33111 ,A, L :I ,,,i' .. lK .g.T:,ei l .,,i,.e A..,., e..... ..,g..i..,M: mix! Xu: u , . .. 4 X lzwll, 'Vw Recall! iw. ' : V1 ' ir , . fi ' 0 . , ll ' N' la gaze .. if , 1 f-is 4 if We -. 4 ta il ' .. . 5 if 'Y -f Nt. -s V ,. ,R ' sf I T ' r L- ' KX ' f iv f 1 f 'Y i is s ' -f . is ' ' : I 1.2 . V - x I .3 , , i' ' ' 1 i A H 4 ' , ,J - f Q 5 ,. 4 . 1 Qs 5 Toi' Row: - Banks : Barker: , Bourland, T. C. : Byrd : DeWitt: Dial: Dickey: Dobieg Dyer: Ehlers. SECOND Row: - Fricks: Gillis: Goolsby: Haggaiwl 1 Hardee: Horn 3 Jenkins: Kraus : Kuettner: Lane. THIRD Row: -f Lehne: McCollum: Mann : Moore, T.: Nassour: Nelson : Ni:-derauer: Patterson : Pollard: Pullin. BOTTOM ROW: f Record: Rheiner. Riley, F. 1 Slack 5 Ste-hling: Vining: Wellborne: Wilkins : Womack: Hammond. President ....... Vice-President. . . Reporter ........... . . Sergeant-at-Arms. . . . . . Sponsor ................. CARDIOID CLUB OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester DECKER WOMACK. . . ........ JOE BYRD LOUIE LEHNE. . . RUSH H. RECORD S ecretary- Treasurer ...... . JEFF VINING .... WASH PULLIN. . . MR. HAMMOND. . . . .BILLY GILLIS .FRANK DICKEY . . .JEFF VINING . .DICK JENKINS .MR. HAMMOND The Cardioid Club is Schreiner Institute's third honor society. It was organized in 1926 under the direction of Mr. T. M. Hammond. To become a member and to stay in good standing, a student must maintain an average of 85, or better, in a college mathematics course. The club held meetings regularly throughout the year every two weeks with interesting and instructive programs. The club's social activities were climaxed by a trek and picnic supper up on Cardioid Hill , as has been the custom in the past. YV! A ii, may 4- qi 'IF K itil XA vi Nfwi-gif Q pi i,f:? e1-X7 il 9 356 Xia, new Mir- A ' , ' ,'.', ,'.' x wi A .J M' 'Me Hccotfff U. 1 yi alll' Tor ROW: Baines: Banks: Brasher: Brumley: Bush: Carter. J.: Castillo: Chambers. SECOND Row: Dyer: Evers: Grant: Greer: Haggard: Harwood: Hodge: Horn: Irwin. Tlllllll Row: Junkin: Kelley: Luke: McMahon, B.: Moore, T.: Newton. F.: Person: Philips: Poole. Bo'r1'0A1 ROW: Record: Sutter- white. P.: Shapley: Sterling: Wendtland: Wheeler: Willey: Yelvington: Hart. BRYAN LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS First Semester Second Semester President .......... . . . FORBES WALLACE .... . . .RUSH H. RECORD Vice-President ........... RUSH H. RECORD Secretary-Treasurer ...... BILLY HODGE .... .... B ILLY HODGE Sergeant-at-Arms ........ JAY CARTER ..... .... J AY CARTER Sponsors: MR. HART and MRS. ERNST. The Bryan Literary Society is composed of students interested in drama, debate, oratory, and extemporaneous speaking. All new members are voted on by the club before being admitted. Under the sponsorship of Mr. Hart and Mrs. Ernst. the club was more active this year than it has been for several years pas t. At its semi-monthly meetings, interesting programs were rendered for the club. The most enjoyable social activity of the year was the picnic and dance at the home of club-member Jimmie Yelvington about twenty miles from town, where the members and their dates had a very pleasant evening. The object and result ofthis society is to bring together in closer association all who are interested in all fields of speech arts. 'T - 'ik .J We View VTE.. .,,.,.,. .:. .i ,,.... If M. . .,.. V , W Hcccftlff mf ll. lyfulllw 'FOI' ROW: - - Baines: Banks: Barnett, C.: Bradley: Brown, N.: Carter, J.: Chambers: Curtis: Daws: Doble. SECOND Row: --- Dyer: Earl: Grona: Harwood: Horn: Jaeggli: Kellogg? Kuettnerg l.aSelle: Lee, Jim. Tllluu ROW: -- Lee, Jesse: Lutman: McMahon, B.: Middleton: Moore, T.: Neel: Newton, F.: Northington, G.: Record: Roberts, J. BOTTOM Row:-'ARooke: Satterwhite. P.: Shapley: Slack: Stehlingz Sterling: Wheeler: Willey: Yelvington: Whisenhunt. OFFICERS President.. ....... . . ..... TOM MOORE Vice-President ...... . . .VERNON ROOKE Secretary-Treasufrefr. . . ....... J. F. CARTER T Pairliamentarian ..... .... R USH H. RECORD Sponsor ......... ..... J . ROY WHISENHUNT The Pre-Law Club was organized last year under the sponsorship of Mr. J. Roy Whisenhunt. Its membership is open to those interested in Law, and consists of thirty-nine students. The Club met once every two weeks. These programs were made very interesting and enlightening by helpful advice tendered by prominent lawf yers of Kerrville, as well as talks and discussions by the faculty sponsors and the club members. The most important social activity of the year was the banquet at the Blue Bonnet Hotel in the later part of March, when an election for the cgficegs for next school year was held. John Roberts of Crowell was elected resi ent. +f'i't X1 ski? 7 711 74? rf.- ccpp 34 f,er....Q tooo sei eq if , , lil M --H rlalil nm l l :- KNXS iii l Hi ll'l A5 - ' fl i ,- Mc 1 , 1 . ' f fill' ff i if . ia Q - 1 ' I ' ' 1' A X r f XX 1 f 1 wg I . .- g. .,, 1 i'1 l-' Tor Row: Y Byrd: Cannan: Carroll: Carter, C.: Clarkson: Dickey: Elkins: Gibson, D.: Hall. SECOND Row: Hamilton, H.: Henry: Hodge: Hudson: Hunter: Irwin. W.: Jarvis, L.: Jonsson. C.: Lehne. L. Timm Row:--McCollum: McMahon, W.: Marshall: Meriwether: Mitchell, J.: Moore, J.: Nubers: O'Brien. C.: Pechacek. BOTTOM ROW: ff- Reid: Shaw: Vernor: Vining: Wallace, F.: Winch: Womack: Woodruff: ENGINEERS' CLUB OFFICERS President ...... .............. J AMES CANNAN Vice-President ....... . . .FORBES WALLACE Secretary-Treasurer. . . ...... BILLY HODGE Sergeant-at-Arms .... .... J EFF VINING Sponsor ........ . . .MR. NORMAND The Engineers' Club is composed of those who are interested in science and engineering. Members are elected by vote of the club. At its meetings, which were held semi-monthly in the lecture room, interesting programs of scientific interest were given. Instructors Nor- mand and Hammond contributed to many of the programs with talks on present and future opportunities in the engineering field. The club was successful in promoting a good fellowship among all those interested in this particular field. H936 ' ' ' lj it 'm'W5'4 f,ff TOP ROW: fButt1 Castillo: Cone: Evers. MlllDl,E R0w:fJacks0n: Patton: Person: Plumb: Real. BOTTOM Row: -- Riley: Russell: Rutledge: Starkey: White. OFFICERS Captain ......... . . .ALTHEA EVERS First Lieutenant ..... .... J ULIE JACKSON Second Lieutenant . . . ...... DORIS WHITE Sergeant-at-Arms . . ...... AMPARO CASTILLO Sponsor ........... ..... M RS. CLAIRE A. ERNST The Co-eds' Club was formed so that the Co-eds might have some means of official representation. Regular meetings are held on the first Friday of each month during drill period. On the night of February the fourteenth, Company X sponsored a leap year dance which was one of the outstanding events of the year. 3-lil T-l,l'. ' it f'4' V7 TL KN'-zgf. li V i 'j..-.,,'- ' Vs? 'ew HCQJ6 Va 'Hg 3513 :1ex1I'Q' .Q V 1 fsrrtfetttt U52 2. mHeee:':e,L4ff1F r n li 1:-:swf ut .'.'::::::x:::::: 1 :ral-:QL ' , ' Pll'l'A1Xl'l lu ' -MA-L A.A,V 'AA' I 'W . ,A l ,L l Tm' ROW: Armstmnprz Bonthv: Rrumleyg Cal'11L-nu-l', C.: Castillo: Cohhi l L-lflcr. SECOND ROW: l'larbul'4lt1 Harmlwivke: l'l2ll'l'lSZ Hzlrwnmlg Hendrix: Lulu-Z Mann: Marshall, R. Tlllllll Row: Nnssmw: Page: Person: Plumb: Pnulvi Rach-leff: Real: Riley, ll. ISUTTUM Row: Shaw: Starkey, J.: Sturlu-y. M.: Wx-iss: Whom-ln-ri Wilkinson: Wmmllm-tt: VVillinms. OFFICERS Firsf Swazwsfw' Second Semester P1-esiflffnf ...... . . .TILLIE REAL ...... . . .DARRELL BRUMLEY Vice-Pmwiflenf ...... . . . HERBERT NASSOUR. . . .......... BART MANN Seclretfzry-Treasurer'. . . . . BEVERLY POOLE .... . . .JULIE ANN JACKSON Sergeant-af-Arms ........ DAVID SHAW ................. ALTHEA EVERS Los montaieses, club de espaiol, tienen de prop6sito: establecer y mantener entre los estudiantes de espaiol una amistad mas intimag ofrecer a estos estudiantes mis oportunidad de obtener conocimiento prdctico hab- lando y oyendo hablar espaiolg producir' mais interes en los paises de habla espaiola, sobre todo. Mlijico y Espaia: y crear mais interes en el estudio de espanol. Se compone el circulo de los estudiantes del idioma espaiol, los que tienen por lo menus la nuta C en su Clase de espaholg tambien de los que han acabado con dos 0 tres cursos de espaiol y que ya no lo sigueng y de los que lo saben hablar naturalmente. Se reune el club una vez a los quince dias. Los programas constan de discursos sobre la historiu, la literatura, las costumbres, las leyendas y otros sujetos interesantes acerca de Espaia, M6jico y otros paises de habla espaiola. Hay tambien canciones, cuentos, chistes y sucesos del dia, todos los que hace interesantes y gratos los programas. '.- , ' f A TQ 3 ,,,,,, ,W 'eialfl 170' , I IL Q43 V-mv MQ A CJ J X Adv ri lj 5-A A A ' Q A A i '.'.' 'AA' i ' . mm ... ' . :fi .'.' lmgi - ,A ' 'EW Hcccfdff i ' Wilirrftwf f Tor Row:-Bradley: Byarsg Cannan: Carlisle: DeWitt: Haley: Hall. MIDDLE Row:-Hunt: Kraus: Lehneg Limiman: McPeake: Manny Matthews. BOTTOM Row:--Myers: Niederauer: Shaw: Shieldest Stockton: Womackg Green. OFFICERS' CLUB The Officers' Club is composed of all commissioned officers in the battalion. It meets every Monday night for the purpose of discussing military problems and movements. It is a very important organization and is essential to the military unit, and it also offers to its members a basic ground course in military science and tactics. On Army Day all members of the club went to San Antonio for divi- sion review. This was both interesting and instructive to the club. Aside from its instructive aspect, the club is very active socially. To- ward the latter part of the year a club dance was given in its honor. Prob- ably the highlight of its social activities was the Officers and Sponsors Ball on May the ninth held in their honor. H9936 ffpfy I yarlduk ::5l1!i'?EL't..,. - V. ..'f?ff32 .f't5'??!!.12 !!!EZ'9f3?if41 , 1. l'1i!::: v-..J.9!l t 'l12f5 'Q ' '.l1!!Z . ':'1 ' ' 'A A'A' A ' ' nf, l' i.. .. .1.1.,1i1 '.l'fi'.ms1. 1: ,ills .AA. no .51 f ' - 74 mi- H-15 X .. ,A . ,X f f lil! J xy! , Vllwlit' Toi' Row: Cobb: Craig: Dyer: Horn: Hodge: Jenkins: Johns, G.: Johns, R. MIllIll.P1 Row: Johnson, S.: Lutman: Marshall, R.: Nelson: Northinyxlon. G.: Patterson: Peebles: Preston. l3oT'l'oxl Ron : Pullin: R4-cord: Rookvl Stuhlinpt: Vining: Wade: Walkeri Wallace. F.: Wilcox. SERGEANTS' CLUB The Sergeants' Club is composed of all sergeants and first sergeants in the battalion. Although the membership was not complete until late in the year, it proved very valuable in the shaping of an efficient military unit. As the non-commissioned officers are the interpreters of the com- missioned officers' commands, the value of such an efficient organization is easily seen. A number of meetings were held throughout the year for the purpose of instruction on military topics by the commandant, his assistant, and the student commander. The result of such an orgranization was a better unit. so :uw-: ft! biilliffl ' A 7 1 it W-Qu i 1 Qwwjlxt xy? ww X pm as MQ' jj Il 6 l llfl 'A .',' ' g.Z1:'iAI '.'.',',' ,1 .,.' . - I I V We Heeodtd 5 f A were H ll lun PRES-SCHREINER SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASS Teacher, Mlss HARRIET GARRET-T OFFICERS President ......................... PARK MYERS First Vice-President .......... WALTER S. BRADLEY Second Vice-President .... ..... D ECKER WoMAoK Third Vice-President ..... ........ R UPERT CRAIG Fourth Vice-President .... .... D AYTON STOCKTON Secretary ............. .... B ENNIE WARDEN Assistant Secretary .... .... J ACK PEEBLES Treasurer ........... . . . .ARNE NELSON Sergeant-at-Arms .... .... B ERRY COLVIN Reporter .......................... BILLY GILLIS Song Leaders LEE HAWKINS, OTTO GRIEF, MORRIS BASEY Quartet LEE HAWKINS, PARK MYERS, WALTER BRADLEY, BILLY GILLIS Since its organization ten years ago, the Pres-Schreiner Sunday School Class has grown into one of the largest organizations of its kind in Texas. Several social affairs, the most outstanding being the annual wel- coming party for the Schreiner Cadets, as well as each Sunday's program of Bible study and songs, make the class a favorite organization with the Students. The class teacher, Miss Harriet Garrett, is remembered as a teacher and friend by hundreds of ex-students everywhere. e H9256 fuel A - - e + a xaww? 1 WM l-Zccalw f 1 O ea-, A Riff E54 we Military , li. 72' When his wound began to heal, Houston returned to Texas and ran for the Presidency. He was elected almost unanimously. Q, I H9345 if ,lu Dayton Stockton l,i1'1l!4'nu11i-Crnfovzvl lfattalimz l'nn1mz1Hrlr'r' M, Mi:-s Irvnv Jackson Halfnliun Sponsor 5 - . A -- 'WYRK 'RRY- ' 'in IM'-7 ' E X I ' 1 . Y 14 , X '--, Q x,,Yf A ilu I J--, ,713 -if N-'V-Y-fr., AM Jfifi,5J C ' fl' fmfj if f A if Z,,Q,AJi,.fLf-Qffjx N, 5 nxgq ' iw 4 4 . THE STAFF Capt. W. 0, Green U. S. Inf. Hrs. Comnluwrlavlt .lack Hunt Majm' s E.1'1'r'r4fiwr Officer 1 A H Miss Flunct-s Neal u ri: .,,., Af . lg ,, 1- S , . N' ., .-,'.t - . a l1 1011 puma: .3 Walter S. Bradley 'V Ifirxf l,i1'ui4'na11t Q - .ldjutanf V ly Iinsigrn VV- M' Wilwx Miss: Courtney Sit-km' H' S- Nflml RW- Hattalirm, Spomeor lx!! f'UlHPlHIIIll'!1?lf 1,1 ,. ,, tll, ' W -xf 73 N 2- ' ff ' - V .,.,,,,Wv .. !,, .-A -- Y , . V MMM- -- - g,,'K,, 4 A 7 K M , .,,, A .,..., A,...,....... SZ.. Kyw-.Nr-' ' N !' ' rv- .4.r.------wr . ., 1. , , -..-.., . V L ,.., 4 W1 X U 17 f fu' U r b BAND fn. Nw 'LA L? wk Q , L 'l ,W A Q' cf , M W 5 5' . S sb, avk, , l'l4'l'II'lllYl Shir.-lclus Ccmtuin, Roy Matthews First I,i1-ufvnant 3 hi . . 43 'f Leslie IJIIJIIIYHUI ...4-PM Srvmrri l1ll'Ilfl'7I!l7ll J ii .l um .' Cunnan 'yo Srrmz l,i1'14f1'nu11t I, John . Suroml l.i4'ul4 nawt Wrwlpw I lvlwflglvzlnnm- JA Ihuhk Myem . n . . Szwzgx. T H E R O S T E R Srl-vml l,i1'uIa'nu11t Brown, H.g Brown, N.g Burnham, L.g Cannang Carlisle: Cobbg Cookg Davisg Ehlersg Irwin, W.g Fergusong Griefg Gronag Gunstreamg Jenkinsg Leslieg Lippmang McCullochg Matthewsg Meriwetherg Madduxg Myersg Newton, F.g O'Bryan5 Peeblesg Pollardg Pulling Rileyg Shieldesg Vernorg Wattsg Walkupg Wareg Wendtland. H Msg , it fem fi f .ff c Q 3 J, f .Q Z,i,Qif1a,f,, f , COMPANY A Decker Womack Captain Miss Helen Cone Sponsor lg, . Xyr' Cape DeWitt First Lieutenant . A-J' Bartlett Mann Second-.Lieutenant Billy Hodge Svconri Lieutenant THE ROSTER Allen, Baines, Barker, Bermea, Boswell, Bourland, H., Bourland, T., Brown, R., Brumley, Burnham, W., Carroll, Cruse, Cummins, Daniel, Davidek, DeWitt, Dobie, Ethridge, Felder, Fitzgerald, Fore, French, Fricks, Garrett, Gentry, Gibson, Gill, Grant, Graves, Hall, F., Hamilton, E., Hamilton, H., Haralson, Harwood, Heard, Henry, Hendrix, Hewitt, Hodge, Johns, R., Johns, G., Johnson, Junkin, Kahn, King, Lyons, McCollum, Mann, Martin, Miller, McMillin, Nabers, Nelson, O'Brien, Perkins, Philips, Randall, Reid, Roberts, A., Roberts, J., Rooke, Rusche, Slack, Smith, E., Stehling, Wallace, J., Warden, White, Williams, Winch, Woodall, Woodruff, Woollett, Womack, Yaeger. ll .,,. ,, 1' - 1 145 , al, U ill fi. if, X J, vi mf xg AA Ilill + . A AA 77 if COMPANY B Louie Leh ne Captain . . ..f ' ' 1 M' L GP! ' 'i?em.iYGl'a I HW ' ,K Sponsor C. F. Byars I First Lieutenant l JV' Alton Haley Second Lieutenant l Tom Hall Second Lieutenant THE ROSTER Armstrong, Banks, Barlow, Barnett, W., Boothe, Byars, Carpenter, C., Carter, C., Carter, J., Creager, Chambers, Clarkson, Colvin, Craig, Curtis, Dawson, Dyer, Earl, Edwards, B., Elkins, Ekstrom, Farthing, Garrow, Gillis, Haggard, Haley, Hall, T., Hartgrove, Hawkins, Heath, Hudson, Jones, Jahn, Jarvis, L., Kellogg, Kennedy, Kuettner, LaSelle, Langerhans, Lehne, Lutman, Mc- Caskill, Mclnnis, McMahon, B., McMahon, W., Middleton, Morris, Nassour, Neel, Newton, P., Nicholls, Noonan, Orvis, Page, Pechacek, Pilcheig Poole, Preston, Radeleff, Record, Rheiner, Rogers, T., Rodgers, B., Satterwhite, P., Shelton, Shapley, Sliman, Slocomb, Starkey, Steakley, Swayze, Turner, Vining, Wallace, F., Waterman, Watkins, Wellborne, Willey. t1u8c5.-swim 'P - .. . 1' X affair,-fam... ' 7 P rl X IQJ6 we ,sb l .X 4 f W -- s . -f ,, -, 4 - .. , , ,, '-s..1+,w , A iiiii 'J J WF I ., ,,,.. l'll,.l1l5.,. .i A ,..,1, , , T, -, J. , ,, , . .. pf 'Q W f X' I if r -ffl? I' fri ir 'J . ,, if A 1: nfl I : G '- f , if if' ifg ,Q .l A :Cl ' M I COMPANY C . ,.,. , 'ii 5 ,fi -.eg :Q km s Tum McPeake Captain A Miss Tillie Real Sponsor David Shaw First l,ir'1lte11ant Al Kraus Svconrl 1,ic1ctcnant C. J. Nimlerauer Srwmzd l,i1'u,t1'nant THE ROSTER Andersong Barnett, C.g Baseyg Baylorg Bryang Bushg Buteg Byrdg Chandlerg Chisumg Cothamg Dawsg DeBellevueg Dialg Dickeyg Dudleyg Durhamg Evansg Gibson, D.g Greerg Goolsbyg Harbordtg Hardeeg Hardwickeg Harrisg Hauserg Horng Hudekg Howardg Hunterg Irwing Jarvis, M.g Jonssong Kelleyg Krausg Laneg Lee, J. W.g Lee, J. J.g Lockg Lukeg McKinneyg McPeakeg Marshall, R.g Marshall, S.g Maloney Melcherg Moore, T.g Moore, J.g Morriss, S.g Northington, H.g Northington, G.g Niederauerg Paceg Pattesong Parrottg Rosenthalg Ruckmang Satterwhite, G.g Shawg Southerng Smith, W.9 Sterlingg Taylorg Tenisong Vanhooserg Wadeg Walkerg Weissg Westbrookg Wheelerg Wilkinsg Wilkinsong Wilsong Woodwardg Yelvington. im? 'J ., w-WNW yqgwg gf .Jw nj-fn M. 4, Q lv 'f'?-Vg, .- . ,V ,,. A, ,, mm. , 3 Vik S qu.-nnasuw-w awww-nv s -1 ll '- ' f fn' Features F :- .LT- L .. ' T Y - il: f H gli. HI 0' 5 ,Nl mv' W, L dm W ' x w Y 1 2- , 1,25 222,95-V'ITTEEQE'-,'?, fi'-:fl ff: ? fag '2V.i. iii Q 15 i E :ii 7,m:u:lll Ilmwl,anfwlrtwmgildf'2- v Q54 - 22' ... fll'm1'L' ' of fyoi QQ H, -o .-37-9 gt:-gygignigzwyygllvglllfglri Q.: 3-5: ni' Elsa!! - x ' E5e 'EgE5 -:1EfA 1 -gg, i'lE3,Igm Q BL ' faviiqmr-eefoo x,f6'fV,'f l ' .-5 ,Q 7' gi4 v :gil-LY V ?. 5 . I , I ' 'ffwlflf 'A ,Q , e - 44 on IE X f - , an ' L' -sf ' 4 -I , 1 X fe glpgvfz y, 1 7 , f . A-Af- .g .L-if ' ,.-Q--- I 'uf I o P i e 1 k-6+-41:5- '?1,.2 1 eg Tj-f V In 1837, the capitol of thi 'republic was moved to the new city of Houston, named in Qhonor of the hefro of e San Jacinto. ' - 7 'Ai -. H936 q- Y 4 JI f 'im Civies are quite noticeable as Admiral and Lt. Green divide the boys into various companies. A new bus awaits the call of Schreiner athletes this year. Some freshmen discuss the good and bad points of one of Schreiner's famous meals. The B team lines up for a look at some of the new co-eds. Jim Lee shows some of the boys the way to the school, which isn't as far away as it seems. The mail man is quite busy all year bringing packages to the wan- dering boys from home. Shorty Matthews works hard for the State Jr. College Cham- pions. The S Association meets and Wash Pullin doesn't like be- ing whipped after winning the championship. Big Gawge Northington helps catch the greased pig. Who doesn't remember that cold day in November when the Texas B team nosed us out with a 7-6 win, and Admiral didn't like it at all. Bully talks things over with the boys at the half. There is a rush for choice seats after the cadets do a snake dance down town. 4 The faculty children, with the exception of Jimmie Whisen- hunt, Barbara Moore, Bobbie Dickey, and Carolyn Normand, pose for the cameraman. Mr. Moore and the Normands like lots of sunshine, while little James Bass Whisenhunt likes his daddy. Billy and Bobby get ready to fly their kite for R. C. Dickey, Jr. VVhizzy, Ernst, and Hart seem to be talking over their troubles. Members of the faculty always have some sort of a bull session at noon mess. Mr. Hammond is always ready to help us in his Physics laboratory. Admiral is no longer a bachelor. Please don't shoot the camera, Bobby! The dance band boys move their piano to the gym. Woodward and Burnham get their right amount of bugling. Hoyt Graves gets his freshmen on the line. Baby Ray tries to gyp the candy man. Walker does a little spraying. Ruckman puts up the Sunday mail, and the table-waiters wait for the boys to march in. Some of the boys have to build more seats for anticipated larger crowds. Big Jim talks it over with Mr. Flennekin. Who works the most for leastj-the tailor shop boys, or the fuel boys ? 571. T! , , ,w i ff me-B+ l an 'ffl' EE l ! .trick-sauna. Q W, E ei .5 A if N is iw . Q Y' X Y b 'MK' The color guards are lined up, ready to present the Colors to Company B. Sunday retreat is not so bad when we have some goodlooking sponsors before us. At noon formation, we hear the delinquency report. The Little Colonel greets you with a smile. Lt. Green got promoted to a Capt., so he gives some of the boys a short Saturday afternoon drill. Louie Lehne got his cap- tain's buttons this year also. What's the hurry, Bush 'Z Many of the cadets got cosmoline rifles this year like the one Steve Baker is issuing. Lieutenants Lowe and Shaw inspect. N I t ntfkfw- we as-ikgwx, ff. - f .f,. ':N L wk:- ix, 'fa was KX, X x Q gf 'ir' iw Ax 2 J CDW-.. H kt... is - if .Wx 4 M Q' 4 V , 'liar-E-xl K l I 1 .sign M xl ' .V K' V f fl- ki 7 Y V - vii: Ll ,ly . ' A A . f 'M A f- 2'-ig ,.. ' Q y - XG, ,fa 5 t. H4,,1 - 2' ' X L Q W I V -, . ...I f . Qafu V L 1 1 1 A ' ayfffa 'T Admiral and Big Jim pose with the inspecting officers from Ft. Sam Houston. These officers approved our sponsors as well as the cadet corps. Square your cap, Ehlers! Capt. Lehne shows Steakley the art of sighting. Some extended order drill breaks the monotony. Company C prepares to take arms after their turn at sight- ing. Kraus inspects Rosenthal's rifle as Tom Hall gets ready to take his name. The battalion review was a success in the opinion of everyone. Admiral sees that every man has a rifle. Bill McMahon and Barlow have a game of horseshoes, but some of the Hoon Hall boys prefer washers. Bute keeps score for a tennis match. Jack Graves' in- tramural baseball causes quite a bit of excitement. T. P. is going to knock it out of the lot, and while Bermea is watching the ball, Dobie runs into him. Patteson, Stevens, and Williams take things easy for a while. Haralson goes over the bar. Hendrix and Baines watch the boys go around the track as Bully times them. The sophomore engineers are all set to go places and survey things. We can't decide who Boris Karloff would choose as his partner-Dick Johns or Pechacek. Mr. Horn is always around with a camera of some kind. Erwin Ernst and his boys have helped many boys and girls to have a most enjoyable time at the dances. Milton Evans looks dis- gusted with the whole business. The band helps put over a big pep rally down town before the Marshall-Schreiner game. Then some time later, they give a short concert for Mrs. Delaney. Gunstream and Cannan Wave to us before going to S. A. to attend the symphony concert. Hoyt Graves does a little guard duty. Otto Grief makes his four o'clock report with Lane. Whoops! My deah! Who objects to the University Girls Glee Club coming to see us whenever they please? Gunstream blows the bugle for us to march in. Ekstrom almost set a new record on the bull ring this year. Need some help, Riley 'Z Don't push too hard, Shorty. Phi Theta Kappa took in some new members, so initiation started early one morning with Goolsby and Dickey. Daws puts in some extra time studying. Mr. l+Irnst's car is quite useful just before drill. Some ol' the band boys wait for Soupy to blow. Looks like some fresh fruit just came in. Ilooke grabs a taxi for church on Sunday morning. Slug flleroj Nelson recalls past triumphs on the athletic field. 'W ,ll ix A group of sophomores discuss the approaching close of another year at Schreiner. The final parade and manual competition are incidents that remain long in the minds of Schreiner students. The sergeants take charge of the different companies and pass in review before the officers and sponsors. Capt. Green congrat- ulates some winners in the com- petition. How about a ride? is what Ware, La Selle, and Brown are saying. The gym is elaborately decorated for the final dances. The lawn tea is last big event of the year before Capt. Green checks the boys out. Athletics ffwo fjhfxl Cn April 21, 1836, Houston, with only 800 men, defeated 1350 of Santa Anna's veterans at San acinto. .5 a 5 5 1 5 F' 2 f ff 9 '. S H z Q Q E 4 E 3 1? E 21 Q E 2 .w ? ,Q Q 5 as vw W AIAAIAA VH ' A if A ' ' Uililiiil' ' ': A ' AA ' jf EM? JMX? Cyizuw ,f-1 i 11. . AQ .:t' Q 'V QA? 5670, MMWW QMLHM' ' PM Qaffwf EE ig . 1,L1f- ' 1 1.f:'1: 'sri :A. .f:: .g4:,,':1'., .-., . .. . I F ' ': '4 ' :'A f -'1f ' 2 jk V C l X W l:.,,: Q52 zl, ii... XM 777 'V 'E' QJTCD, Z'ou.,,-.YAGLQZH 5 1'f ' 4 ,Lw-1-9 Q MJXXQX.-..A I .,.q. i-,L ...,. 5 .,:-,,::,. , ,R ,,Z1: ,nii I ,itt Cr ! My ff' Www' JW : XX E 2? v'l' :1, 112-.., ' 1 . .--11L g 2 ,1.1' .- f 0 W 5 x gagzm ,ff -. . , X ki Q WMM f W wwf? ii Q kjfyk WWLW l V wi ., N, D ??fN7Ej-AXE! 9 3 Q VX X YYY MV M V W 23713 AA 1- --lin H ,',' '.','.',' 3: V I M H lslul--A K, ll TOP ROW: -Jack Graves, Line Coachg H. C. Bully Gilstrap, Head Coachg W. M. Wilcox, Assistant Coach. BOTTOM ROW: - M. D. Bryant, Golf Coachg John D. Williams, Assistant Track Coachg Charles Cornwell, Tennis Coach. M9256 fo- v ?v-Q. W' ' H L n V' V CWMHQQULZZK 'C' LM-s sso'i oeeo wiu an: 1 A LA 1 nsos if Foofball u Us f'1'WW'l tl ...4 .. vw fl 41 no iw f My nolo W-g 9 HE QM ' V,Ev, f111y 'Jll il .J Ml-lflw 1 H Mu H Imax I qw ul 'lu i aw- -will fl B ' 1 o M IIH Ill W! 11 ff. nu Uh rm o , '!'1l'Vf1l N'J 5Pl1 '3l''lx'1 5, .fo W 'nfs L , I W -o l?il3'l'f:llrH7l!ww7' i. Q ' lf 1 l! Uflmlgl' ,hmm swim 'Mil N iw f ' Eff .Jahlkwiv1lP'3l LL!'1 lf JW'-Ll. f4jl fix N n f, f m : mu ' uuzllmi 'Jo Wm' l gill, 1 f , Houston was opposed to the secession of Texas. When the state left the union he 'refused to take the oath of allegiance and was forced to 'resign the governofrship. H956 PAl'l. lioul-1, Cuptuin The 1935 edition of Bully Gilstrap's Mountaineer football team compiled a full season's record that will dominate Schreiner annals for many years to come. The Cadets, a steady and dependable yet often spectacular team, accepted their victories with visible modesty and took their reverses - the season held two of them - like men. A fighting spirit was always evident. Some 60 odd aspirants, the majority of them newcomers, arrived in Kerrville early in September in order to take part in two weeks of pre-season training. This enabled Coach Gilstrap to supplement his lettermen with the more promising of the freshmen and fashion a starting line-up for the season's curtain- raiser with the 9th In- fantry Doughboys on September 28. The army team, a heavy, experienced 'W 1 ti .Of 'WK . '5 a Lis 'Wm' is Q 435 wc Z. if Q is? 85 N14 vu . We 'N' X mae ' -M-H - f'z .- .rw--:law M O U N TA TEXAS JUNIQR Cc BELOW: Q Hrxwiilxsz Jouxs. D.g ROGICIIS, T.g llrlClVllLl.IN. A5 5 fe .ss f ' ' V .,. S , .Y , W, ,M . 7, wi .1 SE'iQ!tgA' 4: Q 'fir if y p E at , WM, . N E E R S LEGE CHAMPIONS BELOW: -- -Tiwron: HAMILTON, E.: LANUERHANSQ DAwsoN. T1 ,Ll , f Q99 Q Q 'l'o.u,uur: limzn aggregation, found the going exceedingly tough. The Moun- taineers, with their sensational Captain, Paul Lowe, setting the pace, romped into the end zone on eight occasions and when the final gun barked were on the long end of a 52-U score. A week later the San Marcos Teachers Col- lege, a senior institu- tion who, prior to 1934, made a habit of trouncing Schreiner football teams, in- vaded Kerrville, deter- mined to avenge the humiliating defeat given them by the Cadets of a year ago. However, two burly backs, Reed, who plunged for two tallies and converted two ex- tra point placements, and Lowe, who re- turned a punt 80 yards for a score, plus a line that functioned perfectly, made it two in a row over the Bob- cats. The final score, which apparently could have been much larger had Gilstrap so desired, was 27-2. Cirvv I The Maroons next visited Austin for their perennial argu- ment with St. Ed- wards. The two elevens, playing in a sea of mud and mush, battled on even terms for three quarters. At the opening of the fourth period, Schreiner staged a drive that carried them some 60 yards to the Tigers' 15 where the attack bogged. Reed immediately stepped back and booted a field goal squarely between the uprights to put Schreiner out in front 3-0. Several minutes later a Saint lineman blocked a Cadet punt and covered it across the goal line for the score that ultimately gave St. Edwards the game 7-3. The following Saturday the Mountaineers journeyed to South Texas for an engagement with the Texas A Sz I J avelinas, a team which had held Baylor to a 6-0 win the previous week. Even the most rabid Schreiner partisans assumed a clearly pessimistic attitude toward the game. It was here that the Gilstrappers turned in perhaps their most scintillating performance of the season. In defeating the Porkers 16-0, Jackson, Langerhans, Myers, Hawkins, and Graves contributed superb bits of play. From the time that Lowe took a pass for the first touchdown the verdict was never in doubt. BELOW: Gr:N'1'l:Y: HAl:A1.soN: Eirmics: Nmsox. Age--, ,, il, Q g - V ugly . gs. , K .. v K- .ur H, N . fin-1-vu-sam .. Tx --11-n. -. . P The Maroons' conference schedule was opened in gratifying style when Westmoorland College of San Antonio was host to the entire Schreiner Cadet Corps in a night game enacted on Eagle Field. Schreiner, with Gentry, Bryan, Barnett, and Taylor playing outstanding ball, toppled the Broncs 47-7. A line-up riddled with injuries combined with unfavorable playing conditions wrought by a frigid north wind enabled a power- ful University of Texas B team to set back a game Mountaineer eleven 7-6 in a contest played before a large homecoming throng. Niederauer and McMillin were Gilstrap's best bets in this contest. BELOW: --Comix Toxics: BAl:Nm r, W. C.: Pllll .- 'T' X 2. 1. ............... H 1 Fx hmm .Lg .V KY , eww-n 1, , - .UN we-. X I'AlcN lwlwllcs The following week found the Moun- taineers breaking a three year Lamar jinx when they thoroughly trounced the Red Birds 20-0 in their own back yard, Beau- mont. Barnett, with his sensational pass- ing, Colvin with his deadly blocking, and Haralson with his fine end play were import- ant cogs in the Kerr- ville victory, a win that gave Schreiner the right to meet the College of Marshall for the conference title. Then came the climax, the grand finale. The picture: PI chilly windy a bellowing, football- mad cadet corpsg two injured stars, Reed and Lowe: a grimly determined Moun- Q c Horr I taineer team, with the golden-clad Tiger of the College of Marshall as opposition. The first half featured a magnificent Moun- taineer goal line stand which repulsed a Marshall drive when three additional yards would have meant a score. Neither team had drawn blood at the intermission. The second half found Schreiner unlimbering their most potent offensive weapons. On a play that started like a reverse Carroll Jones tossed a long pass to Slug Nelson, who scampered to the Tiger 3 before being hit. On the next play Reed, driving in a superlative manner, crossed the pay stripe for the score that brought the Texas Junior College Con- ference title to Kerr- ville, 7-O. --A grand climax administered to a grand season by a grand bunch of boys. fi- A A Y Qgqqnqq 5, vi jquf-555414-xyf1v7'w3x.3gg7'gixQw7' ' .v3ire?,,g z:,r mm 1 qc- ,ff ,, , V, N ' . l gy ,mm V TNF'-' -- H. ' W- - - fr f -luv A---f +A- ' Talk A T' -A ml ' ' J :fi-Viljggw' A' ' A' r rl A m -V ..,.. . . ,rm imrnli wiIHMMMIff' d? , I 1' W P xw I L.--,5,Az5 f .- In., 3 f 1 I Q Gtlwer Sports ' - ' ':3'5i ?ifl?Zi?i5f?kf x.,.1-gf -in ,, 1 ' ' ' g 'YQ' i::'1i1'ilQ Lg':-F411 L I: kd lelua,-,Qf.f: N..-Yagi, o , 1, r -of 'V ,A ' 4 ,,vJf'2-11 y,g.qv,,j -f' fag-,7 .. ffl- R 11.1.-l-+-fl-is-IUMII u 1 233,52 i?+2?2?g,,ig,GiZ H 5:51- fi 'f ': Sl-Ik' fe 22? mulllrllldllwllul v 1'-11342-,e ,f - IQ- ,. - B ' irq F-14 427-'vf r1:,'w'u b .-'-1 f.-,--.mveP 1:iFM'+'2532'?70 7177751 WF' y 'Woe 5' Li Imff ni M FA isaiil 4 , or 1 if A g' ,f3-mr? V .jllWS'4E25S WAX EH Q 'mm' Ya - .12' ,f -, -3, F 1 'W ffqrff qlyb 54,1 4'- f'4w'vgw.m.-..f.m-p.wsmf.-4,- egsgymg-I + 4 iz? W W -X pyq - ' - if l' J 'vii L - - WW Q - . i if A E K -'+'1Vgbbi:f i?i, e --.- ill W f-f '25, -mml fev Ri' 'Q' - 4'fw,e-'7 1 US IK' ww-IIYH. ' 'eff - , V: 'N , ? 3'4-.-19-'3-if 1fE.? 'M' W X . ' UA3'-fr'-,zggsii--Sffi , MQ ' '.... -.',.2-'firfnz 1 JS- 1 9 fs.,-' gg: V 'H f-, x 1-,,.,1fEj:i2-,165-1 ,i:ir' - ' -A. ' Q' 'E' 1-E.: ' -5 ,ig-si During the war, Houston sold his property, and rented Dr. Bailey's old Steamboat H ouse , where he lived his last days. ' li? r M936 V if if A K 1 6 .va 4 I X! -4 X 3 Q - Q Q -i A ' is 9 8 icfx A V 1 1 saw i 'S gi . I is -we .. . . t lf S K I HSS. Friplrlin A series of brilliant wins in which the team looked the part of champions, a num- ber of heart-breaking losses, and the presence of a bad omen which brought sickness and injuries to several members of the club - such is, perhaps, an accurate word picture of the 1936 Schreiner ln- stitute basketball sea- son. In winning 8 games and losing 10, the team fell one victory short of the .500 mark. The most startling re- versal of form came in the finals of the Dis- trict 3 tournament when the Westmoor- land Broncs, an outfit that had bowed to the Mountaineers on two separate occasions during the regular season, trimmed the Cadets 40-25 in the title game. ln order to reach the finals, Schreiner was com- pelled to dispose of Edinburg and Browns- ville Junior Colleges, a task they accom- plished with com- parative ease. The Maroon schedule included 5 games with senior colleges as opposition - two apiece with the University of OPPONENT Binger's Pharmacy .... Alamo Jewelers ....... Westmoorland College. Westmoorland College. Westmoorland College. Victoria Junior College .... Victoria Junior College .... Victoria Junior College .... BELOW BASKETBALL BASKETBALL SEASONS RECORD SCHREINER SCORE OPPoNEN'rs SCORE . .......... 21 29 ....31 ....25 ....38 ....21 .....24 ' Gulrfif: NI1l.SI1N : Drew .3 3,33- 23 Z8 27 22 40 31 3 36 1' Sew? X. 1 ww, H,- . Q , 13ASKIfITRA1.I. SEASONS ILICCORD- tCON'l'INUEDQ X .X 01'roNEN'r SCHREINEK Svoim 01'PoNEN'rs Suomi W A Victoria Junior College ............ 27 110 ' s L 'if' . PY .if University of Texas Freshmen ...... University ol' Texas Freshmen ...... Iflice Institute Freshmen ..... . . . St. Mary's University ..... . . . St. Mary's University .... . . . Texas Lutheran College. . . . . . Texas Lutheran College ..... . . . Brownsville Junior College. . . . . . Ifldinburg Junior College .... . l1l'.l.U1N : Nlllln-1n:,x1'l-Liz: l..xx 1: .1 M . ...mg g ,M M p-'L' il by Q. -mc. M fa .4-www ' , .. . ,.af.ss.............,.-.- ..--J' Q if 'f.Q-.-A Ii.,,,,....:Q, . 1-1 27 is :so 'Pa 16 1.41.4 19 33 23 40 323 10 223 31 67 1-1 117 '1lI'l Il msg 1N.x1,m-Ll 5 ' J, - 1 is - in 1. ,L 2' ff' . --4... NQ1 Qv 'f,. v 1' S 4 I -as li. l . lim .xx Texas Freshmen and St. Mary's University, and a single game with the Rice Slimes. Only the latter outfit was defeated. Out of a four game series with Victoria Junior College, a team heretofore regu- larly defeated by the Mountaineers, Schreiner was able to salvage but a single game. Later, one of the oddities of basket- ball was enacted be- fore Kerrville eyes when Texas Lutheran College failed to tally a single field goal in losing to Schreiner 33-10. The Lutherans, however, defeated the Cadets 31-23 several days later in Seguin. ln losing to Binger's Pharmacy, a San An- tonio aggregation, and winning from the Alamo Jewelers, an- other Alamo City quintet, Schreiner broke even in their pre-season tilts. The scores were 21-23 and 29-28 respectively. A team to whom Lady Luck refused to bow, the 1936 Mountaineer cagers took defeat al- ways chin up and were constantly commended for their fighting, ever-hustling, spirit and morale. iv Dicic Joiixs places while Gillis, Johns, Jones, Haral- son, Steakley, Bour- land, and Marshall all gave splendid exhibi- tions to swell the Schreiner point total. Of the more important affairs that Captain Dick Johns and his mates took part in, the Texas relays, the Ft. Worth Fat Stock Show, a dual meet with San Marcos and Howard Payne, the Lockhart Relays, and a meet with the Rice Slimes ranked in the order named. In the Texas Relays Vaulted 13 f inches to tie second place in competition with nation's better vaulters. Q TRACK A host of 1935 holdovers augmented with the services of several spectacular newcomers, Beefus Bryan and Carl Fitz- gerald in particular, enabled Schreiner Institute's 1936 track and field team to turn in a favorable showing in each meet they entered. As your Recall goes to press the team is preparing to participate in the Texas Junior College Conference finals in Austin. In the District No. 3 meet in San Antonio on April 25, the Mountaineers scored their most decisive triumph of the year. The Kerrville team accumulated over 125 points. Bryan took five first BELOW: Bryan: Taylor: Bourland, H.: Fitzgeralilz Hurmllers: 4-10 Relay Team. Mile Relay Tran x ilu X Li i 'Q X is gs 'Nga is 5. p g we re M ,I -we A e - L' ' .gf iit 1 -A be J i i..',, ,. V - er -. - 1 ' i - 1 i A K C lkril Q ' - iliwiivf--Fi 'iki . fm iiite A ,- it ,W Q is 5 t if wi'-tte,f i 0 is iaii ., , .iye ' F 'rie L 0 zalx., Ili N N1 al gg, K il--A, A f . ffff ' I , - Q it i p e X N WBQAM tai' 5 3 TENNIS Four proven veterans of the courts, Evans, Dyer, Bourland, and DeWitt, combined efforts with unusual freshman talent to give Schreiner Institute a powerful 1936 tennis representative. ln the important district tournament in San Antonio, the Kerrville team broke even. King advanced to the finals in the singles bracket and was well on the road to another victory when darkness halted the play. Arrangements were made to play the incomplete match at a later date. The doubles team, composed of BELOW:- Evans: DeWitt: King: Dyer. ai. . ,Q as 'fd M. N 1 ' A T , ' ' r Qgqm F .1 are Jr Q' 47 ' ' 4 X. 1 f.. ' .. , . 5 Q i ' ' ,, 1, ' .1 Q' ntl?-Qi ? 4 uf' ......... g 'I A . ,' , . W. A is ' it f li ,A 5 x!!xW- .fisyll viii i H A --as , 1. 'ig UL? 'T l. L. limi Bourland and Dyer, was eliminated in the final round by Edin- burg Junior College by a score of 6-3 and 6-1. ln match play during the regular season the Mountaineers were de- feated by the San Mar- cos Teachers and by Thomas Jefferson of San Antonio. How- ever, a victory was recorded against the San Marcos Varsity B and Thomas Jef- ferson, in a return match, was being de- feated when rain halted play. King, Durham, Pol- lard, and Malone turned in some neat bits of play on several occasions. Milton Evans was named cap- tain succeeding Irby Dyer. Blu. MFNIAIIUN Forbes Wallace was winning 2-1. Scoring was based on the Nas- sau system. The University of Texas golfers, 1935 Southwest Conference champs, and Thomas Jefferson of San An- tonio were among other schools on the Schreiner schedule. As this page of the Recall is turned over to the printers, the team, along with Coach M. D. Bryant, is making preparations to enter the Conference title flight in Austin. GOLF With but one letterman, Bill McMahon, returning from the Conference championship team of a year ago, the 1936 Schreiner golfers, with the aid of several talented freshmen, developed rapidly into a formidable opponent for the State's best golf teams. The Mountaineers breezed home to an easy District title when they defeated Westmoorland, the only other team entered, 11-1 on the Willow Springs course in San Antonio. Bill McMahon, Cope Gibson, and Billy Hendrix each captured their matches fl-0 while BELOVV: Wallace. lf.: Northinglon: Gibson. C.: lh-nclrix. Taps F, ,q -5 '. 9- -:axis vb ,. nn, .fr A l f. sfv . U .A 5. 'x xi -.54 , nl- :P' S' ,.,.,. gy., ra ,.' ,VW-.... . 'Cf ' 10123 17. I ,gf :VW if ' ',',Q4?Ga.ALSt 1- .' .fi-fj-Af, , , -y .g..... .4gwy K A ..,, if ', if x'F nqf, If :.,b Q ,g -vii Jlivf' f 1 ., 1,,, Iz- '43, ju., 4 Y . , 11 ' .-fi. fr 1 , 1 . ,'. ,s , at .ag -. L, - A .f-3 , . H1 i ... . , +fTQf' 1' , Q J.i ff . ..1f'?,5f',5f'f's. NJ- 12 ,yt .,,. . I f-.yi A gg. X 4, . , '13 2,,,.5,m' ,x ll 1. ,is-H , N . - 1 , ,- M, ,, , H lr, ,MM:.?vf: W 5. V. ,S 1gi5.,V.f:',111, - -., 'f 1 4-Q' .. ay rx . . .. ., MM. -, 1 .' ' , 5 ,Q 9.'1'X, .Ju-4 -' 31 'M 4-dv, 41,47 ff. ,xl , g,5f.w.x .Jijj ' gud, ,, . Iv I 43, ft. J ' ' :1 1 , AJ .u- 41 , -5 iffy -gl + ,. 'Y .Q WM, A r . tl 375 PL f. - , .A ,Xe 3 .. 1, 32515, .. dj 'H2 ',v M, :wxig 1 Hulk 3,411-L A X ' -ii. qv- in sl' In 1863 Houston contracted a cold which develop- ed into pneumonia, and on July 96, he breathed his last QQ wi my iQ5fxfgj3W7 g'iW,y M W TAPS PN WN 3 fx Q?-5 2 5 , W M 'f Xffi'f'fi.?1V5 H W lllllllllllllllllll 'Vw RQCLULZKK v FOREWORD And now, fellow students, we come to that section of the Recall wherein we find slams, rakings-over-the-coals, and life at Schreiner as it 'really is. You have seen in the preceding pages the beautiful life at Schreiner as it is supposed to beg the beautiful Hill Country, the wonderful buildings and equipment, the cadets with their faces shaven, ears pasted back, and that pained expression which only Miss Angel can evoke. You have seen the faculty with that kind, mealy- mouthed, hypocritical look which all faculty members assume When parading before the public. But now you have a treat coming - PERHAPS!!! Speak not if your name is mentioned, and if a dead silence surrounds your personality, it is very likely that you are too insignificant to mention. Whitewash will not avail you now, so, if you feel that you are deserving, begin to quake and tremble now before you turn the next few pages. H936 , , iam rr-ff racial M H lar wglicil J 'Vw Recall! 1 jj D- N me LAST T4 qi W F Aveancres! Q H Q A 0 6 IA! L 'L P LT! L XX fw wn azz N Dmmfl mm. mmm WILLIAMS K f' P Dl5ClPLlNE COVWXKTTEE F fl QROSIE I f X ff TAPS DEDICATION The Taps Section of the 1936 Recall is cheerfully dedicated to the Discipline Com- mittee of Schreiner Institute -that body of fine, upstanding gentlemen who were such shining examples in their own school days that they just can't conceive of anyone getting into trouble or making the slightest mistake or being guilty of an out-of-the-Way action. They firmly resolve in their hearts to be lenient with no one and to make an example of any unfortunate student who falls into their clutches. They are here to uphold the high standards of dear old Schreiner and to protect the good boys from any evil influence that might be brought to bear upon them. And with this committee and their wonderful work in mind, we go about preparing these final pages of your 1936 Recall. 'P 7 i qi! 6 was Xcaikeis MQ ,7 -1,4-Q -,. .'v ':::: i,kf 1 ,U ','.A, '-:' ' A ' f --'- -1 A-',, ftccmffff 'I' A ' ' -Q.-A ff ltl A i CALENDAR Seventh. Training camp begins. Lowe, Evans, BEND OVER: FRESMMAN! NXXX Jeep Langerhans, Bull McMillin, and Dick Johns ' I ,Q , arrive. Park Myers moves from the Bluebonnet Hotel to 'f , Schreiner. Work begins in earnest with all the big SElDE,RS M E shots at last on the scene. Gilstrap fires the lads with if If FHL:-gg lx? f j his annual opening fight talk. f S f Sixteenth. Freshmen arrive. Chapel seat and ' ll radiator rackets begin. Dick Johns begins a campaign N I , of collective bargaining and cleans up heavily. The ,x N fx ' faculty dons its most cheery smiles for the proud parents. 33:25 X5 ' Nineteenth. Classes begin. The summer is officially Q, Z over! . L f Twentieth. Big Jim refuses to repeat his copy- gawk' righted Welcome address. Freshmen in the North . Barracks learn to sing Fight for Schreiner on the end Yi' I of a broom. Twenty-first. Sophomore Ehlers attempts to haze Freshman Seiders. Is much chagrined to learn that Seiders is a Five-year man and has been busted as many times as Ehlers has failed to get a date. .Twenty-fifth. Everyone is convinced that Leo Goodwin and Red Plowden will not return this year. Terry Luke is already here. Bradley is expected any day. Twenty-seventh. The Presbyterian Church holds its annual blow-out with Schreiner ice cream for refreshments. The freshmen meet all the Kerrville debutantes. They try not to register their dis- appointment. They fail. OCTOBER LT GMEN me - PARUON First. 'The Honor Council decides which-member ' xl ME, DEARIE shall make its 1n1t1al speech in chapel by tossing high dice. Armstrong throws box cars . +2-nw Ag If-KELLY Eighth. Colonel Rosy Rosenthal offers the services Q' ' 5-T of himself, Rooke, and Seiders to the cause of suffering xg? 4 ,E Ethiopia. Haile! exclaims Rosy when no reply comes. lv '55 C57 .--.-- Twentieth. Kelly tags in on the commandant at 1- the dance. On cutting in, he said, Pardon me, dearie. - Z2 U P..S. .He got IT! Durham caught in a crap game on - ,239 97, f this night. Twenty-seventh. Battle between Egg Miller and g J' R Z XM McKenney. Egg teaches him not to kick dogs. Also ' ,f uxzz , , battle between Smith, E. and Blaker. Evans nearly got f X - 2 killed in the latter combat while trying to get out of - I the ring. Twenty-eighth. Rainy season sets in. Catfish Colvin remarks that the wet weather has taken all the curl out of his hair. NOVEMBER Second. CORPS TRIP! WHATTA DAY! Fifteenth. Prof. Scrap-Iron Guinn begins his annual deer hunt of a month and a half. Still no horns adorning his walls. Ditto Junkin, Ditto Williams. Seventeenth. Big Shot Bradley takes his first tour of duty as O. D. Flings his saber in the general direction of the battalion. Twenty-seventh. Thanksgiving holidays. Rosenthal does battle with a deputy sheriff in S. A. All homesick freshmen feel that the world is not so cruel after all. Thirtieth. Holidays end. Skeet Seiders drinks a bottle of brew in Austin. Checks in three hours later in N91-HMG. gqggggpg stupefied condition. KE suggegg Q DECEMBER T so First. Rifle issued to Seiders. He begins drilling U5 on soy Y the company from the ranks. Twelfth. New addition to Whisenhunt family. Weight 7 pounds and nine ounces. f Thirteenth. Armstrong has his troubles with the f irate father. Grief has his later in the year. Twentieth. Hawkins gets Christmas card signed Nora. Twenty-first. Christmas holidays begin. Two lovely weeks of freedom. Twenty-second. Blackie celebrates. will M9356 ,, . 4-C:w i h l,1y' I ,,,AA' li-Tet: xlib' Il' XVQA ll 1 I iw 1 vAV-. Y A mm X . ui ' 4? P f X ll I Hscattt Nu 1 'l CAL E N DA R - fcontinuecii JANUARY - -' ' Sixth. The commandant announces that Christmas 55,61-ROM MCMNNEV Loo-rl, is past and the work for the new year has begun. if' f S th Th h 1'd Lt M ,af ,es EZ Greenegznhzipel e o 1 ays are over, announces . 55 ' gf G Eighth. The Yuletide season is behind us, states f the commandant in no uncertain terms. ': 'Q 6 g -f Twenty-third. Flu epidemic begins. Everyone 5 , Q r 2. -9- sick abed except Doctor Green and Nursie Watts. E 2 ,ff f' Twenty-ninth. Final Exams begin. Q 1g 1- Thirtieth. NOTHING AT ALL HAPPENS DUR- X f -? ING THIS WEEK!!! 'Z Thirty-first. Two of Suckstrap Bradley's out-of- XN town girls come to visit him in the same week-end. He spends all his time nearly going nuts trying to be in two places at the same time. Thirty-first. The Tivy girls begin naming their dogs after Slack. Ekstrom tells Emily Post Corn- well that this D-mn foolishness has got to stop. FEBRUARY Ninth. The commandant informs Ekstrom and McKenney that this is no season of the year in which to go swimming. Twenty-fifrst. The band goes to Laredo. Nuff said!! Twenty-eighth. Rosenthal commands C Company at retreat. J. Reid and F. Carroll have their late dates down on the river- 3 a. m. MARCH Sixth. Government inspection. Everybody washes his face today. The colonel-inspector yanks the major's cap down over his ears. Dyer proudly announces that a war strength company is composed of eight hundred and sixty-three men. Fifteenth. Jim Lee, Banks, Grant, and Shapley go to the midnight show. Lt. Green offers them a ride home. They accept. Seventeenth. McCulloch falls in love! Quits eat- ing. fAt least he cuts down on it.J to Mrs. Admiral. Yaeger was caught in a very em- barrassing situation. Twentieth. Rosy, Evans, Ehlers, and Bourland make anonymous phone calls. Doc Quack rushes out to see about a boy with his leg cut half off. WOULD YOU LIKE I I 'ro RIDE our X X X N To scnooL? X ' 47 X at mf, Z' nm 'G ff ef 7 A 2 ,IJ Jays ,. 5542 4 43 5 Q 25235. .2 ' f iii f j 5 X , .A 2 W 'A 4 fi- Q' Q V 9 if f 2' anal' ,gf - .Q - if da , A , A 4 E r 4, Qf t. , ,, . , Nineteenth. McKenney pays one buck for seat next g W. , J' 5 : 1 K ' -1 ' - - 'fi 0El. 2 rw- na ' Twenty-first. Bill Womack zooms through the campus. Does not even stop to say hello to Pace Twenty-second. Vernor sets record by taking three drowning-outs in one night. Twenty-third. Shieldes gets his from Patteson and the rest. He immediately runs to 1Iunt's room to feel of his heart. Twenty-foufrth. Irwin mistakes Mr. Junkin for his date after taps. Climbs eagerly upon his car. Thirtieth. Lieutenant Green receives communication from the War Department. Stands up and shouts, V. E. no Bustin's! Now Captain William Oscar Green. Buys new hat ..... . . APRIL fx Q Dowv-un.L- - Maasai Ninth. Easter Holidays-the lull before the big L XX E ' YNN0 WY f 'gf ' storm of commencement activities. N WX S my , fini Twentieth. Big Jim finally gets a laugh out of the E T Q, --V 4 It A student body with his reply to Myers' request, Those X 73 in f3f .N -36:14 girls' dresizs inight not be washable and they can't get 4 1 4, t em on t e ine! I X IQ. Twenty-fourth. Band in San Antonio takes first 2 ,' :,'45v,x fgynvzi Nd pi X E Q' place to make good their excuse for going over to get in 4 ,uxs'v,fff7xQ H 31.-K W N all the fun. Big shot officers and their gals follow the ' If if n 'f ' ' 'X 5' Band and get in on the shouting. Also a few stragglers ' 7 X X7 vi' -If thy' known as the track, tennis, and golf teams find an ' . if M ,ii if' -1 .ufffi excuse to get to S. A. to cut up. K CIRw,n,kff -2' 1 V - - 1- Twenty-fifth. 35 pair of band dogs bark all day: ' Zyff, Z X 35 headachesg 35 zeros. 0725! f4 Twenty-sixth. Junkin says taps must sound for A , Y Taps, Sorry we can't see into the future for you, but then nuthin' ever happens anyhow! 7 V -f 'A who V., qgvf qj -I I HI I 'V,. U ','. I,.V. .. '.,'.v.I, It ..,.. .,,. U ' I viw11L1+L1I,6WfWWf f AN HOUR IN PROFESSOR WHlZZY'S GOVERNMENT LECTURE .hifi the t?5ni.25'.12 AND Now ,oENrLamuNs, we FIND THAT- noise of changing 1- Qisses in the corridors. NOW We FIND THAT 7 is quiet in room 206 of the administration ' building. Nearly all of the boys are seated at their desks, absorbed in - what they are reading. The gentle reader will -j not be expected to think that these boys are studying their lessons. Indeed not! The mail X X has just arrived and 1, they are interested in what the home folks Q have to say. Thlomas McPeake en- x d 2 ters astily just as the ' Q tardy bell sounds. Al Z Kraus, who didn't re- 7 ceive a letter today, hurls anh eraser at 1 ,I If Tommy's ead. A free- ' fozgalg ensues. 1 Z X X ro . Whizzy enters, ,S dodging a flying mis- .0 Qu-L sile. He holds up his hand to restore order. Well, gentlemans, it looks like the Supreme Court will either declare the AAA unconstitutional or they will declare it unconstitutional, he states. It's bound to be one way or the other. Cape DeWitt looks up appreciatively, just as if the teacher had said something that made good sense. Park Myers grumbles under his breath, and finishes H neat job of carving on his chair. The remainder of the class slide down in their chairs and prepare for a tiresome fifty-five minutes. Will you tell us what the lesson is about today, Catfish? Colvin glances hastily around the room to try and get some quick assistance. He sees no sign of help, everyone else looking as blank as he did be- fore the question was popped at him. He then checks up hastily to see whether he is in Government or Economics class. He is further bewildered to find that no one has brought a textbook to class. He makes no answer. . .Several of the brighter members of the class eagerly hold up their hands to answer the question. The teacher carefully overlooks them and calls on everyone who looks as if he does not know what the lesson is about. After asking several of them he begins to get exasperated. Take this question, please, he commands. The class groans and laboriously gets out pen and paper. Pop quizzes are their pet aversion in this course. No, I have changed my mind. We will have an hour quiz over this chapter and the two preceding it for next time. The class sighs with relief and turns over, as it Were, to go back to sleep. Prof. Whisenhunt begins to unfold his notes. fThis is a very laborious process, and he must be very careful not to get his history, eco, and government notes mixed. That would be a fatal errorlj I find that there are many of us who are not reading our outside reading in the library. We shouldn't neglect that. It may come in handy on the final examination. That reminds meg we must have a report on 'The Advantages and Dis- advantages of the Committee System' for next time. Who will volunteer for this? Not a soul looks interested. Very well, Cummings, have that prepared for our next. meeting. Cummings looks Very pained. And so we find, firstly that the New Deal is all wet, secondly that Roosevelt has not kept a single campaign promise, thirdly that the Supreme Court will save the country if nothing else will, and fourthly that the British have the only good system of government in the world. . .But it wouldn't work over here. Now please don't go home and tell your folks that I am a 'Red' and preaching socialism and advocating that the American government is no good. Do you know that in France and Great Britain, the only way a person can criticize the government is to offer a better plan? Short pause to catch breath. Now, I am not criticising our government. I am merely saying that it is no good under the present regime. The lecturer looks about the class to find if anyone is paying close attention and taking copious notes. He spies Langerhans who is fast asleep. What are the powers of the House of Representatives and give an example of each, Langerhans. Langerhans snores quite audibly. Will someone wake Langerhans? Langerhans starts and looks up bewildered. Beverly Poole giggles hysterically. He is ignored by both the teacher and the class. Will you answer that question, Pullyin? Pullin does so, quickly and methodically, much to the teacher's chagrin. He regrets that he had forgotten and called on a Phi Theta Kappa by mistake. And so we find ..... What's the matter? The teacher must have mislaid his notes! And so we find ...,. A hasty shuffling through page after page. If he doesn't hurry, we won't find anything. And so we find ........ Hooray! The bell rings, the bugle blows, and the class is on its feet, each man striving to get out of the room ahead of the other. And so ends our government lecture for today. X1 ,Aft 7 1 vs'-liq fi at .NW I is --:e? H+X IIQDJO iss. RQ jill K X1 X xi rf ' ff A .ayglgl , ill lillii Wit' X 3, will' l -. iff if ' ll fflIll1 ' .il -.2 X X .-fl fl il THE SNOOPER The Snooper had to wait until the Corps Trip this year to get any real honest-to-go0d- ness dirt. He found out plenty on that trip. For example: What was the ruckus between John Moore and the crooner's gal in the Gunter Cave that day? And what did the crooner say to J ohn? Of course, it is understood that Moore would never have accosted the young lady unless he had been requested to do so by a group of sophomores. It was on the same occasion that Bradley, Shieldes, Mayeaux, Moore, and Hunt decided to be brave and just set their bottles on the table. Everything went merrily for a while. And then Big Jim and Mr. J unkin decided to go down to the Cave for lunch. Imagine Jack Hunt's em- barrassment when all of the jugs were hastily scooped into his lap. The same night, just be- fore and just after the game, all of the senior officers of the corps, and some of them who f M G-UNTLR Cave 74 nf HlDE nf , I M WC., QNX gig W I ,A 1 W f 142 2 f V 7 Fl'I'?I'r'l'ff f 3 'Q' ' ' si! THE Re's B46 JIM! , 1 5 eg: f , f , ,, f' f P f F tv' - f X , ' xlll -. LM N 9 ' 'i y . . , r ,ef-J-gl, .5 AVA 21 Z 9 5 in ,L V X flag L' 7' 12 1 .,f:,,,,1 15 f, Pr ...4.i:4.f',ZZ f were not so senior , gathered out at Monty's for their chasers, et cetem, and for a general round-up of Schreiner exes. And so it was no wonder that at the formation just preced- ing the game all the officers were in worse shape than the men in ranks. In fact, the drum- major has until this day been trying to figure out how he got the band in such an in- verted and crossed-up formation. Evans, Rinando, and T. Reed slipped off from Bully, and Evans taught the other two how to educate the dice to the tune of about twenty iron men. DO ANY OF YOU REMEMBER When two slightly woozy co-eds from the University of Texas chanted passionate love lyrics for the benefit of Sir Suck Strap Walter Bradley while the hot-cha adjutant slept blissfully through the two a. m. performance???? Said performance was, according to the esteemed Instructor John Alonzo Guinn, very repulsive .... When John Edward Buddie Pace, bosom friend of Bill Womack, was rejoicing and heaving great sighs of relief because the Campus Chatterer would have no cause to use his name in connection with such phrases as a blessing from heaven, the high chair will be occupied, blessed event, etc. 'i ., s s A A f A nfl + M Rw lm lit.-flfliflf THE SNOOPER - cconfanueap When Frank Newton ran wildly up and down the upstairs porch of the Showboat last January just as call to quarters was sounding one night? This item would be insignifi- cant were it not for the fact that Newton was entirely in the nude and no one would let him in a single room in the barracks. Also, Billy Gillis had just driven up outside with his date, Miss Patton, and could not keep her from observing the entire performance, try as though he did. The lady was all eyes. Finally Newton ran down the stairs and hid in the wood-pile until taps sounded and all the lights went out. The day Grendel Heath carried his bottle with him to B. A. class? He spoiled an entire brand new practice set that day by scribbling HEATH W f funny words all over it. He kept the class in xx JE' . gales of laughter and Prof. Moore sniffing ex- QI citedly for the entire period. ' f Q 4 The night L. T. Anderson checked in so ii lvl f late? He told the commandant that he had car -,A Mug Z trouble and that he had had to leave the young lg, ff -'QQ Z .Pdy by herself. The loot was much embar- ' rassed to find the young lady's car parked down A W on the river, and he had to push them all the 11.5 , A , way home. Q Q 5 Z E - E 'L Z ? When Shorty Stockton was having such a ' A A 1 terrible time trying to select a sponsor? He had made the fatal mistake of dogging too many girls and, so, too many of them were expect- ing him to ask each of them. But as Dayton knew he had them on the line, he made the best use of his time until the day came when he had to choose one of them. He hasn't done so well since then. It was gratifying to all of us to watch Miss J ackson's exquisite technique in capturing those little white boots again this year. When the Schreiner Institute Blue Ribbon Band Went to Laredo? Everyone has heard of the expedition which was taken into the slums of Old Mexico by Myers, Shieldes, Grief, Hunt, Peebles, and Matthews. Everyone has also heard about the exquisite women who go to Laredo High School. When Steakley and Rosenthal engaged in their game of Fire Chief or Who Drowned Out Hoon Hall? one Saturday morning in March? The Discipline Committee thought that Steakley's performance was only mediocre, but they thought that Rosenthal's was good enough to send him to join the Port Arthur Fire Department. So they did and so he did .... One of the high spots in the scandal of the year happened when the Phi Theta's made the journey to Kansas to the annual convention. Wash Pullin - what is this we hear about you going around with the married women?? Irby Dyer- what is this we hear about you going around with all the women?? The most interesting romance of the year, perhaps, is that old one between Miss Helen Cohen and Shadow Womack. It is interesting only because it has lasted so long and steadily. One of our most touching romances has been that between Park Myers lThe People's Choicej and Julie Jackson because of their dogged devotion for each other. Probably the most mixed-up romance has been that between Walter Bradley and all his women from out of town. Instead of the eternal triangle this has often resulted in a quadrangle or some figure with even more sides than that. The runner-up for the most mixed-up affair is that between Fanny Neal and Jack Hunt. Why is it that they are going steady one week and not speaking the next?? Other of the romancesof this year are: The quadrangle between Jeanne Wilkerson, T. C. Bourland, Sammy Marshall, and Berman Shieldes. The affair between George Northington and Margaret Singleton. Between Courtney Sieker and Worth Woody - and later Darrell Brumley, who took care of her for him. Between LaVinnia Kennedy and Shorty Stockton and Irene Jack- son. Between Ruth Maercky and an occasionil Schreiner boy. Between Frank Carroll and Jerry Richey and John Moore. And others too insignificant to mention herein ....... -ji 7 -.si EBM? EAR 'G f 1 of X -3 f QS H' --2 9 mx f Z 1, 43 Jfm aim F4 gf xg, X Z! ,, 9 j UZ iz Z 41 THE LEAP Mn xx ,Om dm JS' ll G S, niugiu W .fi F Omer, HALF as BATTALION, gm COOK 9 WANTS V K A ff 'A' ' A new I fl- N S6 18 5 Axe YOU Awmcf, UHFU5 ! u a 4' mljijff Puma A W .J hi ff-5 , 40, 5 QXQZIPZUVA I K.,-2' QW W DANCE Z TW N WA I Z , Sky 4 gi V ZZ X 'fe x W x 9 165: 059' Z J H Z gk' Q-A fa WJQVZZ ' f li, 5 Q , 1 w - Q gig t.: , V l , ,N A f A ,-- ' -f E? L . : ' ' o V - - ,.- ' if , ', D A,' K A fi , , Af 24 ,gage , W 'FQQ 5' - .,--' ' fi-'J ,.-- ws. 2' W A ' A 6 5. ,z f-- ' me -. 'aw ' --W I if 'f .11 ix f? 2 ff QI- - f-- M il- ' 4 is 5 7 S., . HI fig '-1 7 6 F ll ll 5, is if ' I 4 L Nl lb'-,Lx U n M 'T , I V . X ' ' lp-Q 9 - AAMANAA- -Q ff' fl..-Af 1 V ff, AMMM ff ' ,E fo I Q I QV O fi , A 1 , ng. V IC gnu 7, '1 4 ,- n X , - 'find 'a : Ii 'W 11 . x JV Q . A ni n nm...-.1 Ili, It ,npn .,--V - k f V 4.5 U ' in f-f f A . A gg H K' Q . , 5' sf Q f' A lf E 1 ll' - W . lk 4' Q it f- 7' 'fl' 7? W, F Q , A fe- A '2 W J. . 4. yy V I ' , . S eggf ' ,1 ' f A A T -f '-f-E-.ie-A , , ' - ,qv -1: A - . , f 1 l J .I ,rc f sfxv W O n f , 1. A -W r Y ' y , x . .ff te-, qv f 1, V , . Q K ' 1 A ,.. x QW! fi 25? 'X -- --I: R' Q f M- ,ae ' if.-25:2 f f fd g 7 - --1 ,,,., ?2,,g .f XN::I t 7 - fgw' , ,.., ., b , 7 V If : . Q X 11 4 1 'W N VH my 5 Q :gilt N I Af X ' 2, -vu 6, Q : ff J I sv x ' F . Q: Q' 92 Xi 4 , Y Q' 5' L u he-.- ' 2,222 N iii? A 9 4 f , -'- ,1- N' ' Q, ' 1 ' f 'ii ' 4 I r N , I 5 x I . I is . ,,, T3 me 4.4 - - A ' 'X ln Q ' LQ it ,, --aasgfiii E V x ' QZQLQ I .,.,c--H azz. N315 ' 1 T5 mv W P54 'Z ' 2 1 L' .....- Q my ' Z 5 N 52 IT' 1- ., I' ' , x '14 X A '!' , ' if 15293253 .-iff? F' ' -- - M yy, A,,,.A V. 4 U ASTOUNDING EPISTLES v oaaa tflsiurir A' nil. I I D' f l f 1 f , Independence, Kansas, March 24, 1936 J. D. Williams Schreiner Institute Kerrville, Texas. 100 gals Stop 30 quarts Stop Three flats Stop One main bearing and connecting rod Stop We finally got here on bus Stop Besides that all is well. Irby Dyer Dearest Harold: Respected Sir. We have just been to Tivy mt. at Kerrville and saw your initials and box num- Kerrville, Texas Feb. 22, 1936 WF , ber on the tomb. Z 4 I . 4 --. J f 4 We are very curious to know all about you 4 ' 5 - N54 f ' , and where you live. We wish you would write 5 5 . to us. Z ,Q , 4 fs 1 , We have pictured you as a handsome young Q dia 5 I-Q HH.G. if E gentleman. , 4 - , 3 .E ii 3- ixluxunllu I Our real home is in Rosenwood, Minn. - and ' ' nu., we would like to hear from some one who lives Xi I out west in Chrystal City, Texas. We are staying at Kerrville for the present and will graduate from Tivy high this year. Please send us a snap-shot of yourself. Very Sincerely yours, VIVIAN EARwooD DORIS DOUGLASS LILLIAN RUSSELL Kerrville, Texas Box 654 ' ' ' The dirty five, official Taps investigators, report that said Vivian Earwood, Doris Douglass, and Lillian Russell are all rumored lby birth certificatesj to be not more than 13 years of age, mostly less. still in grammar school, native born Texans, and probably have not been out of the state during their whole long lives. We wish by a unanimous vote tqcongratulate Mr. Harold Greer of Crystal City for snaring Qsight un- seenj such sophisticated well-traveled young ladies, however, we recommend that Mr. Greer refrain from sending them their graduation presents this May - they have out- grown that silly little custom. ETIQUETTE TABLE QConducted and trained by Chas. H. Cornwellb Vernor fAssistant trainerj McCulloch fAlmost lost out because of love affair in the springj Ekstrom QMotto: This stuff has got to stopj . Smith, E., Heath, Kahn, French, Curtis, Clarkson, Hewitt. H936 ulnlnmfmmr 'Vw V-Lcccflllf TAPS NOMINATES FOR THE HALL OF FAME Lieutenant-Colonel Dayton Stockton. - For being the only cadet in the history of the school with suction enough to rate a rank above major in the cadet corps. For being diplomatic enough to choose for his sponsor the girl with the most automobiles and still keep the other girls pining away for him. mpe g .lliwro-oo' r o iiliil. ras ter rrrifllf r' Major Jack Hunt. - For being the only cadet to attain the rank of major in only four years of service. QBy what nefarious method, We certainly do knowlj And for coming out of the band, at that! For being allowed to make the trip to Laredo and then skipping the parade down there and getting away with it - he thought. For being the only band captain in history to be awarded the saber for being the best company com- mander. And, in general, for having such an ENORMOUS suck ! Bull M cMillin. -- For honestly endeavoring to drown out the government inspectors last March by placing a tub of water over a certain barracks door. Irby Lloyd Dyer. - For being energetic and genuinely brilliant enough to rate Phi Theta Kappa last year and lucky enough to be elected National Treasurer. For being able to live on his reputation all this year and make wonderful grades without cracking a book. For being able to be immensely conceited about his unusual mentality and still appear to be modest about it. John Moore. - For walking bravely up and congratulating Admiral Byrd before the milling crowds in the Gunter lobby and then sitting abruptly on the floor and smashing his bottle to bits. Scrap Ern Samuels. - For having courage enough to be the only man in Schreiner Institute drawing a salary who refused to sing before the cadets in chapel. TAPS NOMINATES FOR OBLIVION Vernor, McCulloch, Poole, Hamilton, H., Heath, and Pollard.-For never having been officially caught in the act of taking a bath. Buckshot Lane.-For his lousy line of barnyard wit. For being related to the commandant and thereby never getting stuck for his many rascalities. Haley, Maddux, and Stockton. - For putting the creases in our slacks in a different place each time they are pressed. For their speedy UD service in cleaning our garments. Cape DeWitt. - For attempting to force the boys to pay their campus store bills by holding their laundry. For asking Beefus if he was awake. Julie Ann Jackson. - For using her column in the school paper to laud the merits of her sister and for trying to build her sister and other friends up in the eyes of the stu- dent body. Luke, Bourland, T. C., Ehlers, and Yaeger. - For worrying all the girls to death for dates and never being able to get them. For having their own mimeographed telephone lists which they wear out daily. A was Q.. .g mmmnmlnh 'M'-2 f-ZQCLULZUL' A SOPHOMORE ENGLISH CLASS S S' w f ffgif4',lii!iriV S'fi'SW'lIyi1' fr c ' 1 -- - Time: 8:59 A. M. CBlue Mondayj Place: Administration Building Setting: Room 205 Bradley just beats the sound of the tardy bell to the door and is preparing to be seated. Class doors slam shut, and the last echo of the tardy bell resounds through the cleared hallways. Suddenly, above the noise of an annoying vibration of the wind-blown windows, there comes the familiar sound of the footsteps of our enterprising professor of English, none other than the Bull of the Woods, better known as Professor Guinn. The class remains at ease while the Professor in a dramatic movement hurries into the room, does a perfect about face, slams the door, rings out a cheery, grammar-school good morning, flings his school-boy hat into a chair, and with record book in front of him, he starts down the roll at a pace that would rival Ekstrom's bull-ring walking ability. Carlisle, Ho! Cannan. Hoi Colvin. Ho! Cone, Beg pardon,I mean, Miss Cone. Here, And so on down to the W's. Westbrook--Westbrook twice-Westbrook thrice, evidently he's not here. O. K., gang, pop quiz formation, hike! Womack takes a longing look at Helen and slowly moves over a seat. 'Fessor turns to the board and swiftly writes five incomprehen- sible questions that would even make the author of our English textbook Goode and Cross. Yes, you may use pencil, but it will count off 60 points. . .Your two minutes are up. . .all papers in. . .fold your - yes, indubiously, this is English 231-2, and I place two of my digits diagonally across each other. I am possessed of the desire, accompanied with the expectation to commit the inimitable fact of murder, to ask the number of this English course on the ensuing grand finale, and I'll bet you two bits to a Holland house shoe that eighty-six per cent of you will miss it completely. Alone would be a good class song dedicated to myself g I, alone, seem to have studied my lesson. You birds - pardon me - you boys and girls don't seem to know what self-denial means. Why, when I was your age, I was through college and had more degrees than you could make out of a can of alphabet soup. If it wasn't for that hydraulic jack I always use on your grades, I fear that a few of youse guys who are staggering along the ridge of reality might plunge onto the rocks of ruin rather than into the gulf of graduation. Take Baby Blue McCulloch here. Since the love bug nipped him, he can't get his mind on his work, he just idles his time away drawing wind-propelled water vessels or thinking of the great emaciation due to his neglect to consume the usual quota of ground beef sandwiches. Cummins, you look awake for once. What's our lesson about? Did you read it? '2Yes, sir - well, that is, we. . .had some poems and his life. Whose life ? Prof shouts at him. Er - I don't know. . .but I read it all but about half. H9356 f V- VVf-- ,---- ---A ---- -... ..... .... A. ... , ............fu-f-...S-i...............,.. 42.1, .,.. .i ...., ,, - - Q I T. in-mi 1 77'f W'IT 77' ull l'w17,:T77,- i- A- ii NTT: W 1 M32 V FEW Hamm!! Ill W A SOPHOMQRE ENGLISH CLASS - cconfanuedp You are like Bradley and a few others who should have been born during the Romantic Age. You probably didn't realize it when you were out carousing around last night, studying astrology instead of Shelley, that when you whispered sweet nothings into your best gal's ear - for example, I love you tenderly - that you were using iambic pentameter. . . Shelley's clandestined and indubiously planned love affairs do not in any sense lower the standard of his prolific array of literary masterpieces. The unreproachable manner in which he portrays man's thoughts on life, love, and death in his lyrics will live in English literature as Beethoven will in operatic overtures. . . In this poem the stress is on the first syllable, as, for example, 'Mary had a little lamb,' not a goat ranch. . . Colvin, will you tell me the story of AdomLis? Colvin is saved just in time by the bell which is almost drowned out by Professor's profuse flow of mystifying twenty-syllable words complaining about the short periods and at the same time assigning a short lesson of twenty-three pages of poetry for the next meeting. And so another step is nailed to our ladder of learning. TAPS LIST CooK, A. T. POOLE FRENCH JENKINS SZISEED LESLIE SLOCOMB EHLERS MCCULLOCH LUKE PQLLARD TAKES His Fmsr BATH OF THE YEAR -- AT Z A.M.. 'fa ww f 4 E ' , 9 -f . ,af f - ll 1 ' P if , 4 sy , S 5 !g46, 7,Z '-' f i r '- ' NTU!! - Mac df is .2 i his I ir ' 'A 'lf'1'.'fff .I. 'AA. if !.1il'I .'.',' 11ea1i1:. .'::1'-Q ',','. ,',',', ' 4'.23m g Gate Recall! ' magna , i. INFORMATION IN QUESTION AND ANSWER FORM CONCERNING SCHREINER INSTITUTE Where is Schreiner Institute Located? In Kerrville, Texas - The Heart o' the Hills. - The Waste Lands of Texas. Elevation 1,750 feet. Seems like seventeen million feet because it is so far away from everything. Served, as it were, by the Southern Pacific Railroad. One creaky local makes its way to Kerrville each day, weather permitting. The Old Spanish Trail runs past the campus. The old Bull Ring Trail runs around the campus. Is Schreiner Co-Educational? No! And when We say no, we mean NO! If a good-lookin' gal was to be seen on the campus, all the boys would either faint or die outright. As a temporary measure, girls living in Kerrville are admitted to college classes as day students only. Are Students Required to Attend Church? You said it, kid! Each student is required to attend the church of his choice each Sunday morning. If this requirement is not met, he is required to walk the bull ring for many consecutive days to come. Is Schreiner a Military School? Oh, yes, indeedy. The cadets go out each morning of the week and march about the campus just like real soldiers. The general rating of the military unit at the last inspec- tion was excellent. In fact, it is unheard of for any military school in these United States to be rated lower than excellent The military system here is not hard-boiled or distasteful, it is merely annoying. What Supervision do the Boys Receive? Each floor of the dormitory is under the care and supervision of a resident instructor. In Schreiner Hall, the younger boys have their noses wiped by Professors Cornwell and Moore. How Often Do the Boys Go to Town? On Saturday and Sunday afternoons and evenings if their records are clear. That is, if they are not campused, are not forced to work, can skip physical training, have an ex- cuse to get a haircut or see the dentist, or can frame up some other legitimate excuse. Those of the braver type just jump campus and go when they please. How Often May the Boys Visit Home? Practically never. However, if a cadet has an enormous suck, a good line, is not a working boy, and lies his head off, he may slip through about one pass every six weeks. This is very unusual with the majority of the students. Permits for all leaves of absence must be filed with the school by the patron. If they are not, the student is out of luck and the patron will be warted to death until permission is sent. How Many Boys Stay in Each Room? In the dormitories, two boys suffer in each room. In the barracks there are four malcontents in each SUITE . We had rather not say anything at all about the shacks. How Are the Rooms Heated? . They are not. There is an ornamental radiator in each room of the dormitoriesg the barracks and shacks are heated by stoves if one is fortunate enough to possess a fresh- man capable of building a fire. What Care Is Taken Of the Boys When They Become Ill? They report immediately to the infirmary - if they are very, very dumb. If they are very smart, they stay on their feet and go on about their business as if nothing at all is wrong. Once a dumb freshman reports to the infirmary, he is in the evil clutches of the school nurse and physician! 'lj and immediately becomes twice as ill as he would have, had he not gone there. A thorough physical examination is given each student upon en- trance. That is, you say ah to the medico and the examination is finished. I rose .'.g1 .....,,...I.. g ...... pn V A V,T,:.,T,. .... .... , . . , i X iii, IIIIII ML I INFORMATION IN QUESTION AND ANSWER FORM CONCERNING SCHREINER INSTITUTE - fcontinueclb Do Other Colleges Accept Schreiner's College Work? After a fashion. If one completes the necessary number of semester hours, grade points, and other bothersome red tape and rigamarole here, he is accepted at other schools - under certain conditions. What Special College Courses Are Offered? There are special courses offered at Schreiner in college work. Among the most notable of these are: Prof. Cornwell's Education fHow to be at ease before the ladies in the classroomj . Prof. Whisenhunt's Economics and Government fHow to transfer notes direct from the University of Texas's 1924 lectures to your notebook and .how to bull your way through a test. All papers weighed and graded accordinglyj. Prof. Moore's Business Administration fTaught with much sputtering and spewing. Shows how to cheat your employer out of much dough when you obtain a position. Legal methods stressedl . Prof. Guinn's Sophomore English and German fHow to be sarcastic and witty in class and make the kiddies love ith . Prof. Dickey's Pure Mathematics fHow to amble through hour after hour of lecture by repeating every word and every sentence at least three times absentmindedlyj. Prof. Samuels' Chemistry f'How to kill a person and never be detected. How to give the correct scientific pronunciation-and never be detected. How to perform twenty different experiments in twenty different laboratories success- fully at the same time-and never be detectedl. Do You Have Supervised Study? That is what we have the most of. The daily schedule provides for a two hour study period each evening of the week. We consider it great good fortune for a student to study for fifteen minutes out of this entire period. This time is usually spent in reading spicy magazines, shooting craps, and writing home for money. What About Athletics? Well, what about 'em? Sure, Schreiner always has a winning team. Athletic- minded young men are always encouraged to come to Schreiner. In fact, the hypnotic in- fluence of Gilstrap's bull and the evil machination of the Working Boys' Committee keep them going as well as coming. What Other Student Activities Are There? Practically none. There is the Mountaineer, published solely for the benefit of the parents of the students. There is the Recall, the yearbook, in which appears an idealized Schreiner. There are debating and oratory clubs and Pre-Medical and Engineering Clubs which meet only to have their pictures taken for the yearbookg there is the Glee Club, which presents its astounding array of misfit sharps and flats once each year at Com- mencement, there is the Orchestra, which never plays in public at all. Do You Have a Band? Well, some call it that. By lucky accident, the band won first place in a two-band contest last year, and will boast about it for years to come. What Are The Expenses at Schreiner? Why bring that up? Even if we could remember them all, J unkin will think up some more right quick. Does Schreiner Operate a Summer Session? Yesg an eight-weeks vacation is offered all gold-bricks who cannot complete their work in the regular session. Is the Summer Session Operated Under the Military Plan? No more than is the regular session. For further information ask or write J unking he won't know either, but he'll write you a letter so he can draw his pay during the summer. was X C TAPS ADVERTISING W. O. GREEN TAXICAB CO. A- Will take you home after midnight show without extra charge and no questions asked. I CWE USE PONTIACS EXCLUSIVELYJ T. Cook, A. T. Cook 81 A. T. Cook CUnlimitedJ INFORMATION BUREAU We Know the Only Way to do Everything R. CLEMENT DICKEY O L D S M O B I L E WRECKER SERVICE NEW CARS OUR SPECIALTY F. S. SPRINGALL Checker - Upper lf YOUR BUSINESS IS MY BUSINESS H. C. NORMAND Expert Electrician Let me solve your electric wiring and fuse trouble. FOR SALE HIGH-POWERED FLASHLIGHTS i M. D. IB RYANT ff games Will Play ANY GAME ANYWHERE, ANY TIME Specialties: Monopoly and Pin Money Marble Machines G. PERKINS Cross country running Or hare and houndg Hamburgers with Won't slow me down n LANGERHANS, GENTRY 81 EVANS JEEP SPECIALISTS R 1 Tom Rogers eferences Jack Hum TAPS ADVERTISING I. ROY WHISENHUNT Anti - Everything New Deal My Specialty Be agin it and be popular MISS AGEY Wholesale Dealer in Beans We have any size, color or shape in unlimited amounts 4 Also Cockroaches, Flies, Steel Shavings and Rocks F. H. CFUII Height, JUNKIN JACK AT ALI. TRADES See me before you do anything around Schreiner Institute. ' If you don't, you'll be sorry. I. DOWELL WILLIAMS AUTHORITY on COMMITTEES Regular Committees, Special Committees, Day Committees, Night Committees, Big Committees, Little Committees, Cvood Committees, Bad Committees, Committees, Committees, Committees! W. G. MARTIN Visit New Deluxe Saloon LIGHT WINES and BEER SCI-IREINER STUDENTS WELCOME Dancing 10- 3 100 Pretty Girls POOLE and ORVIS Professional MAINICURISTS Office: Infirmary Hours: Sunday Afternoon Reference: Elizabeth Harper Dr. B. Shieides' Detective Agency ONLY MODERN METHODS USED 'A' We specialize in the detection of crime by the heart beat B. MANN--Suicide Specialist If you want to commit suicide, we show you how to do it quickly, thoroughly, and painlessly. Reference: ANY SCHREINER HALL FISH Page 145 TAPS ADVERTISING Are you bothered by jealousy? There is no occasion to be! How to slay the green-eyed monster in three easy lessons. Ensign W. M. WILCOX, U. S. Cornwell Gt Elkstrom Inc. You get in my hair and I'll get in yours. N COL. IOHN ALONZO GUINN alias FRIEND I OHN See me for information concerning Horse Races - You can't lo S6 J, DELANEY CCorporatedj Advocator of the W. C. Fields' Filing System :: ef Also exclusive retailer of French's Mustard I. W. SAMUELS scRAP Q FoR SALE H. C. GILSTRAP Stocks and Bonds I f you hold on long enough everything will come out all right. J. D. JACKSON, M. D. Even if you are sick, I won't believe you, but I'll be accommodating and dole you out the usual number of varicolorecl pills. Newton, Ienkins 8: Gillis Directors l of Community Singing Page 146 Pngv 147 TAPS FAVORITE SECTION Mos! C07lI'I'l.fl'fl .... . . .A. T. C0014 M osf L01'l'--Sllflf ............................... NVOMACK lE1'ggv.wf G1-ipvr ...... BIG JIM fIlLlI1llCI'-H172 MES. Iinwvfxlcnsb Biggrfsf S'l,lfflC-STITIVYJ. Bzfggvsf Bum ................... EHLERS and COBB 1TieJ B1:,!j!ll'Sf Bull-Slzoofm' Biggvsf Pffsf ...... Silliffsf . . . . .. Slmfpzbsf .... . . . Mosf Unmzflifary. . . Higgvsf Lia: '.... lfiggzfsf S1171 ....... Bfggvsf Loud-Morlflz Bigyvsf Nighf Owl. Biggvsf Tighfuvrrl. . GILSTRAP QEleven straight yearsl . .................... MCCULLOCH ........POOLE ...LANGERHANS ......J1M LEE . . .GENTRY .. .EKSTIQOM .. .IIAWKINS . . . .BRADLEY ............................FELDEK llzygzfsf Golrlbrirlc. .CURTIS fRllIlDCl'-HDI SATTERWHITE, PJ I WATCH IT, FELLOW!! G BZ! Our ccCiUi6S -WILL PLEASE You AS WELL AS OUR MILITARY CLOTHES It NK - 'fan I pei.. 5,312 ,L , gg I 5-ff V U M . 5 I I iff 7 X Sy' Q J. When in San Antonio Make Our Store Your Headquarters FRANK BROS The Military Outfitters of the South A I a rn O P I a Z a SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 936 Y ,M V U Page 1.4 ii as Q ' Qompliments of F r a n lc B r os. San Antonio, Texas AUTOGRAPHS -54, 4-nf ,iq 1 4' fpwfj Awe, J: M Mega, ww-N-LUDIA-1, Q1 . . , ' I 172 ,ff 'GJ v,A.v.'Qff7N- A J ,.,L.,, 1,1 ,,u,,l42:',41fM4: f JM, 1TlrJa-4,-.1 ,G N-v 'SL-v KH-4- 'H-1' 9 - ba , AAAI I M, JC-Je-f-1 AL. 1- .,,p.,.f MW Jb...f.1-M4-fo L'-ul a :', ,M cx.J- 12 f4A7'vL,-5-s..-I 'lp .Q-J Cs-'J -f'L 5!'lcn C14- HW jo 1 Q.- if ,..,,,.,,u.,--. 45 W' 'TW f W 'J' , I A . all-Tvs-,,Alf', ljn,vy...,-,-...b CU Page 149 11 If BLUE BONN ET DRUG STORE ,Sanitary ,Soda Cgountain DRUGS - CIGARETTES . CIGARS CANDIES . TOILET ARTICLES STATIONERY ETC. Y PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY Always at Your Service Telephone 140 Ctty Meat M avrltet HENKE BROS., PROPRIETORS Established 1896 We specialize in Home Slaughtered, Quality Meats at prices you can meet '0 CJ Pg 150 Forty-Five Years of Leadership gf!! fK85S1f52Tlff21g5iTiQsi'1 St ., 2.1 't I 5 ' the United States, is in a p k p 3 2 lg h d d d y I h b Li D g S U wit Modern Metho s, .1 ' ' t e est in Quality an ru . f X ,- Try Our Sanitary Fountain R Q j 3 We Serve Only the Best .... :ZQIL-: A- If .-, .Q e KM-A -v-H 5 f I--' S I nrt ' RAWSGN S me 5 ' DRUG STORE r 'fThe Rexall Store 9 X J Telephone 37 -f RL 3-Z L , 4- KERRVILLE, TEXAS Gompliments Lugglgise of Coniipany, 101 W. TRAVIS ST. BLUE BONNET HOTEL SAN ANToN10,TExAs Makers of High Grade Military Boots and Sam Browne Belts KERRVILLE, rExAs Q ,MA Y D l I 3 Pg 151 336 Cf Hearty Congratulations to the GRADUATES of Schreiner Institute May success and the fulfillment of Life's ambition be Yours! WOLFF 8g MARX GENERAL HOTEL SUPPLY CO, Manufacturers and Jobbers Hotel and Restaurant Equipment ' CHINAWARE 0 GLASSWARE 0 SILVERWARE - STAINLESS STEEL WARE Angelica - ALUMINUM WARE Unifmms 0 LINENS, ETC. and Jackets SAN ANTONIO HOUSTON 336 D Complete. . , Autombtive Service Your Patronage is Appreciated Peterson Garage Sr Auto Co r Kerrville, Texas P TRAVEL BY BUS 4 The Convenient v Economical - Energy Sewing MUDE of TRAVEL 4 C PER MILE 5 and LESS Anywhere in the U. S. A. and Return Kerrville Bus Co., Inc. For Further Information Phone II 5 Q Texans of today can secure their independence tomorrow by patronizing their local industries TODAY. U Temand WOllmU9ll6f,S Good Bfead H Rich With Milk Compliments of... your GMGTGTIIEC Of- A. MclIMSEY Best Radio DAYTON TIRES SERVICE EXIDE BATTERIES Cars Washed and Greased With Moto-Sway GULF PRODUCTS Wy cU'6ENRY LEWIS jeweler COMPLETE LINE OF DIAMONDS WATCHES AND GIFTS BLUE BONNET HOTEL BUILDING KERRVILLE PHONE 540 Neal Coppoclc 216 SIDNEY BAKER ST. Phone 560 Electrical Supplies Q.Y .+.M.-.--... le ev., ,,,A,,,-. ,L,,,,,,,,,l,,,,L-,,,,,- ,.,., ,ML H+ 935 Page 155 136 '55 You Can Reach Me ...by Telephone You can reach me by telephone . . . you say it casually, but there is assurance in your voice. For you can depend on telephone service. You can call a number and a voice answers-across the street or across the continent. It's so easy to do-you have been doing it for years. Use has dim' med the wonder of the telephone. Yet the wonder grows-there is no ending to telephone progress. Service is quicker, clearer, and more accurate. Improvements are made each year. Things once impossible are now accomplished fact. Tomorrow will see still greater achievement. That is the pioneering spirit of American enterprise. Amer- ican initiative and American resourcefulness have given this country the best telephone service in the world. Qbviously this did notjust happen. It has been brought about by development over the past half century. Time has proved the rightness of its plan of operation. Quick, dependable, universal service makes it possible to talk to almost every one, everywhere, and to say confidently- You can reach me by telephone. Kerrville Telephone Company D. H. COMPARETTE, General Manager 91 Cl Page 156 ge 157 I-IECKLER'S MEN,S CLQTHING AND FURNISHINGS I 703 Water Street Phone 456 KERRVILLE, TEXAS W W Ml LLIER 61 SON LUMBER Paints .. Oil and Varnisli Builders' Headquarters Phone324 KlERlRlVlllLlLlE, TEXAS Rock Drug Store L. W. MrCOY, Proprietor 'Drugs ' ,Sundries Cigarettes Films and Finishing and Novelties ....ALWAYS AT YOUR SERVICE.... l:isher's Shoe Shop Kerrville, Texas FRANK FISHER, Pnom Acetylene Welding Gun Repairs and Rentals Qompliments of .... Kerrville Greenhouses fKUHLMANN'SJ Gal qZ'l.1Ii',ff O. P. CQUCH Owen 0 KERRVILLE 1315 Main Sf. Phone 24 COMPLIMENTS OF The Kerrville Times 1 v Kerrville, Texas Q Q Cumrtesy f:f Seofvuvifrze Smimlmy 5 Cl-IAS. SCI-IREINER BANK CUNINCORPORATEDJ Established 1869 KERRVILLE TEXAS Pq 159 Q Y T Q MODEL TAILQRING CQ. Dry Cleaning and Dyeing CustomfMade Clothes Alterations A Specialty ONE - DAY SERVICE PHONE KERRVILLE, TEXAS COMPLIMENTS That GOOD GULF GASOLINE OF . GOODRICH TIRES AND TUBES STATE BANK , KERRVILLE, TEXAS Road Sewice T 0 0 KERRVILLE TR B PTIQ K1 CDF S E R.N!I CIE VULCANIZING PLANT RUDOLPH STEHLING, Proprietor Corner Water and Quinlan Streets Phone 260 Pg 160 if-3 ' 'W ff' fmwffrfff' 93 Compliments of The WHEELUS CCMPANY Photographers KODAK FINISHING PICTURE FRAMING Duplicates can be obtained on any photographs made by us Corner Earl Garrett and Main . . . . . . Kerrville, Texas KERRVILLE ICE St STORAGE of THE TEXAS COMPANY J. G. COX. Agent Compliments CGMPANY The Climate of the Hill Country Rarely Fails in Summe'r...What it Lacks We Supply TEBQACO s. EASTLAND, Owner PM C I-.eI, I H-, M-eeCY,a,e,s,-, W, ,, ,e,e,e,aaa,C so 330 Page 161 CE 33 errfuille CZWIECIITGS, Une. OPERATORS OF '.,nn..-D..,.olu,..'.,-0'h,.n.,a0'l.,.. '.,.nu,.. .,.olo...u.,n'l.,....,.uu,.1 Arcadia and Rio Tlweafres .- .. .. .I .. ., . ., .. . 'hav' 'Us-0 uo ' 'Nav' . . - .-'- . - .'- I.: 'ilcui' uns lui lol lai' YOUR PATRONAGE IS APPRECIATED l Military Shirts ' Slacks ' Breeches Regulation Styles Pool Manufacturing Company SHERMAN, TEXAS 'Ufand - Tailored. . . UNIFORMS That smart appearance you find only in tailored garments B O O T S MILITARY APPAREL Laurersfeinls 514 East Houston St. San Antonio, Texas l l V l l F1 Pg 169 T A'i O 'A 'I' 0 Gompliments Kerrville Cleaning Company PHONE 326 COMPLIMENTS OF W. B. BROWN PLUMBING AND HEATING KERRVILLE, TEXAS Let us carry your trunks and baggage when school is out. TRUCK FREIGHT SERVICE TO ALL POINTS IN THE STATE We call for and deliver Eldriclge Freiglwf Line, Inc. K E R R VIL L E C la t SCHNEIDER om Im PM an S PRINTING COMPANY Commercial Printing Kerrville SCHOOL and COLOR ANNUALS PRINTING PIGCSLY-WICSGLY 209 West Market Street , Telephone Cathedral 6543 San ANTONIO as su Page 163 COMPLIMENTS OF Fawcett Insurance Agency Service W. A. Fawcett I. D. Patton Gomplimcnts of The Charles Schreiner Company Kerrville, Texas 93 T T' Q WE SINCERELY TI-TANK YOU FOR YOUR PATRONAGE AND ,Wm T-IEARTY CO-OPERATION... . m l n THE ANGEL STUDIO lVIaytielcl's Mattress Factory Serving the Hill Country in a Special Wav Alfalfa King HoME MIXED FEEDS O Kerrville, Texas I THE BEST MATTRESS Upfigifring VALUE AT EVERY PRICE Work 428 Schreiner St. Phone 268 HALTO MT S .. THE HOUSE OF S 'Diamonds 'fixxf 6TH AND MAIN STREETS FORT WORTH, TFXAS SOUTHWESTERN REGISTERED ' LIFE INSURANCE ' ANNUITIES 'INVESTMENTS Garland Lang Kerrvi e 336 Pg 166 BAi'n' im W' ' ' ' ' CE i FELLOW STUDENTS We take this means of expressing to you our sincere appreciation for your patronage during the year 1935-36. Your support has made possible for us this year at Schreiner, and in return we have endeavored at all times to render you the best of service. The Campus Tailor Shop HALEY MADDUX STocKroN l 5 l ' Gom p l im ents of i PA M P E l. L' S f STUDENTS and FACULTY... We congratulate you upon your successful season just ended. G if... . fzfvr, Wiz? D1 Page 167 Compliments of J. C. PENNEY COMPANY KERRVILLE, TEXAS Compliments of Kerr County Motor Company, Inc F Ord PRQDUCTS WATCH THE FORDS GO BY Qompliments Of SUNSHINE LAUNDRY TELEPHONE 500 KERRVILLE, TEXAS Compliments of W. A. Fawcett Furniture Co COMPLETE HOME FURNISHERS Since 1902 95 ff COMPLIMENTS OF 'The AN HATTAN CAFE EXCLUSIVE BUT X N T EXPENSIVE Compliments of J. C. BURTON your jeweler O FRED F. REAL G E. Bnooxs REAL Sz BROOKS General Insurance Our Facilities Cover Every Form of Insurance OFFICE: SCHREINER WOOL HOUSE 842 WHYCT Street TELEPHONE 214 KERRVILLE, TEXAS OFFICE PHONE 360 RESIDENCE PHONE 143 Whgn m San Antonio .79 Visit Our SHOE Store for Q h Your Footwear 'frmk Needs :ex-lf5 .X DR, H. R, Packard Shoes lim XO'-'f,,T1X .,-fi are designed to N fy X give your feet X ' the utmost in X G -4 LWOMFORT AND fax X EAR. -WX S .00 'C . 5 UP Ask the man who wears them. K 'll T 126 W. H S . 808 Water Street errvl e, exas Packard Shoe Store San Anmgggfoigexgs Q Page 170 Cf fi THE GREAT IOSKE STORE 0 SHOPPING HEADQUARTERS EOR SOUTHWEST TEXAS 0 ii FOR OVER 62 YEARS, Joske Brothers Company has catered to the particular and J. - - ix. fastidious needs of the people of the South- J if F K ix. A west .... and our efforts to please have won . - ' as-2 . loyal friendships for which we endeavor to -eq ii E i - show our appreciation with larger stocks.... p wider assortments .... dependable quality..,, . and low prices. Whatever your need, you can H GET IT AT 1osKE's -4 An institution fx 'N ,ft JOSKE BR T E c i sw RS SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS Since 1873 COMPLIMENTS OF THE SCHREINER BOOK STORE U NIFORM S TEXTBOOKS Masterpiece Composition Books and Fillers Looseleaf Notebooks . Stationery Supplies Pennants . Noveltyjewelry and Personal Needs CE If Page 171 fi 336 Fomby Clothing Co. San Antonio's Favorite Store for University Men Hart Schaffner 5? Marx and Hickey-Freeman Clothes 509-511 E. HOUSTON ST. Compliments of Draugl1on's Business College .. AND .. School oi Business Administration The Finest Business Training Center in the Southwest .... San Antonio, Texas 935 925 Pg This Space Contributed by The Garrett Insurance Agency Kerrville, Texas W. G. GARRETT, JR. L, D. GARRETT 91 kwin U 625118 Kerrville Mountain Sun V ...is interested in Students oi Schreiner Institute - -X - Q-gif-Y -f - ---- --- 4 ----H V A I I K 4 f v 1 4 .Y-V I If ' I tr A E ll.,- V ,f 4. ,I 3,041 jf' W! W IDI-'J If I f II 1, I' V' J I I A,, ig ., J, ,. I INET .Ju A 1 , Q 1 I I I J W , My , I , A Qin Qjfy' iii M ffgjv I L' W I Zn I PP i' ri ' QIESQVVI WAV A ,I J' 1936 T317 ' if ' I I ' Schremer Cash and Carry J: 1 I Solicits Your Patronage on a Basis Of A QUALITY . SERVICE AND FAIR PRICES I I CI-IAS. SCHREINER CO. I The House of Quality P H 0 N E 1 3 4 I 1869 1936 FRESH . PURE . RICH . SAFE WITH SINCERE American Pure APPRECIATION I Milk and Butter- 4 -Perfectly Pasteurized Dr. C. H. Mayo, of the famous Mayo Brothers, Rochester, Minn., says. . . . .I Qlixlsiithln the fircyince ofthe Bogrd 05 ell! 0 GTI Clf to ITISHTC 00 ZITI safe bmilk. 'Ijhe pintcctinn of ju: public I can e insure . PASTEURIZATION R It is the Only Safe Way I AMERICAN I MILK Inc. EAS DI'iIW'TT , A UE ARALSON PHONE 285 610 WATER STREET TED DAWSQN IQ I A au Page 175 M COMPLIMENTS OF E. E. Saenger l.uml3er Compan I Bti 4 , 4 ,. f 4 .Everything the Builder Need5 VM ,1 I f ' ' g ' fl ,lf ' A ' ' It Q Lei Us Help YouWitl1 W il M, f Your Building Problems M M W, Qi. i Phone Z6 Kerrvill Texas C pl' Om Ugmm The Smokehouse 3 ,Student Qfeadquarters P, ll. BRE,WiNGroN Magazines . Cold Drinks plulnbm' S Candies GUARANTEED PLUMBING Smokes , Pipes 1420 Water Street Kerrville, Texas KING RITCHIE OSCAR CLARK The Loubcri' Glassware Sc Cork Co., Lid. COOKING and SERVING EQUIPMENT and SU PPLIES l For Hotels, Restaurants, Cafeterias, Clubs, Hospitals, Institutions and Bars NEW ORLEANS 91' You Avi efiffews .nl Page 176 X 0' cv 1 Q1 ' 2 C0mpli1f1entS gif P f 7 A FRIEND Q 0 Page 177 Q ' Q Dr. Pepper Bottling Co., of San Antonio 1 rapp p apaa aap EENERG' Q ff prlp p ' - if ,N ,,W,i AQl-. 1 ,816 Dallas Street ' Garfield 9137 San Antonio, Texas Compliments of TRAVELERS HGTEL CHARLES N. WUEST, Manager SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS Autographs Pg 178 'W' 'Tw J'-1 a my . jili jf .QW If .f 7'i1fW'i'5f ffr, f. ,R 'UF f , 7' 'Gym 7 M lf' ,A , ,2,,3.. My 1 X F xwf-V - L , ux,,,,, 6 A ,X .va . W J - 1 , P ff X t ,. ' Z A Q V ' ' ' . 1 .-. - , WWI 5 k ' nil 417. ' A ,' ,, 5 gngh-. , ,. '.- ': I 'F 1' +3 ' .ir I me , F, ny.-s-3. , ,- , -, -1. K .Af : P'Eu gf? 'H sy: xr' I Q i , 15 . ' 1 . I '25 . ,ng 451, ' ' ' ' ' 5 , .4 . V , , .. .-. , 4, , , 4 , v F, f 4. . V , ., 1 , 1 gf, -1 , . . ,f -- . 5 5 ras? 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