St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1933

Page 104 of 142

 

St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 104 of 142
Page 104 of 142



St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 103
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St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 105
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Page 104 text:

19 3 3 PRESCRIP'1'O Senior Futuristics TEP right this way, ladies and gentlemen, and see our illustrious city as only Yours Truly can describe it, shouted a lusty stout gentleman in a sightseer's uniform. All right folks, we're off! To your left We have one of the city's most prominent and independent druggists, Mr. Charles Sievers, who attributes his success to making club sandwiches. ' On your right we have the Jackson Building. Mr. Jackson, the owner, has his oflices on the ninety-ninth Hoor-folks, just an air-minded fellow. As we turn the corner, We approach Ludmeyer's Fish Market. A strange thing, tradition has it that back in 1933 Harry attended a Pharmacy college- alas, fate. And to the right, in the two-story brick building, We have the partnership of Kastrup and Klorer, exclusive importers of the sandless variety of spinach from far off Bolivia Chome of contented spinach plantsj. Folks, as we proceed down Euclid Boulevard, on the left stands an obso- lete structure,'a Pharmacy collegeg gaze one and all at this ancient landmark. It is the last of its kind in the country. Believe it or not, but the president of this institution is none other than Charlie Mueller, a man who has been with the school for nigh onto sixty years. His motto is, Everything comes to him who waits. As We approach the entrance to Forest Park, note the marble statue of Commander Speckart, and the bronze plaque below, ':Speecl and alertness do a great man make. Commander Speckart reached his highest achievement while in active service as General-in-Chief of the Pony Brigade. As we proceed along the well-shaded lanes of this beautiful park, we see in the foreground a monumental band-stand, where every evening lovers of the peppy music gather to marvel at the hot, jazzy tunes of Paul Benecke and all the little Bennies, through the courtesy of the Hellava Watch Company, makers of the worldis worst time-pieces. Just ahead We see the most complete Monkey House east of Borneo, with its genial caretaker, Dean Link, who claims he can trace his ancestors back to their family tree, and none of them were missing. And to the left, as We Wend our Way, the only sea elephant in captivity. Folks, it was only through the untiring efforts of the great explorer, Rudy Jonas, that we now have this huge mammal in our midst. Yessir, armed only with his rusty pistol, he encountered this animal as it was taking a sunbath in the middle of a sub-tropical jungle. A hand-to-hand battle ensued in which the sea elephant was subdued and carried for eighty miles to the nearest out- post and sent to our illustrious city, where you now gaze upon it. Now we cross the great McClurg Bridge, under which once flowed the plutaric water of the River Des Peres, that father of waters. If it hadn't been for this man's efforts, the river would not have been Worth a dam. As we depart from this spacious park, we enter University City, the home of pleasure bent, tired, business men. As we travel along Delmar Boulevard, we see the Old Magazine Building fnot the publishers of Ballyhoo, Hooey, or Aw Nertsj. The mayor of this great burg is His Honor Judge Lancaster, who started on his great public career by sitting on park benches. Later his craving Page One Hunclred Two

Page 103 text:

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Page 105 text:

1933 P1 ILSCRIPIO for benches increased, and when he heard there was a judge's bench empty, he immediately applied and took the job. Turning onto Big Bend Boulevard, we see the glamorous structure where- in dwells Howard Lower, once great missionary and evangelist, and at present, the head of a home for wayward girls. As we journey on, to the right we have Matzen's Flower Shop, home of the peaceful pansy. He advocates that if more larkspurs were sold, the world would be a better place in which to live. Across the street we see the Doughnutte Shoppe operated by Pessin and Eisele, a great combination for any safecracker. Pessin, a true philosopher, believes that if all the holes in doughnuts were placed end to end, they would form a line twice the circumference of the world. Veronica doubts that, and says that the holes in all the doughnuts in the world still equals nothing, and one who talks about nothing-??'? As we proceed east on Forsythe, to the right, We see the palatial mansion of Francis Hewitt, Jr., big race-horse magnet. He attributes his success to Wheaties, which he feeds his horses daily. His prize horse, J. Wellington Wimpy, wins the Hamburg Stakes every year, by an appetite. C Again to your left, ladies and gentlemen, a would-be famous surgeon, Dr. Gustav Pollock. He would have been famous, had he not possessed the unfortunate reputation of leaving a probe or a roll of bandage in the interior of patients he operated upon. As we turn right on Skinker Boulevard, we notice the Up-in-Arms Apart- ments. On the second floor lives the only woman dairy owner in St. Louis, Miss Bernice Raskas. Her motto is,- I sell everything but the milk of human kindness. And again to your right, folks, the Jewish Synagogue, with that noted citizen, Rabbi Hyman Silverberg, Pastor. g'What's good enough for Moses is good enough for me, he maintains. As we progress along Oakland Avenue, on the right, the Deaconess Hos- pital with Deasonesses Corbin and Benincasa as mistresses of ceremony. Their Saturday night special is ginger ale and ice, one dollar, and a floor show featuring Mike Mulligan and Charlie Sotier, a couple of Crutch boys from Cripple Creek. As a specialty number, they have that Spanish tango dancer, Senorita Faye Johnson, who gives her interpretation of the waltz I danced with you, or what have you. Right next door is the residence of one Clyde Redinger, prominent and popular head of the Nurses' Union. His motto is, Contentment at all times is the key to happiness. Proceeding south on Kingshighway, we view on our left the Evans Weather Stripping Company. He specializes in stripping. Give him a trial. Do you need your gears stripped? In the small store on the corner, we see the pride of the sausage industry, a couple of boloney men, Frank Hideg and Russell Gunter, long famous for their products. As we travel east on Gravois, to the left we see that great local radio station, K-R-A-U-T, the Breath of South St. Louis. It boasts such local talent as: August Costa, quite prominent and popular for his afternoon talks to women's clubs, Isadore Cohen, crooner of sweet Irish ballads, Pete Clatto, who has worked on practically every chain throughout the United States, except the Chain Gang of Georgia, Joe Adams, wizard of the zither-and who also does Page One Hundred Three

Suggestions in the St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962

St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 49

1933, pg 49

St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 110

1933, pg 110

St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 102

1933, pg 102

St Louis College of Pharmacy - Prescripto Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 42

1933, pg 42


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