St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN)

 - Class of 1943

Page 28 of 82

 

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 28 of 82
Page 28 of 82



St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 27
Previous Page

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 29
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 28 text:

Pugz' Seniaa 01644 P By an Amaimzr I7l1'Ii0f Mefeorologist It is a cool May evening in the eventful year, 1943. My radio is tuned in to the Hit Parade and I am contentedly enjoying the program, when all of a sudden the Band stops playing. There is a sput- sput of static and the familiar peep-chirp-peep-peep of a short-wave sending station. Then a strange program comes in over the ether. What can it be? Wait! A little more static-another sputter-Oh! the announcer speaks!! Miracles still happen for it is a 1955 broadcast! But listen! The announcer is just giving the commercial. Here it is! Mothers: Do your daughters wink at the preacher, giggle at funerals, or take off their pumps when they go out to dinner? If such difficulties are yours, see Madame Stark about enrolling your child in her School for the Refinement of Young Ladies. After your daughter has finished her course, you will never know her again. Or, if she is hopelessly military minded, the Kaiser Military Institute for Girls, headed by Captain Felicita Kaiser, is just the place for your child. Now! The day's news passes under the spotlight- Hartsdale's holding open house tonite. Every car that drives down 41 is stopped and its occu- pants are asked to pledge their votes. Yes, the big campaign is on! Priscilla Stamos, known as Percy to her political friends, is candidate for the coveted oihce of Hartsdale Dog Catcher. Flash! Results of the Congressional Election are coming in. Marvin Ulysses Graves, candidate for Senator of the First District on the Raw Deal Ticket, is the first man to be elected senator since the Petticoat Party gained control of both houses. Attention, sports fans! Last night at Madison Square Gardens, Pete Slugger Gomben, heavy- weight boxing champion of the world was knocked out by Jack One Punch Sohl in the sixth round. Sohl attributes his victory to the fighting skill which he acquired in a certain one of his high school basketball games. With only a trusty shooter, Wilma Mibbs,' Schweitzer went into the Women's National Marble Tournament and came out victorious with a feed sack full of marbles. The notorious Duchess Lorraine Sing Scaramooche has just returned to Lake County from the European front where she made herself famous as a second Florence Nightingale. Her recent romance with the handsome Duke has been the subject of society conversation. Evelyn Baker has organized Dyer's first taxi line, only Evy now wears a uniform and the fee is Sc from Dyer School to the new Moderne Ice Cream Parlor, under the management of Harold Hoernig, Esquire. A sweater! A sarong! Peekaboo bangs! Hollywood's newest starlets are the former glamor girls from Dyer High School, Dyer, Indiana. The sweater girl, Pola Sabo, recently surprised her many friends and admirers by breaking her long engagement to her handsome Ensign Hance. The sarong, made famous by Esther Miller, will soon be forgotten because the wearer plans to retire to a quiet married life with Dyer's former basketball captain of 1943. The peekaboo bangs of Nina Lee Arden were adopted by her nursing assistants in Europe before she started her new career in Hollywood. Ilwrlly-six

Page 27 text:

IIAIQOID KIILMAN VAI I NIINA KI IQIN IINURA KI lI.IVIAN IIJWARI3 KI,IiINE CI.ARI.NC.Iu KUIIN ARIII' IAMISIRT I IiANCiI'S IANC ISOII LONG um m1Ak'l'lN SIIIRI I Y NI II SIN IJOROTIIY NURENBURG Plan' crm A 1VI'.I.YN OYIRIIALAI- MARION I'IIII I IPS I,YI.I4 POI IQUIN QIANI-'I' I'RO'I'SMAN VI.I.YN RAAIS Iil!'I'II ILASMIISSFN SAI I Y I4ASIII1'I'A f,I'Ii'I'IiUIJI SIMMS 71 JH PRI 5 '.I IC III IPI AN SW! I 'I IIJMUNIJ SZYMISURSKI l,IURC.I 'I'IIII,I. 'uniafui aw' KY?- 6. Y ' .. N. -43' C' I'u'xmIn'lu X lu'-IIrcxIaIcl1! Su 111.11 x' 'I Vr1'l1r 1 OFFICERS 7, Qx RI Q ,Q A H II. Azlnlns fiI.l99 Flower: Carnation. IIoIfm.m Clux Molto: Forw.1rd Fora-vcr. I7. Swucr PIIKQI In If I. I I1IIvricI1



Page 29 text:

Paopfzecq 6 Resting peacefull at the Sanitarium is Patricia Schafer who is convalescing from a severe case of nervous shock. Private Schafer of the WAAC's was discovered chewing gum in the ranks by her merci- less drill sergeant, LaVern Drangmeister. Sergeant Drangmeister thundered her disapproval with such great force that Private Schafer was carried away unconscious. Miss Betty Croner, as first woman editor, is now supervising the publication of the biggest and best edition of Successful Farming that has ever been published up to this time! People from Dyer keep interrupting our broadcast with claims that they knew her when she didn't have a chauffeur to drive her around in a super-tractor. Today, a special plane was flown from New Brunswick, Canada, to a mighty metropolis in north- ern Indiana. A certain Margareta O'Dea was working in her New Brunswick studio on her newest sensation, Deep in the Heart of Brunswickf' when she was suddenly stricken by an acute attack of homesickness. I quote her: There's no Brunswick like the old Brunswick. A beauty note, ladies: The newest coiffure, created by Wilma Troup, is taking the country by storm. The hair is parted in the middle and small pieces of it are taken up and tied in little bows all over the head. This is called the Leap Year Love Knot Style. The great composer, Robert Steven Teibel, has just finished his Concerto in A-flat Minor for the Jew's harp. Mr. Teibel wishes to give credit to Miss Betty Lontz who sat patiently beside him day after day putting his inspirations on to the score. Our composer friend finds it more satisfactory to employ a musical stenographer who will look for his glasses. Ina Rasmussen, who amazed the public last week when she answered the thousand-dollar question on a radio program, has announced to the press how she epects to use her money. She will contribute the entire sum to the Society for the Renovation of Old, but Good as New, Birds' Nests. Their sloggan is-- A crocheted mat in every nest. Leo I-Iuseman, winner of numerous livestock awards, is busily occupying his days making a lovely quilt from his prize ribbons. Huseman plans to donate this exquisite piece of handiwork to Aldona Putrus, chairman of the Women's Coal Mining Union of Minnesota. She announces that the Union will, in turn, sell chances, donating the funds derived thus, for providing facilities to wash off the coal so that the miners won't get their hands dirty. Sylvester Scheisser, celebrated flag-pole painter of the St. John Township Region, is marooned at the top of the flag pole outside the Schererville Post Office. Due to the cool damp weather we have been having, the paint is not yet dry and Sylvester is unable to slide down. Although he is not hungry, having been supplied with food by airplane, Scheisser is suffering from fatigue, rheumatism,, and a slight touch of lumbago in the lower spinal area. . Amber L. Hanson, representing the Americacan Federation of Housewives, testihed against Ber- nard J. Hilbrich today in court. Miss Hanson held that Hilbrich had been cruising through local alleys in his new invention, the wood-burning car. She claimed that Hilbrich took delight in refueling the auto beside the housewives' washlines, smearing their laundries with soot. Police quieted roitous mobs at the Platinum Platter last night when Dr. Eugene Upchurch, a popu- lar new physician, actually set the place on fire with his torrid torch singing of Black Magic. Headlines in The Clsirago Globr, july 1, 1955: Great Detective Roman 'Hawkshaw' Kennedy, who started out in St. John with a Chemistry set and a microscope, has now solved the case of the Loaded Cigar. A certain Gilbert Dewes has solved the rubber problem once and for all. The Keilman and Keil- man Donut Company, owned and operated by Marge and Louise Keilman, was at one time almost bankrupt because of the undunkability of its donuts until Gilbert Dewes ate one. He suggested lafter getting his jaw back into placej that these donuts would be put to much better use as tires, owing to their rubbery texture. The Misses Keilman accommodated by frying him a huge donut and when he put it on his car, it was good for 190,000 miles. Mrs. Gene Uppingburg, the former Rosemary Seehausen, star-hurler of the Parishy Bloomer Girls, is still out on the mound. Rosie certainly must have had something on the ball when she pitched for the Brunswick Tigers. Mutual's latest discovery is one of Dyer's daughters. The dull intervals between programs are now filled with animation. Instead of the monotonous, Mommy, I want a Salerno Butter Cookie, you now hear: Woman, sling me a Salerno Oleo Snap, via the golden voice of Thelma Hausenfleck. The Mad Monster has finally been caught. Aman CPJ, who claims that he is Richard Hanft, was jailed today for scaring little children. He was caught stalking through the streets, with a cue-ball hair cut and his eyelids turned up. Tomorow morning, those of you who read the Lake Hills Daily Blatt will see the picture of a great hunter, Lorraine Schilling, with a sabre-toothed tiger and a dodo bird strapped on her bike. Al- though the scientist, john Von See, thought these specimens to be extinct years ago, it took a five hun- dred-dollar bet to inspire Lorraine to lure them ba ek into civilization. Page Iuxmly cwn

Suggestions in the St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) collection:

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

St John Township High School - Echo Yearbook (Dyer, IN) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946


Searching for more yearbooks in Indiana?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Indiana yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.