YMCA Night Law School - Triangle Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)
- Class of 1928
Page 1 of 113
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 113 of the 1928 volume:
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sf E v - 8 :fi JJ 'ff 5 'Q H E gg bg i 4, 51 QU 3 .I . sl 44 Q. .- 1 ..11n1.n x 1 .fun--r ---.ln-.ug..n71n 13, Y' x V 1115 5-5111 f if K-ff fb by-5 gr g -5 H J A 1 ii 0 I X J Q31 u o If , in X f' F gl! 1 f W Y W5 Ti .- Y 1 H V 3+ .21 4 41 1 J W, N' Y L If my 1 K V - '-' In 1 mi ' ,V fa! -Z' ' N :hm ,, M11 .- .,- .g--,g,kiTLi ' Aki bffz. ...M -A -3 km X x X 1, If 44 vb -Xiffi 'X 3 I Z ,... :c K -r V' 'L i 1 'ii ,Jia 'BN f xwx ' X X 'flawsi W I I 5 'xi- 5 H w -'ff - V 15, W ' ' N af-an X :ZA ' - .- - tg q, 41 ., - M F' lf- H .,f , , ., 53, ' MM. , bf-7.. , fl 11 5 ,Q - . I Wi ' Mg Q efngv' Wi ' ,K -.Q A X - w.21i nw f M 5 if Wa - A ' - 1 ' f 1 W ll' M A H Almiw. I VLJQERVQ Q ' ' X ' sh Q 'sl-. ui., . rv X I X E 75fMi,U,, ggi 1 , fan! ll N , -2 L - 59 .3 4'-,'Y 9125 N I K Olnpgrrght 1528 CEnrhun Q Erherer iihriur m Gllywf Alhrri ilhmrn Muztnesa ilhxnagrr A 2 X X . S f:: 5. X :Y It A i -I ,lvbvr -I z:.,:::..,-A ' L V' J' S z - K' :T if f . N I X ' X w i 72?i3?:s'i1i9f:.Su'?g'i?:, . , . .,.A Q f 51, -44' 1 51. i s 'fsfgf V ,gujfg ' ,ffl 1 - ' K , : ' f . , 5222 In ,A.' 5 , ' 'Sf' U flj. - , -, :fa QQ ' - , is. Y Q-L1 Ziff? Sf X -,-339' X YS ' g 'ffl X V - ...Ms ' A i: -.-V . I A 4' My x 11 K, , X I N' J I9 Q '91,-L TRIEFEING LE Puhlislqecl lay time Class of Y. M. C. A. Night Law 5611001 Ci11Ci1111afi, Oliio , , 2:9 1928 fs-far f XR Q3 T? ffl? WW? LAWYER goes forth to conquer with no weapons except those of diligence and integrity, and those prinf ciples of law imbibed during his years at law school. Diligence to meet the stupendous task which lies before him, integrity to keep faith with human kind, principles which are the foundation of his life work and upon which he will steadily build the structure of his achievements. To painstaking and sincere instructors we owe the great debt of being prepared for our profession. They not only have faithfully trained and aided in our studies, but have imbued us with a great faith in our influence as lawyers, and by their exemplary lives and conduct have inculcated in us, reverence and respect for those laws and ordinances of which we are to be champions, and love for those American ideals and instituf tions of which we are to be the protectors. X: Hx, '--fs ssl Z gasp All Q 5 ' rl 1 ll gs. rf-Q 5 U 4 l :vc M -DEDICATION ECAUSE of his kindly interest in us, and because of his never failing willingness to aid and encourage us, and because of our profound respect and high regard for him, we dedicate this Annual of the Class of 1928, to our friend and teacher, Charles H. Elston. E sw ciii HV' fffff -fszwf 251 . fffiil-we QYQCQNQZQ' f WllANGl-El Q pf-'igfp-fig A ' f 4i'HifTe - ' - I -QV' 9 ' ,ff at 'X 1 ' X W?'!fS'Ycr39 - Board of Dlrectors YOUNG MBN's CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF CINCINNATI AND HAMILTON COUNTY Cecil H. Gamble, President A. E. Anderson, lst Vice President John D. Sage, 2nd Vice President H. W. Hutchins, Secretary John M. Stoner, Treasurer E Robert A. Colter Dr. W. T. Nelson Dr. E. E. Eubank C. H. Peterman Charles W. Handman Harry G. Pounsford Ered K. Hoehler Roger K. Rogan Erwin Marx Edward P. Rush ' D. B. Meacham Judge Stanley Struble J. B. Miller Charles P. Taft, 2nd James Morrison Dr. Charles Weber Committee of Management CINCINNATI Y. M. C. A. SCHOOLS John D. Sage, Chairman W, S. LaRue J. Ewing Blaine, Jr. Erwin Marx A. L. Behymer Joseph J. Viner Commlttee of Admlnlstratloll LAW SCHOOL Sanford A. Headley, Attorney at Law ' Walter A. Knight, Attorney at Law Herbert Shaffer, Attorney at Law Qlrficers of Al1miHiSfI3tlO11 Judson J. McKim ...........,.,. General Secretary, 'Young Merfs Christian Association of Cincinnati and Hamilton County Leon G. Nichols .,..,.... ..... D irector, Cincinnati T. M. C. A. Schools Gilbert Bettman .....,... .,.,.........................,.....,.. D can of Law School Charles H. Elston ,....... . .................. Assistant D-can of Law .School Roy H. Harms .....,...., .,.......... S upervisor of Law School 4 f - A I C yifhiiv .NF I O .Q at - X.- 'Sf ' of LW, N A ga , AAC IR X his -f XEZ XE?-'Q ,gksx FD JK.-Q .3 l f'X.w . XO -W TRLANGLE :sexi il ' ' x X Ei? . U LEON G. NICHOLS, B. S. QE. EJ Director of T. M. C. A. Schools Mr. Nichols has been Direc- tor of the Y. M. C. A. Schools for the past two years. The marked progress in all the branches of the Cincinnati Y. M. C. A. Schools during this time speaks of ability and serv- ice. - fgilbf - Although Mr. Harris has been with us only one year there is that something,-' about him which has won the good will and admiration of both students and faculty. He will long be remem- bered by the class of 1928 be- cause of his ability, politeness and geniality. ROY H. HARRIS, B. A. Administration Supervisor W? . .-xvv-xi? A --f : jig' '.. Xi? - I-Tqrql-lg A XE-'W Jx-.lg,Q.f5ff' fr 4f'f-sign? ffwifrfo rr gl J i efffm 'X YU-df' nk T i , may TRIH GLE The heights, by great men reached and kept, Were not attained by sudden flight, But they, While their companions slept Were toiling upward in the night. -Longfellow K ,Si 8i ' t E-if? Yadav-K QE AW Y Eva ww xx If wx x irhnnl ilfarultg Gllwaaw Artrurtzva Svnrwtg 1' S Satire Alumni S S Q My re 'fly 5 N.. I .,..q.'.:rEs1iqF:f??375' ?? 5x 1 ,-' f, 1-vi' - ' ' ' , ,,.f.f?12J'. ' :A-Eli Q- ..:':ff--an 'ff' A -iq 'L' -' -- -tftfff-' 7 233. 4 3.j 5, ' 4' ' .' .,,1 7 ' -, ' -,Q - f, 'glfzf , . .Ax N :T:.jji31:,., SX ' 1-'ff X! ,gi-J.: . . 1 4 Q ' ' ' ,::,::1Mff ' fy: rr -' . H553-' ' . ' - . g 51:7 ' '115g,'f..E - ' ff 2552, .,I -..1 ,Q ' Q '3 'i'-5-51 'IF' X 1 o F532 X i N A - kr-I - , X 'Vw 51: 1 L-1 A .xfrifff ff , 'F.Z3vf- Q .-I I, gulf NQ'-.1 if 11.2127 L ,V 3. .ll-1: i' - , ' f I 'r'..gyi Qfifjif: A-fs-12:wLgs.'.y,'.Cjg.,.5,53,ll f-fzglgiidg ' N , A J' M J' L? if A'.: at 28 2 l'w5:?fcfse- X'I3w6sO3J ZZUFI' GORDON H. SCHERER G ALBERT FOSCO EClif0'f'iTL'Cl1iff Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS Katherine A. Stahley Sol Goodman Judith Yungblut Stanley Silversteen Gladys Solar George Heath Gilbert Shaver George Shives Granville Brooks ART EDITORS Gordon C. Arey Albert Keeler , , . S. I Cb I ISlr I I 0 S rx ,MX MQ T 5 '17 G5 .J aww N16 X X fs Z 'fl Inf? fvf ','2l:.,f'. ,L quil l! . , ,Y y ' l'li! '.g Z2 x . Nm xtm WS i - - YJ .-1.g3 x X . 1 lla., c. Z? f ' J-35 , f f , , , ,,,,., f ff,2,,ff ff fffkffff - mx, - ,ww 51755 Af' ' F16 , 28 Q ' 1 ' X J 1 ig 19 XE? 4 X-Rfgj-ww H39 gf ,fyfr ,px nv Xxq .pxggfi fx?.,,:,M51X Y .A 5 iqff? J qxlr hjzyrfgx xj bw 0 V., I gfa X A-lil? :g::4i,f,- ffqga.-nflz' Enix--ff, -11-5 -lx n, KH 'T '- 3- Lgjff' -, .5jg14i535i, ' 4-14: dj V- Q, I Nfl R4, '?fQ:i5XF'i?G?L'?'i3' Q JTY ' ' M fy-14 1-4 Elgq V'w:liL 'NN uf E-f - U C1 Xqiqlffgyyf .y wk! JJ if gf 'Q JN ,fy 6 A3 X . . 26 , fC7w, QQ .VX-X 5 4 w, .LTR if SLE , sef 220' 241 gg X! C.b' H7 3 A Message f1'O111 t1'1C DC311 T Commencement time it is everybody's privilege to preach ' --so surely the Dean may be permitted to add his mite. Lord Coke said to be a good lawyer a man had to live like a hermit and work like a horse. That might have been enough in easyfgoing England in the 17th century-but even that will not reach in fastfmoving America in the 20th century. Nowadays a lawyer must still work like a horse but he cannot live like a hermit. All America makes a fetish of the gospel of l'Service. So, today the lawyer must not only keep abreast of the developments in his profession, but also do his turn at social, community and public service. However, my advice is to get on your feet professionally first. Do a complete job as a lawyer for clients who are willing to pay for what you deliver before you begin 'to serve the public. Otherwise how can you be sure that you are not ngoldfbrickingm the public? Remember too, that the law is a profession-not a business. Do not measure your work by the fee. If you have undertaken a case see it through however great the effort or slight the compenf sation. The essence of business is profits. The essence of a prof fession is skilled accomplishment. Character is at the bottom of a lawyer's success. There is the wellfspring from which flows the warmth of advocacy, the trust of clients, the glow of professional endeavor. The Faculty during the school years have tried to help in building character and moulding legal acumen. You must now carry on. Our interest continues-with high hopes of your success. C as-T Q, fv A. msxiw g- 'Z 2 1 iiiq? , 9? . -A 19 Gm .. ' -VT g ' fix: 5 23' 1 i'. ihs, 5 v i DEAN GILBERT BETTMAN A. B., A. M. Harvard. LL. B. Harvard Law School I , I Admitted to Bar, 1907 X 1 I ' I I I 'K I ' , Pgi' f . 1 4. 69 ,, F fa lm - 0 1 Xzfhw 2 W' yi' X 19-Zg x X 3 .9 4 5 JUDGE FRANK R. GUSW'EILER Owr .Quiz Monster A. B. University of Michigan LL. B. Cincinnati Law School Admitted to Bar 1901 Judge Superior Court 19164922 YQ ll Ei X-,WX ,X Q-J Q Q l. . ,? -Q E-'Q?X it ' i'v4-iiv lw 3,1 . Timm ' Qfiiffsu my F26 928, 5 FRANK K. BOWMAN JOHN C. DEMPSEY LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted A. B. Yaleg LL. B. Cincinnati Law to Bar, 1898g Assistant City Solicitor, Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1920. 191449259 City Solicitor 1925. CLYDE M. ABBOTT HENRY B. STREET MICHAEL C-. HEINTZ Chio State Law LL. B. Y. M. C. A. LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Law Schoolg admitted Schoolg admitted to Bar 1923. to Bar, 1910 Bar, 1890. EDWARD T. DIXON CHARLES H. ELSTON A. M. Marquette Collegeg LL. B. Y. M. LL. B. Y. M. C. A. Night Law Schoolg C. A. Night Law Schoolg Judge of Com' admitted to Bar 19133 Assistant Prose' mon Pleas Court 1919f1925. cuting Attorney, Hamilton County, 1916f1923g Assistant Dean, Y. M. C. A. Law School. it ia I , C Q, ,Q QL. L D, 5. 5 ,A 3,63 a.g,3A C7 ., ,3 ljgngfyti. ,sk a , t ta. .B KT-Q i'Dss,XX '1jf ?ff'1-fl ' - f .:'Q7:a5Q gi-jj W f'SQiv'?MX , 1 A 19 SLE X , EfX 5?-is 5 F-if BQRETQ-muff 1 LOREN GATCH A. B. Princetong LL. B. Harvard Lavv Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1917. LESTER A. JAFFE A. B., A. M. University of Cincinnatig LL. B. Columbia University, admitted to Bar, 1921. THOMAS H. MORROW A. B. University of Coloraclog LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1911g Assistant United States District Attorney 1920 and 19213 United States District Attorney 1922 and 1923. .EY-,L Q.. J KFJXJQ 'B BQ JAMES L. MAGRISH A. B. University of Cincinnatig LL. B. Yale Lavv Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1925 . ROBERT C. PORTER A. B. University of Michigang LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1917. FREDERICK L. HOFFMAN A. B. Harvardg LL. B., Y. M. C. A. Night Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 19063 Judge Common Pleas Court since 1913g Member Y. M. C. A. Faculty since 1896. f 1 3. A , gf Na 5 if ex, L4 T?-. 'Cx N JP ,L f 'x 7 ' 2 I N TX K-3 - XX-,X V TRIANGLE 5 I TZ-F . ,. V 5 5 X! fs-f-'ZQX .. if CHARLES T, GREVE A. B. Harvardg LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1885 3 Assistant U. S. District Attorney, 1894f1898g Referee in Bankruptcy since 1898 JOHN GATCH A. B. Princetong LL. B. Harvard Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1917. F. B. MCCONAUGHY A. B. Harvardg LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1921. Q25 CHARLES W. HOFFMAN LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1893g Judge Common Pleas Court, Domestic Relations Division since 1913. JUDGE ROBERT S. MARX LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1910. Arr- A M5 2195 4' f. ,.,., ,, I V : ., ,al ..,. '- gf- gs ks- N ' -e5.:2+j., if,-Bkgt - v' - BERT LONG Schoolg admitted to- Bar, 1913. 1, f ii' VA? 1 sri .5 ' ci 'QL..4efp 1 1 i Q., ECL., - tc-R ff-ff -'wlgc N' sf 4. ' fiff-eg ,ff 7,-H , L.. QS Iii 533 iQ tribe .1259 IPVQQ If 'Qi fix tb 'lil A. B. Yaleg LL, B. Cincinnati Law - CHARLES H. STEPHENS JR. A. B., A. M. Harvardg LL. B. Harvard Law Schoo1g admitted to Bar, 1902. HERBERT SHAFFER A. B., B. S. University of Cincinnatig LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg LL. B. Y. M. C. A. Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1912. JOSEPH QLMEARA A. B. Saint Xaiverg admitted to Bar, 19203 Secretary of Lavvyer'S Club. ALPHONSE G. RIESENBERG A. B. University of Cincinnatig LL. B. Harvard Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1919. RAYMOND KUNKEL A. B. Georgetown Universityg LL. B. Harvard Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1925. Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Hamilton County. ,, ...- -- . .,.,l JAMES G. STEWART Ph. D, Kenyong LL. B. Cincinnati Law Schoolg admitted to Bar, 1905, DA A - ... - .F-5 A N f t .415 , L M' 1' QQ' DJ ll , -i-Z3-A wr he ,.., w L -S5 - 1 1- ' A In t 6-6 Ha ba-Qr gf 'M gg Q 3 , FXJLQ Xxx! TMGLE Elgar Fee v 5 lE ! Yfxf ei?-Z,-L-.a X ' A Night Law School VENINC laws schools have a permanent place among the institutions of learning in the United States. Experience has demonstrated that a student can obf tain a thorough legal education in an evening law school as well as in a day law school, that it is not the time of day at which instruction 'is given or study is done that equips the law student to become a lawyer, but the quality of the instruction given and the application of the student to the work outlined for him. In 1893 when the Y. M. C. A. Law School began, it established a full three year course for complete instruction in all branches of the law, although at that time a tvvo year course was deemed suff ficient. The course of study has at all times met the requirements for admission to the Bar, and in many instances an applicant for admission to the Bar of Ohio from this school has received the high' est grade. Since its ,first class was graduated in 1896, up to the present time, its graduates have compared favorably with those of other law schools, as is attested by the fact that as judges, members of conf gress, in the legislature, as practicing lawyers, and in business where a legal education is required, they have generally been successful. An earnest, industrious student body, with an intelligent, conf scientious faculty, has made the Cincinnati Y. M. C. A. Law School a success, and it will continue to be such so long as the same high standards are maintained. A i 25 i 3' 1: ,--- i ,f x ,c 1'- W Q Ct,-:fgg V - YA, Qsgfgfgfo KW V ,A J x t XXI --cali-a A ::g: j,i:1:1-- ,i ji , ' feyff-7,-,-: '.....' ' Y S ,ggi srcigijb Xqgrfjlb 5,57 g '- 1,44 .fqlfax-4-LJ' Exif ,A-qgije ,I IE A 47-' -L5 R X i K Z B ,J ,XJ fcxckf FRY fmwfe. a t ess Cf f 1 1 j Cin 11112 iliaruligz We Wish to express our grati- tude iancl appreciation for your patient and painstaking efforts to transmit to us, in a measure, your knowledge of and experi- ence in the law. Nor are We unmindful of the fact that per- forming such service, after a clay spent in actual practice, renders it all the more praiseworthy. , VV Tr I 4 Nxt 'Q' Q-D ,L ,xg v a k. x , J,. 2:, Q 3 if I N644 x I N Q ff W xx N 'K X F 3-,L xx . 11:12 s NN Z . Qfgfsmx 'a : . M. .V NX X N x Wm lg 5565 X x ,Q M J- 1' H S SX Q ' 4-' ' 2' . ' gwf3:fS' ml 1 I Y-lx if V I - R ' lx , , , wigggka ff img I ? S WG: ,F - Zn' 1 X f, Jizz: . 4'-1?ff7f X , , .,JN ' y i , ' ' 'Z41'if7:2ff'3 ' A f Qi' ' ,LL Z 1 V V . Er , q ' .f --5' ' ::r7' X 235. ,4'J,'i1 ? 5.11 ,',.4.p X 5-YE? I I I. 5 :.,,1'.f'f ,,.. , .,,., Y X I, Aijjaggf ,. ' - ,,fzj-,-,JS ' S , .. .N-M, J S 6 F A 1 ,fi-,!q:.:7A::,i-LQ ' Q 6,2 , I 3 ',f- :if f -'-' 4 Q Q I K' 5 x V M' 'M V' 1 N ff? Xg5g,,,..11. 'm1ANr3u5 ff fix' x XX 3-.ini - 1' I ,f I i X' V X A-:fx-Zofeey Y? ' .. NDQJAB The armored knights will fight no moreg N o longer will their banners waveg The days of chivalry are o7er, And feuclalisnfs in its grave. 'Tis in a modern age We live, An age of progress and of speed, And logic now has ta'en the lead LaW's Works the World to give. - ffx WHY 6-W ii 4 I -so ' tasks 'Q' as I A 'X 1, 5' go' G Q' sw svfe NX eff! S . Yr 5 .aigv if .-, . .. . .., 'AL I4 1 56 Qi g R ,fl GN X Q 1555145 , nn V Z, , f f, 1 X 1' J 1 N inn I F X 49 In 1 V Q X , gp 1.11-'xi ,fa av , f z . rm f' -151,4 l . R A ' E V - 2 ff A ' N - If , -f Q ,g N Q I ' 1 ' ' ,595 X69 ' ff-:i f My i f ,l: 'y ' i f fly e '11 X ,xy V M ! 5, V ,nc f 1 f Wg ff, 'igv an My Q r -f i 'F' nf lk' 'WHY' lx . Q 1 My fl'-W 1: I, A It YI. - fi 31 E 'P AQKLJZILZ 't ,X X fam , fa ZHIWZQ . V-5, f-'iii W SLE iff, X A 57 Q G SSZEZVN X X V-Z 5 :9 fog! ., - ag? ev. A TE f QE Kee A N MA 0 25 if .Q X-X 5 HARRY MCKEEVER ELMER DAVIDSON President - Vice President STANLEY SILVERSTEEN HERMAN BARNSTORFF Secretary Tmeasurer .Xl I ' 'g..-,V , 'fxgix N' 3 A ,Q ff?-QXLA 1 AQ, ,Z -X , 2 Q jf - ww , KS W Q, A xkvfw- Jw-Q, 5E7jiau72FE4z g-KOXXFXK E xxxfif ,v . GLE . g gif-gl-,?QA GTQQVE1: Ni -f 2 J T .:. Q ' ' if T4 :- T Stanley Allan Hughes High Schoolg Iota Lambda Pi Everyone likes a Good fellow and Stan' ley has all the attributes of a real gentleman. His sterling character and high ideals will aid him greatly in the profession he has chosen. Irwin I. Aronoff Woodward High Schoolg University' of Cincinnati This genial fellow has won his way into the regard and esteem of his classmates simply by his neverffailing smile. This is a valuable asset in any walk of life. Alton C. Banks Holmes High School, Covington, Ky. Alton is one of the boys from across the river and during his four years with us he has amply and nobly upheld the honor of thc Blue Grass State. Herman Barnstorif Treasurer, Senior Class, 192'7f1928g Realfgymnasium, Bremen, Germany, Heidelberg and Goettingen Universities, ' Germany, M. Ag Ohio State University DL Barnstorf' is destined to success as,a lawyer if he overwhelms the judge and jury with his keen insight and logic as he has overwhelmed us. Hiram C. Bolsinger, Jr. I Norwood High School, Iota Lambda Pi junior has been considerably steeped in the law--being a law student, the son of a lawyer, and one of the joint heads of .1 repuf table collection agency. . , . . - 'K .' E -a w:vfl1'J, 3 I 5 f els, Q S M lmx ' 5 ' i r :L X 'V' ' I as L, Zig - Am 245 'v w--J ' Mary B. Bowman Secretary, Freshman Class, 192449253 Hughes High School, A. B., University of Cincinnatig Alpha Sigma Upsilon Mary is a consistent girl-in her studies and in various matters, but particularly in her inf clination to sit next to George. Perry C. Brestel West Night High Schoolg University of Cincinnati Perry is fortunate in his getting a judicial training at the same time he is studying law. Not many classes have a member who is a HI P.. F. Irene Coleman Treasurer, Junior Class, l926'l927Q Woodward High School, East Night High School, Alpha Sigma Upsilon Irene is a faithful worker in her classes, and if diligence and faithfulness are the atf tributes of a good lawyer, Irene's success is assured. Clinton Collins, Mr. Walnut Hills High Schoolg Y. M. C. A. School of Accounting and Business Ad' ministrationg University of Cincinnati Clinton is our expert in higher finance. This is certainly a virtue necessary to the legal profession. Elmer Norse Davidson VicefPresident, Senior Class, Hamilton High School, Hamilton, Ohiog Kappa Xi Delta Elmer is a splendid student and his work in the class room is an indication that he may be proficient in the law. Who knows? Ai X X -sf .a g, Wj'k'f:':.f-,5, st ,av Qiv xbrh-fum fjfii L l s l I 1 I N., 1 5 Lf, 3 J- 415 x X 7 t ti.Z Q3f-A ' J-if YZ - wage aaffsfgsfe A Stuart Fletcher Hughes High Schoolg Kappa Xi Deltag Order of Curia Stuart is our prize humorist. His i'Funof graph in the class paper was a great alleviaf tion in our suffering. He also has a cute mustache. Thomas E. Pouch B. S. and M. A., University of Ken' tuckyg University of Cincinnati Talk about ambition! Here's the boy who has it-law, medicine, teaching, are all one to him. Elmer F. Hartman Holmes High School, Covington, Ky. Elmer is one of the truly conscientious stu' dents of our class as is evidenced by the fact that from the time from which the memory of man runneth not to the contrary, Elmer has never answered not prepared. George E. Heath Woodward High School, 19165 Order of Curiag First Bettman Prize, 19255 First Bettman Prize, 1926g Second Scholarship Prize, 1927 George has the ability for scholastic achieve' ment as his above honors will indicate, but he also has the charm of wit and the gift of telling funny stories-of all kinds. Wendell Phillips Kennedy VicefPresident, Freshman Class, 19241 19253 Woodward High Schoolg St. Xaf vier College of Finance and Journalism Wendell is one of those quiet, unassuming fellows who invariably command the respect of these with whom they associate. He is an excellent illustration of the proverb, Still waters run deep. T r A S.-2 RX ,L 5' 9 A? ,ga 04 T4 3 I If-ui no 3 T T l l or no Bernard Joseph Klatch A Newport High School, Newport, Ken' tuckyg Kappa Xi Delta Klatch- B, I. Old HB. I. through per' sistent effort has succeded in getting at least one professor to pronounce his name correctly and completely. We predict a successful future for old B, Bennett R. Knight Treasurer, Sophomore Class, 1925f1926g Withrow High Schoolg Miami Univerf sityg Iota Lambda Pig Order of the Curia His humor is sparkling, his judgment keen: in truth a wonderful combination. As At' torney for Virginia Hudson, Bennett displayed flashes of that legal acumen, about which we have heard so much. Paul H. Kyrlach Withrow High Schoolg University of Cincinnatig Kappa Xi Delta Paul, by reason of his association with The Union Central Life Insurance Company was already qualified as an expert on Insurance, Mortgages, etc., but notwithstanding he thirst' ed for more knowledge in other lines. Harry E. lVlcKeever President, Senior Class, 1927 f 1928: West Night High School Mac and call him canny Scotch humor endeared himself to of leadership justified in electing him presif We can all look to friend. Mack with his and twinkling eye has all of us. His qualities the wisdom of the class dent. Clarence O. Meguire Portal, North Dakotag West Night High Schoolg Miller's Business Collegeg Fly' ing School, EmbryfRiddle Graduate According to reports i'Meg is quite a high flyer. If he will come down to earth long enough we are sure that he will soar to thc heights of the legal profession. ,Qt X 7 Gr Q25-i 'Thx-Q3 YLAQ FMA 'll fx ' 1' '- ff' ' r sisss -e.g v if mx ,iii Q. f f Q l I-5 I! X A-Z 1 1 Richard A. Morris Elder High School Morris has that rare good judgment of al' ways looking on the bright side of things. His grin carries more genuine mirth than many a hearty but hollow laugh. Howard L. Nelson East Night High School Nelson is one of those quiet, unassuming fellows who nevertheless make you realize that deep seated wisdom is far more desirable than egotistical pomp and bluster. Nelson's greatest asset is an abundance of that rare thing known as common sense. Sarah F. Ogden East Night High Schoolg University of Cincinnatig Alpha Sigma Upsilon Sarah has that charm and demure sweetness that is the greatest attribute of her sex. Her friendly smile and kindly interest hold a soothing, stabilizing quality. Royal E. Padgett New London Academy, Forest, Va. judge or Deacon Padgett is one of the most distinguished characters of our class. We predict that Judge Padgetifs cold, back' woods logic will confound many of his op' ponents before the bar. Joseph Melvin Rheins Woodwarcl High School If Joe can guide his clients through their legal difliculties with the same steady hand that he guides through Cincinnati trafiic, thc ultimate of his success is inhnite. V if Q, f Q. Q-Z3 Q Qi i JEL X 1 A V e a s v A Q ii: as -,, ' Q i fx. 15: i' 53ff: BS' Yil iii ' ' I .4 is -vi 3 I y lg I . 25 W Stanley A. Silversteen Secretary, Senior Class, 1928, Vice' President Student Council, 1927, Crd-er of Curia, Hughes High School, Kappa Xi Delta, Editor, Sophomore Reporter, 1926 Stan has not only applied himself diligently to the pursuits of legal knowledge, but to those things which aimed at class welfare and the well-known uesprit de corps. We wish him success!! . Gladys L. Solar Secretary, Sophomore Class, 1926, Hughes High School, Alpha Sigma Upsilon Not the least among us is this young lady. An innate kindliness and sweetness of dispof sition serve as the foundation for all her vir- tues, - Earle W. Stine President, Student Council, 192749283 Cedarville High School, Cedarville Ohio Earle's student career has been marked with an earnestness and tenacity of purpose, asf suring him a bright future at the bar. Earle W. Sticlcley Student Council, 1927f1928g Maysvillc High School, Maysville, Kentucky Earle by his genialty and willingness to serve class interests has endeared himself to us all. ,His one vice, however, seems to be a def votion to a particular brand of candy. William I-lenry Warnke, Jr. Vice'President, Junior Class, 192649271 Bellevue High School, Kappa Xi Delta Wa1'nke is another of the genial gentlemen from the Blue Grass State. Having taken the most recent Kentucky Bar Examination, he seems to be going along in a state of sus' pended animation, pending the result. X ' is ' f i ff x 4- .. ' 1' i a ,A af- we me ax-2 Ez. I-T EK 1 , . '?957?9l45 r 6 da es, L52 2? 7:6 If su .L . s, 2 via N059 i 1' 25 ji H Q Ralph Schubert Norwood High School, Kappa Xi Delta If hard work means anything at all in the practice of the law Schubert's clients may conf gratulate themselves on having made a wise selection. William F. Seeb ohm VicefPresident, Sophomore Class, 1925f 1926, ' Hughes High School, lota Lambda Pi, Order of Curia Bill, that blonde, quiet unassuming aspiranr to success at the bar! We are certain that it awaits you just around the corner. Leonard H. Shiallat Manual Training High School, Peoria, Illinois, Kappa Xi Delta Leonard, by a consistently cheerful disposif tion and a modesty of demeanor, has estabf lished himself Hrmly in our midst. Gilbert Shaver President, Sophomore Class, 1925f1926, SecretaryfTreasurer, Studfent Council, 1925f1926g A. B., Ohio University, Iota Lambda Pig Order of Curiag Editor, Freshman Reporter, 192449253 First Prize, 1927, Second Prize, 1926, Second Prize, 1928 If space permitted, a real panegyric might be written about Red, However, his record amply demonstrates his versatility and the es' teem in which he is held. Morris M. Sigler Treasurer, Freshman Class, 1924-'l925', Secretary Student Council, l925'l926Q Providence High School, Providence, Kentucky, Bowling Green Business Uni' versity, Iota Lambda Pi Most of us will always remember Morris' connection with the Y. M. C. A. Educational Department as one of our Hrst impressions at school. It gave us all a feeling of having a friend at court. V iz f .I 1 aff-N 7 Qef-fi gat. gn Q , in - kd X . . Q 1' 1 ag in QYQXQ 'rkf' 'bijf yp X Joseh White St. George's High Schoolg iWest Night High School Joe has made a place for himself as a par' ticular friend to each of us. He has accompf lished more in acquiring a legal education than others whose efforts were more sporadic. A Melvin Wuest Dayton High School, Dayton, Kenf tuckyg Kappa Xi Delta Mel is the Kentucky Barrister in our midst. Whenever the problems in Ohio law become too abstruse and diilicult, we may look to him for expert advice. Hyman W. Yarnovslcy Woodward High School Although we may envy the distinction which Hyman has achieved in Conflict of Laws and Conflict of Humor, We cannot but admire his persistency in overcoming ob' stacles. In addition, Hyman is contemplating a post-graduate course in Domestic Relations. A Qfehy 41 l Al H3 My ef glfhit-H X -T1 4- ' Q: Li' Ji J' rf 4 lk X xg,-:7 V D' sf' J ,5i-. ,,Q'f '5r,i7 ,gy x UWA mb is Giza-f wa Jw ,ff ff Jw-'Q r Lfcjlqlgxjj 4 xii-4r - T w ere ff E643 f re-if - X-f An Opinion of the Supreme Court NCTHER year- of school work has been brought to a close marking also for the seniors of the law school of the Young Mens Christian Association of Cincinnati an end of four years of preparation, which will launch them upon the world to meet new problems in a new relation. Graduates of your school merit peculiar commendation, not only because of their training in the intricacies of legal science, but also because of the moral discipline, the strength of character, and the firmness of resolution which has held them steadfast in their purpose at the sacrifice of many of the pleasures and recreations commonly counted- the right and privilege of youth. It is quite certain that hi the longer, harder course of the part time school, fraught with temptations more insidious, with difficulf ties more arduous and discouragements more trying, this rigid disicipline will strengthen them for the race to the goal of a successful career. The graduates of the Cincinnati Y. M. C, A. school are to be congratulated upon their achievements and their good fortune. They have been privileged to attend a law school whose standards of instruction are high and whose staff of instructors is comprised of men of fine intellectual attainments. The school deserves the gratitude of the legal profession and the citizenship of Chio for the service it is rendering. The graduates are further to be congratulated upon the fact that they are entering upon the practice of law at a time when the future of the legal profession may be faced with increased confidence. During the past year the educational requirements for registration of law students has been raised insuring a higher stan' dard of legal fitness. Part time schools have become firmly fixed in the scheme of legal service and all the law schools of Ohio are yearly becoming better organized and equipped. In the courts, too, professional standards have been raised. Congress has taken action which will enable the federal courts to reduce the number of pending cases and to bring them to a more prompt hearing. The courts of Ohio have made notable progress along this line. All these evidences of a mounting standard of legal administration denote a spirit of service and cooperation in service. To complete the cyclewrather to crown the structure, of which the Work of schools and courts forms only the ground work and mechanism, the importance of the practicing lawyer should be recognized. The unpracticed young graduates of today will be the seasoned lawyers, judges, law writers and law teachers of tomorrow lt should be suggested that as they go forth in their profession, two voices will be f ,K Easy? A si a 4 is C as it on gf 'ffl :Eg ,D K 4. pf --C-J ' f QY 3 p X A W X speaking to them: one the voice of selfishness and ambition, the other the voice of legal administration denoting a spirit of service and of cooperation in service. For the honor of your profession and for the honor of yourselves, I beg you to heed the admonition of a man older than yourselves in experience, that there is nothing so real as your ideals: nothing that you grasp can give you a satisfaction equal to that of holding to a high resolve. Maintain lofty aims and ideals and you will realize them. Abandon them, and the pitcher is broken at the fountain. Very sincerely, s H? Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Ohio ,Mme f - l 1 , it fl 1 ,--X CMXCQ' -.. .e appz.,-413 lm fxxp 'aff Vi?i3:tff't L--5 t'K wtf. fs, ,- 'X ti 0 if-if We x Xloyn ., xr- s-Af-Q -. of .f ,1 11+---L'T V qlient W f' X 23' as fu- A 4'41l.KxiF f?f JJ' If 4f:7w7Tf0 in s 5: hbf3 'Ln .t!X::-V-- ,ff U ,j 'Ls F fi to J if td Xi! Aug, . sagfcrff FMR! Za tviff- as-ve-Yo-39 We! History of the Class of By E. W. Sticlqley, '28 ISTCRY, it has been said, is only an account of the deeds and thoughts Q of those who have passed the reviewing stand of Time. Histories of the Classes which have preceeded us, indicate that they were all unusual- some better-others best. We, therefore, hesitate in describing our status as the superlatives have been exhausted. We will only say that our Class is good and let it stand to be proven, as it easily can be, just how good we really are. Time and space would not permit the recording of the many acts of our members, to promote the welfare of the class and school. Every committee, eviery individual, when assigned a task for the class, functioned as only a well ordered group can. Our first assembly was held in September 1924, at which time we were intro' duced to the instructors in the various subjects of the law. A realization of the size of our undertaking was brought to us when Mr. Taft calmly announced that we would have the first 40 pages in upersonal property. We had not fully recovered. from this sho-ck, when Mr. Stephens, whom we had decided we were going to like, calmly told us to take the first 10 cases. Early in the class year, Bill Foss, acting as chairman, succeeded in welding us into a well organized class under the leadership of Gibson Yungblut. Gibby led us most ably and was active in starting the nlireshman Reporter our class paper, which proved to be a wonderful aid to each of us. As one class night followed another, we reached the end of our school year, having survived the mysteries of Common Law Plead' ing and the intricacies of Davies vs. Mann, carrying with us Mr. Stephenls admonition that ones head could not be opened and torts poured in and Mr. Morrow's advice that it might be well to know what was meant by Replication De Injuriaf' ln the second year, we were exposed to the N. I. L. and its partners, Bills and Notes, a trio worthy of the metal of any group. Holroyd vs. Marshall and Lumley vs. Wagiier were also met and defeated. Gilbert Shaver was elected class president and maintained the high standard set in our iirst year. The monthly class dinners were well attended. These affairs proved to be both entertaining and instructive, as some prominent member of the local bar would address us on some subject of the law. ' Christmas came along and with it our red apple and chocolate Santa Claus. These were distributed by Mr. Aronoff with great accuracy. The warm nights of May were made warmer by the examination but due to very thorough preparation, there were no prostrations. In our Junior Year, Bill Foss was elected president and maintained the tradition of his predecessors. Mr. Magrish very ably instructed us in The circumstances under which the public force will be brought to bear. At the same time he was largely instruf mental in bringing that force to bear in the now' famous Tumey case. judge Hickenlooper instructed us in making and revoking wills and was rewarded after examination by Mr. Yarnovsky telling us that a will could not be played on a phonograph. Several writers of much promise were discovered during the year when Elmer Davidson sought to eliminate the back row interference. .i Tv J dx R? N FxiliiNTEy',f'gf' X X I X fs- riff'-rf ' X .essex sf P sw L 28 was XL saws.-a Nfxf Mr. Riesenberg explained a Massachusetts Trust, then spoiled the story by asking if a corporation could ride a horse. Mr. Catch told us what 'kEquity would be in May-and it was. Police Powers and Bank vs. Trebein are now behind' us Here is the class we have been trying to get into. After some delay in holding the election, Harry McKeever was elected president and is doing nicely-thank you. Earl Stine was elected president of the Student Council and is showing great abilit, in handling the school problem that came before that body. Mr. Stewart has told us how to beat L'S1O,OOO a year by making 351000 a day, thus adding fuel to our determination to make good. Mr. Creve has told us all about Bankruptcy and judge Chas. Hoifman and Mr. Bowman, respectively are taking us through Domestic Relations and 'ilvlunicipal Corporations. The Christmas season arrived but no red apple or peanuts were received from the school oifice and alas, the cold truth was forced upon us that L'There ain't no Santa Claus and that we are indeed Seniors and above the childish desires of life. Mr. Heintz, has taught us what partners may and may not do, while Mr. Kunkel has tried earnestly to show us the difference between Domicile and Residence. ,Iudge Dixon tried the case of Sarah Ogden vs. Joe Rhines in which Joe was proven to be a dangerous truck driver. Also the case of State vs. Banzer in which Elmer Hartman Banzer was charged with second degree murder for shooting and killing his wife. Both trials resulted in hung juries, which would have suited the class, had it actually been done. In March the class was saddened upon learning of the death of Mrs. McKeever who passed away after a brief illness. Appropriate expressions of sympathy were sent by the class oflicers, while condolences were personally extended to Harry by every member of the class. Judge Gusweiler is now demanding all of our time not needed for sleep and some of the fellows say he is taking part of that. Dean Bettman recently told us that annuals were sometimes found in hidden places and when read in those later days, they prove their worth in the years which they cause to pass in review. We regret that we cannot here make reference to each of our classmates but some few personal references we hope will be permitted. Did Bill Seebohm ever hear a question the first time it was asked or was there ever a question asked that Tom Pouch did not want to argue about? Will someone tell Judge Padgett what cigars are made of and where they may be purchased? Will Squire Brestel be as friendly after being elected City Solicitor of North College Hill as he is now? And will Mr. Klatch, QB. 'U Herr Barnstorff and Ralph Schubert always be ready with an answer and a legal reason for it? Will George Heath and Gilbert Shaver always be Min the money? We hope so. Does Mary Bowman teach school for fun or money? And Irene Cole' man, may she soon preside over her own law oifices. Leaving these questions for Father time to answer, in closing, we dare the pref diction that members of this, the class of 1928, will gain more than local repute and will bring credit to the class and to our school. While we have been busy acquiring a legal mind, many friendships have been formed which will continue through life. Although our task here has been made harder by reason of the demands made upon us by our daily labors, we think appre ciation should at this time be extended to the Y. M. C. A., our school, for the opporf tunity it has given us to further our education. is Q 'run' fx,-1-'Q' A P' 'Sn NN ,tfllh .lu Y ff a L. fast. f: .. .sfcffl V- ,--W it P -s series e' .f . - ' iff- xv ie+ '-frees:fs v S gb 3.3-5-Qgfx. g .ff ' 'f4,,'gQTff'A'f-J LQ' 'Q5QT:jA'l7 El,-lfrfxjq Lie iY'e'-L? f AQ!! J XX '.Lv4 X yi Glimpses of Things to Come May 1943 -Gladys L. Solar -F. Irene Coleman TCPPING in Cincinnati for a week's rest after a tour of the world, Irene Coleman and I were wandering idly about the city, taking m the new shows at leisure and doing what our hearts prompted us to. Irene is an Opera Star and is more popular than ever, and has all the men clamoring for just one teeny smile from 'LIrene.'l At one of the show houses we are entertained by Howard Nelson, who has taken to the stage and it is whispered about that every girl in town has his auto' graphed picture. At least he is the love of everyone. Such eyes! One day while walking past the new library, who should we see but Hyman Yarnovsky, who is a fat prosperous looking advertising manager and tells us he is married and has six children. We then walk down Vine street to Sixth and Vine and there, gazing at the thirtyfthree story oilice building we see the words 'Llvlorris Sigler, M. D, in gold letters on the third floor windows. We are told that he has abandoned the law and classroom to become a famous doctor specializing in maladies of the spleen. Tom Pouch is now dean of Harvard Law School, and is scheduled for an address in Cincinnati during the week of our visit. He can add an array of degrees behind his name that would make anyone look envious. A. B., A. M, L. L, B., J. D., and also R. S. V. P. and B. V. D., B. D. Mr. Barnstorfl has gone to Germany and is also teaching law in Heidelburg University. While stopping at the Fifthffhird Union Trust and Consolidated Banks to transact some business we discover that Mr. Allan is President there. We go to the Court House to take in a case that has aroused the interest of the states and Gilbert Shav-er, now a celebrated trial lawyer, moves the stolid jury to tears by his eloquence and we know that he is a worse heart breaker than ever. Dear old Gilbert! On the opposing side Padgett, who specializes in divorce and breach of promise suits, gives the court an actual demonstration of the 1nore interesting events causing the suit. We are told that Bill Seebohm, after being County Prosecutor for a long time has gone into Partnership with Hiram Bolsinger, Jr. Bolsinger suffers continually from rheumatism because of the lack of his 'Parisi' while still a youth in law school. Upon leaving the Court House we meet Mrs. Mary Bowman-UQ, by appoint' ment, and she takes us for a ride about town in her Rolls Royce and we pass B. I. Klatch, who has a thriving taxicab business in Fort Thomas and also Stewart Fletcher, who is in the radio business on this side of the Globe. Ivlary tells us that Elmer Hartman and Alton Banks are no longer rivals as they have married twin sisters. We go to Sarah Cgden's for a short visit. She owns the largest airplane factory in the world and also finds time for uthat little home of theirs on the hills. We discuss the Law Class of 1928 further. S is av as .ia eff ffl-if 4 are i i att ests ax! s 28 ?Z74c7 I X! Clinton Collins, who is about the only one that has left Cincinnati, is now domiciled in New York City, where he is City Auditor. Stickley has incorporated and has a business of schooling toastmasters and is renowned the world over. Breustle has advanced himself from J. P. to C. I. or Chief justice. Wuest is a judge of Dayton and Warnke has an office in the same vicinity. Upon leaving Sarah's we hear the roar of an airplane ovehead and looking up see a silver winged plane which Mary tells us belongs to Meguire, who flew on a nonfstop flight to Africa, where he was welcomed by the Zulus and he brought home some new dance steps which endeared him to the hearts of the younger generation. Joe Rheins has established a truck driving business and is head of the fleet of autos plied deftly about the city. Irwin Aronoff is now famous the world over for the orchestra which broadcasts over the radio each evening, Aronoff Bros., Inc., and have their broadcasting station at the Giltmore Hotel which is owned and operated by Silversteen, and by the way Stanley gave us reduced rates, as we were old classmates of his. Mr. McKeever and Stine are adjustment and claim agents for one of the largest railway companies in this part of the United States. Davidson is editor in chief of a magazine rivaling Judge and we are sure that his witticisms come in handy and are quite entertaining although we haven't had time to read the complimentary copy given us. ' Kennedy is head of the staff of Court reporters, a new system which he has installed and although he no longer has use for his shorthand he is just as capable a manager of the stall as he was a report-er. Kyrlack has established a television shoppe and orders for photos are keeping the wires hot. Of course he would be up to snuff as he was one of the first to have his photo taken in the uwhile you wait shoppe back in 1928. Ben Knight has a legal clinic all his own and schools the young attorneys in the pathways they are to follow. We are told that Judge Gusweiler has given up his Quiz Class and that Morris and White handle this jointly and not one of the men they have tutored has failed the Ohio bar and some have even gone to other states and passed without preliminary study. Mr. Schubert has given up the practice of law, but has not given up law as he is instructor at the all Cincinnati Law School, which is a new institution in Cincinnati and has both day and night school. Shallot, quiet and reserved as he was during the four years we knew him, has become advisor for all the attorneys of Cincinnati, another new thing, promoted by the city. Boarding the train for New York at the end of our visit we seat ourselves for a quiet trip so that we may discuss the events of the years gone by. Gazing at our tickets we see that George Heath is President of the Big Four. Looking back over the past, after having been away from the classrooms these fifteen years, we have concluded that the Class of 1928 was not so bad after all, and if we may judge from the present status of its members, the future will be bright and glorious. x X55-,Ei is sf? s- . eflfses .F V K gum fair f .f A f i Qi h Viv U -'kb -.r 4' ,fpff LJ aff- YK NJWIS' Xi,7'4TQJ J ' 5Q1,'fN4I11 pyx lj!lfmjANGLp XX! lp I A XX-XNXLZ Last and Testament of the C1385 of E, the Class of 1928 of the Cincinnati Y. M. C. A. Law School, being of sound mind and memory, and nearing the time when we shall leave the student halls and put on the black robes and caps of the illustrious and stand in the presence of our judges and receive our just deserts fthe gods forbidj, and recommending our souls to the mercy of earthly judges and l'heavenly clients, do deem it best to make, publish and declare this to be our last will and testament, hereby revoking any and all other wills whatsoever by us made fa la Anderson, form 234. Remember the form number, you never can tellnj. Item One. We desire all our just debts and funeral Qgraduationj expenses be paid, as soon as possible. fThis is more form, inserted because lawyers are supposed to be honesty Item Two. We give and bequeath our liens on the time of the professors of the law school to the future classes of the Y Lavv School and admonish them to zealously refile each and every lien, so that the gracious stream of knowledge that has been ours shall come down undiminished to the students in the years to come. Item Three. To an appreciative QD world we bequeath our brilliant talents as attorneys. Item Four. The long hours of study, the labyrinth of cases, the conflicts of laws, vve would make the possession of the underclassmen of the Y. M. C. A. Lavv Schoolg for only by this laborious route will they come to the full realization of the glory that should be ours. In Witness Whereof, we the class of 1928, have hereunto set our hands to this Our Last Will and Testament. -The Class of 1928 Witnessed by: Roy H. Harris Robert C. Porter , , .. O,-,fie -Q -. I , NTI 'i 1 ,? ' 'N A fi. 'Q . -X ,Pl MZ 25 -' ig-4 .ggafr, 2,1 , ff I !,L,f1f'S'.g -5' A , 1, T 7 ML, L7 H37 f if f:. . f -2 'f -' 44-QM VN ' 0 I F 155 QCP' 73 1 1,54 ', ,Jigs vw V rp 1' . -,,.4 XA I , U 1131 ui 1 'View . :-,ab , ' ,NV-5 V HW . Q iigl fl ' K in I , f K X' f H, wma I? - X 'Iii - . - 2 . . . It L. gi! i X I ' i no T v v f-X iig t g, yi' 3 x 5 I i 1 1 2 S 1 - xy wo' Q 8 Q f I Our human laws are but the copies more or less imperfect, of the eternal laws, so far as men can read them. '-Froude ja Tfwf' ffm' A gferg 4 S ,Q Q Ga so ' f s ' W me E h a s , .5 , QYX E7 vvfivzi v - if b 28 nf c .Q in 5 Q SOL GOODMAN, President ALBERT KEELER, Vice Pvesident KATHERINE A. STAHLEY, Secretary STODDARD DRAKE, Treasurer V ' A Q- ,Ls - - if - - . , J: ' ' f' wg -P5 , ,,-A Az'7E::-'-QM W, ix ,Er -:A ,, LS G35-f Gs 43 J'-'Q L Rhjxdxqif 5,9 ki'-'i?vTff?:3 fi ' - . 5-Z J' ' 1 P ,, , . :M if X g-X Q3. .,x 'Xff'N .V ' ' fr fsrrx.. f-v Z- .gi QF' .9 ff ' - l QB Lg 2155? X-' i QF-'J'-fb WR e5 4 P-fXx...2g' -xx' ' V E13 , 15's-v., 1 cs A er 1 3 C1358 of Gordon Arey Nicholas Bauer Odis Bertelsman Wni. Boettger Foster Brate Theo. Bumiller Arthur Caine Leslie Cors Fred Clark Arthur Daly John Davis james Donovan Jos. Donovan Lawrence Drahman Stoddard Drake Albert Dressing Harry Fallon Alice Irene Fehl Herbert Fast Harry Feldman Richard Finn Richard Flannery Albert Fosco Stanley Frovve Lester Gottlieb My A. L. Goldberg Sol Goodman Louis Green Q Miller Hayman James Hooper Albert Keeler Anna Kiel Ernest Krusling Crian McElfresh Clifford Miller Paul Mueller Morris Nogen W. B. Petermann Chas. Porter Oliver Roemler Elmer Rose Richard Rust Louis Schear Gordon Scherer Joe Schwartz Wm. Selva Katherine A. Stahley G. A. Tischbein Jos. White Judith Yungblut IM my 'Rf??WgiiiiDX4f??E3i55gQ Spvf Jw I' lift Clive! Qu - fx-Jfif' eff ' ,ff ,' X ,711 ' xgflv 'X-, -f C' ,t?a7'91c . EDT-D HiStO1'Y of the C1358 of 729 L'Ye safe and formal men, Who write the deeds, and with unfeverish hands Weigh in nice scales the motives of the Great, Ye cannot know what ye have never tried! History preserves only the fleshless bones Of what we are-and by the mocking skull The would be wise pretend to guess the features! Without the roundness and glow of life How hideous is the skeleton! ERE we are, three quarters of our path trodden, and getting set to go the last lap. It behooves us, that it would be wise to tell the tale. Having acquired t-he habit of just reading the syllabi of cases, you will pardon us if you find us forgetting the roundabout way and taking the direct path of the epochal events constituting our threefyear encounter. At an election, which required several ballots due to a concentration of political efforts, Sol Goodman was chosen President, Albert Keeler, Vice President, Katherine A. Stahley, Secretary and Stoddard Drake, Treasurer of the Junior Class. Gordon H. Scherer was chosen as Editor of our Annual, and Albert Eosco, Business Manager It is interesting to note that our class is the first junior class in the history of the school to assume the publication of the Annual. Our weekly Trespasses were edited by james I. Donovan, and served their usual purpose. By this time we had fallen so dependent upon the useful hints, di' gested cases, and statutory citations included in it, that it became part of our makefup. Our professors for the Junior Jungle were well chosen. First, on Monday night, we have Mr. John Gatch, who unhesitantly situated over a dozen of the crew below waterfmark, at the final examination. Due only to the generosity of the Y in giving them a second chance, that some of these deep water divers came up for air At midyear Mr. Stewart made his debut, and led us gallantly through the intricaf cies of Suretyship. When sufficient force was brought to bear, no Acts of Congress were necessary to alter the conditions, so said Mr. Magrish, and so be it. Now and forever, Mr. Porter is a carrier, One thing we did not like, was to be asked what the law is that the case propounds, after we had elaborately recited on it. Mr. Sha-fer had his ways according to his L'Wi1ls. The entire school adopted his method of locating the notables in the back row within thirty days of his initiation into the Y Faculty. , M, E.. 2 ' 1 X T 'Q' -fr J T .? 1-L,27'- M T MTX A. ,9 6 so X isffrasg THB-J-cixrfs-WO Blackstone was great, Kent knew law, Story wasn't dumb, but Mr. Riesenberg Incorporated, knew Corporations from the President to the office boy. All's well that ends well. Our concluding num-ber for each week was Mr. Loren Gatch. You could talk all you wished, but if you were heard! We had no trouble, of course, Equity is so easy, even Bill Boettger liked that best of all. The Seniorglunior dinner, Monday, December 19th, 1927, was a decided success. Mr. Gowgill made the principal address, Mr. Stewart gave a short talk, and Mr. Koch touched on the Remus case. The Curia, our scholarship fraternity, presented the keys to the following men: Albert Keeler, Odis W. Bertelsman, Gordon H. Scherer, Gordon G. Arey, Richard S. Rust and Sol Goodman. Lastly, we settled down, reviewed, quizzed and studied, then settled upl' on Examination nights. Most of us had more assets than liabilities and finished up solvent. -Sol Goodman ,iff-'TW Y , ' 1 V ,TA I V! nh A GTX V-X A A-'ima I ,114 Aa . X, r M195 'Y-f' '- 25+ Q.- at ,r . - ii -'if.f.a-f-fs: -. 'f L53 l' at - 0 R5-'XD uma., L1 a,rwvss5'F fftf--Q Lisa 'gifts ' X.-fx xy 1 mmsit .LSU K gmq 6 fe? r Zs ye-ferE?fj6fESJx,'-fs.Xu-1 HW 211111 1116 Needs of the So careful of the type it seems, So careless of the single life. F there is any one thing which this great mass of statutes and constitutions and legeal interpretations and common law applications, which we are studying does not do, it is to teach us to regard ourselves as part of a complex and involved civilization, composed of many persons, who need attention and help and understanding, and what we owe to them. The object of the law is not to protect and aid the individual. Its sole purpose, fundamentally, is to secure and maintain the peace and security of the state or com' munity. Every indictment concludes with the allegation that the individual accused of the crime has committed an act contrary to the peace and dignity of the state. The law is a great armed force which says: ul-lere is the result of your crime, and you must pay accordingly. -And this is true, regardless of the individual. He is punishable by law, no matter what his social or mental standings are. The law does not care about my protection or my needs or my punishment, its sole purpose is to keep intact the laws of the state. The law cares only to maintain its prestige. Before the common law the individuals rights were not recognized, and he was compelled to appeal to the chancery courts for justice. Seven hundred years after the signing of the Magna Charta, its provision that We will neither sell, nor will we deny nor will we delay right or justice, is still a vision of fulfilled desire. The law has become an obstruction in the path of those who realize that the criminal or delinquent is not always to be punished but in many instances to be under' stood, and the theory that punishment is always necessary, is gradually being exploded. The law should be a worker, hand in hand with those who wish to bring to each individual, equity in his particular case, and not an obstacle in his path, making him a victim of abstract justice. -Katherine A. Stahley r - ffgsap J x: B 3 X Af' Zi-ia F 349' ' ' ff X? Qi ,I 7 ' 7 - A ifrgrn 'vga b. R Z x L um . , ,gc f:d'1 um YM-mwx ML :Ama I 'i' ,'l f'f f 3 ,uv X e-Z, mm' WWZWMZRWS ,piggy v. - 5 x ,- Jff T1?gNGLE R I -x ?fX9-KGX Q ' ' Sxw!5f,.+ ,fed 4 Y ' ' f' .,, s f Men are four- I-Ie who knows not and knows not he knows not he is a fool-shun him. 7 He who knows not and knows he knows not, he is simple-teach himg He who knows and knows not he knows, he is asleepiwake himg He who knows and knows he knows he is wise-follow him! 7 NQEJ Xferfggg 1 5 G fi. V is ' my 'f Qgigjjfi X N6 an JI1inl- Xs f'2 KK sf W A .. 1, Kb A 1?-44 frxx ffifqjf-15 fI?X'i5? 4 -- ? GEORGE KATTELMAN, President CARL REUSCH, Vice President geffeilv' ,giifq - .xl .5 M24 , 1, v J-. - V, HELEN HUBER, Secretary ANNA M. GRAZIANI, 'Treasurer O kxfgr, 51 , ' ef-np., ,,, ,XV ., V? V- Q is , I ff- , W'13?l 3' ef ,se 5 f QT .g gf' tx, ef' ex ff- - bf . f - e i 'W Q-x-. ee- 'Seb L 2352-J Q573 kgs fgeffw' if-' gfs V if fffifee-5 me ev ' - fax, Y W WM Qaxfiffiq Gd ,Q 'X - If 6 Q is s 'Zn if P f . 3 ' -5 4... 1 I f -, -- A-f NN - N Q Q '50 - M 'va' x 2 ee. E- Q -fb Q if f Lf 5 5. ' .fs tm ? ' str :s Q J C1388 of Wilbur Apking Joseph Ballance Clyde Banks John Blandford Walter Blume Prank Bowen Sterling Brown joseph Comer James Faulkner Albert Foster Albert Grapes Anna M. Graziani Wellington Guild Robt. M. Hair Myrtle Hallman Ralph Harlan Helen Hineman Helen Huber Charles Hyman Allie Lee Jackson Thos. G. Johnson Elmer Kampel Stephen Kasteiner Geo. Kattelman Clarke Keeney Earl King Geo. Kline L. Kull Elmer Larnbers Robt. LeBlond Maxwell Lyons Donald McComas Jos. McDiarmid Stuart McLean Conrad Magrish Russell Mayer Ruby Metcalfe Phil Meyer Harry Moore Ray L. Murphy M. 1.3 AVTQQ , ,f . J -at v X. . rf., N L, Ruth Niederlehner Arthur C'Connell Howard Oexman Ralph Patton Phil Posner Carl Rapp Ramon Ramos Carl Reusch Vincent Reuscher Harry Rightmire D. M. Ritchie Joseph Roach Elmo Rowe Lester Saeman Emil Schafer Willard Schlanser Erecl Schneider George Shives Goldie Sigmund Marshall Stoecker Harold Stratman D. A. Streit Leon Strickman Florence Traver James Unger Irene Unger Harry Wasserman Earl Wagner James Walker Wm. Wehrman Morris Weintraub John Weiss, Jr. Samuel Weis Prank Wessel Howard Williams P. H. Willis Gurden Wilson Sol Wolfson Wells Woodley Adrian 'Zeigler K' -2' S ft 1 .,- t ,LQ Hs ,sf r-.- W' 'VK ' 'N Qt?-Lf f P C Li 0 ,J fi f 5: fu ll 925 f 5 I , , , cs is The Blggest Tlnng 1n Y Law fBei'ng tm historical sketch of the class of 1930, naturallyj ONSIDER, if you will, the largest group of reasonably intelligent young men and women ever having entered these noisy portals, young people, garnered from the four corners of the Earth, including Peebles, young gentlemen and gentlewomen whose tuition and intuition the Y receives with the greatest amount of pleasure. We have selected this creditable institution, inspirited as we are by the purpose of acquiring some fundamentals to enable us to incl the law after we are admitted to the bar. It shall have been our aim to reflect grace and credit upon those who can sympathize with us regarding human frailty, That the Y may share the glory we anticipate in rendering useful public service is a part of our ambitions. Before and after taking such legal medicine as th-e Y affords, we cannot be unmindful of the fact that over the other classes ours maintains the advantage. In numbers there is strength, the composite mental fecundity of the class of 1930 is surpassing. Let us therefore trust to encourage more scholarly effort, genuinely striving not only to absorb legal acumen Qsolely as a spongej but also to exude our accumulative fund of wisdom among our struggling, earnest classmates, so that they, too, may learn to live and live to learn. Let us hope to further stimulate good fellowship in the pastures earlier travelled as well as in the fields beyond. Having organized and adopted a Constitution-a truly noble document in itself -we proceeded to make history. We elected as our irst President one John Bland' ford, Director of the Bureau of Municipal Research, a worthy young gentleman and a scholar. Socially, we have a penchant for the festive board and we can dance, a la mode. It is our conviction that while we have l'It -when it concerns class spirit- nevertheless, class spirit is a community of interests. It is quite true that upon us, as Sophomores, depends the future of the whole school. Were there no Sophomores, whence could be Juniors and Seniors? But we like to translate class spirit into school spirit. We are a part, indeed a mighty important part, of the more perfect whole We are all, the four years group, of the student body. The potential strength of our union is a beauty that is strong and a strength that is beautiful. Dormant strength needs wakening. To accomplish worthy projects, now and hereafter, let us put our combined effort to work. Through our school years and the media of our student 2 X e Q lx C92 'M ,Qi kkrk X2 ffbf' -f--frliff Q-lg? , 47 X 17 f D X'Q17s.,?' 47 -TLB -if kj F23 L Za - -3?-v' -v 5 u council, as well as our class meetings, we can best be heard to recommend helpful, useful, vital improvements. We have improved our time, having learned some things about the subject matter- title does pass, sometimes, and barristrers know the rules, while lawyers know the exceptions. We remained seated through unending exposures of the N. I. L.g we even agreed that Price vs. Neal is a case never to be made clearer by arguf ment. We believe that faith is the substance of things hoped for-the evidence of things not seen. We feel sure that he who comes into Equity Hrst must have used Lux. We've discovered the tie that binds in accord and satisfaction. Even the undivided half interest is to us as easy as pie, literally! We know the policyholder wins when he dies, all the while we live to love and learn to love to live. Some tell us the second year is the most difficult. We heard that last year, only then they called it the first year. Perhaps our informants refer to the first 40 years! By our works, we shall ,endeavor to help ourselves by helping others to realize what the world offers its people-happiness. Won't you join our jolly big party? Within the doors, unlocked, you'll find just friends. --Halen 'Huber 1 - L. .., . rs M.: ,Q ff A , Y wtf x .. - A YY., V Hx ff ff,-. ' -' : ff - ' ,-1? v P -ff-J 'K ' - .ff- 'GQ' e-'jf X- W ,T Q. J i3csQigg 4 ff L1 if if sn UN JJ Qykrl my-fJ'c?f..J S322 1'iIl'lC7S S C110 011101186 EFCRE the Cincinnatus Association and guests, on Tuesday evening, April 10, 1928, Mr, Alfred Bettman delivered an illustrated talk on Crime Conf ditions in Hamilton County and applicable elsewhere. In the course of his discussion, Mr. Bettman made public some worthfwhile rem-edies, particularly toward expediting and rendering more eihcient the technical prosecution of crime. Among his best recommendations were more thorough preliminary trials in the courts of first instance and elimination entirely of the antiquated grand jury system. In some of the photographic slides projected by the Bureau of Municipal Research were depicted 'scenes that really emphasize the true breeding ground of the crime germ. Specifically, we refer to those photos typical of conditions in Cincinnati's slums and tenements. Some folks tell us we have no slums, no tenements in Cin' cinnati. One might as well look only to the North and say there is no South. If we live on the the hilltops, we only know what the lowlands hold by entering and seeing what is there. Personally, we have seen these very conditions of filth and squalor, as they obtain today, not over ten minutes walk from Fountain Square, yards of rubbish, garbage and whatfnot, pitchfdark hallways, unlighted, ilretraps-playgrounds of tuberculosis, and worse! Past comment upon these things seems to have fallen upon too many deafened ears. So soon as we determine to make our slum districts impossible of existence, that soon will we have stopped most of the culture of crime at its very source. Cccasionally, we are amused to observe this individual or that group rise on stilts of righteous indignation because of some recent atrocious criminal act. What a hue and cry about the police, the courts, the juries, the lawyers and the crime statutes! Brethern, we must stiffen the punishment, put down the screws-so to speak! Why not a little noise about prevention? You can't expect to hatch pheasants if you try to fool the hen with doorknobs! We hear talk about the underworld Beauty and love and ability and worth are to be found wherever we choose to look for it, if we look for the sofcalled scum of society, we'll probably find it, regardless of geography-scum is not all at the bottom of the pot! Those retardant spirits whose will is set against improving living conditions among the lowly, in the Cincinnati slums, should be quite frankly and publicly exposed-to the end that we may sooner realize the greater community good certainly to follow a general cleanfup and clearfout campaign. least of our people among us are, in truth, provided with a fighting chance to improve When even the v V 5' e , a Q. 9,19 . 1' E ! gt K V 'N - aid fa 41 'Q' Gviil X 2 Y 'Cf' jg get E1 misss gg J-as ' LE ci 5 X ' - ' 1 1 Q-170 Yer? fv.. themselves, then and then only are we on the right track toward minimizing crime. We hear broadcast from public rostra people who prate about 'lcharacterv and other esoteric terms, till thoughtful folks who otherwise had a wellfconceived idea of what character really should be, have the doubt raised as to where to find genuine character, surely not in a three shell game! Punishment, character, raise the requirements! Crandiloquent ideas all of them -but who pays the rent? Reverting to that thought hereinbefore, about giving our people a fighting chance to improve themselves, now we are going to require men and women who aspire to study and finally practice law to show a college diploma in each instance, and all that silly rot-as if that were a guarantee of what is in the heart and mind of the individual! We are going to ignore that these for whom we bespeak are prompted by an ambition to carry on while working for a living. We are going to ignore, no doubt, the fact that such peculiarly inspired requirements are Unconstitutional! VJe're going to assure the public that hereafter we'll have none but good, characterful lawyers- we are, not! If it's in the cradle, yes, if not, no schools of higher learning will fill the embryonic void. How inconsistent in this very respect are the very kind of people that promote such perversive ideas and foist them upon an unsuspecting common' wealth-with all these contemplated regulations, they select people who serve utility interests for the purpose of securing repeated rate increases to head their bar associaf tions and other sofcalled civic welfare organizations!-Yet, among those chosen are found men of only common school education, no law school attendance, but admitted to the bar and practicing-and how! Who's going to do our thinking for us? Regulations, stringent laws, miore vindictive punishments-cursed are a people that must be saved by legislation! And withal, we stand meekly by to see little children unhealthfully nourished in the slums, learning deceit and hypocrisy, disf covering petit larceny, graduating into robbery, burglarywtoo many finally taking postfgraduate courses in the various degrees of murder! In talking so much of higher education we can better afford to concern ourselves with the lower education in our midst. Cincinnati gives most generously to Art and the Classics and to the Community Chest. Much of these funds are better spent in cleaning out the slums, in providing homes and environments, in enforcing regulations that will insure places reasonably it for human habitation and development. No one will deny that the Community Chest and other Charities fill an emergent need-they are Christflike expressions and tremendously worthfwhile. Examination, however, exposes the fact that too many of the employees of some of our sofcalled hleading industries are finding it necessary to avail themselves of such charitable funds, for bare existence-30? in one striking instance! Then too, a utility repref senting a national monoply proposes to erect a new 32,000,000 building, as a further XV sp, A was l iw X F1 .. fx ,. 9 1. ft V i 1 i . XijkiggEv.X jj--ig ., J K - Q., 5,7 -T 7.3 l I K J ,yflqjf-vg,11,1,.?,i ,,y1.?p.:-:i?,T- --Z: 1 ,X l u ai J his .. ' ' -rafts Jfisviitlrs' U'i3-'Q L. ' l X5-Lfxw,-gf fx MFJQQLEQBS WEE N' f'?Q1 f?-E XT Y mf Q 'X 'A Q ii- f'4', 5 V 8 Q Ii i no E s t T realty venture, while smugly content to pay most of its thousands of girl employees the munincent sum total of S355 per month! Has anyone explained just how any human being can live in Cmcinnati on S5 5 per month? Anything demanding human hands and human nervous energy in the doing is deserving at least enough remunerf ation to provide a fair existence, up to and thru olcl age, according to what we like to call k'American Standardsfl When the newer generation, infested with far less hypocrisy, does in fact insist on removal of the slums condition in this onwardfforward City, and begins to approve publicly, establishments that pay a living wage for honest work, we will very happily have less need for charity and even less concern over local crime charts, graphs, statistics, etc, ad nauseam. YVe will then have gone well ahead toward achieving what the Lord in his wisdom intended, the right of the individual to live! --George A. Shives, 130 qfll'-NP T .U EJQ Nt r v4 nes-4'.Q X 6 , J V -v- f N Q50 get .gg gf.- yva XJ x r -sa e if an f , , jkf5Zfz?2ZH N X VW I I A. ax, AE ,se .. Q KJ H YP .1 Riff-ff my ,eRQ e2f1QeW1b e A , , , C9 ' I ef I VJU-I-IAM BECHTOT-D1 Pyesidem ERNEST FISCHER, Vice President 'E 'M' ,qu 65. STELLA VITZ Secfreravy EDXVIN HECK, fhqrasurer V Q A 0,2 ex,-gl '3'-FH .45 52 N4 ll 71' N -4 . ci 6 fff-+:L.f i,ii?f 4- ...4f ' M Vi' Y -. '- 9 5' , 'FL' ,g??ig,,,j' , X 0 E:-wi. ' X-XX U U .fiqgizf ' GEN U x GKFX ' Q' 2 Q' fg QQ L, ,, ,Q W Q J tlkm Ewmiff' QD .B 2453! 4 Q, 6 'z , ark!!-acl xtw . Class of 1931 Flora Atzenhofer Wm. P. Bechtold Howard Behle Chas. Billings E. G. Brennsen Granville Brooks James Brite Floyd Butler Lloyd Byrne Stanley Christophel A. T. Clark, Jr. Wm. Collins I Taylor Conover David Corbett Arthur Do-wney Wm. Dunn Marie Falk Arthur Figenbaum Ernest V. Fischer Ervin Forrester Chas. Furber Al Goeke O. W. Halhisch Folson Hayward Edwin T. Heck Thos. Hirschfeld Francis Huber Aaron Wiesen Leonard Jones Chas. Kimmel Lawrence Knollman Jos. Lancett Donald Liebman Chas. S. Miller Wm. Mullen Leonard Murdock H. E. O'Neal Murray Paddack Ray Parson John Phelan Francis Piates Eloise Reed Wm. Reed Jos. Rolf Chas. Roth Roland Sardieck G. J. Schaefer LeRoy Sendellnach Wm. E. Smith Grace Spiegel B. C. Sullivan Ethel Tingley Stella Vitz Bernie Waddles Bernard West N wx f-N P X . 'A ' 2'--f Xa-ff X s :A - e ' ff-f 1 fr -C' '- V Q. was bu-- xg are fa K7 iw 0 V C . . fi:-igin.?'-73 r TQ' U 15-,TP 'Lf XQsQJ,fQjQf L' J.f Kaiig'i'f' -5ig2'i2 e1fLi lx? K e6f?QY - K Za! t or-' Xfmifl T116 P11'CSl'l1'I12l1'1 C1388 HE convocation of all the law students, at the beginning of the school year of 192708, brought into being that group of enterprising and ambitious young men and women academically labeled as the Freshmen. To them, this assembly, with the inspirational address given by the Hon. james G. Stewart, was an inaugural dispensation. To some of the Freshmen, at least, the acquisition and satisfaction of pref-legal requirements had been a struggle. The anxiety over the acceptance by and registraf tion with the Clerk of the Ohio Supreme Court, of their education endeavors precef dent to the study of law, was another stride to 'be carefully made before the actual pursuit of the study could begin with avail. Early in the school year, the Freshman class was organized with the following members as its oflicers: President, Wm. J. Bechtoldg Vice President, Ernest Fischer, Secretary, Miss Stella Vitzg and Treasurer, Edwin Heck. Freshmen members of the student council of the law school, elected by the class were Chas. Miller and Murray Paddock. The Hrst year students began the tour on the roadway winding through and over four mountains of legal exploration. Their courageous hope was that the road over the first mountain would be safely traveled and ascended, though fully aware cf the many lurking crevices and rocky surfaces that would impede their course, still render' ing it, however, traversable and of safe passage, The beacon guides, comprising the Freshman faculty, rendered their instruction competent and illustrious. With the willing assistanceiand direction of the faculty, the way was constantly illuminated. The journey, even for the Hrst month or so, readily quickened the mental acumen of these legal explorers so that a nucleus in the law began its accretion as the climbing progressed. Throughout the school year, the brave Freshmen continued their plodding upward in study and hope, so that, by the end of the year, the first mountain would be surmounted. Also, that they could worthily be acclaimed as conquerors, if not embryonic lawyers. ln addition to applying themselves to the curriculum studies, the class published several editions of The Frosh Legal Eye, the Freshman class paper. Many legal propositions, bits of humor and wit, furnished through the versatility of the editorial staff, afforded an instructive and entertaining collateral interest to the year's work. Aaron Weisan was EditorfinfChief of the class paper. In the fore part of the school year, the Sophomore class honored the nrst year class in having the ambitions, yet cautious and timorous, Freshman as its guests at the I I Q f -.- - ggi 1 53, Qt Fi 3 .Xi 2 P--QT4s:ees sig , ' 4 Yue,-,fff 'XS-c ' J' . ,F iilf ' ' PQ 1' x .g? 'v EIMS X XXX, ft .94 if X A A5 es? asf Qafryfs :ui .gi g if fl K -.fr I W xg, g I 'pi J5vC4X?K i, If annual FreshmanfSophomore banquet. Here, every Freshman sensed keenly the cooperative and genial spirit of the second year class, This element has been demon' strated throughout the year as a living ingredient of, not only the Sophomores, but the entire student body of the law school. At the annual All Law Banquet, held at the new Chamber of Commerce Buildf ing, on March 19, 1928, a further impetus for diligent study and striving for a cherished goal in the law, was given the Freshmen. The notable speakers there inspired and further encouraged the humble Freshmen, firing them with new and greater zeal for even more serious application of themselves to the unusual opportunf ities offered by the law school. For the Freshmen, the first year of the study of law was, in a sense, one of gruesome and laborious toil, but with this labor and effort, the study was one of most intrinsic and fascinating interest. The first year class, members having climbed the first mountainous obstacle in their pathway, believe that their interest in and knowledge of the law will mount and accrete as time and study carries them over the fourth mountain. After that, the shadows of anxiety and uncertainty will be pierced and broken by the radiating beams. issuing from the rising sun, as the early dawn brightens on the horizon of Life, with a new day of Success and Service. -Granville Brooks WW! '.. - 1 sa nsiflxiaii-ff ,A w L QW' Q lr M TQWJQD ki:T'i'lD Jrfflszl., ' ii 'Q,:ff L QAQQLTT Ui'5J2 a .9 ' X11 'F-ay? . . fns fx, e. xr' mmm so A ' 1. 945 If I could ask of life, faind have it give to me A glorious gift .... 'Twould be to live it gloriously and unafraid, On spacious heights .... To blend each deed and thought into a shining pattern, A song of oy .... Breathing a warrior's song of hopeful victory, A gallant knight .... Q, it- T S4 lSil is 7 im: A A is Q be - my X g ix ' 2 il e 319 5: 4 ivy ' 5 X x Q ff? lg Afmiwzyfs . xiii? 'ii Student Council E W Stlckley 28 Arthur Daly 729 Foster Brate 29 Earl Stine, President '28 Q6 v. .a XEf 4X L s iyr ews- ln .E- lm Q , 1 , -, ' s s .45 , rf , Ra fi 'Q 0 - 5 ' A Q. FD Gurden Wilson '3 0- Frank F. Wessel '30 Murray Paddack '31 Charles Miller '3 1 F-K! r 5 2 , ,Q-X52 X 5593 WNELE gi P65 !?'wW The Student Council HE efforts of The Student Council of The Cincinnati Y. M. C. A. Night Law School culminated in The AllfLavv School Dinner which was successfully held at The Chamber of Commerce. The key note of both the aforesaid Dinner and the aforemenf tioned efforts was School Spirit. As a result said Spirit while perhaps not quite 120 proof, is not altogether quiescent, and the mutual respect ancl cooperation by and between instructors and students seem-s to be at a more healthy stage than at any time within the observation of the writer, the present Student Council to the contrary notwithstanding. A serious effort was made to establish a school paper, but the seed sown, seems to have fallen upon barren ground and must be left to the careful husbandry of posterity. It is felt by the retiring Council that it has in some measure aided constructively both the present and future of our School. -Foster Bvate '29 1 tl e s , ck .. Q 1- gifs if f fpX:--Yi1::g-3 J I I - S QT:-ij? . 1 to 2-Fei? QT23 245' ' fffi JI Hvsiffri fiisflu LP J J X TSlL'X4fZ uf ws- 4 -nf'-.+v1 .f:-. 5 ' I. 2113 I ' ., ,. gv, 4,2 as 1.'7?iE'. .X 1 '42 . MN N - ' ., ,mf - f,.1 ,wk e - ' ' .x 2-ff -I ll v f . iv: , f 5 il! - V ggfmrfv - 7-. ww I L -' 2. -- wg ' ' I. 'Kar Wm'T,Q'7f , gy A 0 he! , , ,f-, 2 , . , . f V 4 111 wfs. ' f ,.' f ' ' 1 -ffl - ' 1 ' jw ' 4. ..,,.,,.M,,14f .. , , ,. , , .. -:::-qw 4 .44121 hw! 'il , , - 1 -' sz ' -'4-' - .fr ' .f5'1,o Q 4 f 51 I ' ,A V - A f .- 4 ' 1 fx A X ,yfdf . ,,,, W ,.,,,,,1 . ,,,l V x fr F. .X 5 wa: - x 5 ,,,1. 141- QS, arf ff ,. ing g- -W A 2:15, ,. wvvmf. 11. T.: N L. x - 2-fc. Q' : 1 Q -' - ' . A 1 4 a 55x x V ' Q A X 'FXR J 'Y - 1 X Q . Qing. ,m,., ,mi .QM-ewz 4 ex My Q- , 1 T new i t of 28 91.4 ' TXJTKW T116 Annual LQW SCIIOOI Dinnef By Arthur Daly '29 HE annual All Law School Dinner for the year 1928, was, without doubt, the most successful undertaking of the present Student Council. Vvlhile this event is always pleasant, it was made much more so this year by reason of the purpose for which it was given. In choosing a speaker for the occasion, the Student Council struck upon a capital idea. Instead of selecting some celebrated barrister from foreign parts, the Council chose our own Judge Fred L. Hoffman- celebrated and beloved, right here at home. Judge Hoffman began to teach at the Y. M. C. A. Night Law School in the early years of its existence and has been the most faithful member of the faculty for more than thirty years. To honor our benefactor and to show our appreciation for all that he has done for the school and all of its students during these thirty odd years, was the real purpose of the evening. The entire faculty of the school and more than two hundred m.embers of the student body assembled in the beautiful dining room of the new Chamber of Com' merce building. The entire hall was appropriately decorated for the occasion. At eight o'clock the gavel of the toastmaster, Mr. james C. Stewart, seated the gathering and the fun began. The dinner and service left nothing to be desired. After the tables were cleared and the Havannas were properly aglow, the toastmaster, in his usual interesting manner, introduced John D. Sage, Chairman of the Committee of Management of the Cincinnati Y Schools and Vice President of the Y. M. C. A. who spoke for the School. Next came judge E. Mills, who's subject was, NonfProfessional Reflections. Then we heard from our Dean, Mr. Gilbert Bettman, who gave a history and prospectus of our school. judge Hoffman was then called upon to tell us all about The Chief Justice System. Kata., - - H '4 - ' t ' - ST- l Dean Bettman then presented judge Hoffman with a fine set of golf sticks, the gift of the members of the faculty. The sticks are to be used by the judge when, if ever, he grows old. Judge Hoffman thanked his colleagues for their thoughtfullness and assured all of us that we would have his continued support. 45 W .. . - 1--3 tfr'Tf4i-asf 1 w if , ' fflvin LV K 5' j,,,.fff e .rJf'C3S1, :17 U51-115 its if ,N S CNLZT LL 44, mf -1:45 . ' i 25 P 'XTTF SEJ B A T116 Pl1'CS1'11'1'12l1'1 and ASOPl'1OI1101'C iBa1'1q1,lCf HERE is a reason for everything, quoth the sage. It follows then that there must be a reason for the FreshnranfSophomore Banquet. So we shall try to set forth a reason or perhaps several reasons, why the Sophof more fHe, of wisdomj should lower his dignity to hob knob for a few hours with those who know so little and in their unsophisticated state, think that the mere fact that they have been enrolled as seekers of that logic taught by the inimitable Black' stone, entitled them to all the privileges of fraternalism. Fast workers, these Freshmen, and so it remains for us of greater knowledge- Sophomores-to uphold the dignity of our class and prove to the Frosh that there is not alone a reason for everything, but likewise, a place for everyone. Therefore-The FreshmanfSophomore Banquet- This time honored and annual event took place on Monday evening, November 17, 1927, at the Y. M. C. A. The hour has struck-Seated around the festive board are the Freshmen with a stalwart and dignified Sophomore placed at points of vantage to help aid and assist the lower classmen. After first provmg our superiority in the art of selecting a menu that would tickle the palate of a King, there arose at the head of the table one Mr. George Kattelman, our class president, who, acting as Toastmaster, proved again and again by his clever remarks and witty introductions that Sophomores could do things. George Klein, the 'Lsilver tonguedf' he who might have been a protege of the famous Williams Jennings-if fate had not stepped in-gave the address of XVelcoine We all agreed it would have done honor to Queen Marie. Then again, to prove our further superiority, and show that we can and do mingle with the elite, the Honorable Judge Fred L. Hoffman, the Honorable judge Thomas Morrow, Mr. Bert Long and Mr, Charles Stephens were presented and each in turn, without question, impressed the Frosh that upper classmen are to be respected. In the foregoing account of the 19274928 FreshmenfSop-homore Banquet, we feel that we have set out several good reasons for this annual event, but-behind it all, is a great principle, Truth-Honor-Justice. This great profession Law which if properly interpreted There is no greater, must go on and on. We, as Sophomores, realize that we go on and in a few years enter the several avenues of our endeavor, others must carry on-others must uphold the dignity and sanctity of our great calling, so at this annual FreshmanfSophomore Banquet of l92'7f 1928, we hoped to inspire him who is Freshman of today and will be the Sophomore of tomorrow. -Wilbur Apking TX?-413 :psf 7 ZF -:SK 'T 47 J Q 51592 miners ex ij W2 Xf TX xestf 2-'RG 213 j A Iota ambda Pi7s ssay Contest HE essay printed below is the winner of the Iota Lambda Pi Fraternity's annual prize legal essay contest. It is the practice of the fraternity to award a prize each year for the best essay submitted by a student of the Law School, not a member of the fraternity, on a legal or quasiflegal subject. The essays were judged this year by three members of the faculty, Mr. Herbert Shaffer, Mr. Henry B. Street and Mr. Charles Stephens, Jr., and three laymen. The winner was Mr. A. Howard William-s, a member of the class of 1950. ' LAW PLUS LOGIC By A. HOWARD WILLIAMS '30 'LCessante 'ratione legis dessat ipsa lex, .i Reasons is the soul of the law, and when the 'reason ceases so does the law itself. -Legal Maxim. INTRODUCTION T Is it true that the modern apprehension of intellectual reasoning in law enforce' ment has been mired and swamped by kraken monsters in the form of corrupt practices? Is it true that present legislatures have been pressing their quota with persons of questionable reputation and character? What do these signs, if answered in the affirmative, imply? Each reader can answer from his own deductions and draw from such some form of remedy either, in a general way, or, in an expressed and formulated outline. Newspapers, magazines and other current literature are now in complexing discussion over situations arising from the same germ that has prompted me in making such inquiries as are sampled here. The Lord Chief Justice of England in a recent address before the American Bar Association said: 'kThe administration of justice, as l am sure you do not need to be reminded, is of greater importance to the people than anything else. And it is conf fidence in the administration of justice which beyond anything else makes a people contented and happy. In the administration of justice we must follow the law. Those who make our laws represent the populace and are morally bound to abide by their needs. Law is generally accepted to mean a system of rules established by legislative authority to enforce justice. The laws that we have been led to recognize involve the rules for order assembled by the customs of a growing society. ff D we V 'Q X -. 'f.w?Ts:v1' w ,427 -- g w Mk . ,, f-qi, Y ' A ? x 1 Nx1..g!T?'iT- -- T x - 'i fi V 'X r- 1. MT PTX'Q7iff-laffjgfli e '53 Veil' id! SX ,Ci 44: W .V Q -1 if' -A-k , 1 f - 1 N4 t 7,1 . r ' 1-g -Y' ,.i.fffj,,X-4.:1Z:i,,,5:?- -in-:Ai .xl ILB K flex ,x.,,,.,5..c ,WX V VJ, ,. 4, ia. 7,7 fjrpj ff,,1. C.f'?7Sf L kj ' ill ,LJ xxx fj Y, ,eff U 'lj -Qsgje-1,1 sf Qjfx, dx Z, Xlifxr? - . 6, 5 . ,-X Q28 . -V i Q- D . Q Q an X-.. e As the title of this discourse involves the implication of another phase known as logic, it is deserving of consideration in introduction. Logic is the source in creating the principle upon which to base the foundation of legal jurisprudence. To dig at the firmness of the foundation dislodges the law and all that is built thereon tumbles in a ruinous heap of destruction. A mere shoot or sprout arising at the roof of a plant, sucks away the life of the plant, and at the same time destroys itself. So the law sprouts from the fertility of logic and grows into beauty and justice, then the sucker of corruption catches hold and until it is plucked, it takes away the full strength of proper administration. This consideration leads us to separate discussion of the subjects involved and their combined applications so that one may vizualize the importance and dependence of the two factors, law and logic. I Law is benejicience acting by rule.-Burke. The most important basis of modern civilization is law. Authorities tell us that law is a science of reasoning involving rules of conduct which are formally recognized by a supreme authority. Law termed in this sense includes these well known forms, as an edict, decree, rescript, order, ordinance, statute, etc. We have traced thus far some of the path of our basiclearning guided, perhaps, by a somewhat different arf rangement and in a more crude form. To the average layman, law is usually accepted without definition and without thought as to its importance upon present living conditions. In noting the social and scientific development of other countries one can easily recognize a state of lack co-mf pared to our own domestic progress. Without hesitation it may be said that the great American freedom is afforded by the Constitution which stands as the strong foundaf tion of our supremacy. Datmg back to 1787 when the wise men of this young nation saw the need of a stronger government, a constitutional convention was called in Independence Hall, Philadelphia. Men who were instrumental in gaining our freedom met there, among whom were Franklin, Hamilton, Madison and Washington, the latter being the most trusted man in all America. Washington made a noble speech in which he said, If, to please the people, we offer what we ourselves disapprove, how can we afterward defend our work? Let us raise a standard to which the wise and honest can repair, the event is in the hand of God. Through the trials and difficulties that were weathered, the great instrument of freedom was drawn up. Today, with a number of amendments, this document stands foremost in reverence and respect of all true and loyal lawyers and judges serving in the name of justice. The laws of this people have been guided thereby and the highest judiciary in the land is the supreme court of interpretation. This constituf X7 '- es- ' fi fl, XF l k as T QT Pi 2 li 0 X712 ' 1 f x I-. - . a . t ff XJ QYI1 -.195 e er me 5 I tt i I 1- tional government has received comment by a late noted American jurist which should be of importance to the student of law, spoken as follows: -American scholars look out on the world from a height-that on which their education has placed them. They observe that the tendencies of modern political thought in most countries are towards greater and greater centralization of power in the hands of one man or a few men, subject to checks by the people, either by direct vote or through their representatives. The educated man is especially liable to be affected by the current of worldfpolitics. He naturally wishes his own country to be in line with the advance elsewhere of political thought. I' do not think he al' ways appreciates how the difference in history and conditions between the United States and Europe renders impossible here, under our constitutional system, much that is possible there. This point of view is of immense importance, since it shows that the student should consider the varied distinctions and contrasting elements of the several govern-ments of the world. Courts and laws of all nations are interestmg in their different functionings and their various means of meting justice. The famous judicial combination of this age is one known as the Permanent Court of International justice. With no intentions of stirring up political debate upon something that our own country has not seen fit to enter into, but merely to show how farfreaching is the extent of the hand of law and justice, a somewhat brief discussion will follow upon the court that has heretofore been mentioned. The policy that the United States has taken in the matter of the Pernian-ent Court of International justice has been not to negotiate but to legislate, but it seems that treaties cannot b-e legislated and because of the refusal of the Powers involved, to accept certain reservations, we have not entered. The Court of International Justice is empowered to decide unsettled portions or unsatisfactorily interpreted provisions of various peace treaties and under the mandates. The court sits at hearings of disputes arising over the international regime of maritime ports and of railways and various other vital states of controversy. One can easily see the vast importance connected with the functions of this court and how reasonable law must be applied to serve as a means of prof tection to many nations. Q This continual growth of rules upon which man has founded his judicial stage has evolved from the earliest period when man reasoned only within his primitive bounds. When the safety of his fellow men was to be ascertained, he planned the rules that were to weigh their acts. Through the long hall of legal fame are the busts of Hammurabi, Justinian, Williani the Conqueror, Edward the Confessor and well can we add some of the early judges who sat on the benches of England. These men have established precedents of worth that may be found upon the pages of modern legal records. The whole body of rules of law are summed up by deduction to mean the provisions for the control or regulation of society, brought about by the existence of reason to conform with the social requisites of the time. 'Q TEX Wa, 54525: f '- Q , fe . I fi JL? tm X ,Ez 'fy-ig-'ffiggigl ..ij,.,'e'. k . ,,l., V ,,,.f'l l ' , ' I fly-112-17.111 o Ki GXQ7-f Qidiix Ellilz ., i45 a -621, Jifnfs X JF -9 'sifffo 'ff 9 W G 1 F x f ' k,2 Q 1:72 X! f.b' 3 1 II Logica est afrs ratiocinandi, ut discematur verum et falso. Logic is the art of reasoning, to the end that truth may be discerned from falsity -Aristotle Two thousand five hundred and fifty years before Christ, an Egyptian book was written called, k'The Precepts of PtahfHotep.', This is probably the oldest book in the world. The book shows by its lines that the wisdom of man had developed considerably. We think of Solomon as being the wise man of ancient times, but the space of years between him and PtahfHotep is greater than that between Solomon and ourselves. This wonderful specimen written in such a period of antiquity reveals a clear sense of reasoning ability. In The Cutline of Literature edited by John Drinkwater, the following extract is taken from Mr. Cunn's translation: If thou be an emissary sent from one noble to another, be exact after the manner of him that sent thee, give his message even as he hath said it. Beware of making enmity by thy words, setting one noble against the other by perverting truth. Cverstep it not, neither repeat that which any man, be he prince or peasant, saith in opening the heart, it is abhorrent to the soul. By this we see that logic was put into use at an exceedingly early period. We can trace the wisdom and reasoning of men like the great Chinese philosopher, Confucius. The Greeks, the Romans and the Hebrews all added their bit to the promotion of truthful discernment. The iirst five 'books of the Bible which are inscribed The Lawn are specific evidence of a growing practice of discrimination. While these Jewish writings are filled with history and religious convictions the development of th-e propensities of thought are apparent. Men, by the application of reason have unearthed rules for the guidance of their behavior. The great problem encountered by society is the discrimination between right and wrong. There are certain principles upon which man may follow if he is to judge freely the issues that confront him and his associates. Law is presumably correct and logic is the solution of the elements that go to make it into a concrete factor. Thus we arrive at the principle that obedience to law is liberty. If to draw a fine hair line distinction our consideration will fall upon no truer words than those of an unknown author quoted as follows: It is because men are prone to be partial towards those they love, unjust towards those they hate, servile towards those above them, arrogant towards those below them, and either harsh or overfindulgent to those in poverty or distress, that it is diiiicult to find anyone capable of exercising a sound judgment with respect to the qualities of others. fig? WI j T fi: as ,img K K Tix if Bl?-. T 5' - ABT' X X K7 it V gr My agkpfss g se ft-Q 73 gig? XXXW A' VX53,f,-Ural UTISNGLEA gl. s L 28 Q, - 1 ? tg-25:9 Extracts given by authorities herein are to prove that the merits of logic, known otherwise as correct reasoning, are absolutely essential in establishing good law. The degree of modern learning can only be based upon right apprehension. The intel' ligence exhibited by ancient philosophers, writers and lawmakers should be but one iota if we were to measure by the advance of years a comparison to present day conf tributors. However, advancement has been so diversified that any statement made in this respect would be unfounded unless one were acquainted within a large scope with all subjects relating thereto. By such diversity the logician today as well as yesterday has never reached the ultimate line of problems presented for his determination. The law continually encounters new barriers. When law comes in contact with a new problem logic servesiin its solution. Logic is the backbone of the law. HI One of the early rules governing human conduct provides that you must 'LSO use your own that you shall not injure another's. What, then, have the principles of law and logic proved? They have probably done more to advance society than any other means could possibly have done. Law has developed gradually. Rebuilt portions that have been outgrown by time serve as steps upon which a surer footing can be acquired. The incomparable commentator, Sir William Blackstone expanded the elements of legal factors to a practical form. In 2 Bl. Com., 44, we read: In the course of our observations nu this and may other parts of the present book, we may have occasion to search p-retty highly into the antiquities of our English jurisprudence, yet surely no industrious student will imagine his time misemployed when he is led to consider that the obselete doctrines of our laws are frequently the foundation upon which what remains is erected, and that it is impracticable to comprehend many of the rules of the modern law in a scholarlike, scientinc manner, without having recourse to the ancient. The logic and law of yore is the strength of logic and law in the present. The brutum fulmen of corruption and other transgressions cannot hold against the su' premacy of truth, the keyword of logic. Invariably, when the false blows of these fallacies register upon public record they kill themselves because they are not logical. I have heard quoted before: The wisdom of a serpent is to hide itself. Law that is not based upon correct reasoning is continually assailed and sooner or later exposed, though it stay for innumerable years. Truth is mighty, and it will prevail fmagna est veritos, et prevalebitj and that is reason in its state of perfection. Following the tendencies of modern jurists for the simplification and unifornrityof law we can only hope for a bright future in our coming professional duties. It is for us to raise the standard of legal ethics and enslave ourselves to the all powered master, logic. The reputation of a nation is at 'ji 42 xx- . :fr-7-:A wr W- ,: . TH,-1. 1-W T- , '.-N . V QQ J B . r ,fa , B7 is ii' .,f,:?e1+-i ss-iiefss-fe??5.l.NfiJfM fw A ,ig L3 C- f iff , '!f,.4-L, cy..q 5 ffirnih BX x WX . -.:.,.--- , W ---f - N- fl , 2 X ' fa-QQ.. ' 1 Cf' 'Iij, Qd,,..i ' C' H1625 si-'fe-aff ik:-6 if Xe-:ef'CfggxEp5wswfs.Yti?2T stake as well as its progress in every phase of existence. The legal profession controls the balance of justice. Character is the moulding feature of the law as a whole. The men behind the wheel, the minds that control the works should be free and apprehensive. The lawyer must love the things that are beneficial to the service of mankind, he should act from purely honest motives if he is to direct the machine of the law. From these standards have the logical foundations of the rules of the universe given rise to the force and power of law. I The character of the student of law may be developed along correct lines. It is never too late to take new views toward the ever increasing needs of our communities and prepare ourselves to meet these needs and defend the rights of the people about us. The lawyer is looked upon as an authority in his neighborhood, he is the one called on to perform civic duties and how can he do these things conscientiously if he has not the backing of a reputable character? Character is an essential to reasoning i ability because it is of sound personal thought that its strength takes root. Every wrong thought can be guarded against. Since authorities are impressing upon students of law that character is essential to a thrivmg legal profession and since character is seated in logic and law plus logic are essential to society we deduct there' fore, that these elements are the natural tendencies toward universal freedom. Through the accession of these attributes the elements of unadulterated legal guidance is assured. It is logic that brings liberty, such liberty being the manifestation of truth, replacing corruption with the reality of a concrete foundation of law and reason. Correct governing gives prudence and energy spreading peace and power beyond the scope of its own bounds. If principle were followed there would be no reason for the nation to point to any particular community as a horrible example of the miscarriage of justice. The nation itself would not be infected with the disease of such legal disorder if reasoning were followed logically. If American juries are composed of persons representing less than the average ability for straight thinking and sterness of conviction it is time to remedy them. Cur own logic tells us that if such is the case, there should be a national reform in the jury ' system. The things that seemingly dismantle the logic in law cannot hold, for the grasp of the men of character within the profession will not permit it. With a sense of safety and protection surrounding the people of this nation only cheerful, optimistic and harmonious attainments can be the product. Let us therefore, use the rightful abilities in our legal applications as students and lawyers to the end that the laws be free from contamination and that we prepare ourselves in character and knowledge to carry on the great task of a great nation. tfiffzfiiff , -agp Zlxmhx 1?fr1's,Qfs X fi ff shark M f lit ZR? K' mira N - A? T '5-at V C2 It if ,f'f' X- 'VZXTTSD' A F 1 EZ..-r2fA.x JMTYTIQNGIE b j-2-ii7Q Q 2 , J , - XM' fx! 8 v E-dj x 52? J fgf BF iE J A sv-- ff-QE? Ci! ,Siva LXZXJ Founded Gilbert Bettman Leslie W. Cors ,.,.. Gordon H. Scherer, .. Albert Keeler ..,,. Albert Fosco ....... Iota Lambda Pi ALPHA CHAPTER 1922. Colors: Red, Vv'hite and Gold Mfgmbers iri Faculty judge Frederick L. Hoffman O jjricerrs Charles H. Elston Lord High justice Associate Lord High justice Lord High Chancellor Lord High Chamberlain of the Exchequer Active Members Wilbur Apking Gordon H. Arey Cdis Bertelsman William Boettger Hiram Bolsinger Granville Brooks Theodore Bumiller Leslie W. Cors Albert Eosco Stanley Erovve Albert Grapes Cyrus Holbrook Gurden Wilson Active Alumni Stanley Allen f G. O. Bane ' Frank T. Bartlett Erwin Brainlage Ray Dollenmeyer William S. Edgmon Ralph Z. Emig Charles M. Evans Palmer G. Graves Harold N. Huber Elmer E. Hunsicker William C. Kavel George Kattleman Albert Keeler Carl Reusch Richard Rust Gordon H. Scherer William Selva William Seebohm M. M. Sigler Gilbert Shaver George Shives James Unger Walter Wagner Charles Meyers, Jr. Eugene S. Mittendorf Ernest R. Mitchell William Ransom E. R. Reiners Ervvin Schuessler George Shafer David Stevenson Daronne Tate William M. Vance Harry Vandermark, .Ir Cassius A. Vearil George F. Zachritz, jr. 5 l cf Ez X '51 is 4: eo N 0 W I M gEX,?,, V H.jjjD's ff JW 1 w::d'1Tf J, at A if f-X bd QL'0 .tilwflrsa ' 9517 .fL75 1b '17 If 67' xl JI if .J xii! w If -- '-XJ, fa- 'ffv'-1-4Jfy'xh I , ,f f f' ,f ff 'Y f ' 'liffflfcf if-'K Uxdzi ,gil 25 I M S7545 fCU1,1:frj X fi,'f'4ffW fw, N- .- RN 6 - . N r, ' L2 Q x .f-QQ i i7f9 HRX.. ff' ' V ff 'Mu Eb , l'1 QvXgQ E 1 , X M lg SvkJ Q, aw HWY-.1 ,LQFQTX 1 ff' U ,gf-xg 1343, lv 32' fl 5g-E A ,lzg Y F5716 N X 9 , rjojgi ijirixiaff If ,cixiffxjikfli 6 L3 ' S 37 O -QS 2 . Q 5 l if CJ f PESVQE-' Kappa Xi Delta Officers Stanley A. Silversteen ........ ,... . ..Lorcl Chancellor Paul J. Mueller .......... ,..... V ice Chancellor Paul H. Kyrlach ........... ....., M aster of the Exchequer William H. Warnke., Master of the Rolls Vincent Reuscher ....... ....4.... ....... S c ribe Louis R. Schear ..... ..... R ieve Nfembers Frank W. Bowen Charles A. Boyd Theo. Copeland Arthur J. Daly Elmer N. Davidson John Davis Richard Flannery Stuart Fletcher Sol Goodman Saul M. Greenberg Clifford H. G-rischy Elmer C. Hill Earl R. King Bernard J. Klatch Abraham Lipp Honorary Members Lester A. Jaffee Jas. L. Magrish Maxwell Lyons Orin McElfresh Conrad Magrish Russell Mayer John Phelan Francis Piates Fred J. Schatzman Ralph F. Schubert William F. Schubert Emil E. Shafer Leonard H. Shallat Lehman R. Trotman Francis H. Willis Sol Wolfson Melvin Wuest Jas. G. Stewart john P. Strother 'A ,xt liz, X1 X X s P Q., no , U. if ff .ir wx X ix X - .Y - I 2' 4' :J V f- -- -ff-Tgigg yfz 5 W JCE XJ Qhkjbimiis J' 1 f .V -L, -Ly----.g-.bgiff -13 5- ,. .D L-in 9 4 .S ' -Lf? XX 7-'ikjla-Q2 fATFfgNGL7X 'gif X -?f' x 2117 Zi 25 f .ff T5'if! Xvf? ,xSiDE211fyi. - X Q 5 3 J 1 1 JK QD f .kkk ff. ' 'gl I? ZS G.- :Z ll TRIANGLE . 9-Ai, g2 Cl gl Y f, - Y-- -- - ' f i 1 XY ' 'ance ' G 19 ae L, , '-7 - -9 x a , v 2g - - r vw' .Q 'Wh l Founded 1925. Color: Green Officers Ruhy Metcalf ............ ......... ,.,.. . ,..,,. P 1 esident Katherine A. Stahley .,.,... ........ V ice President A Judith Yungblut ......,,. .,,....... S ecretcury Myrtle Hollman .......... .....,. T feas1,:'r'c1' Nfemlvevfs I Flora Gtzenhofer Grace Spiegel Eloise Reed Stella Vitz Marie Falk Ethel Tingley Florence Trauer Myrtle Hollrnan Helen Hinernan Ruby Metcalf Ruth Niederlehner Helen Heuher Irene Unger Goldie Sigman Anna M. Graziani Katherine A. Stahley Judith Yunghlut Gladys Solar Irene Coleman Mary Bowman Sarah Ggden Anna Kiel Q-.-- . - X . - QW. .,-A . ,SS Q.. A EBQ -'fr' IGQ. Ze if ti A - ,J V f-'13f ?i!j ff-SLLLQQ 53,12 :wmv-1GLEf'ix in -V' 1 ,:-if-vvivngi-L-x LTL -.Tv-,.4..i. I' 3 ' , y N XX 'S iikfixtv f'--, , Cf ljlffx Q55 If xlgn Q' --1-ff-Qffav' T1 X J C, Lf gj'w..L- XJ xM1,.fxx3 My kb ff X 45 vf I N, 6Jij1Cj5-gif N X-gy ,J-3 N tx f F D ff Q -fxfyevaffwx. Q ,. , , , w 1- M, mgxgq sv ,ff -X HX., -t:J,f4-:Nix ff J . ,. - ,f1--f.-fff'-,f':- ' K. , , 1 . M! la Udilivxj Jxj Xi:43: L1! f:x:grNQf!2g 7 Q'7F23QQ,Qi:iX'73f?Zf xxgf' ,ly J5 57:6 E163 xr-' ' XWSUSJ 9 T116 OTJCT of Curia By Oclis Befrtelsmzm '29 HE Order of Curia is an honorary legal Fraternity of the Cincinnati Y. M. C. A. Night Law School and is composed of six members of the Senior Class and six members of the Junior Class. The credit for the formation of this Fraternity must be given to Mr. Albert Savoy of the class of 1927. Mr. Savoy with the assistance of the Faculty organized the Fraternity and drafted the laws governing its membership. As explained above, the total active membership is limited to twelve members, so that each year with the passing of the six Senior Class members, six members must be added from the incoming Junior Class. For this purpose the Executive office of the Law School selects the names of the fifteen students attaining the highest scholastic standing for their Freshman and Sophomore years. These names are sub' mitted to the members of the Faculty who select from them the names of ten students, giving attention to scholastic attainments, as well as to the probable future success at the bar, of the students selected. The final determination of which of the ten students selected by the Faculty shall become members of the Order of Curia, rests with the six Senior Class members. It is understood that the general character of the student, both as to ability and personality, is the governing motive in the final determination as to the selection to be made. The offices of the Order of Curia are those of Praetor, Lictor, Scriba, Quaester and Aedile, the present incumbents of the offices being Gilbert Shaver, Albert Keeler, Gordon Scherer, Sol Goodman and Gordon Arey, respectively. Active Members Seniors juniors Wm. F. Seebohm Sol Goodman Bennett R. Knight Gordon C. Arey Stanley Silversteen Albert J. Keeler Stewart Fletcher Richard Rust George C. Heath Gordon H. Scherer Gilbert J. Shaver Odis W. Bertelsman 'E - , M Ks P - . GTX rec? f,eD.ffx 4 -is fi . . ,x 1 we fuss., r. X. sc x . -Vest .,,,fFF- -f we - Ash Adu V-Q4-ij-11-.-sie'S . 1 - --'rt tif' ' Xt3'??i., Ziff-.'l1 ,xi 19T ,:f cf up 1 Xxiiiii . LM xiii' 1 1 'ZA ' ' ,I'--F TY , ' - fig .1 - lk R -Zig A U 5. ' rin 43 is p- on .ff f...,, - af 41MB S-J --at ' l9:.QVe??i? 25 J XM Krfxdi Q ifxfxj Sol Goodman Lester Gottlieb Louis R. Schear Harry Feldman Abraham Goldberg Joseph Schwartz x -'.:.'X FAQ FR? 5 Page Gimmel SPIRIT of mysticism prevailed throughout the classroom when secret insignias dispatched in all directions indicated a conscription of chosen ones for a new organization. The clouds of curiousness were abated by a Northeaster, which blew away all tokens and indications from the horizon. The purpose, secrecy, was subserved. Three years have elapsed since all these doings. The atmosf phere has been cleared of all gossip and rumor. However, the group formulated at that time into a corporate entity is constantly nearing the goal. At present, with threeffourths of its time, grant' ed by character, consumed, it is at the peak of a glorious success, never having been confronted with an obstacle, great speed was attained, and a wide latitude covered. At the iirst meeting an unwritten constitution and byflaws were duly adopted. The skull and crossfbones agreeing upon the fundamental and basic foundation as cofoperation. That rule being stringent and without exceptions. Throughout the first year weekly meetings were held on Sun' day afternoons and a preconceived and well planned systematical method of procedure was uniformly followed. The plan evolved may be simply described as follows: the number of members was equal to the number of subjects covered in the freshman class. Each member was to read and brief the following week's assignf ment in the topic assigned to him. Consequently, and due to the unity and cooperation, the entire week's assignments were covered. -Sol Goodman QS, gauge, ,f - Ng - J A, fi. no gg ,s .I W- 1 La fx ta U ls-'Mb .1 ,ff U J-ss -,U dec, in SJVXNLZ -Q 55,55 TIEISXNGLE agzfp ' A LT 3 T T I f .sf saw s CHICHJQT Assembly. Some mean ole Profs give assignments. Opening night. The Schoolls slogan: 'Tm sorry, but I haven't that onefl T collects for th-e heathen. Gee I wish I were a heathen, I vvouldn't have a care, Gee I wish I were a heathen, People giving for me everywhere! The sophs Welcome the freshmen at a banquet. Thanksgiving holidays. Seniors and Juniors frolic at the Annual Seniorfjunior Banquet. . Christmas Vacation. We all Wish each other a Merry Christmas! School refopens. These holidays! No one is prepared. We all enjoy the All Law Dinner at the Chamber of Com' merce. For two weeks the profs examine us and are astonished at how little they have taught us! Even the judges dance at our All Law Dance at the Waliiut Hills Masonic Temple. Commencement, and the embarkation of the Seniors on their legal cruise. Bon voyage, Seniors! 1 z ll ' st r a wsfesffx Q f ft Qin J - f 5 aigsef' - 3-2 X CJ C7 ,142 fer ,ex.f, games 8 if ff ATIRE D True humor lies not in laughter, But in still smiles, wlticlr lie far deeper. 'LThe next person to interrupt the Is my wife forward?, asked the pas- proceedings will be sent home, def -2 clared the irate Judge. Hurrah, shouted the prisoner, EDCI McKeever: fpassionatelyj L'The more I look at you dear, the more beautiful you seem. Irene: fexpectantlyj Yes?'-' McKeever: fbrutallyj 'SI ought to look at you more often. El D EI Red M.: What's the matter with that fellow, Stine, was he 'hit by a truck? Morris S.: UNO, he's the president of the Student Council. U El III 1 ll N A Crying Need lj El III Sarah: I just got back from the beauty parlor. I was there three hoursf' Gladys: Too bad that you stayed so long and then didnlt get waited on. senger on the Century. She wasn't to me, sir, replied the conductor politely. EIIIID . - -'S Y ..-1 , ..... - . 6 tp' I. is '--. 1- .-1: Misfit... f If I I ll Something Due-to Happen EI U lj Quizz Class Reveries Two questions, tear 'em apart. . . wonderful! . . . I should have known that. . . tell them all you know, . . fChorusj It won't take long. . . oui! oui! . . . what do you people do between midnight and live in the morning? . . . that's what I thought you said. . . I have ernninent authority, here on my right. . . 47485 in your list. . . I thought they taught Contracts in the law schools . . . Yes, Harper is always liable. . . that was before we gave the country back to the Indians. . . in Kentucky, yes, in U. S., no. . . that's what I think, too, but the Chief Justice holds other' wise. . . now Mr. do we find this in Swan's Treatment. . . two guesses. I take no chances, I read them to you. , . I just think it's wonderful, the vast amount we cover in a few minutes. . . how simple, how easy the law is-when you know it. . . what if the child did die? . . . blood, law, rep' resentation and estate. . . I guess that's bad? . . . you're darn tootin'. . . now at seven o'clock on next Tuesday evening. ' Ds Tx ' I ss N 's -ff 1 Q he if f il 'fd -W e gg! Y M , sae? C fb: ' '! V -. A sr' ,-If -v-f 24,-H. A yr jijrfjgx 1' iaxvx Y J- 5,75 fa D Y. T X- Q cs X,-'G vtfixor-aff.-all Zs' ,rib-eifcfifv' EPf2i5:!H?J5vXi11'9 3 !X TJf,! gfVx.2 Y Elevator Boy: This is your floor By Their Words'Ye Shall Know Them: daughter. How dare you call me daughter!, stormed Mary. Well I brought you up, didn't I?, retaliated the lad. EIDE! 'Heath says he calls his girl babe--she hasn't walked yet. 9 t its ' : The Pfic esof lame Fosco: If a man is under sentence of death is he competent to testify? Mr. Gatch: !'Before or after punish' ment 715 Fosco: fsarcastically under breathj We are talking about bars of Justice, not Pearly gates of Heaven. IIICIEI Heard in the Y Cafeteria Sarah: What kind of service is this? My plate is wet. Hartman: Pipe down. That's your soup. lj II! III Judge Royal E.: !'Have you anything to offer before I pass sentence on you? Prisoner: No, your Honor. I did have 3520.00 but my lawyer got it. II! C! lf! Meguire: fphoning his doctorj - Come at once, he said excitedly, my little boy has swallowed a penny. How old is it?, asked the doctor. Meguire: 1894. Mr. Elston: The Volstead Act' is the most remarkable act ever perpetrated. Mr. Stephens: Well, what do you think of that case? Mr. Dempsey: That's a darn good case. Try reading it. Judge Fred Hoffman: Within the apparent scope of his authority. Judge Morrow: Whois that talking in the back row? EIDE 'Arthur Daley: farrested for speed' ingj Listen, oflicer, I am the prosecutf ing attorney! Officer: Ignorance of the law is no excuse! p U EI EI Did you say the Ungers are going to build soon? , Right! They haven't the plans made, but they have a spot to build on. Well, of course, that's a lot. EI EI III 4... Would 'You Fall for Her? II! II! li! Mary had 0. little lamb- You've heard that yarn before: But have you heard she passed her plate And had a little more? .V ., in x - - , ffxx. gfis ,,. ., fa, ,. N Tx ':'zrf2-f-ff? - dxf- . ' I -vw eff- .ff--:ei ' A ' f Ps ri I s XT I X s is at ff ,t , , :X.lL.'L,fLeM:k ' V L W Sf. ' ' ,V V 77 , +3-ii X . 5: lffi' 0 i X 7 , ' 7 if elf kim AHL: JJ xg 5 . ,., .Y gf 1 - 11,1---f -----4 ' pu. X ' ng, .yn . Q ... . . 1 I ' f -- V,-,-..N --f' '-3 3 Q'3f:,A-- ' of-,5 'J .nf 'QKX-J ' NJ i yr fxgyfhfc Tx? C, TVXKQ 9 - '. 'T -..Zia 2 ff fx, fffi .4 L J fgwcf iififsytj-is DON-if A . 25 I fx, EIU 21:53 Eb-'T.7'SfQ3YCi33 ifV'i!' Grapes: Who was that lady I saw you with, down the street?l' Le Blond: That wasn't a street: it was an alley. lil lil El Mrs. Huber: Qback from honeymoon in Switzerlandj Don't you remember that wonderful gorge in the Alps, dear? Mr. H.: Sure dog it was the squarest meal we had. UUE Schlanser: I've gone 12,000 miles without a puncture. Reusch: G'wan, I saw you at a dance the other night with a flat tire. III lj U There was a thin maiden called Irena, Who bought a new vacuum cleana, But she got in the way Of its suction one day And since then nobody has seena. EI III EI Woodley: Can you dance? Bowen: No, but I can hold them while they dance. El El II Antony: Cleo, m'love, I can't afford to buy you a new string of beadsffi Cleo: Come across, old dear-'twill save the price of a new gown. EDU Non C. Mantis and the Cv. F. Knight calls his wife 'LCrystal -,- she's always on the watch. DDD Al: You look like a sensible girl, let's get married. Katherine: Th:-1t's just the trouble, I'm too sensible. III lj U It's a long sentence that has no parole. D El El Someone asked Warnke if the scar on his wrist was gotten in the war. He said, Nope that's from reaching for the meat in a boarding house. DDU Slow motion pictures were invented by a man who once watched Yarnovsky taking some money from his pocket. III III lj Mayer: Papa, does the devil ever go skiing? Pop: How in Hfll can he? lj III II Ain't It True? Say, Fellows, Did you ever take Your best girl To the movies And no sooner get Settled than she then Starts to rave about The hero? His hair is curly While yours is straight. He is tall And you are short. He wears a soupfandffish And you don't Even own one. He drives like Lockhart, Rides a horse like Sande And has lists like Jack Dempsey. And about this time You give up all hope When suddenly she Turns and says She prefers you to a Whole reelffull of sheiks. Did this ever happen to you? Me neither. ef' ef C6 Irs 41,51 IWW.-. -, ,r E53 PS7 Z1 Nw a--HRV I X L 0:55, lxzwiijiv ff ! - F-wifi,-:df-Af:, V' flfiix '- , ,Q 2 ,qu 4 , X fi .TV V A A ,R - - fn Luvii. ,gs cg ik ggfffir, ' , X ,gre ik I X- Ri? tx:-,f il,5--5 'Q 31,3 ,,p. , sf 5 Y 3 as ,gf -,X xy - , - fx , , lgg ro H E ,lf ZR J ? 5 WEN J I 47 x XX! X a X4 0 W 1' 1 mx 1 ' Q V P' 1 f. , ' ,f 'lx 11 V' rl : 3. f. ' 5 2 ' . -. V .-.. -:' .,,- V n Q Qi fsiff' fy .:fij ifj7ffQ 1fT?' - ' ' 3 3? Qi .M In 1.1-3.1: .. ., ' 1. . . -1- X---L ff!! if. ,--'Fir IEKNYT f.:1E'i' .if 'fifif n Rag, g -:-' vt.: nigga gy o I f:j,.QE X fm. --...jk N JF'-4? 1:-xv! Q N . Q 9' ' 5255. gif: ' ' X 244' - 4 ,QW sg Lrg S! - 521 ff: .- 51:5 '411 215 Ny' 5.1. . 14-1: . 1'6 fjjt ' if S 112- ' -'Tfff QA I ' . . :Q 1 1-fa' 3 A . V ...',-IZ,-t ' .543 f A 4, align- QI 4. I .gjgl Q ' Kwif '- '1.:'i.1i: . '!:fAL-,. V :gj. . .. ...vig-' X . 1145... . S 7 'A 2.4 , 'A K ' ' . 2 --2tif:'fl- Y -4 ' 6 L 1 6 Q11-ifoed-f-X627-if 45 ,2513 serv Eyfrywwexni MI Acclaim the Aliumnil, fudith Tuxngblut '29 T has been the fashion on occasions such as this to use them shamelessly to minister to our own pride and self consciousness. We have used them to prove the standing of our school, while declaiming against invidious com' parisons, we have been inclined to build comparisons of our own upon their uncomf plaining shoulders. So, we have said, our Alumni is better than your Alumnig and we have proceeded to deduce from this fact many very comforting things. This satisfying procedure may have swelled our own selffesteem, and inflated our pride, I question whether it did as much for the Alumni. I acclaim the Alumni for their own sake, and out of a spirit of grattitude. I do not wish to make them perform in public. I shall not single out some and say Beloved!, and others and say Mark and marvel! The Y. M. C. A. waited years for us. Lean and hungry years, some of them must have been, too, years of impatience, wan hope fighting eager despair, years of yearing for the fullment of a dream. How was it ever to feel any assurance that we would come along? How could it know? Yet it persisted and kept busy. Obviously there had to be grist for the mill during those years. Hence the Alumni, and our gratitude. Seriously, I like to think of the Alumni as that great body of pioneers who made the way easier for us. They have earned our gratitude because they showed us how. In the days when the vision was not so clear, they determined to carve out of a busy life's too limited leisure, the foundation of a professional career. And they did it. 'To them we owe our School in a very true sense, to some of them we owe the personal service by which they have guided our own efforts, and to all of them we owe the comf forting assurance that the thing can be done. We who follow them are not likely to forget their service. We would not be woof ing the Law if we were not earnestly striving for the things that they strove for. And the assurance of their example, and the knowledge of their accomplishment is the chief source of our confidence. The Alumni, looking back at the days of their preparation, will be indulgent with us if we boast about them, they will smile if we single out some and say l'Behold! They will understand our feeling of kinship, and best of all, they will be sympathetic when we use the thought of them to bolster up our courage. I never knew an Alumnus who laughed at our perplexities. I never knew an Alumnus who failed to extend a helping hand when we struck the rough places. I never knew an Alumnus, successful or otherwise, through whose words the common goal we have before us did not take on a new lustre and seem somehow more nearly within reach. And I suspect that if the Alumni knew that we, while appreciating their accomf plishments, nevertheless secretly feel that as soon as we have entered the profession those accomplishments will dim and fade beside our own, their instant and whole' hearted response would be: L'More power to you, students, and the best of luckln I acclaim the Alumni. J up 1 gp NZ X de GQ fp Y lfx ' fl' 'fX,,f TiSs. 6' 3 V- ag. fQ'14 ' 'ts X f?gs E? TQ?-'Qlrg, Q ' UZDQMQ 515 X inimi eww- X as was XQXZXJ New Opportunities for the Law Student and the Young Lawyer By WALTER A. KNIGHT, '99 President of the Legal Aid Society OR twenty years Cincinnati has maintained a Legal Aid Society for the purpose of providing legal advice and legal services generally in or out of Court, to those who were too poor to hire a lawyer. The people of Cincinnati are socially minded and try to care for the unfortunate persons of the community no matter what the cause of their misfortune. The Legal Aid Society was formed to care for those who would be unjustly dealth with and who would not know and could not enforce their legal rights but for such charitable help. The organigation has been a most useful instif tution from its start, and its usefulness has been greatly ex' tended during the last few years. It maintains its office in the Community Chest Building, 312 W. 9th St., Cincinnati, where it may cooperate most ad' vantageously with other institutions engaged in the work of human helpfulness Almost every kind of legal problem is encountered in the WALTER A. KNIGHT work of the Legal Aid Society as Mr. George H. Silverman, who has been Chief Counsel for fifteen years or more, will tell you. The work grew to such an extent that an Assistant Attorney was necessary and Miss Sarah E. Grogan was employed to fill that position. About a year ago a new idea came to the Board of Trustees of the Legal Aid Society, and that was to offer to some attorney just admitted to the Bar, an opportunity similar to the one a young Doctor would have, who had just been admitted to his prof fession in our City,-that is, an interneship for one year, participating as a fullffledged professional man in the work of the Legal Aid Society under the guidance and direcf tion of its legal staff. Frank T. Bartlett, a 1927 graduate of the Y. M. C. A. Law School was the first person appointed to this position, and so far as we know, is the first Legal Interne in the world. He began his work immediately after having been sworn in at Columbus in July, 1927, and has been diligently at work since then in the Office of the Legal Aid Society. This experience brings him in contact with a very large number of clients, 2689 having been served by the Society in the year 1927. Not only does he ac' quire valuable experience by coming into first hand contact with clients and their legal problems, but the range of their troubles in and out of court is much wider than that of any private law ofhce. Every Attorney of the Legal Aid Society also feels that he or she is engaged in a peculiarly valuable piece of social work, benefitting those desperf ately in need of such service. 3' 9 f I X QIMQQQ Z Sjfgi irgztg-f K. F ' A,,, V 'VT 4, 12,7 ll I ii fists +1 we kfhfs - ' - U .J-Q62 if if fe 'sgy gig-sff t i1-,Q f-Y-- --l ' ' 9 , X ' LQT I ' ' f T1iQie?f,.lsl'TAi' ' agiffii N 2 it ' ,ff We ' fr 'I Me W 5115 5 T XXXQF-fg,'fc7' Nifrvsv Last Fall the Legal Aid Society decided that it would start a Legal Clinic and offer to all senior year 'law students in Cincinnati, an opportunity to participate under the direction of the Attorneys in charge, in the legal services rendered by the Legal Aid Society to its clients. After careful investigation of similar work done at Northf western University at Chicago, an invitation was issued to the members of the Senior Class of both Law Schools to enroll and begin their work. Eleven enrolled and seven of these continued the work throughout the term, took their examination and passed with very creditable grades. John H. Wigmore, Dean of the Northwestern Law School was furnished a copy of the examination questions and in a letter to the President of the Cincinnati Legal Aid Society, stated that he considered these questions fully as hard as those given their students. The Y. M. C. A. law students who completed this Legal Clinic work were Gilbert Shaver, Bennett R. Knight and M. M. Sigler. Heretofore the young lawyer just admitted to the bar, unless he was one of the few who had experience in a good law office while a law student, found himself without practical knowledge of legal procedure and generally did not know where ref cords he must consult were to be found or how to go about using them. His handicap for the first few months of his practice was therefore serious and embarrassing. But still worse he knew nothing of interviewing clients or witnesses and legal ethics had little concrete meaning for him. The Legal Clinic student sees service enough to learn where the offices of public officials are located, what these records are and how to use themg he learns something of the art of interviewing clients and witnesses and how to begin looking up the law relating to a concrete case. The practice of all attorneys connected with the Legal Aid Society must at all times be strictly in accord with the code of ethics adopted by the American Bar Association, and the same careful attention is given to the work of these poor helpless clients that would be given in the service of the most valued client of the best law firms. Therfore, to the extent that their short and intermittent service will permit, the practical training the student receives in the Legal Clinic is precisely what is needed for his best development. Inevitably a student who has taken the Legal Clinic work becomes a better citizen and a better lawyer. But the favored few who serve as Legal Internes, with a year of full time service at the Legal Aid Society, are fortunate indeed. We expect to see those who have had this exceptional opportunity and taken full advantage of it, render distinguished service to their community, whether they practice in Cincinnati or elsewhere. Some of these should become leaders of the bar and the community. These Legal Internes will not have to go to the gallery of the Library of Congress at Washington to learn that Of Law there can be no less acknowledged than that her voice is the harmony of the world. X Y- . LZI-Elrglxlxl -L -,525 ,I F ci i pf I ' .1 ,M - AX ,. W ,,.'f.-.Y gi fax. , ff, +R-X451 - --1 fQ67Jvb1 2FEfrQvEFZda5W?j5wfQw9B - .- 1895 Robert L. Blagg John D. DeWitt John E. Fitzpatrick L. B. McCord 1896 David M. Allen William H. Cowguill Fred L. Hoffman Charles W. McKnight Charles P. Mackelfresh Robert C. McConaughey 1897 J. Harvey Brigham John H. Costello Malcom G. Davies Carl W. Lentz 1898 Wilber Clark Benton Charles A. Davis Alfred T. Fulford Albert W. Highlands Charles Herbert Jones Charles Stewart Lyons Harry J. Meyersieck George W. Platt David P. Schorr Fred E. Wesselman Herman J. Witte 1899 Clarence E. Baen Samuel W. Bell Harry F. Brewer Charles Broadwell William Burkamp John O. Eckert Harry E. Engelhardt Charles A. Gehrlein William H. Grifhth Charles H. Harmeyer John VJ. Harrop. Joseph W. Heintzman Victor W. Hertwig John W. Heuver B. A. Hulswitt Walter A. Knight Alumni iKnairr William S. Longley Frank P. Low Edward Mittendorf William E. Moore William V. Muller Gerrit Raidt James A. Riddell William A. Rinckoif Millard Roebling Frank K. Schaefer Jesse M. Simon Frank C. Vogelbach John J. Ward William Wersel Henry Christian Vwfewer 1900 Harlan Bailey Harry H. Bausch Henry F. Bulow Glen G. Brown Charles A. Haefner Frank Hannaford John J. James Newton T. Jones Clarence J. A. Kyle William Lamb William C. Lambert Robert A. LeBlond Simmon Lemonek Charles C. Martin Clinton E. Mather Arthur C. Minning Carl S. Rankin Harry B. Sprague Max M. Stallman James M. Stone Arthur L. Vickers Nathan I- Zeif 1901 Robert H. Berger Samuel S. Davies Thomas J. Edmonds Fred H. Evans James A. Fraizier Arthur C. Fricke Dennis T. Hackett Dana W. Hartshorn, Jr. Walter R. Hinkey William B. Johnston Joseph A. Keadin Joseph L. Lackner Christian F. Mumm Oliver Wick Roll F. N. Sigler John W. Whalen 1902 John G. Bammerlin M. Milo Beatty Walter M. Beinhart Frederick Bertram Edward A. Bruton James Grimes Cassidy Robert C. Coghill Archer E. Cragg Robert V. Foster William C. Hartshorn William B. Haskins Eugene D. Maxield Lem S. Miller 'Herman A. Nieberding M. S. Pottenger Albert B. Roessler. Harry A. Rust Samuel Salzer William H. Schmidt Oscar F. Shephard, Jr. Thomas M. Taylor James T. Thornton 1903 Hiram C. Bolsinger Frank G. Browne Herman C. Bryant Joseph M. Conway William C. Burton Clifford F. Cordes Herbert R. Davidson Lawrence J. Diskin John F. Frenkel Louis C. Fritsche William A. Geoghegan Willis L. Gibson 'George S. Hawke Jacob F. Jonas Clarence W. Jones Elmer S. King Henry E. Koch HMP: ii0fffli1 1-1olQf5W9gfW'+ewW I .sy .ii.,W. .. .. . . . H, J . .. , L 1 1 e-X -A -gx-jx 74 Qt-DX-MN V A -' t 1 ' H 'L'T7.i,: --fibre -A-A -Y-Irt:, h fl , I ,XV H ara N455 'f:'.17iQ'lJL':Q1.u ii' F 1 A ' .frri-tffj - we ' r V 1' 4.,f-'V ffm Q we -fri-as cars, 7 1 ' . ' 1 e ,gi Tliglifr 5 l Za eff X Svrwiwlj Walter C. Mulhauser James J. Ryan George A. Spangler Morley P. Thompson Frederick H. Warren George VJ. Wolfbcrger Frank Zumstein 1904 August H. Bode Albert W. Bogen Andrew Broadston Louis H. Capelle Jas. D. Chambers Tilden R. Culbertson W. M. Dean Arthur H. Ewald Harlow U. Farrell Stanley Fernberg William E. Garber A. W. McLaren James S. Richardson John E. Shephard George Slaline Arthur Spangenberg H. L. Staadeker U. Richard Weber. W. Meredith Yeatman 1905 Frazer D. Acomb Henry C. Arthurs Louis Beyerlein Benjamin Biedenharn, J Russel Hayes Blair Paul Dewald Albert G. Feth Edward J. Holzhalb Phillip Kates A. F. Leue Michael H. Levi Frank Lingo Blaine McLaughlin Arthur B. Mussman Bion C. Place George E. Platts William Reilley David Scott Thomas Usher 1906 Samuel Assur Harry C. Barnes Stephens L. Blakely X-'Xf!x J. Edwin Boothe Frank E. Burnett Howard D. Burnett Bayard G. Burris Frank M. Conant Gerald J. Connolly John W. Cowell Edward T. Dixon Robert Franken Montello Gray Emil A. Hauck Arthur M. Jack Arthur F. Kwiss Stuart A. McGill Elisha H. Matthews Edwin S. Morrissey James B. O'Donnell Gustave A. Orth 1907 J. Harvey Brigham Anthony H. Brink Charles S. Burdsall Spencer C. Chambers James A. Flaherty Harry F. Freking Joseph R. Gardner Charles Ginnocchio William P. Hohmann Joseph Lemkuhl Fred D. Lynd Henry J. Mergler Harry C. Metzel Leslie P. Morrell George B. Mundy Charles H. North Howard N. Ragland Rob,ert E. Richardson Edward J. Tracy Harry R. Weber Paul Wisenall Frank Woodward 1908 Charles Baumgartner Charles S. Bell William H. Cobb, Jr. Joseph G. Defosset William J. Deupree Rueben D. Fishback William G. Franz Otto H. Katterjohan Edward J. Kennedy George R. Landen Frank A. Mitchell Augustus Pollock Ellsworth Regenstein Richard Remke Joseph H. Rohrer John H. Scheuman Robert M. Scott George Stugard Gabriel H. Wolff 1909 Arthur E. Afsprung William A. Bissantz George J. Hamburg Albert R. Hoffman Clifford Huffman Warren W. Kendall Edward C. Lovett William H. Meyers William H. Mortashed James H. Newman H. W. Patton William J. Ricker Charles H. Sherwood Judson A. Shuey Frank Spitalberger A. J. Van Duzen Joseph R. Weber Charles Weigel Richard A. Wellman Alvine Zanone 1910 Clarence H. Andres Edward J. Brearton Joseph W. Euler Fred W. Grau Edward Hauenschild Herman F. Hohnsted Charles E. Hopkins Charles H. lan lber George W. Kiefer William H. Klaver Harry T. Klein Nicholas Klein Henry E. Lindsey Cliiford H. Luft John W. Matthews Leo U. Murray J. Benson Newell Ernest M. Rouse John W. Sadlier Paul L. Schupp Elmer C. Schwertman Ln lgf Q1 XG:4s. flq .Cf figlfsz KM ffm? .s was-fe Ffa 28. ye-S-.?efEG 'XtMf 'igzfflkfuilj XC! Herbert Shaffer Albert E. Singleton Frank E. Stapleford Dan N. Steible John Frederick Wendeln Isaac Meyer Vv'ise 1911 Leon C. Barley James R. Clark Arthur D. Couden I. B. Davidson William F. Druhman Charles H. Dunkhorst William C. Dunkhorst George F. Eyrich, Jr. Oscar H. Forster Isaac M. Frieberg Leonard Garver, Jr. John J. Grau P. P. Hengo, Jr. Sultan Klein Charles A. Lowe Roy Manogue Albert C. Mittendorf John H. Reisinger H. H. Ruggles John W. Schweller Roscoe C. South Buford C. Spencer Henry A. Strauss Henry B. Street John M. Wilke, Jr. Albert T. Winkelmann F. Clifford Wright Julian O. Yeager 1912 Frederick G. Barnes Thomas T. Bennett Clifford Borsch Alfred T. Geisler S. G. Gray Earl W. Griffin Walter W. Helmholz George H. Hermerding John NV. Heuber George W. Lawton, Jr. Oscar Leiser Victor Massa Paul D. Morrow O. W. Sherman C. W. Snyder, Jr. Edward Southworth R 12 K CQTJQXHT I K,-3 -R A- ,vs.,,5m.:v,,s. P-. .f.-3 . in .LS A H. F. Thompson Fred O. Valentine C. K. Weber C. T. Williams C. B. Vrfood Carl H. Smith 1913 A. F. Adkins Leslie H. Bacon C. L. Bloss R. H. Foertmeyer Elmer W. Grischy Cecil L. Hall Edward M. Hurley Fred YV. Lommers Martin C. Kirchoff Cliiqord C. Lang Lorenz L. Lemper G. G. MacDonald Thomas F. McGuire G. O. Maxwell Frank L. Muehlman Walter D. Murphy Edward Peck William Peck Elmer G. Pryor Adolph Rosenberg Albert C. Ross William Sander, Jr. Walter N. Schafstall Joseph B. Schroeder Thomas B. Schroll Ludwig Sinn Charles B. Smith A. E. B. Stephens Charles B. Terry Irwin C. Zitt 1914 Dawson E. Bradley Martin Brown Joseph T. Carney J. H. Drake Charles H. Elston James NV. Farroll Robert A. Flannagan William C. Foertmueller Marmion L. Freeman William F. Gabel Gustay E. Gebbart Henry Goldburg Edwin I. Grizzel William Hoifman I , . . J , . . . . 1 . XL, . T f fl so 1 Figs XJ QE ff Dana K. Holmes W. P. King Donald W. McLeod Richard M. McNeer Charles A. Mauer Byram E. Moore John C. Nieporte Albert J. Peine John R. Quane Harry Quitman John M. Renner Miller W. Renner Louis Rubenstein James C. Russel Walter S. Schmidt Clarence A. Schneiders Franklin P. Shaw Thomas J. Sheehan Jr. Rolla L. Shickner Harold Siebenthaler August A. Siemon Val Stolz Henry F. Vinette Louis Vxfeiland 1915 George VJ. Burns James Campbell E. H. Chamberlain P. Gregory Cloud John F. Dresing Raymond T. Fell George W. Gale John P. Geoghegan Burt H. Getelson Henry F. Gravenkemper Edward A. Gruner Robert H. Haines George A. Hamma Henry D. Hopf Lewis H. Jenkins Walter R. Keagy John E. Keeshan Richard Kenkel Charles M. Kennan John H. Kilduii Louis Lifschitz Robert A. Ludeke John McCarthy James A. McDonald Clifford C. McGary John A. McJoynt Thomas L. Mcjoynt Harry E. Marble ,fgff G' Q A - -'-F ' '- ff-'4 .,' ,X . V' t1IXv,1fxX 9.-.ay -..-J ......::,4. 'i'i'.11- lv. fx I .ggi . ,N -3 N.f Jr X. -A-.5 fy: :ef A' .Lg.:f. ' 1 'F 'Cl J. J' My I K 1 X 11' iv K ij!! . f 'X J '.',' 928 X A. J. Martin H. C. Newman Carl F. Pieper Willard N. Poland John H. Roux John A. Scanlon Louis J. Schneider R. Schwertman John B. Theissen Fred R. Thumann Jack Weiser Frank H. Wolfhorst Stanley Woodward 1916 R. S. Carroll F. H. Cole, Jr. S. W. Cornish Clifford W. Elliott William S. Evatt Charles J. Frech E. J. Gardner Clarence H. Hallman George Halloran O. W. Hardin E. J. Joest August J. Knapp Robert A. Kramer Albert H. Leeker Charles F. MacGrath Arthur Mall John F. Mitchell W. A. Otting C. J. Penn Charles Rickoif C. S. Ryan M. E. Salsbury C. M. Smith Otto G. Spangenberg R. S. VonHoene 1917 H. H. Baker H. M. Bruestle L. W. Brunner W. M. Dumont Edward Hauser 4. , TRIANGLE 1 J. S. Shuey F. L. Zugelter Chester Clark E. R. Gwinner 1918 F. C. Ellig William Hyman Carl Klein E. W. Koenig W. J. Malone John C. Newton Charles M. Price E. A. Schott T. N. Shirry Charles E. Stephans C. W. Tieman F. J. Wandstrat 1919 Frank R. Crowe Daniel W. Davies Fred H. Derfus William A. Middendorf Samuel Saxe Peter Sattler Omer C. Stubbs 1920 Edwin Becker William C. Busch A. J. D. Bussdicker Lester B. Butterworth J. A. Culbertson William P. Deasy R. C. Dieckman A. D. Duduit Benjamin Frankland Bernard J. Gilday William C. Groh H. H. Helwig George L. Humphries George H. Jones A. J. Martin Herman Santen J EE LX I Q 1921 Harry A. Abrams Duncan C. Brafford Lawrence C. Brunsman Loraine E. Cain Stanley Chrisman George Crapsy Clarence F. Denning Victor Godfrie Henry J. Harbrecht Florence M. Hornback Justus H. Jordan Harbert Kettenacker Gervaise G. Karpe Edward Kluber Simon Leis Lawrence Lowman John H. Moesta John G. Morgan Louis T. Murphy Roger L. Neff Earl R. Roehm William J. Rung William C. Schuch Edward Stapleton Ernest W. Stockmeier. Richard Udry John R. Warrrington Otto Weilhamer Raymond J. Wilson Andrew Yauch 1923 J. E. Bennett Harry J. Cain Bryce H. Dettor Catherine Emshoff Nathan Foote Andrew Haefner Elmer Hunsicker Harry C. Kruse Michael Lacinak Edward Moeller Robert O'Brien William J. Ranshaw Eleanor A. Ridiman T. J. Edmonds William D. Schaefer J, M, Ryan H. B. Heyn Charles W. Smedley Louis Schuch .l- B' King HCITFY Sundermann Ervin G. Schuessler J. L. Lunsford Nathan Vigran I, G, Stephenson L. B. Neyer ' Edwin Westerfeld D, R, Tate R. E. Pott Gordon D. Wilson E, B, T1-ever F. D. Preston Walter Ziegler Leon M, Weiss at C M ifFtTr4 Jets ff X B: K 17' 'QB 'KT R3 ,M TRIANGLE Cgyym ETA' MQ,-,Tw C-. iv-X L 1924 Stewart S. Cooper C. S. Deputy L. E. Golter Edward H. Meyer David F. Naylor Charles K. Pulse Alvina Reckman W. D. Rea Charles Rodner Clarence Ross G. L. Schilling Frank J. Schreibeis W. Ray Skirvin Adam Strobel Iohn M. Tritchler Albert N. Thomas 1925 john J. Arnold John Bailey G. O. Bane Ralph Backer Elmer H. Biedenholz Rose Bloom Ervin Bramlage Clifford I. Brandt joseph B. Bruns Arthur T. Chambers Ira T. Decker Ray I. Dollenmayer John G. Dossman William S. Edgemon Joseph Fagaly Abraham Friedman Samuel J. Ginsburg Edna Glenn Palmer G. Graves Edna R. Hehman Overton D. Iackson Henry L. Kelsch John A. Kiely Helen C. Little George McPartlin PM l i was Charles William Meyer Ivan I. Perkins Herman C. Poppe Clarence A. Proctor William I. Ransom Thomas F. Scanlon W. A. Schuberth Erie L. Schulte Harvey A. Schultz William K. Slye Alex Snider Oscar C. Tiemeyer William M. Vance Henry L. Walsh 1926 Marie Ashton H. C. Beckner Charles Boyd Richard L. Brummer William H. Buether J. Warren Dells John W. Driskill Harry Falk Albert Farber Lawrence Farrell H. J. Gray Sarah Grogan John B. Hicks R. B. Kleinmann Iohn Koury P. E. Lahman Abe. Lipp I. Aaron Meyer Charles I. Meyers Clyde V. Miller W. H. Niland R. J. Paul Samuel Plotnick Otto Polking Louis E. Porter Fred G. Reiners Minnie Robfagel Miriam Romaine George F. Shafer V. R. Shephard D. H. Stevenson James I. West George F. Zachritz Oscar F. Zimmer Harry L. Riggs 1927 Francis T. Bartlett Donald S. Beightler Ralph Miller Christman Harry Peter D'Angelo Ophelia Mund Emden Charles Macmillan Evans Helen Iulia Flannery Saul Meyer Greenberg Wendell F. Hanselman Cyrus A. Holbrook Paul Alvin Holdt Frieda Hoff Huber Harold Nicholas Huber William Carl Kavel William Louis Keck, Jr. Carl Koehler Ottillia Marie Krombholz Charles Edgar Lester, Jr. Rose Levinson Harry Meier, Ir. Ernest Reece Mitchell Frederick Wade Murphy Arthur M. O'Connell, Ir Albert Edgar Savoy Fred Joseph Schatzman William F. Schubert Frank Joseph Sexton Sydney Daniel Shafer Lehman Ross Trotman Cassius Albert Vearil Edgar Philip Vogel YValter C. Wagner Ansil Denison Weaver Vera A. Woeste I' 5-JAN 'XA F ll'73-M62-S QA? 0 fc? X i A A' f . . M ff Wi Lij l 1 S533 if-ggi K' lf Zig,-:lf-'io' JA fx, 17 aL' A N-QL Ar-Lf' F X .D ,V . m.:af:.-V+, v ff' if-5 ff Bti,-Yr-Q J ff. x 92 ' ,,T1i, S1 ' Lxjvf The Graduating Class Stanley Allan, Colerain, Mt. Airy Park. Irwin I. Aronoff, 2311 St. James Avenue. H. Barnstorff, 259 Greendale Avenue. Alton C. Banks, 3930 South Jefferson Avenue. Hiram C. Bolsinger, Jr., 2207 Cameron Avenue. Mary B. Bowman, 211 Gilman Avenue. Perry C. Brestel, 6939 La Boiteaux. F. Irene Coleman, 2004 Courtland Avenue, Norwood. Clinton Collins, Jr., 2235 Kemper Lane. Elmer N. Davidson, 445 Cleveland Avenue. Stuart E. Fletcher, 780 East Mitchell Avenue. Thomas E. Pouch, 1624 Scott Street, Covington, Kentucky. Elmer E. Hartman, 2958 Wardall Avenue, Westwood. George C. Heath, 1530 Dudley Street. Wendell P. Kennedy 4223 Williamson Place. Bernard J. Klatch, 602 Temple Bar. Bennett R. Knight, 3642 Columbus Avenue. Paul H. Kyrlach, 2061 Eastern Avenue. Harry E. McKeever, 5012 Ravenna Street. C. O. Meguire, Lunken Airport, Eimbry Riddle Company. Richard A. Morris, 967 McPherson. Howard L. Nelson, 2802 Highland Avenue, Norwood. Sarah F. Ogden, 2835 Linwood Avenue. R. E. Padgett, 218 West Court Street. Joseph M. Rheins, 1620 Rosemont Avenue. R. F. Schubert, 3844 Forest Avenue, Norwood. Wm. F. Seebohm, 1633 Rockford Place. Leonard H. Shallat, 22 West Daniels Street. Gilbert J. Shaver, 320 Burns Avenue, Wyoming, Ohio. M. M. Sigler, 721 Delta Avenue. Stanley A. Silversteen, 638 Rockdale Avenue Apartment. Gladys L. Solar, 3922 Trevor Avenue. Earl A. Stine, 2930 Markbreit Avenue. Earl W. Stickley, U. G. Ee? E Company, 4th and Plum Streets. William H. Warnke, jr., 207 Garfield Place. Joseph J. White, 3976 Clifton Avenue. Melvin G. Wuest 335 10th Avenue, Dayton, Kentucky. Hyman W. Yarnovsky, 3578 Van Antwerp Place. ez? , it if: 21253 if if 'H Ls' Xifffxf - ii QP? 3MfMw54X it 25 Isa-4755 X sefawga xx - ' -A1375 fag? -J ' . .X ,. , L! Lawyerjs Oath I do solemnly swear: I will support the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State of Ohiog I will maintain the respect due to courts of justice and ju' dicial oilicersg I will not counsel or maintain any suit or proceeding which shall appear to me unjust, nor any defense except such as I believe to be honestly debatable under the law of the landg I will employ for the purpose of maintaining the causes conf fided to me such means only as are consistent with truth and honor, and will never seek to mislead the judge or jury by any artiice or false statement of fact or lawg I will maintain the confidence and preserve inviolate the secrets of my client, and will accept no compensation in connecf tion with his business except from him or with his knowledge and approvalg I will abstain from all offensive personality, and advance no fact prejudicial to the honor or reputation of a party or witness, unless required by the justice of the cause with which I am chargedg I will never reject, from any consideration personal to my' self, the cause of the defenseless or oppressed, or delay any man's cause for lucre or malice. So help me God. ff X fi-,Q , ff 57' af.-P-V -. 1 R-, ,A 11' ff C' i xv sf' tj-t f sip- -as sc , j , I ,--, 71- - -- jj f' XL ' 'I C533Ii':lQLLii?5i1lIf',iIIfC1 'fr I 47' .1 X1 , ' 5-1. f '-'iff K- -ilk, :R , 1 xg, .QL ,, .L, v 5 aw! . V ,j - 5, - B V- . jj , 9 4 Jw ka .Ll x.f X' JJ ' 'if' H 'W' -,Vaf 1' V, 1 I 0 I 11'-92 H .xj eff 1 ' A - gg c C7 25 The Cincinnati Schools Law School The pre-requisite educational conditions for entering the Law School, are two full years C 60 semester hoursj in an acceptable college. The four year Law School Course prepares one for the Ohio State Bar Examination, and leads to the degree of Bachelor of Laws CLL. BJ. School of Commerce The four year curriculum in accountancy leads to the State Board of Accountancy Examination QC. P. AJ. The four year Business Adminis- tration Curriculum leads to executive and administrative positions. High School graduation is a pre-requisite or entrance in these programs. Many special certificate courses are offered, as Trafiic Management, Salesman- ship, Advertising, Public Speaking, etc. Night High School Fully accredited by the State Department of Education. These classes are conducted on the informal basis. The school functions for the benefit of the adult student who has missed the opportunity of getting his high school training during adolescent years. Business School Complete Stenographic, Secretarial, and Bookkeeping Courses are offered in either day or evening classes for both young men and young women. This training prepares one for secondary business positions and for advanced work in the school of Commerce. Technical School In this school are offered five other programs. Cab Two year supplementary training for machine tool workers. tbl Two year supplementary training for building construction me- chanics. CCD Two year supplementary training for electrical mechanics. fdj Two year supplementary training for industrial chemists. fel A one semester course in Foremanship. Show Card Writing, Cartooning, Commercial Art, Blue Print Reading. and Building Estimating are offered under this head. . N. N Yr 5 - ., X 41.15 is 66 P1 4 g l .ga.-.c-. .T an ... rt A X 'X sf ' ' ' -r , 'i me-.-. viii W Em2'f:S ' 'T' V iff 1: 1: 1 ff , tv I 282 ll -Q-L L l r .... ,g is ..... l 2 5 5 I f : ' Compliments of 5 ' Compliments of E s 5 I . I 5 A Friend I 5 D. T. Hackett s 5 s I- J I- --- r r 4 - Young Lawyers ' E Compllmerits of I E in common with all people need l if I g Faith, Hope and Charity and the E E 5 greatest of all these is Charity. E E. G. Schuessler : 7 E ' W. M. Vance 25 5 L- ---- Al L, .... --- EMERGENCY FUNDS for any useful purpose may be had at 671 interest a year, plus ZZ service ' charge-that is, 58.00 total charges on a loan of 35100.00 for a year. Payment E to be made weekly, semifmonthly or monthly to suit your convenience, I E Borrow from a National Bank at a banking 'rate of interest. E : : INDUSTRIAL LOAN DEPARTMENT : : I I I 5 Brotherhood of Railway Clerks National Bank 5 ioos VINE sr., CINCINNATI, OHIO t Open Regular Banking Hours and Saturday Evening 7 to 9 o'clock E Telephone: Canal 7825 Ql- fr --.1'l': f.. :. '?vF'- -1' 113523.11 ' .fit Vfngggf- 1 xi dkxf-T.N. I X V .fin .-X aff- Y , fx' xr f 'gr-,Ty X1 X ' I L,..iQ:V,W4 s SI ,VliI.?L :'..,,.n,i I' '- ., 1 fx 1 A 'l I .I . f-.i... Ht i li .. , s i,-.,s. Teens- .efiuf -' ', E'-' X flnxx-.5 ':,.cl:' . K . ,K H - , - - Y . Lil 1 I .5 Y' 'if-' ' lx ln Q. Zfef XQPJLJ uv cxj ks 'Am T, A-.ex ' J l, ,J A-1,37 'ff li igffq, 1 gy Xxa aff'
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