The SPY 1920
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The SPY 1920
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The Kenosha High School Year Book, The SPY, for the 1919 to 1920 school year.
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4/18/2017
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01/01/1920
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Kenosha High School Yearbook Club
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47332663 bytes
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School yearbooks
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text
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Kenosha (Wis.)
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PDF
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Yearbook
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Kenosha (Wis.)
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eng
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PUBLISHED
BY THE STUDENTS
o
lhe
ENOS HI\
11 I G H
SCHOOG
KENOSHA
WISCONSIN
Qlbministr at ion
<tCiasses
JLiterarp
<!&rgani?ations
Qltbletics
J}umor
Qlbb ertisements
[ 2]
Foreword
H
days are very happy ones,
and the memory of them is always
pleasant. \Vith this thought in mind the
compiler ' of the eighth Spy Annual have tried
to prepare in fact, fancy, and picture an accurate and attractive account of the activities
of our chool during the past year. \\'e hope
that this book will be read with satisfaction
now, and that a time goes on, its record of
the joys and hopes of this season of our lives,
so easily forgotten, may help inspire each of
us with an active interest in our Alma 1ater.
IGH SCHOOL
[3]
Dedication
T
o THE students and alumni of Kenosha
High School, who, because of a real interest in the youth of this city, are working to
secure for u a new high school building, we
dedicate this book with the hope that their
efforts may soon be successful.
[ 4]
ADMI
Board of Education
......
JAY
B. GLER M, President
ELLA F. PowER , Secretary
CHESTER D. BAR
FRA
CIS
ES
GEORGE \VALLIS
JOHN
I. CHESTER
R. 0TTATI
LEWI
PETER
GEORGE \V. A
DERSO
'vV. ROWELL
F. T ACKI
vVM.
J. ELt1soN
Eow ARD A. FLUG
c. A. LEO ARD, JR.
GEORGE .KLOTZ
\\'M.
GEORGE LI
J. THREIN"E
DEMANN
FRANK
CHE TER
H. DIBBLE
T
NICKLA
KOLLMAN
D. OLEY
FRA
K
DRI SELL
[5)
MR . MARY D. BRADFORD
UPERl:\TE "DENT OF SCHOOLS
[6!
GEORGE NELSO. TREMPER
PRI~CIPAL
[7]
Faculty
, ClE"'.'\CE:
YL\'E. TER
\\'.
\\'ARD
"Take 1h1• 111'.'(/ q11estion, i\liss
[ndiana L'niversitv , :\. B.
Indiana, tate Not:mal School.
Cni\·e rsit\' of Chicago Graduate
School..
~
l..\R(,LERITE IL.\RDA\\AY
"Spt'rial i-eports lo111orrow ."
C ornel I College.
Iowa State Teachers College, B. :\.
:\I.ICE " EI.SO'\
"The soo111'r you gel quil'I the sooneiyo11'/I gel 0111."
Wi sconsin University, A. B.
R..\Y:1101'D EDI.ER
"That's pc1jl'rll)· obvio11s."
Wisconsin l 1 niversitv.
School of i\.lilitary- Aeronautics,
L niversity of Illinois.
'.\I:\THEl\.1:\TI CS:
Lot.,r. E \\'11 .LIA\1s
" Hun)' a11d sign i11 yo11're /ate as
it is."
mith College, B. L.
Graduate \\'ork at ~orthwestern
L' ni\·ersity.
\1 ARY
c. E. B \YI.ER
"Ti)' to make a rer01·d today."
Illin ois State Normal University.
HISTORY:
I SABEi. R . LO\\ E
"Steam a11r;, F.lerlririty hm;e changed
the map.
Northwestern L1nivcrsity, A. B.,
l\.1. A.
I .A:\GC:\GE:
C \ROLY-., ] JOI.\H
"Dow11 lhl' ollllr stairs, please."
Wisconsin l lniversity, B. L., l. A.
GEOR(,£ "'.\'". TREl<IPER
l\.lichigan l ' nivcr. ity, . B.
Berlitz School of Language .
CniYersit\ of Illinois Graduate
School.-
[ 8]
LA GllAGE:
HELE:-. PoHLE
"Awrig/11."
\\'isconsin Univer ity, A. B.
E'\'"GT JSI I:
:\!Rs. l\1ARY BLA:\CHARD i\1uRPHY
"Vow ,ifr. Tremper "
L' ni' ersity of Minnesota, B. L.
l\1ARY
E.
DE\' Ll:\
"JIm·pdlarpo!"
l 'n i\ersity of Denver, B. A.
DoROTH\
SLATER
"isn't it love~v!"
l ' niversity of Chicago, Ph. B.
l\lilwaukee Downer College.
1\1. YANDER\'ORT
"I despise, abhor, detest, and
abominate "
L niversity of Tllinois, A. B.
Southern Illinois State l ormal
School.
IsABEL
Pl'BLIC SPE:\Kl:NG:
MOLLIE M. DERBYSHIRE
"!!ow did you react?"
Columbia College of Expression.
LIBRARY:
HELEN
B. SPENCE
"},1fy ambition is to get
a B. //. m
'/hp.'"
University of \\'isconsin, B. A.
1USIC:
ED:-.\ CutERO'\
"Ready, sing!"
Lawrence College Conservatory of
Music.
C01\1MERCE:
B. M ..\Lo,·r:y
",Vow w/1en I was a boy-"
Chicago College of Law, LL. B.
JoH'
[9]
01\I IERCE:
I Jc)\\ \RD\'. 1\lcCL RDY
"Yo11'r<' i111p11dc11t! Go lo th<' offire."
L1 niversity of Colorado, A. B.
Greg!!; School '\ormal, Chicaf.!;o
'\El.LIE
I.. l\l\1.0.\"EY
/1 t"
.\lih\aukce '\ormal.
"Sh
Lms '\oRTH\\ \Y
"Twenty rnpirs, plt'aJ/'."
Mih\ au kee :\ormal.
\'ER:\\
Zo1.1.ER
"Eyes n.ff Liz<' ke_vboard!"
\Yhitewatt>r '\ormal.
MANL'AL ARTS:
Gi.\DYS \\'JNECAR
"IFam't the spi11aclz lo~·clyr"
, tout Institute.
[JARRY
\\'.
K1R:-.
"Good morning, Miss Hardaway."
Bradlq Pol~ technic I n~titute.
J. H. SPRAGUE
"Now _vou're square with the wni-!d."
Land Tech.
MRS. 0. L. TRE'\ARY
"Here's an exr11sc, anyway."
Office A sistant.
[ 10 l
.
.
DI CCLAS9 ES ID
o
TRO
MO
l! EYMA T
BLA TCHARD
\'JG
Mid-Year Seniors, 1920
PRESIDENT
. . . Ct RTIS \\loss
...
VICE-PRESIDE ~ T
ARTHl'R TRON"\ lG
PHILCP BLA
SECRETARY
TREASURER .
CHARD
TELLA HEYMA
..
T
.,. .,. .,.
Honor Students
.
VALEDICTORIAN
CLA
'YMMONDS
s ORATION"
s POEM
ADOLPH PALL RA. 1l SEK
F'ERN" KATHERYN E IERY
STELL
DECLAMATIO J
HI TORY
HEYMAK
~lARJORIE E.
CLA s \YELCO 1E
CLA
l\1.
YvETTE ZARA GOLDBERG
ALL'TATORY
CLA
. PHILLIS
.
.
EDITH G.
lILLAR
y Tl D , EN
CLASS PROPHECY
AzALE\ JoAx TERRY
GIFT
F. LLOYD ,'y 1MO ' I)
CLAS
.,. .,.
.
Class Colors
Pl RPLE AND \YHITE
.,. .,.
.
Class Flower
\YEET PEA
[ 11 1
. . . . . . . . .
. '\'id."
Cla sical Course. Cla. s President, 2; Debating
Team, J; p~ taff, J, -!; Class Play Cast.
"Rt' wise don't 'ii:ork,jwt bl1df."
... IDXEY BR ccE B1sxo
..................................
PHJLll' T. BL'\.'.\CH .\RI)
.
. . . . . . . .
"Phil"
English Course. Ci\ ic Co-operation Club 1; Boosters
Club 1; Camera Club 2; H. R. C. 1; Duo igma 2, 3;
Beta Phi Kappa -!; Cla s Secretary -!; py taff 3;
Charge to l ' nder-graduates.
"He sloops lo nothing but the door?????"
"ferncy"
Scientific Course. Lyceum L eague J, -!; Knittin g
Cluh 3; Girl couts Troop YI J, -1-; Kenhidram -1-;
Athletic Association -1-; H onor tudent; Class P oem.
"That of hii· smiling was Jul simple and coy."
. . . . . . . . . . '"Joe"
Cla .. ical Course. Civic Co-operation Club 1; Tennis
Club 2, 3, -1-; Du o, igma 2, 3; Treasurer 3; Latin Club
2, 3; French Club 3; Boy. Octet 3, -1-; Class Pla y Cast.
"Like a circle ending never
Doth his tongue go 011 forever ."
Jos EPH LE STER EPsTEix
.. VEA CAROLI~lE l~REDERICKSO:\'
.
.
.
.
.
.
'\\'u,ap"
Engli h Course. Athletic :\ssociation 1, 2; Girl
, couts Troop YI 3, -1-; Commercial Club J; Tennis
Club 3; Lyceum League -1-.
"//bsolutely tireless is her mouth."
"Ve/lie"
Boo ters Club 1; , py Staff 1, 2, 3; Editor-in-chief -1-;
nnual taff 3, -1-; Athletic As ociation 1, 2, -!; Lyceum
League 2, 3, -!; Glee Club 2, 3, -!; Latin Club 2, 3, -1-;
Tennis Club 3, -1-; Debating Team 3; Secretary D ebating ociety 3; Lake Forest Contest 3, -1-; Du o
igma President 3, -!; Class Vi ce-Pre ident 3; Base
Ball Team 2, 3; Girl Scouts Troop YI 3, -1-; Juni or
Four Minute 1an 3; Kenhidram 4; alutatorian;
Cla s Play Cast.
"!leaven bless the man who invented the plzone."
YVETTE ZAR\ GOLDBERG . . . . . . . . .
1. H AR\10:\'
. . . . . . . "Betsy"
Cla ical Cour e. Clas Trea urer 1, 2; Athletic
s ociation 1, 4; Latin Club 3, 4; Duo igma 3, 4; Girl
couts Troop VI 2, J, -1-; Lyceum League 3, -!; Yi cePre ident Lyceum -!; Spy taff 3, 4; Annual taff -1-.
"A ga)', lively girl is a joy forever."
ELIZABETH
. "Ste/"
:cientific Course. Glee Club 2, 3, 4; First place in
Declamatory Contest 3; Lyceum League 3, 4; President Lyceum 3; Class Treasurer 3, 4; Booster's Club
1; py taff 2; Ken hidram -!; Hon or tudent; Class
Play Cast.
"Does size do a lot of things you can't resist?"
'TELLA I-I EY\1\'.'
[ 12]
..................................
r.-.---·-------------~
FR \'\ClS JosEPH
J \Cl'.SON
, cien ti fie Course.
"I' ve dug and dug, and at last I'm thru."
J \~IES K.\TO\\ tTz . . . . . . . . "Cutie"
Classical Course. l li gh School Orchestra 1, 2, 3, -!;
Science Club 2; Latin Club 2, 3, -!; Tennis Club 3, -!;
Debating Society 3; Class Play Cast.
"Elis 111ie11 is lofty, but his gaze
Too well a wandering heart betrays."
lll\RRY
r.DrT11
J. K:\LDSE'\
Scientific Course.
()iris Athletic Association 1, 2, ..J.;
Orchestra 1, 2, 3, ..J.; Glee Club 3, 4; Duo Sigma 3, 4;
l .yceum League ..J.; Knitting Club J; Girl Scout Troop
\ ' I 3, ..J.; Class Play Cast; Honor Student; Class
I listor).
"A11d does it 1101 seem sad to )'Oii
!Vhm 1 should like to be s111all
To have to be so Vt'l)' tall?"
BEATRICE E ...;.
KoRT . . . . . .
"Beak"
Classical Course. Class President 1; Civic Co-operation Club 1; Basket Ball Team 1, 2; Boosters Club 1,
2; Junior Four l\linute l\lan 3; Orchestra I, 2, 3, -!;
Latin Club 2, 3, ..J.; Lyceum League 2, 3, -!; Girl Scouts
3, ..J.; Tennis Club 2, 3, ..J.; \' ice-President 3; Glee Club
1, 2, 3, -!; :\ thletic. ssociation 1, 2, -!; Spy, taff 2, 3,
..J.; Annual Staff 3, ..J.; Class Song.
", '/1e's herl' I heard her giggle."
l\1 \RJE L\RSE:\
l•:nglish Course. Athletic Association 2; Commercial
Cl~b 3.
"Her 111odest looks th1 cottage miglit adorn,
Sweet as thi· pri111rost' paps beneath t/11• thorn."
C11 \RI.Es L EPl'.O\Sl'.Y
"Charlie"
Classical Course. Boosters Club 1; Physics Club-!;
Latin Club ..J..
''For /11' was s/1y of the ladies."
. . . "Sid"
Commercial Course. Commercial Club 3; Class Play
P ropert) ;\lan.
",J 111i11d content both crown awl ki11gdo111 is."
~!Cl'. A.
·----------------·
1 A(,.\RO
.
.
...
Classical Course. Boosters Club I; Latin Club 2;
Science Club 2, J; Spy Staff J, ..J.; Kenhidram J; T ennis
Club 2, J.
"Alan is 111a11, and 111aster of l1isfate."
[ 13 l
--- ---...........................
.-~------
~.
hLLAR . . . . . . . . . . "Marj."
Commercial Cour e.
Girl couts Troop IV President J, Vice-President 4; Baseball Team 2; Basket
Ball Team l, 2, 4; Captain 4; Lyceum League 3, 4;
Athletic A sociation 1, 2, -!; President-!; , py Staff-!;
Honor tu dent.
"Love me, love my wife."
;.\1ARJORIE E.
C
RTI J. Moss . . . . . . . . . .
"Curt"
Scientific Course. Class President 3, ..J.; Clas VicePresident 1; Tennis Club 2; Debating Society 3; Spy
Staff 3, 4; Pre ident Kenhidram -!; Four 1inute Man
3; Class Play Cast.
"Shall I, wasting in despair,
Die because a woman's fair?"
ESTHER
EL ON
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
cientific Course. Lyceum League 4; Glee Club 3,
4; Class Play Cast.
"You lzauc a soft and mouing voice, wl1icl1 pleads
Witlz eloquent melody."
TEL ON
. . . . . . . . . . . . "1Vea"
Scientific Course. Lyceum League 3, -!; Glee Club
2, 3, 4; Kenhidram -!; Athletic As ociation 3, -!;
Treasurer-!; Tennis Club 3, 4; Girl Scouts Troop IV
2, 3, 4; Class Play Cast.
"A true friend to all wlzo touch lzer life."
LI1"NEA V.
EDWARD \V. PETERso:-> . . . . . . . . . .
"Eddie"
Classical Course. Latin Club 3, 4; Duo Sigma 3, -!;
Beta Phi Kappa 3, ..J.; Tennis Club 3; Foot Ball 3;
Art Club 3; Liberty Loan Oratorical Con test 3.
"Fear not, IJI)' hearties I am lzere."
. . . . . . . .
"El"
Classical Course. Lyceum League 3, 4; Latin Club
2, 3, 4; Kenhidram -!; Tennis Club 3.
" ;fre we late? !Ve are here comes Ellen."
ELLEN R ASML SSEN
R \SM LSSE' . . • . . . . . . . .
" , /manly ma11, to been a 'bishop able'."
ADOLPH
1. s lllll.Z .
Commercial Course. Girls G lee Club 2, 3, ..J.;
Lyceum League 3, ..J.; Spy Staff 3, 4; Commercial
Club 3.
"For her J'/l dare tl1e billow's roar
For her J'll dare the distant shore."
ELIZABETH
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11!'1. . . . . . . . . . . . .
[ 14]
HLcH
T. CLAIR SoL'THMAYD
.
.
.
.
"Kewpie"
.
Classical Course. Boosters Club l; Sergeant-at
Arms I; Boys' Working Reserve 2; Duo Sigma 2, 3, 4;
Latin Club 2, 3, 4; Tennis Club 3, 4; Spy Staff 3, 4;
Debating Society 3; Boys Octet 4; Kenhidram 4.
"Yowzgibus boyibus lovibus Latin."
LLOYD
Yl\1'.\.10:-.0 DS
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Scientific Course.
Boosters Club 1; Physics Club 2;
Tennis Club J, 4; Beta Phi Kappa 3, 4; Beta Phi
Kappa Orchestra 4; Student \lanager Football Team
-l; Honor Student.
"That eyes!
Those nose!
PH\' I. I.IS SYMMO!\ i)S
.
.
.
.
Them mustache!"
.
.
.
.
.
.
"Pl1il"
.
Classical Course. Boosters Club l; Science Club 2;
Duo igma 3, 4; Latin Club 2, -l; Class Secretary J;
Baseball Team 2; Lyceum League 3, 4; Secretary J;
Spy Staff 2, J, -l; Annual Staff 3, ..J.; Athletic A sociation 2, 4; Girl Scouts 3, -l; Basketball Team 2, 4;
\' aledictorian.
"Herfailings lean to virtue's side."
:\z..\LE..\ TERRY
.
"Ten)'"
.
Scientific Course. Athletic Association I, 2, 4; Duo
Sigma J, 4; Girl Scouts Troop V l 3, 4; Lyceum League
4; l lonor tudent; Class Prophecy.
"Then be 1101 cov
For havi11g once but lost your prime
He may forever tan)·."
A RTH LR TRo~vH. .
. "Art"
Scientific Course. Class ecretary 1; Boosters Club
I; Duo igma J, 4; Tennis Club -l; :\nnual Staff 4;
Treasurer Duo igma 3; Class \"ice-President -l; Kenhidram -l; H. R. C. I; Spy Staff 3; Boys Octet J, 4.
"fie advanCl's with slow and stately step,
, htd t/1crc' s 11othil1g um make him /wnJ' ·"
\\'ALTER .
. . . . "Emmer"
Classical Course. Athletic Association I, 2; Latin
Club 2, 3, 4; Duo Sigma 3, -l; Lyceum League 3, -l;
Tennis Club 3; Girl couts 3, -l; Kenhidram 4.
El\l\t \
"If to her share some earth~v errors Jail,
Look on her/ace, and you'll forget them all."
DElfooy .
"Babe"
Scientific Course. Latin Club -l; Junior Glee Club 2;
Cir! Scouts Troop VI 3, 4.
GR\CE LoREXA
"///hat a drcfll)' place this world would be,
/!'ere there }JO lit1le people in it."
H.\RRY \'".CARI.SOX
.
.
"
~r.;.:cde"
Classical Course.
"/f'ell, there is yet one day of life before me,
/lnd, w!iatso' er betide, 1 will enjoJ' it."
LEO SJo..O\\"RO:\Sf.d
L................................
~
.
.
.
.
.
.
...
"It is tl1e greatest f ol~v, not to be jolly
That's wliat I think."
[ 15]
"Blessed be the day that --"
~
-.,..._e::=.=---1'"
0000 0 0 0 0 0 0
0000 ooaaoo
O O OD 000""'000
0000 000 ! ODO
[ 16 J
1'.l\LDSEX
Hl STED
CHlBB
Senior Class, 1920
PRESfDE:'\ I'
H \ROLi) K \ l D'iE\
.
\'1cE-PRE...,IDE:\T
SECRETARY
:--.To:-- 10 Gr ·\:\ \:\TO:-- 10
rE \X:-\ETTE Hl ' STED
.
OLIVER CHl BB
.
TRE \Sl RER .
..
.
. ....
Hon or Students
\ ' \ l. EDICTORI \ .\
BER , ICE RHODE
RL TH lh:cr,ER
S\l.l' T\TORI \:-\
c L \SS H !. TOil)
Do1us E\' AN"S
ELL.\ l\lERRTLL
lRE:\E GR .\\ ES
CL \ss PoEl\r
0Ll\ER CHl BB
c L \SS PROl'H
BE \TRICE B \RXETT
~ Ro-;E .l\1AR1'.S
.\1 \RG.\RET PcLL
ECY
CH \RGE TO l r xDERGRADL ' ArE
CLASS GJFT .
.
.
.
.
H .\ROLD K:\TDSE:\
.
. . .
Eowrn KLEIST
Class Motto
"GRAD\TI;\r" ( STEP BY ,'TEP )
......
Class Colors
......
Class Flower
LA\ F'\ DER S\\ EET PEA
[17]
PETER A; EM
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Pete"
Commercial Course. Entered as , enior from Class
of '21. Class Vice-President l, 2, J; French Club 2.
"] am 11ot a politicia11, and my other habits are good."
·-------...------·.
. . . . . . . . . . . .
"Be"
Clas ical Course. Lyceum League J, -!; Kenhidram
-!; Latin lub 2, 3; Physics Club 2; Athletic Association J, -!; Tennis Club J, -!; Girl cout Troop I\' 2, 3,
-!; Honor, tudent; la Prophecy.
"]oy rises in me like a summer's morn."
BEATRICE B :\RKETT
. . . . . . . . . . . "R11f11s"
lassical Cour e. Lyceum 2, 3, -!; Glee Club 2, 3, -J.;
Tennis lub 3, 4; Girls Athletic ssociation l; Latin
Club 1, 2; Lyceum Play Cast 3; Senior Girls Sextette; Honor Student; alutatorian.
"So quiet, so modest, so winning, so sweet;
'o many virtues I loue to repeat."
R uTH BECKER
HAROLD BENTSO
Scientific Cour e. Football 3, -!; Basketball J, -!;
Beta Phi Kappa-!; Tennis Club 3, -!; Kenhidram -!;
Lake Fore t Conte t -!; py Annual Staff-!; Oratorical
Contest 3.
"He is only f antas 1ical that is not in fashion."
ARTHUR\\'. BLoxooRF . . . . . . . . . . . "Art"
Scientific Cour e. Beta Phi Kappa 3, -!.
"Genius does what it must, talent does what it can."
. . . . . . . . . . . "Jf7in11y"
English Cour e. Entered as Junior from Randolph
High chool.
"Jf/hy does one man's yawning make another yawnr"
,R \\'D> BRLS . . .
1ARIE CAMERO-.; . . . . . . . . . . "Zol"
English Course. Girl cout Troop IV 2, 3, -!; Duo
Sigma 3; Lyceum 4.
"None but herselj can be her parallel."
HAZEL
. . . . . . . . . . .
"Ollie"
Scientific Course. Beta Phi Kappa 3, -!; Secretary
an<l Treasurer 4; Beta Phi Kappa Orchestra 3, -!;
Class Treasurer 4; Orchestra 3; Honor tudent; Class
Poem.
"What's in a namd"
OuvER CHL BB
[ 18]
I ·--------------------··
..................................
Lous Co. E"\Tl:->E .
"Lou it' "
, cientific Course. Chemistrv Club 1; . c1ence Club
2; Beta Phi Kappa J, -t.
''.\ilt'nre is sweeter than speer/1."
.\\rEDEO DEilo E
.
.
.
•
Cla. sical Course. Entered K. H. S. 1918 from Italy;
<;ergeant-at :\rms 2.
"Few things art impossible lo diligmr1· and skill."
DOROTHY B. f<.DDY
''Dot''
Classical Course. Latin Club 1, 2, J; , cience Club 3;
Athletic ..\ssociation 1, 1, J; Tennis Club J, -t; . p)
• taff J; Lyceum League .1, -t; Lyceum Pia} Cast 3;
Dramatic Club -t.
"Somi: da;• 1'11 sm·t'~v get in wmng, for I ;abber, jabbtr
all day long."
DoR1s EL.\'\.
. . . . . . . . . .
"Dodi"
Scientific Course. Lyceum League J, -t; (;Jee Cluh J,
4; Kenhidram 4; l lcmor Student; Class I !istory.
"Intelligence is not lzer only virtue."
"F.tlz"
ETHEL GET!>CH\I\:'\
Lyceum l.cague 4;. r: Tssuc
Commercial Course.
and Annual taff -t.
"It is good to live and learn."
A"\T0"\10 G1..\ .. ..\:\T0'10
.
.
.
.
"Tony"
.
Classical Course. Class Officer 1, 4; lkta Phi Kappa
1, 1, 3, President -t, Vice-President .1; h.enhidram 4;
Art Club 3, -!, President 3; 'Tennis Club 3, -!; Latin
Club 1; Four :\linute peaker Fourth Liberty Loan;
Annual taff 3, -!; Debating Club 1.
"His speeclz is a burning fire."
\Y\LTER GILBERT
.
.
.
. "lf/al~v"
. cientific Course. Duo igma 3;. p) . tatf 1; Tennis
Club 1, 3, -!; Orche tra 1, 3, -!; Boosters Club 1;
Fr<.:nch Club 3.
"Jia; ;·ou ln·e all tlze days of your life."
F.1.\,L'EL Gooo:-.L.\:'\'
..............................
" 1\lmm;•"
Cla ·ical C( ur e. Entered from R.H. . as Junior;
py, taff -!; "K" Club-!; Lake F rest C.01te t J, 4;
Football -! .
"Yinety-nine per cent genius."
[ 19 J
"Kaddy"
Scientific Course. L) ceum League 3, -J.; Glee Club
2, J, -J.; Ci\ ic Co Operation Club 1; Tennis Club 2;
Girl Scouts Troop IY 2, J, -J.; President of Troop, -1-;
Senior Girls extette; Duo Sigma 2, 3; :\thletic
.-\ssociation -J.; Kenhidram -J.; Class Song.
"Her 111ain object in l~fc is to cat, lo drink, and to be
lllt'J"I)'. "
KATHERYX GRACE
(RE:'\ E (; R ..\\ ES
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
English Course. Entered as Senior from Lincoln
High School, Zion Cit); Honor Student; Class Poem.
"Dilligence is till mother of good fortune."
ALICE G. HAI.LISE\'
. . . . . .
• . "Hallisey"
Classical Course.
Latin Club 1, 2, 3; ciencT
Club 2, J; Tennis Club 3; Athletic .\ssociatio 3, -J.;
Girl Scouts Troop IV 2, 3.
",he 11eve1· complies against her will."
"Hot"
Scientific Course. Entered as Senior from Class of
1921; Beta Phi Kappa J, -!; Class Treasurer 1; Octet
2, J, -J.; French Club 2; Boys' Working Reserve 2.
"Rejoice, ()young man, in thy youth."
ST\'.\LEY G. HEATH
"7enny "
Classical Course. Entered as a Senior from Zion
City lligh School. Lyceum -!; Girl Scout Troop VI
-J.; Class ecretary -J..
",J lass with quaint and quiet ways."
JEA:\'.\ ETTE H LSTED . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . .
"Reily"
Commercial Cour e. Knitting Club 3; Lyceum
League -J..
"And her.face is euer pleasant."
0RELL\ JoER"\lDT
t
. . . . . . . . . . . . "Joe"
Scientific Course. Orchestra I, 2; Art Club J; Tenni
Club 3; Football J, -J.; Basketball 4~
" '" 'ub -J.
Beta Phi Kappa -J..
<:_
".Fasten lzim as a nail 1 a
JosEPH S. KEsSLER
"U l
'
E1rn1:-.; K1.usT
. . . . .
.
. . . "Ed"
Commercial Course. Pre 1dent 2-Yr. Commercial 2;
Beta Phi Kappa -J.; Beta Phi Kappa Orchestra -1;
Honor Student; Class Gift.
"And still they gazed and still the wonder grew,
That one small head could can-y all lze knew."
[20]
...................................
__J
---·
~___;;;.__
-
K:-.. LD. E:\
"Happ_·"
English Course. Beta Phi Kappa 3, -1-; \ 'ice Pn.:si
dent -1-; :\rt Club 3; French Club 3; Sp) Staff\; Class
President -1-; Annual, taff -1-; Honor 'tudent; Charge
to L-ndergraduates.
"His wisdom is i11 propor/1011 to /us hci:r/it."
HAROLD
(;L \DYS :\l \EC. \ARD
Scientific Course. Girls Glee Cluh 2, 3, -1-; L) ceum
League 3, -1-; Kenhidram -1-; Senior Girls . extette.
"Cursed be the ~·crSl', ho~;; «'11/ so e'er it Jlo~,
That lt'nds to make one worlhy bo)' my Jot'."
Lt CILLE \1.4.C,lJIRE
" l.u "
Scientific Course. Lvceum League J, -1-; Duo ~igma
2, J; Girl Scout Troop i \' 2; Ci\ ic Co-Operation CIL~b I.
"11-'ould ;;.:e had suclz another."
RosE :\1ARKS . . . . . .
"Ro"
Cla sical Course. Latin Club 2, 3; Lneum League
-1-; Honor. tudent; Class Prophecy.
.
"'Ji,// me thy company, and I will tdl tlzt't' 4:/w1 tho11 arl."
I· LL\ \I. :\TERRILL
. • . . . .
"El."
Scientific Course. Pin sics Club 2; Lvceum League
3, -1-; I l onor Student; Class Histor). .
~
"Good natun and good s1•nse must e~·erjoin."
"Red"
English Course. Ci\ic Co-Operation Club I; Lyceum
League .1; Treasurer -1-; Glee Club I, 2, .\, -1-; Tennis
Club 2; Girl couts Troop I\' 1, 2, 3; Senior Girls
Sextette; Commercial Club J; Athletic :\.ssociation 1.
" 1n,~ ar.<:a_v ..-r11-roz ', .. i11: a:~·ay ran', I'm off for a good
time, rome if you dare."
H El E'\ • 'en \C".'cientific C<1urse.
:\ ssoci a ti on -1-.
"Helt•n1•"
L) ceum League 3, -1-; .Athletic
".'he ha; a 'satiable mrwsity."
\!A R ',RET P· LL
..................................
. "Jlarg"
Cla·.-ical C iur.·L. Du
i.zma 2. ,l; t.lrerary 3;
L\ceum LLa...::uL \ -1-; PrL ·id~nt ..J.; Cla ·. Trea. urer 3;
l\.. lep < 1man1a-c Ca.·t 3; J\..enhidram ..J.; \ 'ice-Pre. ident
..J.; .·py tatf I, 2, 3, ..J.; Girl • C1JUt rr JP n· 3, -1-;
Lwn Cluh ': Ci\·ic C -Op1.:rati •1 Ch.. h I; H onor
tUllL it; Ca.- . ProphLC) .
.. Ha . ."OU nM l1t'<1rd 11 said o)i,
.1 :::oman's nay doth Jtand jfJr nau"h/?"
[ 21 J
C\RL R\KO .I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
, cientific Course. President of ChernistrY Club 2;
Ci\~ic Co-Operation Club 1; Beta Phi K~ppa 3, 4;
Kenhidram 4.
",/ ma11 of strife and conle11tio11."
·---- --·1
I RE:\'E 1. REITH . . . . . . . . . . .
"Rene"
cientific Course. Girls Lyceum League 2, 3, 4;
Athletic Association 3, 4; ecretarr 4; Girls Ba eball
I; Kenhidrarn 4; Commercial Club3;Tennis Club '.2. 3.
"fl'/iat is well done is done soon enough."
BER:\ICE RHODE
"B 111111)' "
Classical Course. Clas President 1; Class YicePresident 3; Girl Athletic Association 1, 2, 4; Girls
Basketball 2, 4; Lyceum League '.2, 3, 4; Spy Staff '.2,
3, 4; Latin Club 1, 2, 3; Girl couts Troop IY 2, 3,
4; Tennis Club 2, 3; Duo Sigma 2; Kenhidram 4;
Americanization Pageant 3; Honor Student; Yaledictorian.
".'he loves but one-at a time."
BERTHOLD G. ScHAEF"ER
. . . . . . . . . . "Bert"
Scientific Course. Chemistry Club 2; Beta Phi
Kappa 3, 4; Beta Phi Kappa Orchestra 3, 4; I Iigh
School Orchestra 3, 4; Football 3, 4; Basketball 3, 4;
"K" Club 3, 4; Basketball Student 1anager 4; Class
Officer 4.
"Short of stature, he was, but strongly built and atlzletir."
. . . . . • . . . . .
"Mike"
Science Club I; Commerce Club 2; Beta P hi Kappa 4.
"Little said is soonest mended."
M.1cHAEL ScH L 1.Tz
. . "Sen"
cientific Course. Tennis Club 2, 3; Kenhidram 4;
Annual Staff 3, 4; Spy Staff 4; Lake Forest Contest 4;
Chemistry Club 3; French Club 3.
"lTe grant that a/tho lie has much wit,
He is very shy of using it,
As being loath to wear it out."
\\'ALTER A. SE:'\:\E
XYDER . . . . . .
"Glad"
Classical Course. Beta P hi Kappa 3, 4; Tenni
lub
3, 4; Latin Club 3, 4; Kenhidrarn 4; "K" Club 4;
Octet 4; nnual taff 4.
"And truly he has not begun his bright career."
GLADSTO:>:E KEITH
. . . . . . . . .
"Wahley"
, cientific Course. Beta Phi Kappa 4; Class President 1, 2, 3; Art Club 2, 3, 4; Kenhidrarn 4; Football
4; French Club 3; "K" Club 4; Octet 4.
G1LBERT " 'AHLBERG.
"For 111)' part, I'd rather be the first man among these
fellows than the second man in Rome."
['.22]
~•
IJP
I
----------------• I
--~-
................................
. .
"Coke"
Scientific Course. Entered K. H. S. as a Senior from
Kemper Hall; Lyceum League 4; Senior Girls Sextette; Glee Club 4.
"Herself alone, none other she resembles."
CORA 'YELLS
"El"
Classical Course. Lyceum League 2, 3, -!; Latin
Club 2, 3; Duo igma 2; Americanization Pageant 3;
Tennis Club 1.
"Size's all my fancy painted lzer."
E1.EAl'\OR Al'\N' CAVANAGH
"Mmj."
English Course. Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4; G. . Troop
I\' 2, 3, 4; Lyceum League 3, 4; Senior Girls Sextette; Art Club 3,4; Kenhidram 4; "Julius Caesar"
1; "The Kleptomaniac" 3; "The Japanese Girl" 3;
Tennis Club 3, 4; Annual taff 3, 4; Class Song.
"M11sic hath charms size loves both music and channs."
MARJORIE GLENORE Krnc
ELMER
................................
c. A:-.:DERSO:'\
Classical Course.
States Army.
Entered as Senior from
nited
I
-
[ 23]
E'.\' ,STROJ\1
SCHOJ.EY
l\1\YO
l\[l
EI. I.ER
T\vo -Year Commercial
Seniors, 1920
PRESJDEKT
•
ETHEL ExcsTROM
\ '1cE- P RE IDE:'\T
LILLIA:\" ScHOLEY
SECRETARY
LORR \l:\"F
.
AGNES ~ 1 LE LLER
TREASLRER . . .
T
T
T
Class M otto
" \\'£ \\'11,1, F1xo A \\' .ff OR i\l..\KE IT."
T
T
T
Class Colors
OLD
R osE AND B Lt;E
T
..
..
Class Flower
R osE
[241
l AYO
----~
ELIZABETH HELE:\ B \D;
. . . • . . .
. "Liz."
Salesmanship Club; Commercial Club.
"I am read)· lo admit that )'Oil are 'i.i;rong and I am right."
"Rutliie"
RLTH DEA:\S
Salesmanship Club; Commercial Club.
"Life's greatest problem."
ETHEL R.\G\"HILD
I->.;c. TRO\f . . . .
. "Peg;o"
President I, '2; Commercial Club.
"Afodt· ,/,simple and S';;,"eet."
• O'\YA ETHEL
c;, LL
.
.
•
.
". onnie"
alesmanship Club; Girls Athletic Association; Commercial Club.
" J good Iii/It• sister lo e:·er~rbody."
HILDE<.ARD PAL LI ·E LL EBKE
"Pol~r"
Commercial Club; alesmanship Club.
", he doe; notl1in w partimlar, bill does it u:ell."
. . . . . . . . "Frenrhy"
Girl. cout Troop Yf; Commercial Club; Clai;s ecretar~; Girls :\thletic -\ssociation.
"&·o~rbody's girl."
L oRR.\I:\E :\JAYO
L11.Y :\It: ELI.ER
. . . .
"Lil."
alt: man. hip Club; Cla
Trea urer; Commercial
Club.
"}llJI a rrir/."
-\c-;-
\I
....................................
R
K"T ff.
"' PF RR
..
"Blonde"
~alt. man-h·r Club; Commerc•al Cub .
·· T e srlr:er air/."
[ -5 ]
MADELL E MARGARET REL sooRF .
"Madge"
alesmanship Club; Commercial Club; Girls thletic Association.
"A girl witlz no 1·egrets."
FERK LLCILLE SPEKCER .
. "Faii)'"
alesmanship Club; Commercial Club.
"Knowledge comes of learning well retained."
MADELINE SACKRIDER . . . . .
"Sis"
Salesmanship Club; Commercial Club; Glee Club.
"A blossom full of promise."
ALICE AN A HULTY .
alesmanship Club; Commercial Club.
"Forward, alwa)'S forward."
"Luc)' "
ANNA \\'I SNIEWSKI . . . . . .
alesmanship Club; Commercial Club.
"Li/Ile comrade."
"Ann"
R uTH ETHELY ZINDAR . . . . . . .
. "Zinde"
Salesmanship Club; Commercial Club.
"I am a girl after my own heart."
(261
_.
............................
ZIE \ ' ERS
ROCKWF.1.1.
Mid-Year Seniors, 1921
P RESIDEXT
..
l1RBAX Z IEVER '
ER\q_ - \\'ALK.ER
Y 1CE-P RESI1)£:\'T
SECRETARY .
B El " LAH R OCKWELL
T REASLRER . . .
R ICHARD GREE . " E
T
T
T
Members
B AIRD, i\I II.DRE [)
:\!I LLER
ETHEL
B AILEY, H AR O LD
.\LUTZ, :\! EYER
B ERl\rIXGH Al\I J OE
:\l cRDOCK, R oBERT
CE IL
• ~ EL o _· TEDDY
D GC\ LOP, I R \ I X G
P ETZh.E, GFORC..E
G REEXE, R I HARD
P o\YELL
H OYE, H OBART
R o
H t:D ox, R \.\.i\ro x D
R Y.A X, •.\ LY E
D u.;
AK ,
.\I R • .\.. r
h.WELL
B Et LAH
H ERZOG H o " ..\.RD
I ER I.\. x .·
R E. IIDA
'E
._' ...,. PTT, :\l .\. G \
\\ u .
/. E
L .\.R £." , F REDERl '
l\ l.\. R Ql I.' , FF , 0 \
l\l ' \ RRO. \\ \ 'l
\
ZIE\
,f ' .
ET
Be R Ts
TELSON
Mc CARRO::\
Advanced Juniors, 1921
PRE IDE ' T
...
. J C' STIN BARBER
EARL McCARRO r
YICE- PRESIDE::\T
STE I.LA NEL. 0 J
SE RETARY
TREASCRER . . .
CASSIE B u R
s
M 111bers
BARBER, J C' TIX
BA YER, GLADYS
BosTETTER, JOYCE
BcRNS, CASSIE
B LTTCHER, BER JICE
CRA1 E, GLEN A
CRA r E, OvEDA
CROS . ' DOROTHY
RRAN, GLADY
DOHERTY, GERALl)J;\E
c
ELYA . H, MAR\"
FINK, LcCILLE
Fo1urns, FABIA
GALLIGAl\, ALICE
GooOMA T' E'rnYLE
GOTTLIEB, THEODORE
GROTSl'..Y, HARRY
HARllERT, ~lARY
HEXSEL, ALMA
J,EN 0 ' THOMA .
LcowIG, .l\lARIE
01A \V ACl'..E, CLEMENT
i\1A YER, A
TOI
ETTE
~1AYER, CJrn. ENCE
McCARRON, EARL
i\IcNuLTY, ELIZABETH
• ELSO
'STELLA
PERK.I J ' HOWARD
POWELL, A T ABEi.LE
RAIMA 'LEO
RHODE, RICHARD
RILEY, LEO
ROEMER, MARGARET
SCHMITT, LEONA
ScH LER, REC.INALD
SCHWARTZTRAl ' llER, PA
HERMAN:\", YJOLA
SHIMEK, LILL.IAN
STEINERT, SYLVIA
}OH '· Of\\
I ETTE
joRGENSE:\, HELEK
THOMP ON, Le LC
\ ' ETTER, HASE LL
\YER TER, GEORGE
JACOllS, Al\1Al'\DA
(28)
LARSEN, EDITH
}AY, }AC!'..
KILTZ, LL CILLE
KrsTEX, CELESTA
\\'HARRIE,
1ARGARET
KUSTER, GEORGE
\Y1 E, HAZEL
J
\ VHITB ECK, t: 1 0
\Y1RTANE ' ,AG TES
L
-•
I•
RAIM A
EASTMAX
GABRIELSON
BL' CH
Two-Year Commercial
Juniors, 1921
PRE . IDE0:T
CLIFFORD GABRIEL S O!\
.
KATHRYN EASTMAN
V1cE-PRES1 DENT
ELMER RAI 1AX
SECRETARY AND TREASl: RER
REPORTER
.
.
.
GENE VIE\' £ BL SCH
.
• • •
Members
ALBERT,
B AI
lARY
T' RoY
BOHR,
VELYX
LAKGER, A.Ll\L.\
:\lAGARO, ).Lul Y
~L.\SLO\\" SKA, EoxA
BRAX1'.0W, l\lABE L
~hcHELS, GEORGE
Be CH, GENEVIEVE
PLATO, ELIZABETH
BOYLE,
Pc LL, ~!ARIE
lARGARET
CLAL'SEN, CLARA
RAIMAX, ELl\lER
DOHERTY, LILLIA:\
RAS'.\ff
EASTMA T
' KATH RY:\
R1 BAR, ETHEL
EX' ;\ Ll\IA
GABRIELSON, CLIFFORD
Res ELL, LILLIA:\
HAASE, Lt: CILE
SCHJ\IORRO\Y, ;\L\DELTXE
HAIJ\'E ' l\lARY
SEITZ, '"ALTER
HoHE ' ECJ--.ER, PHYLLIS
Sc P ..\KCrc, ED\\ _\.RD
KE SLER, FRANCES
KLEI
SCHMIDT, ED TA
K CCERIK, EMIL
ZYTKO\\" KA, HELE!\
'\'Erss, EcGEXIA
ZEYEN,
!ARIE
[29]
ZEFF
WHITCOMB
PATTER 0
BO
Mid-Year Juniors, 1922
PRESIDE
T
.
CHESTER ZEFF
VICE-PRE SJ DENT
SECRETARY
THELMA \VmTCOMB
.
.
.
TREA , URER .
.
.
}l' LIA p ATTERSO
LouisE Bo ·
ERGEA IT-AT-ARMS
.
LEO SWITAL KI
......
Memb rs
ALCOCK, l\t1ARGARET
K
Au TER, MoE
MADER, BES IE
BoN, Lou1sE
MEYER ' ADOLPH
BORKE ' HAGE · , ALBERT
PATTERSON, JULIA
BOTH, EMER 0 •
PIERCE,
DEDIEMAR, GRACE
[30 l
DSON, CLARE TC£
lARION'
\VITAL KI, LEO
EMERY, YICTOR
SwoLKI
ERLER, GERTRCDE
THOMP 0
' ALETHA
GcN • , ALLISTER
ToMLI ' So
, \VALTER
,
OPHIE
JlJLffS
HALBERSTADT, HEN'RY
\\7EJSS,
HA ' SEN', LAl RA
\YJLLIAMSO ·,THEODORE
Hcwr, FRANCES
\VH!TCOMB, THELMA
HOPPE,
ZEFF, CHESTER
1ARGARET
HOLT
"
z~
J Y,
.
LA WREN E FRIEL
\ TJCE-PilE . !DENT
.
GEORGE JOH
SECRETARY .
BEATRICE HotsTEI
TREASURER
..
.
.
.
.
JAME.
CLARE TCE
SERGEANT-AT-ARMS
01
1\1 YER.
1 HLICK
......
Members
J
•
;\, DE RSO:\') GORDON
•
. ' DRE, .EDG ~\R
KusTER, LESTER
LI
DBERG, .-\LFRED
13AER, :\1°ATHAN
LIVINGSTON, RAYMON"D
B \LL, ALICE
:\1 \RSH,
BALM, GERTRL DE
1\lARTIN, RALPH
BL\LES, BERTHOLF
t\lA.X\\'E LL, J EA.
1ARIO
BEALES, }EA:\'ETTE
l\lr LLER, OuvE
BERENS, h.Ei'\E
1\lILLAR, DAVID
BETZER, FLORENE
BrnNEMAN, RosE
IrnK, ORA
l\1oRRow, CHARLES
B1s1101', ELROY
I l'HLICK, CLARE
B1u rE, l\IA Y
1 RPHY, LINU
E
[ 31 J
Men1bers
(Continued)
BRYANT, CLARE
0hERS,
CORR, LOl1ISE
NELSON, GL.\D\'S
Ct MMINGS, E \' E LYX
0DELBERG, LAl JU
Ct RTI ' CHAR LES
PETERSON, HJAL I
DAVI ox, BEl LAH
PrETRAXGEL1, :\-.;<,
Eow ARD , l\h LDRED
Ron1xso:\, LoRR \11\
FERRY, YIOLA
RosrxG, Lot 1s
Fi
K, CYRIL
SA!\THIEL, Lot rs
FLEM! ' G, ALICE
SCHIPPERS, Rt TH
FocART~ FLORENCE
SCH LAX, LESLIE
FRIEL, LA\\' REN E
SHLMWAY, GL ·\DY .
GoTTFREDso r, ERSTEY
SrnNEw1sK1, JEA ' ETTE
GRJGXO ' ,BELLE
Sl\11T11, H \ROLi)
Gt
TER, EDITH
Sot LE ' , Roe.ER
HAILE, ESTHER
STELLA, ~ORMA
HA 1MOND, LAWRENCE
STEWART, \\'ERVE
l IARIUS, EDWARD
Sw1 FT, THOMAS
HARTWIG, ALFRED
T1-10 1PSON, En\\ \RD,,....---
H \R\\OOD, ANNA
Tt RKLESOX, FR \'\"K j-;,'lA,.._II
HEDSTROM, Gu TAv
TL RNER, Qt - 1l\TEJ\'
HENRICKSON, RITA
\'ouMER, G1.AD\'s
I loLSTEil\', BEATRICE
\\' _\LKER, ELE'\1\0R
HcGHEs, HELEN
\YATRI1"G, ROBERT
IsERMAx, 1\1.4.RJORY
\\'HITCOl\IB, '.\11 LDRED
]ACK.SOX, OLIVER
\\'1LLETT, ZELBA
JOHNSON, HELE
\\'ILLIA 1. 01\') OLIVE
T
]OH, ' SOx, no1us
J OHl\'
ox, GEORGE
JoRGENSOx, PALL
\\'ooDBL- RY, ]OH:\'
YA:\'IK, STEl'HEX
BARTER, GLE:\
KARIGAN, CHARLE .
FARRAR, HALLECK
KE
THOMAS, ROBERT
NEDY, THO 1AS
KoRYZNo, ALEXAXDER
[321
J HIES
Ron EL, Lons
----.
Bl' I. L .-L\10 R E
C L A l DO:-.
L ..\ R E \
C.IFFORD
~~ ~
.~G' .
Mid-Year Soph_omores, 1923 · ~vr"
PR E SJl)E\ 'I
CH \RL E \
\ ' 1cE- PRESlDE:\T
SECRETARY
L. Bl LL \1\JOR E
RE:-. E l\1. CL \L DO'\
.
.
.
TREASl R E R .
.
.
SERGE 1n-A
·'.·)'"
CH \RI.OTTE L \RSE;\
LEXA
. . . . .
\[A 1.co'1 H ""
.~XDER .~(.XE ~--~t~:~,~~~:slER ~
EX,
BERGER, l\ 11 I.DRE!)
G1 !' FORD, I .EK\
BJOR
GLO\\ \Ci-.1, Et (,El\!:
'HELE:\
B ocvuo, FRED
GL N"N, FLORA,,
c;, ITORJ)
I
,,o,\d :RI
T
•
f""
HUX<., EDT~ :1-,
()\\ \
) C\Sl\JIR
Ls g,N , OLGA
BOLLMAN", ELIZABETH
H.\HX, 7'LALC0l\I
l
B oRi-. E xH AGE!\, \ '1o1. \
Ho'Cl A Rj)
G<)JWOx
PtE s 11, FRA:-.. "-
Ho
( luuci-.
B osTE"'TER, 1lAROLD
Ll\JF.:R, GL \DYS
RAsc11,
J, \O\ KE
Ht c,l , I'\, FRA:-..c1s ~
Be LI.AMORE, CHAR L s
J.~KSEI\', H \ZEL
R As1\ILS . EX, 0LG ,\
ScHE .\ITER, C. Grnsol\'
CHRISTE r sox, AR
J oHxso:-.., \\'\LTER
ScH'\EIDER, CH .\RLOTTE
B REN"l\.\1AN, FRED A
CL A l . DON,
R
D
)osEPllSO?\, EsTHER
SHEl'llERD, .-\LICE
CLARi-., \ \'\YXE
.JL LJA:\I, CHRIS
.' 'rE:\SO:\, ELl\lER
CoHx
HA
Jt· xKER, EDx A
Sl. RERt s, H\zE r.
Co LE
P
K \l\rER \D, ETHE 1.
K '\R:-..Es, I I \ROLD
TREX \RY, Dox \ LD
KxLDSEX, STA:\ LE\
\ Y1c1n, F1.0YD
SHAW, l\1 A R1ox
LAXDGRE:\, E s THER
\ \'rn.T \:\Ex, E1xo
ER, NELSON"
L\RSO:\, CH \RLOTTE
YAXCE, Fr.ORE'\CE
GAMBLE, \ \' ALTER
LTXDS 'l RO\!, .-\LFRED
GASCOlG
MERRILL,
D 1CE 1
)
UP
, P ETER
, ELGEKE
L
I0
·i
T
E, CLARE ' CE
\ ' Al\ D ER \ \'EE, J osEl'HJ ' E
R \Y
[ 33 J
LARSEN
TR
ESDELL
HARTIG
PULAS1'.I
One-Year Commercial, 1920
PRESIDENT
.
..
EDWARD LARSEN
VICE-PRE !DENT
RUTH TRUESDELL
ECRETARY
ALMA HARTIG
TREASlRER
J OSEPHI
..
E Pt, LASKI
..
M embers
BoR ' HCETTER, HE . RY
JOER!\ DT, ERMA
B RULMAUR, \ VILLIAM
LARSE
ConER, ETHEL
L AR EK, L ours
FENSKE, R u
SELL
P uLASKI, J o . EPHINE
Goo EN, J E
IE
GRIFFIN' J OH
[34]
' EDWARD
R ILEY,
1 ARGARET
ScHAt; FEL, P EARL
H ARTIG, ALMA
WIFT, ADELAIDE
J ACKY, vVALTER
TR - ESDELL, R t:TH
.~
Midnight a'la Poe
]ACK
I
]AY, '21
night, and October. The clouds were scurrying across the sk} in silent
haste, an_d the moon, visible_only at. intervals, w~s pale_ and wan as a ghost that
warns with a sallow face of a corntng storm. fhe w111d moaned and he)\ led
thro the trees, the few remaining leaves shivering in the chilling blast, and scurrying hither and thither, as if to escape the reaching shadows.
A hidden owl sent it') dismal hoot floating across to us, seemingly on some
flitting shadow of the scudding clouds. Dale and I hurried along toward the
depths of this haunted woods, the weirdest place along the Carolina Coast.
Not far to our right the old rice swamps stretched away in black, inky vastnes , and in the distance boomed the solemn voices of the ocean, as in its deep
voice exulting over the gruesome dark of the rice swamps. To bolster up my
already fleeting courage, I tried to think of other things than the immediate surroundings.
To think that I, \Yilliam Brant, should be here with one of the country's most
renowned detectives, to solve an unparalleled mystery, with which the weird and
unnatural was generally associated. I laughed at the thought, and the very sound
of my voice seemed sacrilegious in that awful silence. I clamped my hand over my
mouth and walked more rapidly to overtake Dale who was a few feet in advance.
The crunching of dead leaves and twigs, and the sighing wind were the only sounds
which we heard now as we penetrated deeper into the woods. The path which
we were following soon joined an old driveway, between the bricks of which weeds
were growing waist high. It had evidently not been used for some time. At the
far end, set off between two large stone pillars which terminated the drive, I could
see a great old mansion looming up in the darkness with its high walls silhouetted
against the sky in a brief period of moonlight. Dale hesitated; I came along side
and nodded to his gestures of ilence.
"Funny how the old codger would stay here like this all alone," he whispered
cautiously.
"It was probably that which he was watching over that kept him here," l
an wered, trying to calm my faltering voice.
"Even at that," he answered, "I wouldn't think that treasure or riches could
have much influence upon a man of eighty."
"You forget that he was born with the secret and that his whole life was spent
in searc h for that which he knew was within hi s own house. It would tend to
harden him to the world; and so he lived there guarding what was his and yet not
his unti~ his whole life was wrapped up in the one idea."
"\Yell said, Bill, if your teeth weren't chattering," observed Dale walking up
the drive through the weeds, and to the steps. "However, I think silence is the
best policy right now, and you know how ticklish a ghost is about being disturbed,"
and he chuckled a 1i ttle chuckle which I knew was absoluteh· forced.
H e stepped upon the first step of the porch flight, wl~ich creaked dismall~,
and answering creaks echoed dismally from every corner and window of the broad
veranda. \Ve walked up, twelve steps in all, each step creaking and groaning, and
with the accompanying echoes and the howling wind, each step \\as a chill for me.
T WAS
[35j
"A. fine place for me to be spending my seventeenth birthday in this lone ome
haunted hole," said I bitterly.
":\h," he criticised, "and perhaps it \\a n't you who was looking for adventure?
l hould think ' ou'd like it for a change."
.L\t this minute above the sound of the wind and the rattling creaking windows,
I thought that I could hear footsteps.
ly heart throbbed; my blood froze; my
teeth chattered \-iolently; I " anted to run but could not move. Dale flattened
against the wall and motioned for me to do the same, and together we cowered
there v. hi le the sound of the footsteps came nearer.
I could see a long hand reach out now from behind one of the pillars, silhouetted
again, t the sky, and then disappear again.
ly teeth chattered so iolen tly that
I believe they were heard over there, and a figure jumped out, at the same time
flashing a light full upon us, and in the glare of the light, I could see an automatic
in the other hand. I started saying all the prayers my cattered wits could command.
"\\ell," said Dale cornpo edly, "what's the idea?"
"Oh," exclaimed the voice behind the automatic, "You, Dale? Well, that's
all right." I breathed a great sigh of relief.
"I didn't expect to see you here, Swift," said Dale, for it proved to be a man
from Dale's department. "How is it?"
"You ee I had a hunch that I might be able to work this thing out, and, well
I'm here anyway. Can't vou give me a few details?"
"Certainly," said Dale, striking a match and lighting a candle which he drew
from his pocket," but wait until we get inside." And he added, to my questioning
look at the candle, "To ave my batteries."
After trying various keys he finally inserted one which induced the heavy,
plate glass door to swing ponderously open, and we stepped in. A musty odor of
dead air greeted us; a bat nearly extinguished the fluttering candle flare, and our
hadov.s were throv. n in long, fantastic shapes upon the walls. All was silent, silent a a tomb; otherwise it was the same as upon the day that the old gentleman
had died. The heavy, massive furniture stood about like silent 'itnesses, and
large, old-fashioned picture probably of some ancestors frowned ternly down
from the walls. These were in terspanned by cob-webs, which in the candle light
took on the appearance of silver nets. A large door opened at one end into a hall
beyond which we could see nothing but darkness. \ Ye stood together.
Dale broke the silence. "There's very little to be told," aid he, "in fact
very little is known about this old gentleman, except that he lived here alone with
one servant, an old Chinaman, and altho hi source of funds was unknown he was
always very well supplied, and yet, seemed greatly in fear of having some secret
found out. Ile was known as Landon, and I guess his name was practically all
that was known of him." \Ye listened intently, and he resumed, "Popular gossip
has it that he had found some treasure left in the old manse by Black beard, the
pirate, and at any rate he was found dead one morning, and many and strange are
the tale which have prung up to explain his death. I t certainly tends toward
the occult all right. His door was locked from the inside, also his window, and
there was no other means of entrance to his room.
ot a mark was on the body;
nothing that could ha\'e caused death was found . An autopsy failed to reveal the
slightest cause of death. It was in the chamber right above here," he added .
[36]
I thought the stories I had heard of the guarding of treasure by the spirit of
the accursed gatherer, and somehow the wind seemed to howl in a wav that came
mysteriously from the charnber above.
,
"Yes, I knew that," said Swift, "but I wanted to make sure, and now, Dale,
with your permission, I propose to sleep in that same bed, and in the same position
in which the old man was, a murdered, and I'll prove to all these fools who
bother about supernatural possibilities what wonderful fools they arc," and he
laughed a scornful laugh of bravado, the laugh of the fated.
It was useless for us to persuade him to abandon his idea; so v.e agreed to stay
near by and watch for any possible disturbances.
Swift started down the long hall, we following, and our footsteps resounding
on the hard floors echoed, and re-echoed among the great rooms. After passing
many doors opening onto the hall, we came abruptly to the encl. \Ye mounted the
winding stairs, and walked down the upper corridor, Swift leading the way holding the flickering candle, which, a I remember now, lent to his face a yellowish
tinge, suggesting the uncanny.
\\'c reached a large chamber at the end of the corridor. Dale fumbled in his
pocket for a skeleton key, and finally produced one which caused the rusty bolt to
leave its place.
"This is the room," he said, and the door swung open slowly. The same musty
foul smell of stale air greeted us as we had at first experienced upon entering the
old manse.
The room was large, and in its furni hings bore out implicitly the old time
architecture of the place. The ceiling was high and, in the corners adjoining
the walls, was spanned by cobwebs. The carpet upon the floor was dark and of
heavy texture, in richness matching the heavy ebony chairs which stood -;tiffiy
against the walls. And there, there in the back of the room, stood the great bed;
the death bed, the bed of mystery, overarched at the head with heavy veh'et fold .
\Ye stood and looked upon it. ~ow rumblings of thunder were heard from
the distance, low, ominous, growling themselves into ilence again. The lightning
flared intermittently, now pale as summer fireflies, now brilliant purple etching
the trees against the sky; and now throwing in to trong relief the thunder heads,
great, threatening and low.
till di tant but gi,,ing an idea of the fury o f the
storm, the bolts flashed down between.
"Eleven thirty," quietly announced Dale, and, men as we were, we all feared
in our hearts the approach of tweh'e, the fabled hour.
All of the foolish ghost stories I had e\'er read came to me but, well-_ )mehow I couldn't laugh as I was wont to do. Dale and I now \\·ithdre\\ int·J the
corner, and sat with our backs to the wall, oppo. ite the bed. I held ,\,ift' - tta hlight and my automatic. Dale held his, and together we at in .·ilence \\ hile wif
slipped in between the covers, the CO\'ers that had not been ckturbed .'ince-.
Perhaps you wonder at our precautions? I wa. fooli . h enough o my.di,
but often afterward [ have admired the :uperior fore:ight, or greater -no\ \· .;e
of circumstances, whichever it \Vas, that catL'ed Dale to take them.
\\'e sat there about, I don't knm\ e-..;:actly how long. Tht: win
increa ed to a gale and was :creaming around the 'Orner. of the r t·: th ligh
fta<;hed in brilliant violet. The room \\a: now bright a: by, 10\\ plu =-"
Plutonian darkness, and in the purple flares I could ee 'wift's gaunt form with
his long arm reaching out upon the cover, his hand clasping and unclasping con\ ulsi,·ely. How much more did he know of this place than we thought?
There was a period of darkness, a settled hush; then came a terrible crash, a
deafening roar. The house seemed to sway from it's very foundations; the wind
and rain pounded upon the window pane! \Ye huddled together, confounded at
the fury of the elements.
And then it came! A quick, wheezing-groaning, sound from the bed!
ly
blood curdled. I sickened. I was frozen, paralyzed, unable to budge an inch!
Crash! Crash! came the deafening report of an automatic at my ear, and then,
Oh, l Jcaven, what an unearthly scream! A terrible shriek that froze the marrow
in my bon es, echoed through the halls! And all was quiet.
The cold chills ran down my back. I managed to stand up; my knees knocked
convulsively. I was revived by Dale croaking hoarsely for the flashlight. I
pressed the button. A flood of light was thrown upon the bed, and there, stark
and white, was poor Swift. Just behind the bed where solid wall had been before,
was a yawning hole, and lying face downward with his yellow face horribly distorted, lay the old Chinese servant of Landon.
* * * *
It wa some time after, and Dale and Swift and I were talking together.
Swift dead? \Yhy no, of course not, but he had a narrow squeak that night!
\Vell I may as well tell you a few things now, it's over anyway.
You see, old Landon thought that a Chine. e might be trusted. He was
wrong.
Trusted with what?
Oh, you don't know about the treasure; do you? \\ell you see it was probably
left there by Blackbeard as was supposed. l\laybe it wasn't. At any rate it was
there, and only the old man knew where. The Chinaman was resolved to find it.
It was very simple. \Yi th the old man out of the way who should hinder his
earch? \\'hen the old gentleman was found, who would think of sliding a panel
behind the bed? Of a long slender platinum needle, no thicker than a fine hair to
be inserted at the base of the brain without drawing a drop of blood, without
leaving a mark?
And about wift?
'wift knew that an attempt \\Ould be made on his life, and he was on the
alert. Luckily it only pierced an invulnerable spot of his throat.
\Vhy should he attempt such a thing?
'imple, with two murders in one bed, who w·Juld interfere with the Chinaman's search?
That scream fool you?
\Yell, even a Chinaman can scream.
[38]
Hazing and Hazel
GLADYS BAYER, '21
was lonely, and one could hardly blame him. He was four
hundred miles from home and friends, in Room 205, North Dormitory, at
Kingston College.
"Say, Bob," he said, turning from the window and addres ing his room-mate,
"what do you say to a, troll around the campus? It's only seven-thirty."
"Couldn't if I wanted to. Got four pages of Greek to translate." And then
as Clyde began putting on his coat, he added, ''Better steer clear of all sophs.
They're carrying out that crazy law of their about hazing all freshies caught out
after nine-fifteen."
Clyde grunted something in return and stalked out. Once out into the open
air, his spirits revived, and he was sauntering aimlessly towards Main Hall, wondering if there was a lecture on, or anything to pas away the time, when he noticed
a number of people going in the direction of the gym. Espying a cla smate, he
hailed him, and asked, "\Yhat's the idea of the crowd?"
"\Yhere've you been, Jackson? Don't you know tonight's the first impromptu
college dance of the season?"
"I suppose you're going to trip the light fantastic?"
" \Vell,,, I'm going over to give it the once over. Come on; trot along; two's
company.
Clyde prided himself on being a good dancer, and dancing was his favorite
pastime; yet tonight, he wasn't enjoying himself. There were only three girls
that he knew in the entire crowd, and their dancing didn't agree with his. He was
just speculating upon the advisability of going home and helping Bob with his
Greek, when he aw a girl no-he wa certain she must be a fairy that he hadn't
seen before.
he was tall, with beau ti fol brown curls piled artistically upon her head, and
sparkling dark eyes, and yet somehow it wa n't her beauty alone that attracted
him; it was the gracefulness with which she glided over the dance floor and her
personality.
he was a genuine girl without a speck of affectation about her. He
decided upon that, after watching her for a few minutes. His only wonder was
that every boy in the room wa n't seeking her attention.
The dance ended, and his goddess and her e cort sauntered to the other end
of the room. He glanced at his watch; it wa eight-thirty. He had little more
than half an hour before he must leave, if he wished to save himself the humiliation
of hazing.
"\\ell," he said, gritting his teeth, "I'll not leave until I know her."
But that was easier aid than done. After he had a 'kcd all pos,ible and impossible acquaintances for an introducton to his fairy without finding anyone who
knew her, he was in the depths of despair, when ,'uddenly hi, heart ga\·e a great
leap.
he was dancing with Arthur Barry, and \\ondcr of wonder' Bob had
introduced him to Barry only that morning. Ht.; had a \\ild de-ire to hug Bob
and probably would have done so, if he had been in hi' ,·icinity.
C
LYDE JACKSON
[ 9J
:\t last that seemingly ne\'er ending dance was over, and he happened, in his
most causual way, to come upon Barry and to he introduced to l\liss I Iazd Dewey!
It is needless to say that he monopolized her after that, so that the minutes
fle\\ by with alarming alacrit). It was nine o'clock, nine fi,·c, nine ten, and still
he could not make up his mind to go. "\'inc fifteen! 1t was too late now, e\•en if
he \\ished to go, and besides he did not \\ish it. \\'hat right had the sophomores
to dictate to him e\•en if he was a freshman!
It was in the middle of a dance that she said, "Oh, :\Ir. Jackson, look over at
the door! The sophomores arc hazing a poor freshie again."
His heart seemed to fall a mile, but he smiled and said, "The sophomores are
a cruel lot; aren't they? [wouldn't relish being decked up in green like that."
"I wonder, oh, they're going to march him around the room for everyone to
laugh at, how mean!" and her voice was so S) mpathetic that Clyde almost envied
the poor freshie.
":\nd that's not all. They're going to make him carry that sign. Can you
make out what it is?"
"I like to to take out, oh dear, I \\ish he'd hold it still, 'senior girls after
nine fifteen. I'm a freshic.'"
:\ laugh went around the room at the e'>:pense of the blushing freshman.
Even Hazel Dewey laughed.
" I t's mean," she said by way of apology, "and yet it's funny. I guess I'm
rather old-fashioned, but to me it seems a\ b\ard and out of place for a girl to go
\\ ith a boy younger than herself."
He smiled his assent.
"Do you know, you haven't told me to what class you belong, and L'm rather
bad at guessing!"
He had been dreading that question all e\·ening, and especially now. She
\Vasn 't a freshman; he was sure of that because he had ne\ er seen her before. , nd
now, in the face of what she had just said, how could he tell her he was a freshie,
and lose here friendship? Xo, he could not. If he only knew what she was!
\\'ell, he couldn't take any chances; he'd have to bid the highest!
" I ' m a senior,
.
antLl you.~"
"Oh hcrn lovely! I'm a- junior. You ha\ e a lo\'ely class president; haven't
you ? "
"Yes yes! But I don't know him."
"You don't know him?" with great surprise.
" \\'ell, not intimately." He was thankful when the dance ended.
The next dance was the last one. She had that taken, and yes, she had an
escort to see her home. \\'ell then, would she go to the theater with him the next
evening? Yes, she'd like that, and so it was arranged.
He sneaked home, avoiding all sophomores, very much pleased with himself
and with the world in general.
" \ \'here've you been?" drawled Bob as he entered.
"Out having a glorious time."
" \\'ho is she?"
[ 40 l
"\\'ho wants to know? Anyway she's a peach only J got myself into a
dickens of a flx. I told her I was a senior."
"Gee, this is going to be a good one," and his roommate chuckled to himself as
he '"en t back to sleep.
The next day Clyde avoided all people that he knew were sophomores as much
as he possibly could without causing suspicion, hut it seemed the more he dodged,
the more he ran into them, and they always looked him over from top to bottom,
and said something to their companions. B1 night he had worried himself into
imagining all sorts of terrible hazing, that was coming to him, and he set out to the
Dewey's so ne1Tous that he was fairly ill.
"I wouldn't mind for myself," he muttered, "but if they drag her into it- ."
Ther~ were two boys in front of him, and, in passing them, he heard part of a
conversation.
"Think of the nerve! A freshie defying our law, and staying out until eleven
with a junior girl, and right under our very noses!"
On seeing him, they quickly changed the subject, and he cro sed the street
with alacrity. Two blocks farther on he heard almost the counterpart of this
speech, in the same way There was no use telling himself that they didn't mean
him. It was perfectly plain that they did. He had gotten himself into a pretty
scrape, and it was harder to get out than it was to get in.
At the Dewey's, he was ushered into the library, where Hazel Dewey and her
brother were holding a conversation about "that freshie," but as he entered, she
rose smilinglr to greet him with a prett) gracefulness so that he was sure that she
didn't at least know that "that freshie" was he.
:\fter the greetings, he asked, "\\'ould you mind if I sat down for a few
minutes? l\ly head is behaving very badly tonight." That would gi,·e him a few
minutes to think.
She was all sympathy. "Oh how horrid! Yoy're going to it right down
here in this easy chair until you're better. \\'hat shall I do for you? Keith,
you'll go to the drug store and get something, won't you? That's a dear!"
\\'hen the door had closed after him, Clyde aid, "~Ii
Dewey, plea.e it
down there," motioning to the chair ne ·t to his, "I I',·e got to tell you omething, that I'm sorry for
sorrier than you'll ever know. I I told you la t night
I wa a senior. I'm not. I'm onlv a freshie. Somehow omething vou aid iu.·t
before made me say it. :\nd the 'sophs got a hold of m;.· sta;. ing ~0~1 t after n-ineflfteen last night, and they're going to haze me. I don't mind, but they're not
going to drag you in to it!"
He looked up to flnd her smiling. "0ly dear ~Ir. Jackson, I\·e been waiting
for vou to tell me that. I knew it all the time. You couldn't be a senior, and
kno~v so Ii ttle about the school. Besides, T knm\ nearh all the :enior:, becau:e
Keith is president of the sophomore class, and more 01: le-- a::ociated with the
upperclassmen. So when you told me: ou were,,_ senior, I told: ou I \\a.' a junior
-and I'm not. I'm a senior in the high school."
Clvde looked at her increduloush, and she continued, "I told Keith-he \\,L
my escort Jast night alJ about it, an:J he said he'd bring: OU around all right an j
he concocted some kind of a scheme about hazin~."
r 1I
Clyde was bewildered at first, but when the truth dawned upon him, he broke
in to a hearty laugh.
"Keith went after Margaret R oss. He thought maybe you'd feel safer with
the pre ident of the sophomore class, even if you don't have to worry about hazing,
' "
an d you wont.
Clyde prang up, and danced hi s goddess around the room for joy. "Four of
us! \Von't we make that show entertaining tonight, Miss Dewey?"
"Couldn't you call me 'Hazel'?"
"Cmldn't I? Just let me show you! And you can say 'Clyde', can't you?"
And thus began a firm friensdhip, which lasted during all of the college years,
and afterwards developed in to much more .
. . .
Cousin Jasper's High
(With apologies lo]. W. Riley)
JuLIA PATIERso
, '22
My cou in Jasper, he
Don't live in this town, like meHe lives 'way down to Rensselear,
An' ist comes to visit here.
He says 'at our Keno High
'Ain't nigh as big as theirn is; why,
He says their high's big as four
Er five schools like this, an' more!
He says if his folks moved here
He'd cry to leave Rensselear'Cause their high' got a gym
n' swimmin' tanks an' ever' thin'!
Yes, 'n Cousin Jasper's high
Is awful beautiful, oh my!
An' there ain't no holes where the rain comes thru
Cuz their high school's purt nigh new.
n' when my Cousin Jasper kum
T' our chool, he beat it hum,
Cuz the ulfide gas they mac.le
Mo t nigh killed him, he said!
Yes, an' Jasper, he says they
Got a swell gym there, an' play
An' practice there, so as they beat
II other teams, ist as neat!
Wisht our high ain't like it is!
\\'i sht it's ist as big as his!
\\'isht 'at his high ucl be moved clown here
An' they'd move our's to Rensselear!
(42]
A Cup of Ginger Tea
Con.A P.1A RQ_urssEE, '21
HERE," sighed
liss :\melia, drawing the lace curtain a little farther apart,
"those awful people are in at last. It's not had enough T suppose, having
paved streets and heavy traffic but I ha\'e to have an Irish family with ten
children right under m) nose!" ;\liss :\melia sniffed indignantly, continuing her
gaze from the window of the old house which folks <;aid seemed to have grown
\\earily and "genteelly" old. In the street belo\" a rnO\' ing van was just leaving
a muddle of children, furniture, and barking dogs on the walk in front of the house
adjacent to ~Iiss Amelia's.
At least one other spectator viewed the cene with disfavor. i\Iiss Mary
Ellen Haskins, from her vine screened porch, also \'ented an occasional sniff, ;r
remark. "Here, I've lived all these years in peace and quietude, and now there
is to be no more peace for me. I should think they could make a law against such
an encroachment on the rights and quiet of others!" \Yhether the" they" referred
to the family below or to the city officials, will ne\ er be known, for at that moment
;\liss l\Iary Ellen heard a soft patter of feet behind her. Turning she saw that her
vi. itor was evidently one of the strange brood next door, a golden-haired baby of
perhaps three years. Her sunny round face beamed with smiles that showed
through the dirt.
ow if there was one thing in the world l\liss 1ary Ellen hated,
it was dirty children. It seemed impos ible that once she had been a merry, carele youngster. It was quite a train to remember the days hen he and Amelia
Meredith had romped in their back-yards. \Yhat chums they had been, through
childhood, girlhood, and even young womanhood, until that dreadful dispute
aro e which had served to separate them for year and years. It had been a foolish
quarrel, anyone would grant that, literally, a tempe. t in a teapot. ;\lis
Iary
Ellen had a fondne for ginger-tea, and :\melia had a particular aver ion to pices
of all kind . Once, when the two were corwer ing on the front porch, ;\Iary 'llen
excused her elf to get the refreshments. ,'he always made a cup of ginger-tea for
herself, and one without ginger for :\melia, but today, she absent-mindedly filled
both cups with the spiced liquid. \Yhen she returned to the porch, the conversation drifted to the ubject of pices. \Yi th the ga) banter of an old friend i\Iary
Ellen was chiding ;\liss Amelia for her failing when at last .-\melia ipped her tea.
'he suddenly dropped it, and, losing her temper, said some very unkind things to
;\Iary Ellen, who calmly went into the house and shut the door. From that day
to the one of the advent of her visitor, just mentioned, ;\lary Ellen had never
recognized Amelia by word or deed. The coolnes · now became habitual, and the
reason for it had almost been forgotten.
Iary Ellen stood staring at the child, who stuck her fist into her mouth, and
dimpling said, "Guess, 'ou didn't heard me tum, I wan ts a tookie ! " Of all things!
:\Iar) Ellen began to fear that her aspect was not so fearful as it should be.
he
screwed her mouth up, and began, "I never allow children c ·pccially ·oiled one ,
on my front porch!"
The child looked up, absolutely uncomprehensi\·e. ".._'hall I go in an' det
one?" she a kcd, S\\ eetl) .
T
J.
[ 43]
":\Ierciful hea\'ens, no. Don't dare to come in. I'll get you a cookie." So
:\liss l\Iary Ellen entered the house and returned with a large sugary one.
":\le likes cookies like ziss," the baby asserted, and was settling herself down
on the steps,' hen a large, rotund\ oman, with merry eyes, and a much bedraggled
appearance came in to view around the corner of the house.
"Shure, an' 'tis the loikes of ye, Kathleen, to be always for makin' friends. Oi
hope she's not clistarbed you, madam," this to :\1iss Mary Ellen, who came out
from behind the vines.
"I have given her a cookie to quiet her," said the latter, assuming a "holier than thou". expression,
"although it's against my principles to feed children on
,,
my f ront piazza.
The Irish woman with profuse thanks took her leave.
1iss Ellen, with a
queer little palpitation of the heart, went in-doors, to think of nothing but a sunny
golden head and a round, dirty, smiley face.
Three days passed of Ii vely bustle and upheaval in the neighborhood of Mi. s
Amelia and ~liss 1ary Ellen, and the family which separated them. ~ot once
but many times did the t\ o old maids find themselves running to the window to
look with interest upon some new event in the yard adjacent. 1 ot one but many
cookies did Iiss :\lary Ellen dispense to Kath lcen O'Toole, her Ii ttle three-yearold neighbor, and once or twice the hard stern line of the spinster's lips had unconsciously bent into a smile at some of the antics of her self-invited caller.
On the afternoon of the third day, Ii ttle Miss Kathleen made her first exploration of the house to the left. She scrambled up the back steps and banged the
screen-door until :\li, s Amelia, startled into action, timidly opened it. Today,
Kathleen's face was clean and her gingham frock fresh.
"I'se turn to borrow your can-knife!" she asserted positively. "My muzzer
los' hers and he wan ts to open one."
"I have no such thing as a can-knife, unless you mean a can-opener," declared
the worthy lady of the house. For twenty years, no one had asked to borrow
anything from her, e pecially a rough and tumble O'Toole. " I'll let you take it,
if you'll be careful to bring it back."
Iiss Amelia felt rather a harned of the pleasure she took in guiding the tiny
feet through the kitchen. There was something in the touch of that little hand
that brought back some very tender memories. She could not account for the
strange little thrill she received when the baby looked up, at parting and said,
"l'v1e like 'oo and me'll tum again."
In the days that follow<."d, both l\liss Amelia and 1ary Ellen received many
vi its from their little friend.
nconsciously, she twined herself around the two
old hearts, hungry for love. Strange things began to appear on Miss Amelia's
cookie tray in the shape of gingerbread men, and no one could have recognized Miss
i\1ary Ellen's prim sewing-basket, now. trewn with bits of silk and lace, to make
clothes for a diminutive doll.
Summer was drawing near a close. The O'Toole children became, if anything, more hilarious with the falling of the leave.. The older boys had hung a
huge swing from the bough of a paternal old elm tree in the back yard . To the
back windows, therefore, :\-liss Amelia found her attention turned many times in
the day, to the unpardonable neglect (may it be confessed) of a batch of cookies
[44]
in the making. Miss l\Iary Ellen, from the opposite side of the playground,
watched the merry-making day by day, with a little sparkle in her eyes that had
not been there for years.
One morning a strange quiet prC\'ailed the little cottage. :\II the O'Toole
children had departed to other neighborhoods but Kathleen played ahout the
yard, watched by two pairs of loving eyes, from two distinct kitchen windows.
The air was heavy with pollen dust and the only sound was a merry 1rish di tty
that floated through the door.
Suddenly Kathleen \Vas seized by the demon of
unrest.
he looked longingly at the forbidden swing, then dragged a chair under
it climbed up and sat down in the unstable seat, kicking the chair over as she did
so. B ut no sooner had she seated herself than the swing jerked back\ ards, for no
reason at all, throwing poor little :\liss ..\dventurous to the ground, where she lay,
quite still. In less time than it takes to tell it, tv•o hack doors were slammed, and
two old ladies were at the spot. Completely forgetting that they had not spoken
for years, Miss Amelia turned and helped to carry the unconscious body into ~lary
Ellen's house .
"She'll come to in a minute. Tt's only a bump," said \Iary Ellen, taking a
glass of water from . melia.
P resently the big blue eyes opened and a big smile appeared as the hahy saw
her two dear old friends bending over her .
" I des I- mustn't ride in there no more," she said, " r want a tookie." The
two ladies drew a sigh of relief.
"Oh, my lands! I left a pan of cookies in the oven," gasped \liss ..\melia. ..\s
she hurried out the door, ~lar) Ellen caught her slee\'e.
" ..\melia ,"she said, "Amelia, \von't you come over this afternoon for a cup
of tea a cup of ginger tea?"
" I 'd be delighted," smiled :\ l iss. melia .
. . .
Vultures and Ju, tice
CH~.. rr.R
ZEF1, '21
was .'enori ta Catalina Lazumas, of the
town of Las l\ l idas, on the border of the Great \ Ie,ican De ert. Those same
black eyes hacl thrilled Pasquale, a :\Iexican greaser, w.th the desperate
passion wh ic h is typical of the L atins . He would dare anything to please her.
One day a German peddler came to Las -:\Iida: \vith hi· ware of trinket and
.
JC\\els.
enorita Catalina became c:xtrcmelv attached to a bracelet in the form
~,fa silver circular ·erpent et with diamond·, but he had no money with which
to purchase it, and neither did Pa:q uale. But it took \'ery Ji ttle urging to
determine the grea.er's cour e to :ecure that CO\'eted bracelet for hi enorita.
The next da) P a ·quale learned that the peddler wa going to leave the town
for a village nearb) on the arne side of the desert ju t before un:et that same day.
Pasquale accordingly ettled him.·elf on a quiet :pot behind a large cactu · plant.
From the crest of the -lope the peddler and hi. burro u1 tering the dt. ert l Joked
like a large in, ect and a :mall one creep!ng ·lowly ov r a unlit floor. There wa.
no other living thing in :ight e ·ccpt the wheeling \'ulturL ab)\ e hem.
A
\\'Ol\IAX of great fascinating black eye
I -t.5 I
Pa q uale flattened himself and cocked the hammer of his \Yinchester. He
drew a careful aim, and the copper bead of the rifle ight covered the breast of the
unsu pecting peddler. He knew that he could kill the man at two hundred yards,
but he re, olved to wait until the peddler had crossed the dry, shallow gully at the
foot of the slope. There wa neither trail nor road across that part of the de ert;
the peddler was taking a short-cut. In the little gulch his body would soon be
meat for the buzzards and desert snakes, and no man would ever find it.
A minute later the copper bead again covered the man's breast, and this time
the rifle cracked. The peddler clasped his arms across his chest, and fell on his
back in the dry waterway with his eyes wide open and staring. 'o he died.
\Yith nervous, fumbling fingers Pasquale rifled the pack on the animal, and
produced the bracelet. He took also a wooden crucifix and a red silk bandana
handkerchief. These he tucked into his waist front, and turned toward the town.
The -un wa going down behind distant mountains in a glowing mass of clouds.
Before Pasquale had gone a mile, darkness had fallen, and he cursed the peddler
for having been so slow. One great golden star shone in the heavens before him.
Toward this, he laid his course and hurried onward. In the still heat of the de ert
night hi breath came harder and harder, while he slipped and stumbled again
and again on his way.
The guiding star disappeared suddenly, and upon looking up, he found the
clouds had covered the sky, and the desert was a black emptiness. A large black
form, with two out-stretched arms, loomed before him, and a shudder of terror
shot through his body. For a moment he stood staring, then drew nearer. The
startling form proved to be that of a great bulky cactus tree, and by its presence,
Pasquale knew that he had lost his way. I le was certain that he was not on the
way to Las Iidas. But he did not acknowledge to himself that he was lost. A
moment of concentration, and he felt sure which way led homeward.
Then he
started off again.
In a little while his breath was coming in gasps, and he was trembling and
drenched with weat; but still he did not spare himself. Thirst had begun to
torture his mouth and throat, and with it had come fear, for he knew that thirst in
the desert soon becarne madness. :\lready there were dancing figures and colors
before his eyes.
For hours he rushed ahead, spending the last of his energy. His mind was
becoming confused, his knees were shaking, and every time he slipped and fell,
it was harder to rise. Finally he was staggering, and he knew that his next fall
would be his last one. Suddenly he plunged over a low bank; his head struck a
rock, and consciousness left him in a shower of glittering lights.
The morning's sun burning his face brought him back to his senses . He lay
flat upon hi back, clutching the bracelet in his shirt. His head was throbbing
with pain, his swollen tongue filled his mouth, and his whole body was stilled with
weakness. For some minutes he rnade no effort to raise his head, knowing that
what m~t his eyes would be life or death. He pra) ed that he might see the green
ribbon of the valley with its silver thread of blessed water water. The image
was so vivid that he almo t was sure the rcali ty was near. I-Jc fancied he heard
[ -!5.J
the faint tinkling of bells, and the singing of a girl. The imaginary sound brought
before his mind the face of Catalina with her deep eyes and eager mouth. By a
mighty effort he raised himself upon his elbow.
His eyes met the glassy stare, the drawn yellow face of the dead peddler. He
had traveled the night in a circle returning to the place from where he started.
Before the sun reached the middle of the heavens that day, the myriads of
vultures had a feast of two human bodies such as they had never had before.
What Do You Live For?
ETHEL KAvrERAD, '22
Do you think that your life is worth living?
Do you make it the best that you can?
Do you trive for a higher position,
Than is held just by common man?
Do you work for a nobler spirit,
For a character staunch and true?
Are you trying to make others happ},
As you would have them do for you?
Do you sulk and refrain from the troubles of Ii fe,
Or do you meet them in a manly wa) ?
Do you use all the pep you can po sibly get,
While indulging in work or in play?
\\'hen a difficult task is before you,
Do you say with a firm voice," I'll try,"
Or do you shrink from the situation,
And utter, "I can't," with a sigh?
If you try once, and find you're a failure,
J ust be sure you will try it again.
Do you know that patience will bring you success,
And that in due time you will win?
\\' hen opportunity comes your way,
L'ntouched, will you let it go past,
Or will you just drift along on life's \\a\•e ,
.-\nd as nobody will you be cla 'Sed?
Behold! Do not be like a dreamer,
.-\nd let all the good things pass by,
But take hold of the situation,
.-\nd success will be yours, if you tq.
[ ·!7 J
A Hard Luck Story
T
HE rain
fell in sheets, and the tramp cursed softly as he bowed his head against
the storm and sauntered sullenly toward the town. Occasional jagged flashes
of lightning outlined in silhouette the swaying sky-line of trees, and, beyond,
the tall spires of the churches. :-\ few lights glowed dully through the storm.
The tramp hunched his shoulders high, and thrust his hands deep into the
pockets of the torn trousers.
"Hard luck," he soliloquized savagely, "follers a man ever'where. I ain't had
a decent stroke of luck since I been a kid. It's iust staved awav from me. I
could ha' been something, but now ......... "
·
·
·
On toward the town he ploughed. :\ lightning flash, more terrifying than
the rest, illuminated the landscape. The tramp dropped his eyes as a shield against
the blinding glare. Another flash
"Hello, what's thi ? "
The tramp stooped quickly, and reached into the mud for a glinting object.
"\Yell "he choked, "if it aint a dollar! :\silver dollar! It's me for a square
meal and some drinks."
He clutched the dollar more tightly as he strode more swiftly to the settlement
ahead.
"One dollar," he mused, "one lonesome, measly dollar! \\"at the hell good is
one dollar, anyvvay? :\ meal a drunk maybe; then hit the road again.
ow if
I'd been lucky, I'd ha' found a pocket book mebbe, like Frisco Frank done.
Hundr'd and flve bones he flshed up on that trip. An' me I flnd a mealy dollar!
Luck's agin me always has been. Always will be!"
He slunk up the main street and into a saloon, the lights of which glittered
invitingly. He stopped inside the door and shook himself as a dog shakes when he
leaves the water. The bartender eyed him closely; business was bad, and he
didn't like the stranger's look.
The tramp thumped on the polished bar.
"\Yhiskey!" he ordered. "An' quick hear?" fie slipped the cover from the
free lunch tray and helped himself liberal!).
"Lernme see the coin flrst," said the harkeeper warily."
"That look good?" he queried insolently as he spun his newly acquired dollar
on the counter.
\\'ith still greater insolence the bartender bit into it, and rung it on the board.
"I recon it's genuine," he vouchsafed reluctantly. "\Vhere'd you get it?"
"Found it. Hustle the booze."
Seven cheese sandwiches and seven drinks put the tramp in a better humor,
and he started talking unconcernedly.
"Gee, I'm the hardest luck guy in the world. ~ever had a chanct. I'm
starvin' all the time "
"Thought you found a dollar," interrupted the barkeeper.
r -ts 1
"\\'hat's one cartwheel? I've spent sixty cents a'ready an' I ain't comfo'thly
settled yet." The bartender thoughtfully regarded the dollar in his cashdrawer.
It seemed very lonesome it was the only silver dollar he had taken in that night.
A newcomer stood with his foot on the bar-rail and regarded the tramp amu eclly
across the foaming top of his glass of beer.
"Tough luck guy, eh?"
"Yep," snapped the bartender. "Finds a dollar outside, an' then come in
here an' kicks about it. Says '\\'hat's a dollar?' Kin yuh heat it?"
"Trouble with you guys," said the third man, "is that you don't know when
you're lucky and when you ain't."
"Don't I " - whined the tramp. "l\Icbbe I don't. You sec, r ain't IH~ \' er heen
lucky; so I don't know what it's like. \\'hy, a pal o' mine finds a pocket hook with
a hundrjd an' five bone. An' me a dollar. Bah!"
The other two laughed. The tramp took another drink and started for the
door.
"Local freight's 'most due," he said cheerfully-whiskey had made the world
more cheerful of aspect. "I'll see if I can't find a hobo Pullman. S'long!"
"S'I
l
d reams. "
. ong; peasant
The tramp twisted his face into the semblance of a grin.
" o such luck," he snapped. "I ain't never had no luck!"
He reeled into the storm. The bartender sen'ed the newcomer with another
drink, and doubtfully received a five-dollar bill in pa) ment. I le turned to the
cash drawer to make change; found three one dollar bills and the sih,cr dollar the
tramp had given him. He smiled as he turned it over in his hand. He inspected
it clo::;ely. Then he howled suddenly and danced a few steps behind the counter
"\\'hat\ the matter?" queried the other anxiously.
"0-o-o! look ...... " The bartender held the siker dollar before his eyes." Look!"
"\\'hat - "
"Hard luck!" screamed the bartender. "Hard luck! \ \'lw that bli therin'
boob neber noticed that thi dollar he gave me is dated eighteen hundr'd an' four,
and it's \VOrth about a thousan' dollars in ca h!"
[ 9)
/
Compliments ot
MAYOR JOH
[ 50]
G. JOACHIM
ORGA
TIO NS
Spy Annual Staff
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
FAc
LTY ADv1soR
.f1s
FAc
LTY AUDITOR .
MR. HOWARD
RT DEPARTME
.
T .
...
.
lARJORIE K1
LITERARY DEPARTME
MOR DEPARTME
T
.
.
DOROTHY
G, A
.
.
1cC
TO IO GIA ' A
BE
.
v.
LATER
RDY
. . . . JuLIA PATER 0 1
DMI ' I TRATION DEPARTMENT
H
1. ZEFF
CHE TER
.
TO TIO
LAH ROCKWELL
.
..
T
JA f... JAY
YDER
0RGA TJZATIO
CLA SE
ER , ICE RHODE
DEPART 1E TT .
DEPARTME TT .
. YVETTE GOLDBERG
.
HAROLD K
ALUM I DEPARTME
B
I
T
.
.
.
.
D 0
''\VALTER
RoBERT
f uRDOCK, A1anager
BRIKE, HAROLD BE T 0
GORDO
]ACK JAY, DAVID :MILLAR, JAME
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
E
. MARGARET Pu LL
.
ESS STAFF
TYPIST
E
.
.
.
.
MYER
. ETHEL GET CHMA
ZALEA TERRY, ... LICE
CHULTE
[51]
he Spy Annual Staff
·-------------------------------------------------------·
[°52]
Spy Issue Staff
·----------·.
EDITOR-I ' -CHIEF
YvETTE GOLDBERG
LITERAR \' DEPARTMENT
COYLA
lARQ_l JSSEE
Loe \LS DEPARTMENTGLADSTONE S\ YDER
BEt:LAH R oci-. WE LL
ALl.JMNI DEP \RTMEXT
MARGARET P u LL
B ERNICE RHODE
H t:MOR DEPARTME ' T -
] ACK j AY
R EGI TALD SCH
LER
ATHLETICS DEPARTMENT
J usTI
B ARBER
EXCHANGE D EPARTMENT
LILLIAN HIME K
ART D EPARTMENTH oBERT HoYE
SGBSCRIPTIO
MAN"AGERCLARE B RYANT
R EPORTERS CHARLES B l_, LLAMORE
D ONALD TRENARY
T YPISTS ETHEL GET.SCH 1A
ALICE .'CHL LTE
AzALE c\ TERRY
B LSIN'ES
l ANAGERR oBERT l\l L RDOCK
A SSISTANT B lJSIXES
:\! .\NAGER .'
GoRDON B 1u ' E
D A \'ID l\h LLAR
Al\1E . :\1 YERS
J
THE 8US ,NESS STAFF
·----------·
'\ on: :\ t the time the accompanYing pictures were
taken the entire business staff'' as· scouring tht• cin
for ads. H ence the clouds of dust
[ 53]
3Jn jlflemoriam
~crtrubc <e::. Jl..angan '19
::Orccmbcr 31. 190 -3Tnnunrv 22. 1920
(!;llllor of 1918 ~PP ~nnunl
"Jilone hnel:IJ tbee but to lobe tbee,
Ji}or nameb tbee but to praise."
[54j
Lyceum League
FIFTH
RO\\'-THOJ\!PSON, GETSCHA\I, l\1ARQLISSEE, 1AYER, TEI'.\ERT, BE\", BAIRD.
FouRTH Row1ERRILL, F.Rl\Ks, TovACK, B..\R:\ETT, FREDERICK. o:\, REITH, KixG, \\'HARRIE.
THIRD
Row -CAMERON, PO\\ ELL, Zuu:\ISKT,
lrLLER, lsERMAl\'\",
! AC.LIRE, RHODE, Eonv.
SECOND RowFIRST
Row-
1YERs, GRACE, ! ARKS, HJMEK, llu sTED, JoERNDT.
ROCKWELL, ... CHAEFER, SHA\\, PuLL, \YELLS, HALLISEY,
CHMITT,
CAVA:\AGH,
SCHMITT, V\'HITBECK
Officers
1\1oLLIE DERBYSHIRE, Advisor
1ARGARET P ULL
MI
PRESIDE
T
ELIZABETH HARMA
{ Rt:TH BECkER
\'ICE-PRESIDE. T
BER::><ICE RHODE
ELAINE l\1YERS
SECRETARY
TREASLRER .
Me111bership
1920
BARKETT, BEATRICE
H\LLI . EY, ALICE
;\hERS, ELAIKE
BECKER, RLTH
CAMERON, HAZEL
HL .TED, jEAXETTE
: \ 0\ AC!...., HELE:\
KING, :\I:i.RJORIE
;\L\EG \\RD, G1. \DYS
Pt. LL,
lARGARET
REITH, IRENE
RHODE, BER:\ICE
JOERNDT, ORELLA
CAVANAGH,ELEAKOR
EDDY, DOROTHY
E \'AK ) DORI.
:\IARI....., RosE
lAGCIRE, LL CT LLE
GETSCHMA ' ,ETHEL
lERRILL, ELL\
GRACE, KATHRY
\YE1.1.s, CoR \
Kowr, BEATRICE
SYJ\1l\10NDS, PHYLLJ ,·
1921
THOMP 0 ' LL LL
\YHARRIE, 1ARG \RET ~IA\ ER, CR ESE. CE
:\IA \"ER, :\;-._TOI:\ E rTE
\\ HITBECK,
NO
1ARQl 1ssEE, Con.A
J
Zt.:LE
BAIRD, 11LDRED
Bo , Lot 1sE
0 EPHSO , FLORE
J
l\lr LLER, ETHEL
PO\\ET.T., l\l1RI\ 1
Roct.....\\ ELL, BEl 1.u1
SKI, HELEN
ScH \EFER EL\
._'Clll\llTT, '.\l \RGARET
... CHJ\lll'T, LEO~A
... H \ \\' DORO fHY
SHll\lEt....., ],ILLI.\N
SrF1. ERr, S\ 1 \I.\
1
CE
[ 55 J
Beta Phi Kappa
THIRD
RO\\
Cosi: Tl
SEcoxn
Rem
~IR. \\ '.\RD, ScH \IIER,, CHLLTz, RA1'.0..,1,, :\YDER,
1, Kc. s1 .ER, YABs, CHt BB, ZIE\ ' ERS, KLEIST.
FIR . T
Ro\\
\\ 11.LIA\1so,, r'\Etsox, BLOXDORF, K:-.Tnso:-;, BE'ITso:-;, \\'.\HLBERG,
luRDCCh, \YALhER.
CH\\ARTZ-
TRAVBER.
P1u:s rDL T
.
YICE-PRESlDENT
To, Y GrA
A, TO
HAROLD K
IO
UDSE
SECRETARY AND TREASL- RER
OLIVER CH
FmsT SERGE\ TT-AT-ARMS
BERT SCHAEFER
SECO:t\D SER.GEA ' T-AT-ARMS .
EDWI
BB
I' LE[ST
The Beta Phi Kappa is a club organized to promote the study of science in the
Kenosha I Tigh School. This is its third successful year. Tt has in the course of
the last ) ear established a first-class wireless receiving set in the Physics laborator)
of the school, which communications can be heard from the Atlantic and Pacific
coasts.
r sr;i
Girl Scout Troop IV
M1ss GLADYS ' VINEGAR,
THIRD
Ro\\
SECO:\l) RO\\
FrnsT
Captain
M1s
BARDE, , Lieutenant
B\R,ETr, J o11xso:-.:, R HODE, J\11ss \ \'1xEC,\R, BE.H1:s, B\IRJ>, '\11.
GRACE, BERE:\S, SCHIPPERS,
RO\\-Jl\cons, SHl\1EK,
McN LTY, THOMPsox, l\lILLER, ~E1.sox, Ho1.sTEDI.
Officers
First Semester
P RE IDENT
\ '1CE- P RESIDEKT
'ECRETARY
BERNICE R HODE
Mr
i\1ARJORIE
L IA.R
KATHRYN GRACE
ELI/ i\B E l'H
l\1c
o,.
1ILLER, PLLL, FLE\IJ'.\(" FERRY.
~ LTY
Second Semesta
KATHllY;\ GR \CE
Lr LLI \). ScHI\lEJ-RvrH 'cHIPPER 'i
lRE;\E BERE. -.;
TREA lJRER
Girl Scout Troop VI
liss ALICE
ELSOX,
Captain
l\IR ·. L. TtRXER, Lieutenant
S Eco:-.: 1> R em
\\' HA RRLE, ScHOLEY, !'- :-; u n~ Ex ,i\' EERGAA RD, R oe i.;. \\ EI. 1., Siu.\\', ;\ l..\. R<J.L 1ss EE, H c '>TED.
FIRST
TERR)) \\ ·\Lf.;.ER, K ORT, ;\h.
R O\\
'ELSOX, SCH\!ELLI'.\(" 1'..\IER)' SY\1\10:\D.
Officers
P RESIDENT
.
\' ICE- P RE IDENT
ECRETARY .
T RE.\SlRER .
ERGE..\NT-AT-ARMS
B E LAH R o KWELL
EvELYX CL \1 uxc,s
L oRRAI'\E i\ L.\ YO
. D oROTH\
'H \ "-
l\I ARGARET '\' HARRIE
[ 57]
The Art Club
K1:-.c.,
}AY,
\ YEIS •. ER,
\ YALKER,
h\\ACKI,
PATERsox,
BR1:-.E,
~lcC..\RRo:-;
ZEFF,
\ YAHi.BERG,
GJ .\ '\ ·\ '\TONIO
PRESIDEKT . .
YICE-P RE IDENT
ECRETARY-TREA
CHESTER ZEFF
J LIA PATERSOl\
RER
lRWI
' \TALKER
......
The Salesmanship Club
THIRO
R O\\
Eco:-.-o Row
FIRST
Ro\\ -
DE\:\.,,' \C"-RIDER, P LEsH, Goon\1 " ' GL:\DERso:-., :\h1.uc.ER, \\' 11.1.1A .\ 1so'\, \ '1sc11.
:\hELKE, 01.so\', " TEER<. \ARD, G \SL L,
CHUI.TE, STEI:-. B \C"-,
OER\'DT, SP EX SER,
DEt:TCHER, ZnrnARs .
PFA'\\ULI.ER,
\\A:\ O\i, \\'1s;-;r£si-;.1, R EI:\'SDORF, Miss NoRT\\',\\', l .E! TB"-E, B \J!IO,
LE:-.-Tz, P1 \RR, :\h ELI.ER .
J
Organized in February, 1920, t he Salesmanship Club has become an organization that will permanent!) imb ue the stude n t of salesmans hip wit h the fundamentals
and de irabili ties of an art of arts.
[ 58]
The Girls' Glee Club
THIRD
RO\\
Eco.·o Ro\\
FIRST
RO\\
CHOLE1, S \Ci-. RIDER, Kixc., \Y HITBECh.
CHAEFER, TEI:\ERT, \\' HARRIE, EvA:->s, PIERCE, 1ILLER, Bo:-.:.
;\l.-1.RQUL sEE, HExDRICKsox, CRAXE, l\hEG'\ARD, .Miss CAMERO:->, GRACE, l\h-ER ,
Gooo~r.-1.:-., :\1.-1.YER,
;\LI. ER:\IAXX, R. I ER:\lAX'X .
.. . .
The Orchestra
THIRD
Eco. ·o
Ro\\ Ro\\
FrR.T
RO\\ -
OR<,EL TRAXD, (,ROTS"-\', Y \B , \\'1 1.LJ u1 o\, C11.111 RT, l.l\l >s' ll 'll\t, \ 111\,\111 t •
CoH«, R1:ru, \\1RTA , ,, , , \\'JC,1n, \\'1 ssO\\, ) .\\JK,
l11c11"11, ~t'11 \1·11 R, \It
CARR() .
lARR<)\,, Z11.L ' SKt,
\\'11u· . A1', ll A1\1.s,
J\l!CKI I () , J {AASE, ,\lAR<~l IS 1:1 ..
i\11
Cutt RO\,
1\.111
, S11\ll\Rt H,
[
t
l
The Boys' Octet
PERI..! . s,
\ \'AH LBERC.,
A . DRE,
FRIEL,
H ARRIS,
H EATH,
NYDER,
-
GREE
-
'
The Kenhidram
THIRD
R O\\
S1·co . ·n Rel\\
F1RsT
[60 )
R em
lh R'\ETr, E\· ·\Ns , K IN<., l\l ARQ.uissEE .
(;1 \'\.:\'..\'\TONIO, E'\ '\E, " ' AHLBERC, B EI';TSON, R AKOSI, l\11 ss D ERBYSHIRE.
R uTH, GRACE, ~l..\EG ·\\RO, P LLL, R HODE, EDoY.
T
H
s
p
I
The Foot Ball Season
A
~ EXPERIENCED coach plus a faithful squad plus some student support equals
a winning foot-ball team, and that is what K. H. S. had this year. As a
result Kenosha's expert playing and fighting tactics are known and recognized
throughout the state. On our schedule were the strongest teams in this part of
the state, and, as the end of the season drew near, our list of successes included
practically every one of our old time rivals. On Thanksgi\'ing Day \\C went so
far a to bring down a champion up-state team.
The team had their first chance to show their mettle when thev were matched
against the Lake Forest Academy eleven in a practice game. Th~ game ended in
a tie. It taught the quad some valuable points, and also gave the coach a line
on the players.
The first game on our schedule was with Bay Yi ew. Kenosha trimmed them
ea ily-by a bigger score than last year. ~ ext came \\'est Divisi on. They had
a trong well trained team, but 1uhlick and Bentson placed us on the long end of
that score. The sore pot of the season was our defeat by \\'aukegan. \\'ha t
made the defeat more bitter was the fact that it was the fir t time that \\'aukeu:an
had beaten us on our field for five years. It was in this game that \\e lost Goodman, our quarter-back. Petersen was also injured in this game, and was forced
to stop playing for the sea on. However, in our next game we uphc:ld K. H. , ·.
traditions and won from Racine again. The team next journeyed to \\'aukegan
where they suffered their second defeat of the season. H ere the)· were pitted
against a team using different tactics, a team that played to win regardless
Next came \Yashington High, Milwaukee. \\'e had not been beaten by an) :\lilwaukee team thus far, and the \\'ashington game did not mar our record. The last
game of the season was played with Oshkosh on Thanksgi\·ing Da). This team was
the trongest and cleanest we played this year. :.\!though our fighting spirit stuck
to the last, we were unable to make our runs ad,·antageously, and we lost the game.
Before next year graduation will have taken eight football men so that the
1920 squad will be a comparatively new aggregation. But to know that \1 uhlick
and Captain Gearhardt will be here is sufficient assurance that we \\ill have a
champion hip team again.
The football schedule was as follows:
ept. 27 . at Lake Forest .
Oct. 4 . at Keno ha
Oct. 11 at Keno ha
Oct. 25 at Kenosha
ov. 1 at Kenosha
Nov. 8 at \Yauke ha
Nov. 15 at Keno ha
av. 27. at Keno ha
Total point
. Lake Forest
Bay \'iew
\\'est Di,·i.-ion
\\'aukegan
Racine .
. \\'au kesha
. \\'ashington
. Oshko ·h
pponent 5:; K. H.
I
()
()
I
()
1()
3
,.,.,
K. H . .'.
K. H . .'.
K. H . .'.
K. H . .'.
K. H . .'.
K. H. ,' .
K.
] ,'
K. H . •' .
12
. 95
(61 J
The-1919-1920 Basket Ball Season
B
ASh..ETBALL in
K. H. S. \ as not a great success this year, so far a the actual
number of victories ' as concerned. The word, suaess, however, can b~
applied in several different senses; and from one standpoint this season of
1919-20 was successful, for it showed us our weaknesses. It showed K. H. s.
plainly that without a floor on which the team may practice and feel at home, they
can never wrest the honors from teams that do have this advantage.
Keno ha ranks high among the cities of \Yisconsin in almost everything but
in providing an up-to-date high school building. It is certain that we are far
behind in providing a good gym, a good playground, and other facilities for the
recreation and physical development of our future citizens.
The only real gymnasium in the entire city is in the Lincoln 'chool. The
squad had the privilege of using this three nights a week for an hour and a half!!
\\'hat could be accon•pli hed in so little time? Even then the pupils had to be
deprived of many of their activities that the K. H. S. squad could practice. Having
no place to play is certainly the worst handicap any team could have.
Another handicap which confronted. Coach Edler thi year was the lack of
experienced. players. \Yesner, guard, had had a little experience before, but it wa
not at K. H.
Gerhardt and 1uhlick were on our team last year, but as they
had no coach, their experience could not count for much.
1eyers, a forward, was
the star player in most of the games, for Herzog and McCarron, rivals for the left
forward po i ti on, were absolutely new at the game. The problem was a tough one
for the coach, and he had to spend the first month or six week on the elementary
principles of the game, instead of on the technical point as he had expected. He
had to be content with a team which had only slight knowledge of the finer points
of the game. For these rea on we should not blame either coach or team for their
lack of uccess; but we should praise them for their faithful work in spite of discouragement and difficulties.
The schedule follows:
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
J;eb.
9. at Lake Forest .
16 . at vYaukegan
23 . at Racine
30 . at Elkhorn
31 . at \Vauwatosa
6 . at Kenosha
14 . at \Vest Bend
20 . at Keno ha
27 . at Kenosha
Total points
[62)
. Lake Forest
. \Vaukegan
. Racine.
. Elkhorn
. \Vauwato a .
Burlington
. \Vest Bend
. Racine.
. \Vest Bend
Opponents 205; I enosha 99.
. 36
. 20
. 27
. 13
. 29
. 15
. 15
. 25
. ")_)
~
K. H. S.
K.H. S .
K.H .
K.H. S .
K.H .
K. H. S.
K.H. S .
K.H.
K.H.
3
1]
8
8
9
17
19
12
12
Girls' Basket Ball Team
.TELSO\", PF\\":\ITl.l.ER, RHODF, CL RRA\", REITH, SYMl\10:\'DS,
hLLAR, " 'HITBEC!-.., l\111.LER
Lineup
FoR w \RD
LEOJ\'I\ PFA
IRE
FORWARD
J l NO \VHI TBECK
CE:\TER
Ge ARD
Gt ARD
SLB . .
MILLER
E REITH
BERKICE RHODE
TELLA NEL
ox
OLIVE 1\11LLER, GLADY. CcRRAN
Schedule
Bain Social Center
\\'est Allis . . . .
Bain Social Center
\\'e t :\llis
Gorton Hall
Gorton Hall
4
4
2
10
8
14
Total points- Opponents 42; K. H.
K. H. S.
K. H. S.
K. H.,.
K. H.,.
K.H.
K.H.
12
()
16
]l
14
12
. 65.
[63]
Girls' Athletic Association
T
Girls' Athletic Association was reorganized in September of this year
through the initiative of a few energetic girls with a great deal of school spirit.
It was organized to promote athletics of all kinds; to give the girls something
to do; and at the same time to make them better, physically and men tall). The
association has adopted a point <;ystern, according to which a girl, when she has
earned 350 points is entitled to a" K".
o far the firt "Ks" have been won h)
;\larjorie :\Iillar, Bernice Rhode, Irene Reith, Juno \\'hitbeck and Stella >rclson.
Our first president was larj. lillar, one of the chief promoters of the association,
and our advisors \Vere liss ~ Telson and l\lis
pence. I\larj. made an e cellent
president. She worked like a trooper to interest the girls to arrange for a place to
practice in, and to schedule games; and the advisors played no little part in making
this year a success. \\Then i\larj. was graduated in February, our former secretar)
Bernice Rhode succeeded her as president.
\\'ith her as president, Irene Reith as secretary, and Gladys Bayer as treasurer,
the club has done even more work the second semester than it did the first. :\
football party for our heroes of the gridiron was giv n. Even the boys said that
they had a peach of a time; so it must have been a success. You sec long ago, we
learned that the way to a man's heart is through his stomach; so we planned accordingly.
:-\s it happened almost no one on the squad danced; so we had g;amcs, and
stunts, and a "sing," and everything. That is, we didn't know they could dance,
but Zie' crs proved that at least one could, when he gave us an Egyptian temple
c_Lrnce by the weird light of an Edison lazda. But that isn't the half of it. The
party became an assured success when I\luhlick, the great and glorious fullback,
won the needle-threading contest, and on receiving a water-pistol as pri;:c shot
Coach Edler in the hack of the neck with a stream of cold water. Some hright
wit had loaded the pistol.
Soon after the never-to-be-forgotten party, the basketball season began under
the supen ision of Coach Katherine ~ovack. About twenty girls went out faithfully to practice, and after a month the team was chosen as follows: Juno \\' hitbeck,
"Z\larjorie ~lillar, Bunny Rhode, Irene Reith, Phyllis Symmonds, and Stella Nelson.
\\' hen larj. and Phillis graduated, the team was changed a bit, and Leona Pfan rniller was added. The shift seemed to do us good, and anyone will testif) to our
"snappy" games. :-\II the money we made on the games went to the association
which is getting stronger every day.
\'ollcyhall, hasehall and tennis are also featured in our summer athletics. \\'c
are sure that there are plenty of girls with enough "pep" to make any attempt to
put through this kind of athletics, a success. One of our fondest dreams is to ha\ e
a high school inter-class field meet, and we hope to have our dream come true this
summer.
HE
[ 6-!J
J
K
E
5
Kind reader, if you like these jokes,
\Ye' re read~· for your praises,
:\nd if you don't we beg of you
To kindly go to blazes.
• • •
Public Examination
A
NNOl'NCEM E:\T is made of the etiming civil service examinations for office
boy
and chief stamp licker for military service in the Kenosha High School, to be
held June 25, 1920, in the vestibule and reading room of the SPY office.
Salary for the first seven years will be ele\·en dollars a decade, and will increase
each twenty-two years thereafter until the maximum of four dollars and ten cents
i reached. Then the employe is fired.
Applicants must be provided with pencil,
paper, thumbtacks and piano stools. No gum chewing or spitting will be tolerated
during time of examination. The preliminary examination will consist of a set of
ten questions on several important questions. :\n applicant must answer correctly
thirty of these que tions in order to be considered for the position. :\nswer will
be judged by their accuracy, incerity, and the way thew's are dotted. • o attention will be paid to grammar or spelling. This position offer many attractive
advantages and it is hoped that there will be at least one applicant on the date
announced. All applications will be held strictly conf.dential, and will be used as
hair restorers on billiard balls and door knobs. A few of the questions to be a keel
in the preliminaries follow:
Exan1ination Questions
1. Trace the decent of the Democratic Party from the time of King Alfred.
2 \Yhere was Moses when the illumination was obliterated?
3. \Yhen, How, \Yhere, and \Yhy did Queen Anne die?
a. Give the name of the undertaker's assistant.
b. If he had no assistant, give the reason. (Quote authority) .
4. Explain Patrick Henry's statement, "Laugh and the world laughs with
you; snore and you sleep alone."
5. \Yhy are the following names important in history? Ray Hudson; Lady
Francis Brick; ' ir Howard Herzog; Lord Leo Ril ey; Duke Gordon Brine;
Queen Ruth Becker.
6. If the Chinese consul at \Yest Bend fails to pay its taxes, Hoo Kan.
7. \Yhat was the technical difference between the Irish alphabet and the
Scandihoovian dialect during the reign of King Harold Knudsen III?
8. Explain just what Abraham Lin coln meant when he said, "Let him that
wisheth to keep his dignit) beware of an iC) sidewalk."
9. Punctuate the following: The boys held a feast last night. President
\\'ilson, Andrew Carnegie, \\'illiam J. Bryan, Charles Chaplin, and layor
Joachim were among those absent.
10. Insert the dollar signs in the following:
Dear Sir: Three years ago I said I hoped I'd choke if I ever wore one of
your collars again. \Yell, I did and I did.
11. Recite \Our fa,orite ,·erse to the tune of, "l\lan Had a Little Lamb."
12. \\'hat rh) mes with the word apple beside · editot:?
[65]
ALL SINGLE; -
AS PAR
AS
I.NE: tfl'fOW
C<>NVE RSATIC)rj CENS0R£1>
1-R. .II
• V£NlJS AT r~~ \NEU..•
ST. 6AllBI<~
"GLAO"
HE/IR IT ~ATTLE?
ITS Ac.RUEL WOIL.. O
.............................................
[66]
Is he a dreamer? He certainlv is. Last night he dreamed he \.Vas eating
shredded wheat and ate half the mattress.
• • •
Heard About the Halls
Hello, Hellen how are you?
Say, what's that city in France?
Darn that dingbusted theorem!
Gee, what a peach of a dance.
And he told me hi last name was bingo,
, ay, Iarg- what's the Jes.on today:
And sh-h-h-h he wanted to ki s me,
I got in without having to pay.
Do you smoke Dan? I thought you had quit it.
She told me to come at three-ten!
Good night!
ome d d fool took my rubbers!
And what did you say happened then?
Yes'm, I had the Lumbago Hey, Doc-let me use your comb.
Oh, 1ary ! If I told your mother!
I was glad when they played, Home 'v.·eet Home.
Did you say that he ta ted your powder?
Oh! \Yhat a smell from that room!
ay, cancha talk any louder?
\Yhat are the word to that tune?
ay, Phil-what i the a signment?
Julius \Yei s-put the third on the board.
Really the street car was topped, ma'm.
_row recopy that, ir, word for word.
Oh, what terrible singing!
"\York just the fir t ixty-four."
"Down with the bunk," cried ~ ra pol eon.
_ O\. "Re pond" to thi ,.,:atch ju t once more.
If it i n't twelYe b 11 now all readY.
I hear there', a "Hock hop' in town.
Oh ye,-, you mean :\bie ohen' ?
:\o\\ you an all go it iown ( 7. _ T.)
T.
• • •
\Yh\ is a .·tr;rn hat like ,1 -i.-s over a l i h
_-\n-'\\er lk-;rn." it'· ne,er felt.
1
:
...................................................
TM!" 8JG- OM E's SUNNY
FIVE ON Orie ISN'T' FAIR, ·soys
WHATS iHE Joi<.£, Wlu.1£d
AF'EW MEMQ!::RS o~ THE Ol/S:RALl.
....
VALEPl~TORIAN, SPARE THA'T CHILO!
K'.H.S. IN T~E l>ISIANC.E
...............................................
[ 68]
At last the secret i out.
ow we know why and how Tony Gianantonio
got his start, and the secret of his phenomenal success in school. \\'hen Tony was
a boy he used to get his arithmetic lesson something like this: He would go into a
delicatessen store and ask the proprietor
"How much is three pounds of ausage at sixty cents a pound, four pounds of
butter at thirty cents a pound, five pounds of yeast foam at forty cents a pound?
How much i it?" The proprietor would then answer, "That will be five dollars.
Do you want to take them with you?" And Tony's retort would be" No, that's my arithmetic lesson for tomorrow."
It is now also known that Tony has developed a remarkable head for economy.
One day his father told him to buy a stamp and mail a letter. Tony returned in
about ten minutes, and his father said, "Did you mail the letter?" To which
Tony illustrated his unusual talent by answering, "Yes, father; but I saved two
cents. I saw a lot of people drop letters into the box; so I watched my chance and
when no one was looking, I dropped mine in, too."
T
T
T
Nothing But the Truth
If one would only open keep his eyes,
And to the sounds about prick up his ears,
A 'twere, he probably would hear such ounds,
That for their very oddness would surprise
Him, were it not for what his senses tell,
Are real true facts and not a vague surmise.
ow this will dou btle sly seem strange to you,
As all things do when they are new in mind,
It happened once last week, Tuesday J think,
To tell the truth each one was bound to do,
And strange and many were the things then heard,
Within the olden school the air was blue.
For courtesy I will not say his name,
But he had just appeared an hour late,
\\'ith sleepy eye, and much diminished breath,
He wheezed something with effort, 'bout a train,
And then he saw the calendar and said,
"'Twas hard to leave the bed though- all the same."
'Twas in the panish cla sand all around,
It sounded like a panish restaurant,
La Espanole was flying thick and fa t,
To hand in home work we were duty bound,
Oh, what excuses would be heard - instead
We're liable to, with a good show in town.
'Twas in the history class and names and dates,
Were flying thick as leaves in a fall rain,
I think it was old Solomon, the king,
Who had a thousand wives gi'n him by Fate,
Of his great wisdom I was to discuss,
I said he had a solid ivory pate.
[ 691
........................................
100 ABOVE" lti T~E SH A D£
l>ICl1''S SPECIAL Tl~S
TH E COL.
A SCENE" IN SALEM
Gll>MP NAPO.
THE IRISH"1AN
SH-H-H
OUR &ELL£
'M UFF" SAID
•.SPEED"
THE STi'I RT
HAll.POLLARPO
IHI: F IN 15H
SE.E. THE PrtETTY
l>ANDELIO~S!
.........................................
(70 l
A Spy Business Meeting
ScENE Room 16 (Lavi hly furnished py office).
TIME- Any day and every day in past two months.
P1u CI PAL CHARACTER
Editor of py Annual and member of Annual bu ines taff.
R. 1. "Awright, guys, the meeting will come to order. Hey, can that tuff
now M will you?"
J. M.- " Say do any of you guys know where I can get a hold of some clean,
white pants?"
R. M. "Come on, find out afterward . How's the list coming?"
J. 1\1.- " Say, you sure gave me one rotten bunch to ee."
R. 1. "\Yell, some guy had to see 'em, didn't he? First I gave th em to J. ].,
but I decided that you would be better. Age before beauty, darling."
H. B.- " ay, M- , get me out o' chool this afternoon, will you? I've got
a physics test."
D. 1. " ay, can't the whole staff get off? \Ye gotta get some ad , fellas."
J. J. "Gee, don't we know it? I dunno how I'm gonna get some o'mine way
out in th country."
D. M. "\Valk out; all the roads are paved."
J. M. "Say, those two guys had a circus, didn't they?"
.
C . Z~. "\"'', ot two guy ?"
J. 1. "Barnum and Bailey."
(Chorus of long, drawn out "Ohhhhhh's " ).
C. Z. "And they call , uch people human."
R. 1.- "Say, wot's the matter wich'u guys? You ain't workin' at all."
J. J.- "\Ye ain't, eh? ay I walked about ten miles last night for a quarter
o f a page. "
D. M.- " Sure, so did I."
C. Z. "Aw, say, you fellas have got to work."
R. M. "Gee whizz, la t night I went out and got about nine pages in ten
minutes."
] . M. "\Vell, by gosh, you better go out and get nine more cuz I can't get any."
J. J. "Gee, did you see the classy summer suit in a window down town?"
R. M.- "How much did you get this A. 1., Dave?"
G. B. "I make a motion that the meeting adjourn."
J. M. "I second the motion."
C. Z. "All those in favor signify by walking out."
......
Mary had an answer book,
\Yi th her it came in handy,
Once she used it for e 'ams,
nd (\Yell the re t i censored. )
[ 71 ]
LOOI< OUT !
.SHE: 81res
A HAL.F l>o~EN
HEl\l>S oF - ?
... ........................................
[ 72 ]
tocks went down in the rubber exchange today. Four new pairs disappeared
and four old pairs remained in their places. Yours truly wishes to announce with
all gravitation that the next one who exchange rubbers with him will plea e leave
size eight .
T
T
T
A Little Longfellow
(A Parody on "The If/reek of the Hesperus")
It was the schoon r Asparagus,
That sailed the muddy sea,
And the skipper had taken hi little daughter,
To bear him company.
And he sailed straight up to 'K. H. S.,
\Vhile the wind around him roared,
But I must say, lest I forget,
His schooner wa a Ford.
ow, when they'd sailed into our school,
Hi daughter shook her head,
Powdered her nose, and waxed her lips,
Then this is what she said.
"Oh father, I hear the sound of guns,
Oh say what can it be?"
"Some angry kid who got a bid
That he flunked geometry."
"Oh, father, I hear the sound of bells,"
he burst out in a sob.
"Be not afeared, that's just the bell,
That loosens the angry mob."
"Oh, father, I hear an awful noise,
l surely can't go pa t."
"Be not askeered," her father spake,
"That's just the Spanish class."
"Father, I fear I will grow faint,
Oh say, what can it be?"
"Ju t hold your nose, my Ii ttle one,
That's just our chemistry!"
"Oh, daughter, I thot l had a wreck,
ntil I saw this place,
But now I'm not afraid to look,
A person in the face!"
[73]
..............................................
.PAl\lH)l!VIL.. PHILJP
GOTTA HEW JOS?
WHAT'S l'Hf" CA1'4 4 °?
ARE THE
Poo1<s Loq.<Eo?
lrlTME WILDS OF :z10"' C1T'f.
THI;' SPy IS AT E"ASE".
EARLV
SIA.PS
..........................................
[74]
Spy Spirituali tic Investigation
The ouija board is certainly the third member in the eternal triangle- man,
woman, and ouija board. \Ye have heard from various sources that members of
the high school have indulged in this "indoor sport."
The Spy, ever curious
to find out what the students are doing, ent their" Inquiring Reporter" to various
people and the result of his investigation is herewith presented:
"I left the office this morning about 9 o'clock determined to find out if possible,
this rumor floating around that students of the high school are working the ouija
board. I arrived in the high school about fifteen minutes later, and, as I entered
the assembly I di covered a group of people am0ng who were "Bun" Rhode,
Jeanette Husted, Gladstone Snyder, Ruth Becker, Harold Bentson, and Beatrice
Barnett. I approached quite unannounced and as I drew near them heard Beatrice
exclaim, "Ouija, please tell me my faults."
Int n e silence reigned for a minute, Beatrice and Harold both placed their
fingers on the little table, and the seance began. Slowly the small table moved,
and this was the result. "Quiet." Beatrice knew this to be perfectly true and
the intere t in the ouija board became more intense. Harold then ventured a
question and asked if whether or not he would flunk in Physics this summer.
Slowly, silently the little table moved and stopped at X. Then interest began to
wane and some left the group, but Bunny ever ready with a solution to the problem
explained the meaning of the strange phenomena. "As X is the third last letter
in the alphabet, Harold will have only three problems wrong and receive a good
mark." Happiness again being restored, I left the merry group fully convinced of
the importance of fonsieur Ouija.
I walked slowly down the aisle and as I passed the office door Oh, Conscience
be my guide- there were Ir. Tremper and lrs. lurphy diligently putting questions to 1r. Ouija. I cautiou ly opened the door, entered the outer office, and
concealed my elf behind the door leading into Ir. Trempcr's office. I listened,
and in a few moments Mrs. lurphy's voice was heard above the din and roar of
the assembly.
1rs. Murphy was heard to say, "\\'ill the sun shine next Thursday?" Silence reigned supreme for a minute and then the "two future seekers"
exclaimed, "Oh, thank heavens." I wished to know what the result of this question was, and as I peered over the door I saw that the little table was serenely
resting on the "moon" in the left hand corner of the board. I was curious to
know what the meaning was, and before long my wish was granted. A
Ir.
Tremper had traveled in South America it was thought to confer the honor of
answering the question on him. This is what he said, "The moon will shine on
the day after the Thursday in question, but because scientists could not find a
suitable name for the sun which shines at night they called it the moon, and, as
the moon will shine Friday night and because it ne\ er goes to sleep, it will also
hine Thursday."
Mrs. Murphy seemed perfectly satisfied with this e planation and left the
office radiant with joy and hap1 iness.
I wa getting di gusted \ ith high school occupants and determined before I
left the building to visit a class room. I quietl) entered ~liss Lo\\e'_, room an l.
settled myself comfortabl) in a scat. I thought that no\\ 111) mind would be
[75]
~. .........VV..M•~•R•e..11s..~.~.~..~.o•A•~.~..' ..................................... I
(76)
rested after my adventure with ouija's. But fate had planned otherwi e. Mi
Lowe asked a pupil to give the assignment for that day, and I was brought back to
earth by this announcement, "Pp. 453 to 459, consult all important que tions
dealing with the causes and results of the civil war with the ouija." Had this
noble instructor become addicted to the use of the ouija? Horrible beyond a doubt .
.-\s long a I wa in the classroom, I took notice of the answers they gave;
the fir t victim to be called upon was Justin Barber. He had consulted the ouija
and a ked it whether the Civil \Yar was just. Ouija answered "Just what?" Miss
Lowe seemed pleased with this recitation, and gave Justin a zero. The next
student called upon was largaret Pull. She, trying to outwit the ouija, asked it,
"\Vharpo warpon tharpe barpattarple arpof Barpunkarper Harpill?" Ouija was
on its guard, and the table moved from one to another letter this is what it read,
"G-E-0-R-G-E \\'-A- -H-1-~ -G-T-0-N. Miss Lowe was in ec tacv over this
' answer and said because largaret gave such a brilliant recitation she could be
dismissed from class for a week.
It was growing late by thi time, and I decided to slip out of the room and go
back to the office. I was weary and completely di ·gusted when I thought of what
our present generation was coming to. I then wrote up the result of my observation with assistance from heaven.
T
T
T
Just Like That
Once there was a little lad,
And of all the brains he had,
They all tended toward the bad,
Just like that.
And upon a certain day,
l\liss Hardaway did to him say,
" lake ome hydrogen this way,"
Just like that.
But a great idea mean,
Lodged in little Eddie's bean,
He took nitro-glycerine,
Just like that.
l\lixed it with some dynamite,
And some nice guncotton white,
Threw it down with all his might,
] ust like that.
lany days have gone since then,
Happy days that might have been,
They've buried Eddie's fountain pen,
And just that.
[77]
.ATrA HITttN"U1, SNYPER
THE
ANTHONY
.Li BULL
START
THE F"IHISH
LATlli SMARJc'.
MAC. SR. ~ JR.
THAT CoATI
WI/ATS FUrll'IY? • WE WON'T BE HOME, ETC••
.............................................
[78]
Banter on Geometry
(and Others)
Students: Study geometry! Peruse these testimonials, and take heed.
No. £. Says a former student of K. H. S. "I am glad that J took geometry.
Recently my little boy tore a triangular hole in his pant . , ince I had a triangular
piece of bright red cloth, I began to think. So I measured two sides and the
included angle of each, proved the triangles congruent, and upon this irrefutable
authority I proceeded to replace the hole by the piece of red cloth. :\nd, ju t
think of it, the fit was perfect. The rest of the job was easy. How can I tell you
how much I appreciate this knowledge."
Your truly, l\IR .. X.
No. I I.- A short while ago a friend offered to ·ell me a pair of his hoe at a
low price. I took the offer. But he wanted me to fit them on at hi· hou e. :\ s
I was very modest, J did not like to take off my shoe in another person' house.
(Guess why?) Therefore I put to use my knowledge of axiom which I had
acquired in geometry. Convincing my friend that fitting on shoe was an illogical
process, I said to him, "Now, since you have larger feet than John Jones, and
since John Jones has larger feet than I, therefore )OU have larger feet than I, by
axiom 10. Hence your shoes will fit me." "Righto," he replied, and the bargain
was accordingly consummated. Incidentally my dignity and decorum we.re preserved. A thousand thanks to you.
l\lR . Y.
No. III.- But here is our best testimonial, written to l\Ii \Yilliam :
Dear Iiss \Yilliams:
I am very glad I took geometry, since it has greatly increa ed my rationality
and perspicacity. I was especially interested in the hints of the science of logic
you occasionally dropped. They made my desire for knowledge of logic absolutely
insatiable; so I took to reading" Sherlock Holmes" for the sake of its comparatively simple bits of reasoning.
ince then I have developed the science of logic
to a very high degree. Here are a few gem - of logical thought, which you ha\'e
not, in all probability, thought about. (Pardon my somewhat ju ·tifiable pride in
them.) Please compare them with my school day reasoning and ob erve how far
I have advanced.
" .M ary Jones uses powder. Mary Jones
a girl. Therefore all girl - u e
powder." (Forgive me, girls).
"John J ones chews gum. John Jones i a tudent of K. H . ,·. Therefore all
students of K. H. S . chew gum ."
"Farmers wear o\·erall . The students of K. H. ,-. wear overall
Therefore
all students of K. H . S. are farmers . " (Beg pardon, boy,-.
H ere is my proof of the Darwinian Theory . ":\lonkey.- h:ffe ,<.me in!elligence. ;\lankind has some intelligence. Therefore man kin i i.- in the ·la .. o · h,
mon ke) s." (Page Julius \Yeis ·, and show him .
"Girls remain si'\:teen ) ear of age for a period of about fi, e ) t.ar.. He 1:. _ a
person who has been si,teen for fi,·e) ear: . Ob,·iou:ly this per:on i. ,1 g· ·I." T. F. I .
" B ut, for the sake of reconciliation '' ith the girl: :\Ian :mi h 1. : n .tT · _ ·
nice .
larv Smith 1s a girl. Therefore all girL-~are ~·t•·,. :·c:n ~-. ,.,. 1· - ...- ; ..}: . ( .
.
~
~
.
i\l
.............................................
WATCU/N6 DICK'S ?
· WNEF?EJA BUY IT?
A SON O~RESi
A LOVING CUP-LE
AN AEROPLANE VIEW Fl?oM l<.H.S
You ' ~E. G ~NNA Gn IT
...........................................
[80]
Someone- " I can make a worse face than that."
omeone else "Yeh, but look at the start yah got."- Ex .
. .. .
l\1iss Vandervort (R eading Gray's Elegy)
here, for the most part?"
Riley " Dead."
"\\'hat were these people, lying
......
Who Can Tell?
Now, if prohibition keeps on,
This I ask of you,
Can a boat put in some Port?
Or a storm be allowed to brew?
Or, will a man be arrested,
\Yhen intoxicated with joy?
Or, when a ship is on a bar,
\\'ill they pinch it? Ship ahoy!
And, when I think of one thing,
This is how I feel,
I'd hate to Boat upon the boat,
That sails with unsteady keel.
Imagine the skipper's daughter say,
A.s she ga\'e his arm a pull,
"Last night the moon had a golden ring,
Tonight the moon is full."
1t won't be afe to use your brains,
Or e\'en a house to rent,
You'll ne\'er know when you'll be charged,
\Yith a "case of good judgment."
I'd fear to be a , wi -man,
Among the :\}pine strife,
You surely \vould be taken up,
For ha, ing much "high life."
......
1 I~\)eful da,:. a, cout went -!th to a ldc.rful th ter which he reached 2 l,. Then
he decided 2 pecuL' hi· money in 6 chocol ·oda ·. He 4th with in-lmally ran to
'ex IO'' foun 10. There he \\a -lced 2 ,·pend more than he cou1 i a-ld, -l he met -l
friends and each one didn't e\·en pre 10d 2 pay -l their ·oda. which the wai er aid
in -lceful tones 2 the lad of lOder nars amounted to -~ of 1 iollar.
TherL-l, i 1
Aoki rage the boy went home di ·cc;n ol, .
[ l]
•
•
HAHN OGM 5TOlE"
CON$ERW\r1VE GIRLS
'7.30 J\.M .
V'/H05c l'l. IT?
[82]
NO WO('I OCR CT Wotlr <;o
1920-The Spy-1920
Yearly Symposium issued some time before, after and between times, at a
great risk to the taff.
Contents
I. EDITORIALS
\Yhy Editors go to Heaven
. . . . c. ZEFF
Truth \Vill Prevail
. . FRED BEYER
Our Future- Let s Prepare
How ARD PERKINS
II.
RRE T TOPIC
hall \Ve, ubmit to Final ? . . . . . . . . . . \YARD lcCARRO.
How I \Vould. Run the School . . . . . . . . .
PHIL BLANCHARD
\Yhy \Ve \Vant tudent Control, but Can't Have It
TEDDY GOTTLIEB
1\Iy Views On the Coming lection . . . . . . .
CORA \VELL
III. FICTION
The Curse of a Flunk . . . . . . .
. J. BARBER
For Hers was a Sweet Temper
(,.. E. DEDIEMAR
he Loved Him, but He \\lent Away
GORDO T BRI E
fussed in the Dust . . . . . . . .
H. HoYE
I\'. TRAVEL
Travels \Vith a Flivver
H. BENT o
The \ Yild, \Vild \Vest .
. C. GEARHART
To Pleasant Prairie and Back
1ARJ. KI TG
The Road to the Office
.
. . TEDDY GOTTLIEB
A Tour to the Administration Building- How It Changed During
1y Three Yi it
. . . . . . . . . . . . . A. GALLIGA .
\'. At:TOBIOGRAPHIE
The True Facts of 1y Life .
BELLE GRIG o.
From Insignificance to Fame
}ACK }AY
How I \ Yon Honors . . .
JoE KE LER
YI. M1 CELLANEOC ARTICLE ,
1y Per onal Beauty Hint
. . . .
. . . .
CAP. JE E
\ Vhat To \ Vear and H ow To \ Vear It
. . . . JoE BIRMI TGHAM
\ Vhat' In a ame? . . . . .
PA L CHWARTZTRA BER
\ Vhy I Am a Social Success
. . . .
1ALCOLM HAH
How to Get Through \Yi thout tudy
DAN HoLl\rn
One Thousand and ine Excuses . .
CECIL D
CA
(Every topic was written e pecially for th , py. \ Ve have spared no expense
to make this number pleasing to the eye and ear of every one who reads it. Our
motto is "Though they be strong, large, and mu cular, we are fa ter." (On with
the dance .)
c
T
T
T
\ Vife " J ohn, there's a burglar downstairs eating my pie."
H ubby- (drowsily)-" \ Yell, I'm not going to get up at this time of night to
give him dyspep ia tablets."-Ex.
[ 83]
Questions of the Day
By Our Inquiring Reporter
''Thy do you think Kenosha need a new High School?
From a scientific point of view:
MR. . "TARD, teacher of Physic in K. H. . .
"The need of up-to-date laboratories is very great. " Ti th our preset~ t apparatus we are unable to perform some of the most important and most practical
experiments. This school has only an alternating current of electricity; consequently all work involving the direct current must be 'calculated,' not actually
performed. The laboratory and the recitation room are one. Th re is no suitable
pace for the , tu dent to keep their apparatus and books. In fact there are 0
departments that suffer more than the cience department in their lack of proper
facilities to perform the mo t practical experiments of applied cience."
MR. TREMPER, Principal of K. H. S.:
"YVhy do we need a new high school? (Short laugh). " Tell, I haven't time to
tell you all the reason , but here are a few. Our science departments are absolutely
inadequate. There i nothing to our Botany laboratory. Plant can't be grown,
because they freeze over night; we have no such thing as an aquarium. \Ve lack
the apparatus neces ary for such work. Our chemistry department is large enough
to accommodate about half of the pupils who wish to study that subject. Our
domestic science and manual training departments aren't at all large enough. " Te
ought to have printing presse and other equipment of that sort."
"vYe hould have a regular cafeteria large enough to accommodate at lea t half
the people in school and a kitchen and dining room apart from the D omestic
cience Department to take care of it. \Ye have no music room at all. Art is a
subject unthought of as a study here. " Te have no phase of it whatever. Our
heating and ventilating systems are a joke, and the lighting system couldn't be
much worse. \Ve need an auditorium with a large stage and a moving picture
outfit where pla, s and lecture can be given. \Ve have outgrown the present
school and there is no chance for expanding it. \Ye have a fine faculty and student
body, and we do need a new high school for them to work in."
I. ABEL VA DERVORT, teacher of English in K. H. S.:
"~ir t of all Kenosha High School needs an auditorium. In Bloomington, a
city about the size of I enosha, there is a fine new $50,000 high school with an
auditorium which affords wonderful opportunity for holding concerts, pageants
and entertainments of that sort. For instance the
linn eapolis Symphony
Orchestra will give a concert there soon. Such a thing could never happen here.
Then, too, there is a crying need for a gymna. ium. And there aren't even enough
rooms for each teacher to have one to herself. \Ye ought to have a teachers' rest
room and a dining room suitable for banquets apart from the sewing room. The
heating system is atrocious; one is either uncomfortably hot or cold. There is no
happy medium.
"Moreover Kenosha is a commercial city and consequently opposes the high
school. By the time the pupils reach enior high school, education is optional and
the need of an attractive building to keep them in school is very neces ary."
M1
[ 84 [
11 s Lowe, teacher of History in K. H. , . :
"In a commercial city like Kenosha the children need an incentive to keep them
in school, and a new high school would be the proper thing to furnish that incentive.
bright attractive school with pleasant class rooms adapted to their
special studies would create an atmosphere conducive to study.
The pupils
would have more respect for an education attained in such a building than one
obtained in an old out-of-date school. They should have a choice of a good many
original course ; a chance to learn something they like. But the thing we need
most is physical training for every one of the students boys and girls alike. The
recent army examinations proved that more than anything else, and the sooner
we get all these necessities the better for everyone concerned."
T
T
T
A funny old man told this to me
I fell in a snowdrift in June he aid
I went to a ballgame out in the sea
I saw a jelly-fi h float up in a tree
I found ome gum in a cup of tea
I stirred my milk with a brass key
I opened my door on my bended knee
I beg your pardon for this said he
But 'tis true when told as it ought to be
'Tis a puzzle in punctuation you see.
T
T
T
Man in a dining car "Thi ham is awful!"
\Yaiter- " Sir, it took us two weeks to cure that ham."
Man-"\Yell it must have had a relapse then."
T
T
T
Coises I Foiled Again I
Once a youthful college youth,
Thought he'd be a sleuthful sleuth,
So he took his sleuthful hat,
Put it o'er his youthful map,
tarted out a crook to trap,
\Yhat could be sweeter?
He went hunting for hi bum,
\Vhen he found him did he nm?
\Vent so fast straight up the street,
Burnt his shoes right off his feet.
ure that boy he can't be beat
And the crook came right behind him.
[ 5J
Diagram of a K. H. S. Student
Coming to School
HOME
+
TS.t. .,.... WVE'S"
,,..-------- -....
tI FOil SC. HOO L
(/
I
t
..1.. L IGHT'S
I
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BUT
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RE.MEMBERS
/
He. FOR.IFOT
I
Tb MA IL A
A
LETTER.,' /) MAILS 11
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AND :5TOP5
ro CHAT
T DE.Ft.RICK' WoR.K'IN().
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I
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F'Rl•NP
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9 A.M .
'
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[ 86]
' ,
I
l '
IZ..Zo P.M. l?E'TURNS HOME.
PA ~1 GEE' , BUT 1
STUDIED HARD ~-DA'(! •
~LLS
1 40 CE'NTS
sc.HOOL
1
( .-"""\
..
I
.&
lt:.:~
1POOL ROOM
c'J!tks }
MINPANP
DE.C.ll>ESTO f//
St<IP
/
__ :.:.~~.':./
/
Calendar - 1919-1920
September
2-School begins with cheers and pep.
obod) knows what they're going to
take but the Seniors, and they've forgotten. Alrno~t all of K. H. S. at the
Rhode in the afternoon to see Doug. Fairbanks.
3- The new Sophs discover that Mr. Tremper is "some" talker.
4- fr. \Vard starts to torment the clock. A number of the Sophomores are
pestering the janitor because of mis-direction b) upper dassmen.
5- 0h, aren't tho e new ophs the cutest things with their palm beach suits and
straw hats? First week of school over with.
8-A little more order at school.
lr. \Yard gets half through with the seat , and
discovers he's left about fifty people out. Joe Birmingham decides to come
back to school.
9- Miss Yandervort discovers she has a bee-oo- tiful period assembly - almost as
bad as last year.
10- Band concert tonight- there will be some lovely recitations tomorrow.
11- \Ve begin to find out that school is no joke - and it might not hurt very much
to do a little tudying.
12- Rain! But sunshine for the IIIA's they go into l\Iiss \ ' anden'o rt's assembl).
13- \Ve begin music. A great big crowd a bigger noise.
] 6- Bunn y and Coyla stage a free for all in the assembly.
17- 0rchestra begins practice. Glee Club signs up. Our warbler are back with
us trong.
18-Election of class reporters for the Junior News. Chester Zeff named editor.
19- 1eeting of Lyceum to elect officers and new members.
22-C?ur warblers begin to practice. Yvette creates a sensation with her "diamond"
nng.
23- 1\1iss \i\'illiams is Johnny-on-the-spot with detention. The other teachers will
probably follow suit.
24-First Spy 'taff meeting. Looks as though we'll have a good Spy everyone
seems reaclv for work.
25-Troop 6 o( Girl Scouts hold meeting. Elect new member .
26-:Miss Northway has special cla s after school. First regular meeting of
Lyceum League.
29- Everybody comes to school with "a cold id his do e." ~1eeting of Dramatic
Club at 7 :00. Kenhidram chosen as name.
30-Spy mass meeting at 3:15.
luch excitement over prospect of a tag day.
October
1-Mass meeting at 11 :55 to arouse enthusiasm for the Ba:' Yiew game. Junior
I ews and Spy throwing slams at each other.
2-Hostility between the Spy and the Junior ews worse. Beautiful day, but
the colds are still flourishing.
3-Tags, tags everywhere.
o slackers when it comes to the Sp) subscriptions.
Spy and Junior 1 ews decide to bur) the hatchet.
r87 J
67
8
910
1
14
16
17
20
21
2223
24
272829
chool in good pirits walloped Bay View, J3-0. Chester Zeff receives much
praise on success of the Junior News. .M r. \\'ard's A. M. classes have vacation.
\\'hole school repairs to the l\1ajcstic at J :20, to sec Na>'.irnova in "The Brat."
Ir. Tremper makes a speech in the fourth period assembly. l\luch cramming
te ts tomorrow.
\Ye find out that life is just one darn test after another. Fire drill.
Fir t rhetorical program. One of the best e\'er gi,'en. Cletus Kupfer wa on.
:\ typical "Blue londay." Lots of goose eggs dish ed out. Tickets out for
'enior A dance.
Great excitement third period. Boys catch a mouse in the as embly.
Tickets out for football game. Fred Beyer has a stiff arm, Bill \Tileta has a
stiff neck, Betsy Harman ha a game an Ide, and we all have headaches.
First i sue of the Spy out. Everyone much pleased with it.
lass m eting
at three-twenty we play \\'est Di \'ision High School, lil waukee, tomorrow.
Hurrah! \Ye walloped \Yest Division, 7-0. Two arti ts from the lillion
Dollar Band entertained u during music period. Kenhidrnrn meeting after
supper.
Girl , cout meetin~ of Troop IY. Chemistry 2 cl as makes alcohol and after
July 1, too. l\Iy- oh, my!
Cla s meeting during mu ic period.
First report cards of the semester.
l\1any smiles and many sighs.
Rhetoricals. The assembly bell get rambunctious during the program.
Roosevelt memorial program. Senior A's win football ticket contest with
1(;J/
-c r.
'
Tl1ey ' re " some " t I1cre e J?
'
1. "I> ep " parati eat -/ :->"O . .Leveryone
out to
lick \Yaukegan tomorrow.
0ur boys fall at la t. Lo e to \\'aukegan 6-0. ~Ir. Trenary speaks on Better
English.
Everybody getting all excited about Lyceum- Beta Phi Kappa party. Elaine
is having some time collecting the dues.
liss \ 'andcrvort's English 8 class presents a "Better Speech" play in the
assembly. It makes a hit. Sidney Bisno was in it.
November
4
"Kewpie" outhmayd get to school on time. Captain Lewi speak at 3 :00
on the work of the marines.
5 Rh etoricals. Isn't it nice that the Senior B class is so large? \Ye have
rhctoricals o often, don't yer know. \\'e'll bet 0.liss Derbyshire likes it too.
10 \\'e're back again strong after our lengthy ( ?) vacation. Raining in the
morning. Our hopes are raised when it starts to snow. But we are doomed
to disappointment it lasts for about a minute.
11ot much doing today. \Ye all go down to see "The Miracle Man" after
school.
leeting of the Junior classes. The early birds are giving their Junior Prom
12
bids. Looks a though there'll be something doing. H. Hoye is threatening
to kill \Y. , enne.
13 --Florence Yance finds out that a box of fudge doc n't last very long if you take
it to school. l\liss Vandervort does some reseating in her fourth period
assembly.
[88]
14
17
Mass meeting. Spy art conte ton. Chester Zeff running it.
Clifford Gabrielson is practicing falling up the steps at every opportunity.
He can do it quite gracefully now.
18- Fllen Rasmussen gets to school on time. \\'e trip the light fantastic at the
Scout dance after school.
19
1iss Slater has quite a time fifth period with E, a 'n Dottie 'n Beulah and the
rest of the bunch.
21- Yvette discovers that there is a little chance of getting to school on time if you
get up at five minutes to eight. Rhetoricals today. Also Lyceum. At last,
Dot Shaw appear on the Lyceum program.
24 Honor students announced. l\lr. \Yard is busy all day trying to schedule a
game for Thanksgiving. \\'e beat\\'. H. S., 18-3 Saturday.
25- The Senior girls start a manicuring shop in Miss Low's assembly. Plans
going fine for the Junior Prom.
26 \\'e play Oshkosh tomorrow. Everyone out for the game! Spy out today.
Decen1ber
1- Back again, ready for three weeks' work before Christmas vacation.
li s
Hardaway finds a mou e in a beaker of syrup which she left standing on the
Chemistry table over vacation. Lost to Oshkosh, B' Gosh, 12-21.
2- Margaret \i\1harrie gets "all het up" over some anonymous notes she is receiving from "honey boy." 1iss Cameron leaves for her home in Texas until the
first of the vear.
3- Miss oren' of the Frank chool take charge of the Girls Glee Club during
Mis Cameron's absence. Emma \\'alter is on the war path today.
4-Meeting of the py Staff. Also of the Junior classes. Plans for the Prom
getting along fine. Dance given by Troop 6 after school.
one of the u ual ocial gathering after school. Every5- Rhetoricals today.
one home to get ready for the Prom.
8-\Ve speak, we do, we eat, nothing but "The Prom," which is pronounced
unusually successful by all.
9- The Athletic as ociations are having an awful time. Neither the boys or
girl can get a place to practice for basket ball.
10 Our warblers entertain the \Yoman's Club with a few selection . Pretty soft
for tho e who haves venth period classe .
11- \Yhatever struck Phyllis? She has been doing nothing but quoting poetry all
day. In love? we wonder.
12 "Oh, what a time for the Girlies when the Boys come marching home." Now
that the football boys are through with their work, the Girls' Athletic A sociation will show them a regular time this evening. Games 'n dancing, 'n eats
-oh them eats !- 'n everything.
15-The snow is thawing, and leaking right into the office. Ain't that nice, now?
And then they say we don't need a new high school.
16-\Yell, well, well, two more set sail upon the sea of matrimony. Dorothy 'haw
and 1argaret Pull are now man and wife. \\'hachanoaboutthat?
17- The eniors are all excited. The clas play try-out is coming, coming. It's
a gay life, if you don't weaken, it's getting too close to the Christmas vacation.
[ 89]
18
n with the Chri tmas spirit. The enior Class has a Christmas party after
school.
1y, but 'anta Claus is good to those eniors. Margaret Pull makes
a nice anta Clau .
19-The Lyceum follows suit. Christma party after school. Can Marj. King
mak hot fudge? \\'e'll say she can. Oh, the pre ents- all the way from
Boston garters to automobiles. Spy's out. Oh, but they are great! Now
our hard working ( ?) K. H. S. students are going to get some sleep in the
morning for two weeks.
January
5-\Vhy all the commotion in the office, Oh, we just over lept. That's all. Class
play try out during vacation and the cast is hard at work.
6-\Vas that a Bolsheviki meeting after school?
o, only the Seniors making
arrangements for graduation.
7-0h! The excitement. Spy banquet pretty soon. Uh-Huh! Spy meeting
during music period to arrange detail . The Glee Club start to practice again.
8 \Ye' re getting over the effects of late leeping during the Xmas vacation. About
ten le s tardinesse this A. M. Cla s Play tickets on sale. \Vatch them go.
9-0ur :rirls' Basket Ball team defeated the Bain School Social Center last night,
7-2. Prizes awarded for art contest. Julia Paterson wins first prize.
12-Big excitement! Joke found in the py box. \Vell, well, well-you never can
tell.
13-More excitement-Beak writes a "pome" for the Spy. But it is lost, and
won't be in the next issue. \Vorse luck.
14-0h, the poor Seniors! One week from today-then exams. They're beginning to find out that life's not a thornless path of roses.
15-\Vow ! State inspectors! Really, you've no idea what good little children we
are, when we want to be. Girl cout troops entertain igrid Larsen after
school. A mock wedding-Lorraine and Coyla set their little ship a- ail in the
sea of matrimony.
16-\Vhy are the , enior all dre ed up? Oh, they're having their picture took.
Our girls play \Vest Allis tonight at \Ve t Alli . Our boys play \Vaukegan at
vVaukegan.
19-' too bad. Lost both games. One session today bad weather. Everything set for the py banquet tonight.
20-0h, where, oh where, has my Ii ttle cat gone? Yes, cats are certainly phenomena
when they visit K. H. S. You'd think we never saw one before.
23-Spy out again. Oh, the new cuts are "supermalglorious."
26- enior banquet tonight. Lucky eniors ! All through with exams. vVhile
the re t of us start in tomorrow.
27-Curt was a peach of a toastmaster last night. Everybody says o. Exams!
\Vow!
28-Isn't it surprising how many people are sick, or have to help their mothers or
just need a rest? Ye -very, when you con ider what torture those who are
well and able-bodied are going through.
29-THE night. The class play. "Nothing but the Truth"-ooh, we can't wait
-can you?
30--I t surely wa the best play ever, and that's nothing but the truth. Class day
exerci es thi afternoon-mid-year class of 1920 sings their "Swan Song."
[ 90]
February
2- All aboard for the new semester. My, but we miss those eniors.
ome of
them are back with us, taking a post graduate course. Lots of nice, green,
little Freshies here.
3
oodne ! \Yhat a wild scramble in the as embly ! The eating i n't arranged
and everything is mixed up. Dot Eddy fell out of her seat.
The Spy Staff is just about reorganized now. Yvette Goldberg is taking a
post-graduate course and will remain as editor. Bob Murdock is business
manager.
5 Thing are quieting down. Mr. \Yard really has the seating arranged.
13 The Senior A's treated themselves to a Valentine party. They had a dance
and played games and ~1. King rendered many Indian Jazz songs "'n everythin '." Miss \Yinegar prepared a delicious supper for them.
16- The school is all stuck up as a result of its athletic victories aturday. The
Girls' Ba ketball team defeated \Yest Alli and the boys won from \Ve t Bend.
17- Everybody filling up on candy. Lent starts tomorrow.
18 Quick Watson, the needle! Mis Vandervort surprised and amused her
assembly today by falling off her tool in a faint. First day of Lent. Many
students church-bored.
19-Second day of Lent. Only 38 more, cheer up.
1iss Vandervort is none the
worse for her fainting spell. Beatrice Kort is wearing a band around her head
today to keep her brains in.
Mass meeting at 1 :30. \Ye play Racine tonight. Mr. \Yard gave us the
2
history of Kenosha's athletics. Tony acted as cheer leader, and we practiced
a few yells. "Coke" stopped to chat with Harold, omething's up.
March
2-Evidently Mr. Tremper thinks that "sprig has cub," for he wore his derby to
school toda v.
3-The derby ;s a poor sign of spring. Colder today. Marion Pierce fell down
three stairs.
4-Much colder! Temperature on third floor is 52. Temperature on second
floor 66. Temperature downstairs i 89.
5-A little warmer. Two well-known members of the enior class expect to
attend the Follie tonight. Girls' basket-ball team plays the Gorton Hall girls
from Racine.
9-Beta Phi Kappa initiation after school today.
10-Kenhidram had their pictures taken this noon. Ain't they the berries?
"Coke" back to econd childhood and appeared on roller kates.
11-Tony Gianantonio left for Georgia today. \Ye'll mi s, you, Tony.
12-\Veekly meeting of the Beta Phi Kappa. Bert chaefer officiates in Tony's
absence.
15-Miss \Villiam's olid Geometry clas are thankful they do not have concave
polyhedrons to deal with.
16-Beta Phi Kappa po ed before the camera this noon. The revivali, t from the
Park Avenue Methodist Church entertained us during mu ic period with a
few songs and funny stories.
(91]
II the little children come to school today dres5ed in green. It's surprising
hov many people claimed to be Irish today.
18
liss Low declares war on her first period l\1odern History class. A few in the
class expect to get a mark this month.
19- Ir. Clase and" his dog" entertained us again today.
22 Tony is with us again. Glad to see you back, Tony.
1iss Yandervort
fainted again toda). It's a great life if you don't weaken, and the first hundred Years are the hardest.
23 "\·ic.'" Emery and" Polly" Perkins almost come to blows. Bcntson's pictures
floating around today.
2
Rain toda\ Cora \\'ells absent.
2~ l\lore rain. C. \\'.comes back.
26 Rhetoricals this afternoon. "K" Cluh organized after school. Carl Nelson
orates on e plo ives in Beta Phi Kappa program.
29 Assembly half empty at 8:15.
30-E,rerybody thought the enior A class was a large one, but at their cla s meeting i\Ir. Tremper informed a lot of them that they were not ready to graduate
yet.
31-A whole week off for Spring vacation. ":\in 'tit a Grand and Glorious Feelin'?"
17
April
7-0ur week's vacation wa a day short, but we enjoyed it just the ame.
8
lrs. lcCombe and i\lr. Clase here again today. Mr. Clase make candy out
of saw-dust. \\'e want the recipe.
9- \Ye know a lot of people who arc going to see "Oh, Oh, Cindy." vVe know a
lot more who aren't because they don't know what to use for money.
12-Some one reported that Ir. i\IcCurdy and l\liss \'andervort were seen at the
how together unday afternoon. Right in broad daylight, too.
13-Extra!
'xtra! Amateur burglars broke into the school last night. Stole
some chalk and erasers. Everybody raving about "Oh, Oh, Cindy."
14-" Oh, Oh, Cindy" was a big success. Dick Rhode starred as Robinson Crusoe.
Lake Fore t contestants named \\'alter Senne, Theo. Gottlieb, Harold
Bentson, Emanuel Goodman and Chester Zeff will represent us.
15- Iartin, the Beta Phi Kappa wireless operator, receives the time daily.
16- py out today. Rhetoricals this afternoon.
19-Dramatic Club had a candy sale after school. A5 usual the candy was a11
sold by the end of the seven th period.
20 Overall Club is in evidence. The boys look just too cute for anything in their
blue overalls and work shirts.
21-The Haresfoot Club entertained us after school. Honor students announced
at the Senior Class meeting.
22-Rai n as u ual.
23-Beta Phi Kappa dance. The music was grand.
25-Spy auto contest leaders announced. Elaine starts things moving.
26-Chandler, Nash and Hudson signs all over the school.
27-They're off. Kessler leads for first twenty minutes.
28-Spy Annual goes to press.
29 The end of a perfect Calendar.
f 92]
THE DAILY SPY
VoL. MCVIX
Yb, TERDAY
"MORE EDUCATION,"
SAYS SPEAKER
TERRIBLE ACCIDENT
BRINGS SORROW
K. H. S. Senior Class Graduates
With High Honors
Engineer on Local Train Proves
Hero Last Night
A feature of yesterday afternoon's
commencement exercises was .the address
lff Professor Harold T. Bentson of the
l'niversity of Karpenarposha, who
spoke with exceedingly extraordinary
eloquence before the two members of
the K. H. S. Senior Graduating Class.
The second feature of importance was
the valedictory, salutatory, class poem,
and class prophecy spoken by the
valedictorian of the class, Thomas
llobert Hoye, who is incidentally president, vice-president, secretary, and
treasurer of the class (the sergeant-at- SINGER DELIGHTS
arms died a martyr in office l:~st year).
AUDIENCE LAST NIGHT
The other member of the class, .\Iarjorie
King, entertained the few people who
remained with one song entitled, "You Accident Ends Program by DisTellem, \\'ebstcr, You Know the \\'ords."
tinguished Vocalist
] t is interesting to note here that '.\liss
J\.ing was attired in the most stunning
Bv '"" \11 sit CR1T1c1.
~: R
l1 lac k- um l>re Ila-clot h dress extending a
..
.
,
few feet below her feet and trailng
Undoubtedly one of the world s
along in front of her with an exquisite greatest misfortyncs," was the almost
gracefulness which is characteristic only unan1111ous op1111on of the ten thousand
of the Irish.
people who attended the vocal concert
The 11rofossor was the most distin ,_ last night at_ which Professor Isabel
· he t I spea k·er o f ti1c evening.
·
I gle Oscar
u1s
- I \I. I.. Ce1_1_1cndomc
·
I ·1·1sang a couple
1·
spoke five minutes and then. there of < uets unass1ste~.
1e au~ 1ence
,
· '
packed even crack 111 the wall 111 the
~asn t anyone left Ill the h;tll except. ~he auditorium (rn the third Aoor of the
Janitor, a,nd he was sweep111g out. I he J\.cnosha Iligh School building. Both
professors theme was supposed to deal
·
I
· h th e va Iuc o f t h e mot Icm ct Iucat1on
·
of the most prominent
wit
I I customers
I
Iat tie
•
as taught in sheds like K. H. S. To concert declare< tlat. ncy
iadn t
sa\ th;it he did well is putting it mildh- heard .a bett~r songs~~r s111cc ~hq killed
· ·
·
.
. · ' the
a1H· 1 1t
I neighbors
fI cat.· l he
I continuous
· ·
I ap-t
r · 1s ahcompliment toI his speakmg
I
pause rom t 1c tune t 1e p1a111st a mos
qua 1t1es t at we arc ab c to say t iat fell off his stool until the curtain slipped
hut one person fell asleep during the
I f II ·
I
· l ll
f
entire performance. The other. two ant c_ 111 t ~e mit' e o a song was
died
J spl_end1d _test1mo1;y
that the pco11lc
>r.
..
• .
• ...
• . . enjoyed his rendition as classical n~usic.
_I ofessor Bents'?n opened his .1ddrcss But as a ragtime vocalist, Professor
with th~ old, old Joke of the man that Ccmendomc ,~mild make a better undcrwould give ·~ hunt!red thousand dollars taker, seemed to he the conccnsus of
to be a millionaire. I k laughed so opinion in the musical circles tod:n-.
heartil): that_ he almost awoke the l lowevcr onh- those who were able to
p~rson Ill the first row. I l_c then began ho.: up wo~ild t;dk .diour it. Tho.: majorh1s1 ston. of modern education :\mong in of the audience (both Frances
ot1er things he said:
I (uguinen and \lalcom I Jahn) are
"It's wonderful to have an education. unable as \'Ct to sleep off the effects
Education tits a person to be a useful of last night's revelry, and up to a
citizen, a good husband, and a good late hour this e\'cning, the) arc still
provider. Just stop to consi ler \'Our unconscious.
education in comparison with your
I t was onh with great diffiniln· that
present prohkms and sec how wonder- the reporter. succec;led in gainir;g the
ful it reallv is.
permission of the editor of this paper to
"You st.udicd grammar, and \'OU earn publish the photograph of tho.: former
$!,()a week. Bt;·t the fellow wi10 wrote waiter at the Chit«1go chop joint, who
a song entitled, 'You Aint (;ot '\ o Time has won an en\'ious reputation for turnto Sa\ '\'othing' makes as much in a ing out famous euromologists, whatc\'cr
minut.e as You do in a month.
that is. :\ t•losc examination of the
" You studied water-color painting, features of the professor's coat and
hut about the only application you shoe-lace, in_c~uding. his face •. will show
make nowadays of your skill 1s when many promising lines w h1ch speak
I
I
I
C ntir 1ud on Patt 2. Culunui .!
Xo. B
Continurd on Ptl.(t :?, Column 2
It is with deep regret that we must
·lllnounce to the public the terrible
accident that happened last night near
the:\ B R I. t\'. R R R crossing just
cast of the c1n. Last night, about ten
minutes after · twelve this morning the
"Sunset Flyer" came whizzing past the
mile-posts. The engineer saw a little
w hire speck on the track in the distance.
He blew his whistle once, and the object
didn't mo\'e. He blew it again and still
it didn't move. The third rime he blew
it, he casually remarked to the fireman
to put on the brakes. About ei!!"hteen
miles past the scene the train stopped,
arousing the indignation, wrath, and
temper of Ethel Getschman, who was
the most prominent passenger on the
train and who also acted as Conductor,
Brakeman, '\ews-agent, and Sweeper.
rhe engineer, blind to all threats against
his life, steered his train around and
started to return to the scene of the
tragedv . . \bout two hours passed before
the,· learned what it was that was hit.
\\'ith tears in his eyes, and with an ex prcsswn of deep feelin!!, the engineer,
fireman, and conductor picked up what
was left of the deceased and slowh· and
solemnly took a trunk from the baggage
car, quickly disposed of its contents into
the ditch and placed the remains into it.
Then the three formed a funeral cortege,
.llld carried the hean· trunk to the nearln· ccmcten. The· three dug a hole,
pla\'ed a m.1rd1, lowered the trunk, covered the hole, and erected a handsome
headstone inscribed with the following
words:
" :\ dog stood on the railroad track;
:\ smile ''<lS on his 'isage,
I le didn't hear the train conw on,
Toot! Toot! Bologne s:sage."
History Students Organize Club
.\ new socict) in the J\.enosha High
School has been organi/ed to make- a
detailed stmh of reason' for the mall\
notes in mu~ic as compared wirh th~
methods of living used lw the .\rabians
and Zionites.
\Ya!ter -Tomlinson is
president of the dub and the following
other officers were named:
ssistant
President, Thelma \\ hitcomh; Bookkeeper, Julia Patterson; Customs Col
lcctor, Emerson Both. The duh plans
to meet again as soon as the restrictions
on rhc fre;dom of speech are removed b,·
the faculty advisor, who h'" not yet
been named.
[ 93 J
THE DAILY
PY
Published between strikes of the help and
whenever we have time
"More Education"
ALUMNI NOTES
Continiud from Fir1t Pa,,e
Sidney Leonard was arrested in Chi.
cage the other day for loitering near ,L
water fountain A pint bottle of distilled water was found in his lodging
rooms, but he was released on suspicion
Adolph Rasmussen writes from Saugatuck, Mich., where he is employed at
present making baskets. Those who
remember him on the basketball team,
will recall how proficient he was in this
work.
Arthur Tronvig, who almost broke
the state record for the pole vault, is in
business as an undertaker's assistant in
Ropeville.
Chris Jen en, captain of the 19 football team, was recently granted a divorce on account of the cruelty of hi
wile.
We received an interesting letter recently lrom ' liss Yvette Goldberg, \V ho
won the Latin Contest Medal in 1910.
1iss Goldberg has an important position as a mule-driver for the Bisno Lumber Company. Her great success is due
to the fact that instead of cussing the
mule as the other teamsters do, she
recites one of Cicero's orations, which
is far more effective.
llugh Southmayd, who holds the high
school record for heavy work, has a responsible position as ribbon clerk in a
department store on the East side.
Harry Katowitz, the famous sprinter,
ran for office on the Republican ticket
recently.
The above notes indicate to all that a
high school education is necessary to fill
all important positions in life.
you paint your knuckles with iodine
after the hammer slipped while you
were trying to be useful around the
THE TAFF
house.
Editor ................ Bu l\Y RHODE
"You studied foreign languages, but
Vice-Editor ........ BERNICE BuTCHER
\VALTER ENNE the only one you ever got any grip on
was German, and it's not considered
Reporters ........... SANl A CLAUS
much of an accomplishment in this age
{ The Rest Quit
o.f peace treaties and l\1exican revolutions.
Rejected at the Post Office as third"You studied spelling, but somehow
class matter. Patent applied for.
the boss seems to get along much better
without it than you do with it.
Our 1otto:
"You studied geography, and the
"FREEDOM OF THE PRES>"
war came along and messed up the map.
~owadays you envy the fellow who
never saw a geography, because hi
EDITORIAL
ignorance saves him so much confusion.
"You studied writing, but your opBelieving that the interests of the portunities for practicing it at the
students of the Kenosha High chool bottom of checks are still rather limited.
will not be satisfied unless we waste our
" ometimes we wish that we could
perfectly good kerosene staying up give our education to the grocer and
afternoons writing this, we, the goats trade it in for a box of matches or a tube
that have been voluntarily or otherwise of face powder."
pushed on this staff, are going to insi t 1 At this juncture in the j)rofessor's
upon studying our spelling and history talk he looked up and noticed that
before we write this, so that we may not everyone hat! left the hall, and he con· ·tors w
· h en gratulated himself, and fell down the
.incur th e wra th o f th e Jani
the special reports are issued each year. steps.
The last time we started to write this
paper the typographers (both \\'alter
Singer Delights Audience
Senne and 1argaret Pull ) went on a
Conti mud from Fir1t Page
strike for more chewing gum between
meals, and a six hour rest before t)'ping well for a man of eigh tr-four winters.
each word. \\'ecompromised by demand- :'-lotice the lines under his nose. They
ing their resignation and asking them indicate that before many years his
to come back in the morning. But that upper lips may boast with pri~le a little
wasn't the least of our worries. \\'hen fuzz, the longest individual hair of
we did get the type all set we ran out of which, promises to exceed a quarter of
vaseline, so our motive power was nix. an inch in length.
In fact, the
Finallr we succeeded in borrowing a can writer is positively certain that the
of the neighbors' bottled steam and professor will be forced to find another
sent about four issues out to the waiting means of livelihood so that he may
public. With our large circulation support more comfortably his two
entirely filled we now turn to the stu- wives and seventeen children. The
dents of the high school and our motto lines of the singer's mouth show that he
is "E Pluribus
num." The editor has indulged in long and tedious drilling,
has been called to the telephone so there exercising the muscles of his tongue.
won't be any more editorial.
The professor admits that he used to
open bottles with his teeth. He seldom
uses spectacles on Saturday and Sunday mornings for the simple reason that
Postpone Reorganization
his wife uses them on those days.
"\ow to return to the program. Just
·•\\'hen a girl with a wad of gum in her
after the orchestra (Bert Schaefer) was
mouth comes chewing in my face, my
seated, a silent hush fell over the three
mind reverts tom\· boyhood days on the people in the auditorium. You could
farm, and [ feel inclined to say to her,
have heard a spike drop . As the pro"Get over, Boss."
fessor appeared on the stage two of the
This, in substance, was the keynote people walked out. The first number
of the speech which Hon. Julius Weiss on the program was a dramatic onegave at the annual reorganization meet- step, in Italian, entitled " lmbicuts
ing of the Society For The Promotion of Digmaliber Zastrivt." Just before the
Propaganda For A ew Il igh School. end of the first line another person in
It started to rain in the middle of his the audience walked out, and at the end
speech, and the meeting was called off of the first line the curtain acciden tall I'
until next time.
fell on the head of the professor and th~
rest of the audience applauded wildly
and the performance was over.
There was to have been two pages
It was announced this morning at the
more of this paper but the forms acci- hospital that Professor Cemendome
dentally blew out of the door and were would be unable to appear this evening,
so the rest of the program was called off.
destroyed by fire.
I
[94]
PERILS OF PETER
Chapter QRX
Continued from a month ago Friday.
a ved ! At the hallowed hour of J :00
in the afternoon by moonlight. Peter,
his hat pulled down, emerged from the
rear door of the soda parlor just as Miss
Lura Emon entered by the front . Once
more he had escaped her grasping
clutches. He was expelling a deep
breath of strong 23/{ 0 relief when lo!
the villainess appeared in the alle), her
eagle eyes fastened on his once strong
manlv form. His keen active brow
quickly discerned an avenue of freedom
hither to unthought of by any of the
parties concerned. He rushed madl)
ten blocks down the dusk alley, leaped
a hundred feet into the air, grasped the
handle of a cab door and flung himself
in pressing the cold muzzle of a poodle
dog against the back of the dri vcr's ten
inch wooden skull.
"Forward the light brigade," he
shrilled in a deep, base voice darkly disguised. The cab plumi;ed forward; he
sank back with a contented sigh and
slowly breathed in his aristocratic pug
nose the sweet essence of pure lily-white
Perfume! A woman! 1le
onions.
tore his dark blond hair wildly. A flash
of lightning from the clear starlit sky
fell on the face of the shy little vampire.
He looked right, left, up, down, backward, and forward, and what did he behold but a huge, black, towering -(To
be continued).
STUDENTS HOLD
INDIGNATION MEETING
(cheering) each morning. \\'e swear by
the pencil we swiped that they shall not
ring on Saturdays or Sundays thus
aw;king the janitor· from their restful
beau tr naps (wild cheering from both
chairmen . \\'e, the undersigned, therefore affix our cognomen to this historical
document, as being against listening to
the alarms before and after each period."
Signed, Gordon Anderson.
pon. ~he
motion of P aul J orgensen the petltlon
was rejected by the following ';'Ote:
Ayes, 2T, :\oes, 14. The bu mess
meeting was over and the boys declared
a social hour, and all danced out of the
room and down the fire e_scape.
Thus ended the most important and
di astrous meeting ever held in K. H. S .
L ast \\'ednesday afternoon the boys
of the student body met in R oom -l8 to
voice their greivances against the present system of management of the alarms
which are sounded at the beginning and
end of each period. A committee of
boys headed by \' ictor Emery, and ineludi ng R ene Claudon, T heo. Nelson,
Carl R akosi, and Oliver Chubb, presented a petition signed by seven of the
two hundred and twenty boys in the
school which _unde~lined the reasons for
so much tardiness in the school.
Through considerable effort and notwithstan~ling the many objecti~ns of the
boys to making the petition public, our
reporter has succeeded in getting a copy
Buy The Dail} Spy at all Butchers·
of it and offers it below. The boys have
a n~vel way of conducting their busiSociety Woman Divorces
ness meetings, and it is certain that
should many other organizations hold
their meetings under this plan, they
A decree was handed down this mornwould never get any business done, ing in th~ Tennis Court which set aside
whic h is twice as much as a club or so- the marriage of Mr. and :\1r~. Charles
ciet,· usualh· does at a meeting.
Gearhart.
I n the compla111t '\1rs.
'!'he plan; which probably started in Gearhart avers that her husban~I refused
172 1 by Caesar just before the battle of to w111d the alarm cloc_k ever)· night, and
Bunker H ill, provides for a chairman 111 0th.er ways madt' life unbearable f?r
who is appointed by himself and who her. !'he defendant did not ap1Jear in
must be recognized b,· a J . majority court. f t was stated that at the time he
before anyone may a;ldress the chair. was in swimming.
-\ t the meeting \\'ednesda\, seventeen of
the twelve bo.ys present ~ere appointed
Fax and Faibles
chairmen, and the other twenty -two
bo1·s acted as vice-chairmen. T he meeting was ca ll ed to order by t he eleven \\'c all know Beatrice B
chairmen and the reading of the seconds She sits in R ow A does she.
was postponed until the secretary, At fifteen after eight.
H arold Knudsen, recovers from a severe 1f you hurry she'll wait .
attack of rheumatism. A toast to the For she shuts the doors daily, you sec.
new high school building was substi- Then, too, we'1·c a small naug~ty _boy,
tuted, but most of the boys didn't enjoy \\' ho's '\1 iss \ 'andervort 's unceasing Joy.
it because it was burned on one side.
] Jc cries and he tries,
T he presenting of the petition was the But she, through his bluff spies;
most dramatic feature of the afternoon. 1'm sure you have guessed
H obart
\\' ith tearstained eyes and downcast
H oye.
look .-\ lbert Borkenhagen walked Jag-1 O b · h
· r~ · Fl ·
gcdl~· to the front of the-room and heg:tn T ur ng ~~pot 1 n 1 e is · .a 111 e,
in a· solemn, trembling voice, " Gentle.o equa tis uhse e~s to strain,
· sn1tt
· ") and You, too , --.:
c. w1 '
men , (sniff,
- at Iian 1,•or conquers
h
t"ll
1
B.ter (sniff, sniff) we have met to con- >lit er tongues ne1:er s I ' . . •
sider' whet her we s hall or we shall not. l\1 an} t housands of foes has 1t slam.
Gentlemen, (sniff, sniff in my opi'lion T edd i· Gottlieb on L atin does dote,
we shall not."
.-\nd he frequently gets \" irgil's goat
" l object'" broke in Amedio De Rose. \\' ith the verses he sings
" I am positil'e we will be right if wi: ad- .-\ nd the way his voice rings,
mit that he is wrong." ( -\ pplause from For his pony ne'er misses a note.
1l asscll
Vetter}. Dick R hode came for One da,·
\ 'ice-chairman,
. we saw Alice Ball bawl
· 1 \\" ith rage
ward and with a happy 1·oice sa1t,
- as she came down the hall.
''Gentlemen, l think we s hould post- \\'e cried, " \\'hat's the matter?"
pone this discussion of whether we But she said, "Stop your chatter,
should or should not hang the house cat l 'm angry because l 'm so small."
for larceny and direct our attention to T he latest and best we can show
this more ·i ;11portant business the pcti ' ls Albert B- -- a small dynamo;
tion.''
I Tis q uestions arc long
" I second t he motion," Robert \1 ur- -\ ml his l'Oice it is strong,
dock exclaimed and t he cha ir man of the But to answerhim--well, we don't know.
petition committee being ill with lum- , Of bl
I
h
- • -.
e
·
·
I · -C
·
om es we a\·e man 1 tis tru
bago 111 the Jaw, '.0~1s ost:nt111e was And brun~ttes , and curl}: hair too '
as~ed to read the gn~ 1 ances. _ ,, .
But Ei·eh-n 's curls
~\ c..are met here in Room ' I, read \\.ith thdr wa,·es ,;nd their twirls
Lollie, for a com.mon cause. (.-\ pp!ause
I 00 k ·ts if thn 're stuck there with glue.
·
•·
·
·
\\"e swea r by t he mk spots on our fi ngers
that the assemblv clock bells shall not 1
ring, thereby causing Us to be late
.-\11 the ·candal in T he D a1h 'py.
I
I
I
1
1 11
I
K . H. S . 23 ; Winthrop Harbor 23
In one of the fastest and closest baseball contests in the history of the. Kenosha High School, the K. H. S. nine ~le
feated the \\'inthrop Harbor High
School team bv the close score of 23 to
23. The garn'e was played yesterday
afternoon on the roof of the county jail,
and was featured with many accidents
that prolonged the game until way into
the night.
Both teams were handicapped with a
shortage of players and equip~ent.
Johnson,of \\'inthrop Harbor, as p1tch~r
and catcher, starred for the losers. H is
speed was astonishing. He threw the
ball and was on the other side of the batter before the ball got there. Kessler, for
Kenosha scored fifty-two runs, one
hundred 'and nine of which were home
runs. As the southerners had but one
bat and K. H. S. had none, both teams
had to use the same bat.
A few accidents which happened during the game are worthy of mention. ~ n
the second inning Frances Hugunm
broke the bat and the teams had to use
a tennis racket for the rest of the game.
In the fourth inning Richard Green fell
off the roof while chasing a Ay, but returned uninjured because he fell on a
load of soft coal. I n the Kenosha half
of the sixth Gladstone Snyder, first,
second and third baseman, bumped into
the smoke stack and smashed his nose
almost to a pulp. He was carried downsrairs into a padded cell where he later
recovered. In t he entire game nine ba lls
were lost. The situation became so precarious that in the ninth inning ther
were playing with marbles and In the
twenn·-first inning ther had to use ball
beari,;gs. A number of errors almost
cost \\'inthrop I !arbor the game. J ack
J ay became confused in the sun~ight and
made a stab at the smoke coming from
the chimney. J ames J\ l yers l~st his temper when the umpire s~ruck ~1m out ~nd
threw a gust of hot air in his d1rect1on
that blew the umpire off the roof. Aft~r
two strikes had been called on D avid
J\1illar some one no one knows where
yelled up " ll ey ! Pitch the horse .over
the fence some hay!" and M ill ar with a
look of determination in his nose
struck out.
T he lineup is as follows:
K. H . S.
\\'inthrop H arbor
\\ alker
p
Brine
C
l\l urdock
Trenary
Griffin
IB
Bullamore
'.! B
Larsen
J oq:(enson
And re
JB
K nudsen
LF
Schaefer
H olmes
Home R uns nobod1.
\l istakes
even· both but Dan I lolmes and he
didn"t pl:;y
Game called at m1dn11i:ht on account
of darkness.
Revised Latin
L ightibus outibus in a parlorum,
Bo1·ibus kissibus swet:ta girlorum,
D:;dibus hearibus louda smackorum,
BoYibus gettibus with a cluborum,
La~dibu: nextibus outside a doorum,
Gettibus upibus with a limporum .
[95 ]
Index to Advertisers
PAGE.
Allen -\ Co., The .
. HO
Allen's Sons Co.,'\. R .. . . ...... 144
_-\merican Brass Co . . . . . . .. . . . 103
American \Yoolen !ills ..
104
Andrae Bros.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
Arenson Foundry Co. . ... . .. . . . 108
Austin Bros.....
. .. .. . . . .
136
PAGE
Jsermann Bros ... .. .
. 97
l 1 AGI .
I Paksys & Garsham . ......... . .. . 141
Pantorium. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . ... . .. 99
J alrn & Oilier.. . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. .. 124 Paradise .... . .. .... . ... ...... . . . 137
Jensen, Emil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Parker & Gamble . . . .. .... . . . . .. . 117
Joerndt, Fred F... . .
. . .. . .. 147 Paulson, A. L..
. ...... .. 134
Johnson & !Jansen Co.
. . 124 Peoples Laundry
. . . 104
Jordan, II. I..
. 124 Perkins Bros. . . . . . . .... .. .... 135
Badger Fuel Co. . . . . . . . . . . .. . HS ' lorrlt Bros.
. .119 Pfennig, Chas. .. .
. . . . 122
Barden . tore.
14 5 joscphson & Zimmerman
. . 141 Pirsh, Peter & ons Co .. ... . .... .. l 33
Bear Bros .... ... .. . . ... . . . .. . . 112
Pitts,]. M .......... . . .. .... .... I 18
Becker Stores . .
. . .... .. . . . . 124
Kappus Bros. . . . . . . .... ...... . . 121 Powers & Young . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
.
Bell Clothing House
. 108
. ..... . . 119 1 Powell, Lewis\\' . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . 143
Bermingham Lumber Co.
. 115 1'.arncs, Ralph . . .
. 147
Betsy Ross . .. . .
.1 .H 1'.aufman, \\. ].
Hidinger. L. F .. .... .
130 1'.enosha I ,·cning cws . . . . . . . . . 142 Regner Jeweler . . . . . .... , . . . . . 149
.141
Block Bros. . . . .. .
. 109 1'.enosha Lvening Ilerald . ..... . . . . 149 Remcr's Laundry. . . . . . . .
Bode Bros .. .. . .... .. . .
.Ir Kenosha Grand Con5en·atory of
Rhode, The . . . . . . . .
. 130
Brown Studio ... . . .
.
138
l\lu sic. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 Rockwell, Chas. L.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Bruner Dairy . . . ...... . ..... . . • J.:13 Kenosha Knitting Co..
. 111 Rhode Studio . . . . .
. 122
. 13 ·
Buckmaster & Hammond ..
1'.enosha I .umber Co . . . .. .. . ... . . 114 Royal Re taurant . . ... ..
. 136
Butfalo Candy Kitchen ..
106
1'.enosha Realty Co. . . . . . . . . .. . 113 Rudy, Fred P.. . . . . . . . .
.1+1
Carlson, Charles . .
120 1'.enosha Shoe Shining Parlor .. . . 125
Cavanagh & .\1ittclstacd ..
. 124 1'.ing's Delicatessen . . . . . . . ... . . 145 Schmitt's Candy Shop . ... . ... .. 118
.. . . . . . . HJ
Central Fuel & lee Co . . . . .
118 hlukan, S ...
. 120 Schmitt's Bakery
Collins Theatrical Co. . . .
. l'.'2 Knudsen, K. P. . .
. . . . ... . . . . 130 Scholer, 0. ] . Co ... . ... . .. . ...... 13-1
Coliseum Skating Palace Co.
.14i Kolpin Drug Store .... .
.... ... 105
.. . 138 Schuler's Baker)
Commercial Electric Co . ...
122
Kohlman i\1 art in Corpora ti on
.. Ill Schroeder Studio ....... . .. . ...... 139
Condon 's Ice-Cream ..
. I 37
. 118 Schwartz, Carl. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
Cooper l_; nderwear Co. . . .
137 hohe Chop Suey
127
. . . 116 Sidne) Studio. .
Copper Kettle.
.104 hradw1JI Drug Co.
. 135
huhcc
131 Simmons Co., The . . . . .
Curtiss, Clothier .. . . . . . . . ..
'mith, I liram j.. . .. ... ...
. IJ9
Dahl, A.H . .. . ... .
150 Lazzaroni, ,-\. J.
. 110
.. .122 Sorensen, Ted..
De Berge . . . ... . .
l 17
l.indas Co., The ...
. ... 119 Southport Lumber Co. . . . . . . . . 143
Dewey Hardware Co.
. !JS
Special!) Brass Co.
. 119
Dolean, Charles
141
Stahl,
-\.
F.
.
..
98
\Ltrnmhcr
&
\\
hytc
Hope
Co.
H8
Dunnchacke Co.,"] he ...
121>
l.H
. H6 Sulli, an, J. I). Ix Co.
Drur), A. L.
. 14' \lajcstrc & Butterfly Theatres
130
.\Ianos Ice Cream Parlor
. 129 Sulli\'an, Frank J.
Fichelmann, Louis :\1.
116 .\lahfuz, I .utfey.
.131
. . 110 Sullivan, Dr. J. D........
Em.dish, John
110 \larathon Shoe Repair ,·hop ...
. 113
. lfl9 Sullivan, Thos. D.
Enterprise Dep't. Store, The .
130
Swartz '-:ursery
... . " . 135
.\lass
.
.\lutual
Life
Insurance
Co
...
116
Flite Confectionery, The . .
. 148
. 109
Ernst & Co., C. I J..
112 '\layer Drug Co.
Taylor, G. \\' ..
.119
l\kCatfcry Bros
. H7
149
Tennesscn, Dr. A. 11.
100 I \lclntne, Geo. l\I.
First '\Tational Bank, The
. 11. 114
Threrncn, \\'m. J ... .
Frost \lfg. Co . .
115 l\lc '\ crl, 0. A.
. 119 Tip Top Tailors. . . . . . .
.119
.Ill Tomlinson, John
125
Gephart, C H.
126 .\k's Pharmacy
.123 Tronvig, '\1 rs. Chas . .... .
. 126
Giannantonio, Ernest
1.H :\lcrchants & Savings Bank.
117
c;ordon, S. R ..
I~ 1 l\lcyers, Geo. B.
. IH Turner Sons, L.
Gottlieb Co., The .I
106 \lillar Agency, The .. ....
. 126
Cray Electric Co . .
105
I 2'J
Union D)c \\'orks .
120
(;reenirrn;'s Store . .
125 l\lodcl D. and l\I. Parlors
\lorse Granite Co.
. Ir \'incent-\1cCall Co.
114
Hampel. Jos ...
" . 1.15
Vincent- \ladsen Sales Co . . .... .. . HJ
i lannahs :\1fg. Co. .
. ..
150 '\'ash '\lo tors Co.
. 10- Virginian Theatre.
. . . . . . 129
Hansen & So.ns Co., Thos . .
138
'\'
ational
Office
Supply
Co.
.
120
lkvman
.. . 135
124
elson, Frank & Son
.138 \\ allig, I ohn B.
I linderman Studin, The
. 125
125
14- \\'ehh, C. R.
I Iii! Steamboat Linc . . .
. . 128 '\c\\cll Studio ..
. 131
\\ells, F. L.
I lolhrook, L J-1. • •
•
. 122
orth Side Garage . .. .
116 \\ells, John ll.
. l<H
l loldcrne~s Grocery . ....
. . 125 I
. 134
\\'est Side Fair, The
1lrupka Bros.
IJ I
149 \\'ickerling's Store .
.. . .. 139
I lurd's Drug Store . .. .. .
. . I JO Ohcrtin, P. "-:.
llylen J 0.: ....
. 105 O'Donnell Coal Co ..
113 \\'in ther l\1otor Truck Co .. . " " 102
1r
I
[96]
THE
SPY-
~
ADVERTISE
y
ol attract at ten ti on wherc\Tcr you
go either favorable or otherwise.
It-all depends on how you are dressed.
You'll never need to worry if ) ou
are in Kuppenheimer Good Clothes.
They are fitting companions to be
seen anywhere. :\ml cost? Thl'.y
are the cheapest in the long run .
.'ee the latest ideas-new lapels and
collars the single and double breasted American styled suits and overcoats models for all builds, ages and
types of men.
Stetson Hats
Borsalino Hats
Mallory Hats
1ocs.
IQCopyright 191.0 The House of Kuppcnhcimcr
BROS.
ISERM ~AN
2 I .f.-2 I6
Ll GG.\GE
\lark et , 7uare
.l
tr C.\ r
rn..\\' FU
G B \(; .
A. F. ST AHL & CO.
l\eal <!Estate
Homes, Farm Lands
Jfnsurance
In All Branches
LOANS AND GENERAL
BROKERAGE
Cor. Church and Park Sts.
[98 l
Phone 112
If You ant
Service
C
L
This Bank Allows 3 per cent Interest on
avings Deposits
jftrst jl}attonal Jlank
1!enosba, wmi~consin
l 1 nder the Jurisdiction and Supervision of the
l 1nited States Governmeu_t
Established 1852
Capital
Surplus
CHA S.
c. BRO\\!\
• . •
C. C. .\1.1.FN . . • ,
\\'M. H. Pl R!\ E LI....
[ 100 l
• •••..
$500,000.00
$15 0' 000. 00
President
. \'ice-President
. . • . . • • •
.Cashier
:\1. G. BoERXER .• . •... .. Assistant Cashier
C. I. OzAXXE
. . • . • . . . . . :\s
istant Cashier
J. \\'.Bi.AIR . . ... . . • . . . :\ssistant Cashier
q/)hat is the 9K_oney CVafue
o-F flooa Sound Sleep
Simmons prings, that really do
invite the body to lie out tlat,
every muscle relaxed.
I IE average mao is critical
about his food, his clothes
and the house he lives in. These
things cost h:m money, and he
insists on getting money's worth.
T
Specialists, too, in Tu:i11 BedJ
-that fine principle of a separate
bed for every one, so that one
sleeper does not disturb the
other, or communicate a cold or
other ailment.
But sleep is free. I le is apt to
be casual about his sleeping hours
-and in selecting a bed, he
thinks more about style and price
than he does about Jleep.
.
Think about lm/J in relation to
Jleep- and you will go straight
to the immons l\1etal
Bed, built for Ileep.
Ask the leading dealer in your
section about immons Steel Beds,
Brass Beds, prings, Day Beds
and Children's Cribs-the mo·t
popular sleeping equipment in
his store.
• •
The" MONTROSS"
No 1990
ln Twin Pair
7'.1 adc of Simmons' new
Squ:uc Steel Tubinc sc:amlus, smooth and
bnutifully finished.
Exquisitely cnameld in
rhc
accepted
Dccoutivc
Colon.
Hu the Simmons patented pressed Stttl Noiuln1
Corna Lock1. [:asy roUin&
c:i.stcn.
Your choice of Twin P:i.ir
and Double Width. Spc:cially plusintt in Tums Pair.
Thousands of people will
tell you that they never
realized how deep and
sound sleep can be, until
they discarded wooden beds and
ordinary metal beds for a
Simmons Bed- noiseless, restful,
sleep-inviting.
They cost little if any more
than ordinary beds and springs.
And when you are selecting
your Simmons Bed with an
eye to their appearance in the
room, you will see that Simmons
has for the first time established
beautiful and a11tl1oritative duig11 in
Metal Beds.
Simmons Company are pioneer
makers of Metal Beds for sleep.
Makers of those
.
wonderful
Slap i.r a big subjut! JPrilt u.s for tht brochurt, "ll 'hat ltading Aftdical JournalI
and lltalth lllaga:.iru.s Say about Stparalt BedJ and Sound Slup." Fru of charge.
SIMMONS COMPANY
ELI ZA BETH
AT LA TA
KENOSH A
SA
FR ANCISCO
MO TREAL
( £,·ecutive Offices: Kenosha, Wis.)
SIMMO
BED
l3uilt _for Sleep
l 101 J
Winther Trucks
The real worth of a motor truck is proved by actual performance.
If it handles its load unfalteringly, day in and day out, without tie-ups
or delays, it is a distinct business asset- a profitable investment.
\\'in ther trucks ha\ e established a reputation for efficient, economical
performance in every essential industry and have been accepted as
standard equipment by many national users.
Why not, then, a Winther for your own hauling?
type for your particular needs.
There is a size and
Prompt Dfliveries
WINTHER MOTOR TRUCK CO.
KENO, HA, \\'L
[ 102]
O~
JN
THE
AMERICAN BRASS
COMPANY
[ 10')
DIST! CTIVE IN PATTERN
CORRECT I STYLE
SUPERIOR IN QUALITY
The three essential features of every good Suit or Overcoat. Our
reputation for making good clothes has been built upon the idea
of giving full value for every dollar received.
Every garrncn t we sel l is made to your individual 1neasure in rmr
own s hop from all wool materials.
American Woolen Mills
30i
JAi'\
TIU.ET
Made-to-Measure Clothes
Furnishers
THE COPPER KETTLE
Light Lunch s, Jc Cream, Soda and Confectionery
OF Tl IE BETTER KI TD
'12 1 I LIZ \BET! I -;TRFJ ~T
"Carry Your Bundles
to Carey"
The People Laundry
TELEPHONE 317
JOHN H. WELLS
l\.eal ~%tate
anb 1Loanb
5'9-521 iilar/.:et. 'tree!
22.J Afain Street
[ to.+ I
P/10nes: 958-3247
The Kenosha
Grand Conservatory of 1l1usic
(The lVisromin l11stit11te)
DR. Hn .A-.iD, EM. S1.ATRF-\\'11 so,., President
\\'11 LIAM l\lrnnri.scHt 1TE, Dean
]OH'.\ S11Rl\"ER ER,l'ST, :\ssisrant Dean
MAx R1F-.i,·EMA1''.\, Secretary
Kenosha's Leading School of 1usic, now in its seventh year, offers complete instruction in Piano, Yoice, Violin, Organ, Theory and all Orchestral and Band In struments.
The Conservatory is a member of the International Academic L nion and its Courses
of In struction are standardized and accepted for Credit at all leading Colleges and
l niversities.
Th e D epartments of Expression and Aesthetic Dan cing have already made a name
in Kenosha, a to the excellency of their work.
Our graduates are in demand as teacher. . Now is the time and this is the place.
Twenty-one Instructors, eight of them from Chicago, comprise the faculty.
Full Course leads to the D egree of Bachelor of l\Iusic.
I70-I72 Deming Street.
BAKERY GOODS OF lJ
EXCELLED Ql
Phone I603.
LITY
SCHULER'S BAKERY
2 1 4
WIS CO
PHON E 509
T SI
T R E E T
HEADQUARTERS FOR
For FIT, STYLE and Q AI JTY
P TRONIZE
FL SHLIGHTS and BICYCLE
J. 0. HYLEN
Gray Electric Co.
Tailor
354 Park Avenue
Corner Main and South Streets
Elertrira! Contractors
270 Wisconsin Street
Phone 198
[ 105]
''You'd Be Surprised"
At the values we offer
in Silks for that new
Summer Dress
WE SERVE DAINTY LUNCHES
Try our excell ent Coffee, Tea, H ot C hoco late,
Cocoa Menier and all H ot D rinks . H omeMade Candies, Ice Cream, Ices and Sherbets.
All Kinds of Ice Cream . Brick Ice Cream t he
year round. Fancy Br ick Ice Crea m 60
cents a brick. Bulk Ice Cream 50 ce nts a quart.
254 MAIN STREET
[ 106]
TELEPHO E 2480
Organized Accuracy
and High-Grade
Motor Vehicles
Organized accuracy, the key to Nash manufacturing practices, has its reflection in the
satisfaction owners derive from their car or
truck and in the saving to them of many
dollars, not only in first coH hut in maintenance as well.
For no organization is better fitted than
The Nash Motors Company to mant1facture
products of value in large volume.
Thus the quality of The Tash Six is governed absolutely by u because it i built
ninety-three per cent complete in our factory.
VALUE CARS RT VOLUME PRICES
THE
H
10TOR
CO IPA Y
KENO HA, \\'J CON I 1
Afm111farturers of High-Grade Vehirles
[ 107]
Figure your clothes expense
by the year, not by the suit
You'll see how rnuch "cheaper" good quality is. Clothes like Hart Schaffner & Marx
make, and we sell, cost less because they wear
longer and you buy less often.
THE BELL CLOTHING HOUSE
EPST EI'I BROS., Props.
KE OSHA, \YISCONSI
H ome of llai·t Schaffner & Marx Clothes , f.f/. L. !)011glns
Shoes and W ilson Bros. Shirts
PHO E : Offi ce an d I ron F oun dry, 479
S teel Fou nd ry, 1088
Arneson Foundry Company
... Manufactm·ers of...
Converter Steel, Brass and Gray
Iron Castings
KE OSHA, \VISCONSI T
OFFICJ-.. AND IRO '\' FO '\DRY :
ou th a nd J-. xc ha nge ~ treets
STEE L FOUNDRY: H ami lton Avenue an<l 1': . \Y . T rac ks
[ 108]
MAYER DRUG CO.
T\\'O STORES:
151 .\lilwaukcc Avenue. Phones 131 and 2900.
189 llowland Avenue. Phone 440 and 898
Pure Drugs and
Sundries
Puritan Phonographs
and R ecords
\\'f. Df·.LI\'l<.R TO .\LL P \RT~ OF TIIr. CITY "FRI-Y'
EMIL JENSEN
PL A ST E R E R A NI) CONTRACTOR
TELEl'IJONE 866
..
771 SiH.IUDA!\ R OAD
J\1ARATHON SHOE REPAIR SHOP
A1cmos Bros ., Proprietors
\ Ye clean and block ladies' and
men'
hats of all kind and
make them look like new. \ \'e sell
the real L' . S. arm r shot:s.
\\'e repair shoes by the Goodyear
welt shoe repairing system. Also
first class shoe shining for l.tJies
and gentlemen.
P ll OXE 2964
360 .\1:\ Rl..::ET TREET
"The l/7011um's Store Complete"
Coats, Suit , Millinery, Shoes, Furnishing
• 'ty/esPrircs
CO R'\l·. R \I .\ I'\ ..\ '\ I)
\\' !SCO'\"SI '\' STR I l ·T~
Tht' 1llommt's Dt'11umd of !ht' Dcsirablt• Things
,t"J_ua/it)' Co11sidacd, .J/wa)'S t/1e Lou:esl
BLOCK BROTHERS
r 1091
PHO!\E 514
PHO'.'\E YOUR ORDl::.R
OUR 1\IOTTO
"!!;.,1ta!ity, Service, Satisfaction"
MAHFUZ
LUTFEY
( ·ucn.ssoR TO
FERD. BECK)
GROCERY AND MEAT MARKET
\\'E \\'ILL DELI VER AT O'\'CE
853 GRA'.\'D AVE:\UE
ELSIE JANE MCSWAIN
mlp=to=!llate ,ilNillinerp
COR'\LH l;,LlZ:\BETI I \'\']) GROVER STREET~
KE:\O HA, \\'IS.
If you want to buy, sell or exchange
REAL ESTATE
-
... SEE. ..
JOHN ENGLISH
SE!:.-
.. FOR ...
TED SORENSEN
918
alem Avenue
l 110 I
Phone 1628
Hardware
PIIO~E'>
296r, \\'D 177 1
DRl'GS, ST TIO'\'"ERY,
TOILET ARTJ CLES
CA:\'DY, CIGAR
AND ODA
Mc' s Pharmacy
R. E. lvlcDermott
COR'\'ER FRl~ l\10'\"I AVE\'U
CA ME R
PHOTO
\'\'D SYl\11\10"\-DS 'T Rf, ET
ND
PPLIES
KENOSHA, \YI .
KENOSHA KNITTING COMP ANY
l'vlanujaclurcrs of
f ligh Grade Knitted Outer Garments
For 1iJen, /Fomen and Clzildren
Kohlmann-Martin Corporation
Bottlers of Quality Beverages
Keno 'ha, \\ i 'con 'in
I 111 J
DE\'ELOPI ' (; A ' ]) FINISl11N(7 BY EXPERT I ' THE KODAK WAY
"Tlze Store of !i!.,uality"
Books, ,'tationery, School 'upplie' , porting Goods, Kodaks
and Kodak Supplies, Fire Arms and Ammunition, Bicycles
263 i\1AL T STREET
KENOS llA, \\'I co TSI T
THE HINDERMAN STUDIO
Extends its appreciation for past favors and hopes
to be able to meet with )'Our needs in t/1e near future
Our l\lerchandi ·e is the kind that makes us proud to
hear you say: It Came From
[ 112]
W ALTE R M. B LRKE, President a11d Treasurer
AR l llLR
J. ScH\IJTZ, ,\cfft'lmy
mue JSenosba ltealtp C!o.
General :\ge n ts an d :\.dj ust ers
R al
stat , Loans and Investments
INSURANCE
BONDS, NOT. RY P BLIC
R ooms 3 and -l Burke Buildrng
218-220 ".J arket Square
PHO N E 304
J 11 l\1AL ' STRr.ET
5 19-52 1 H O\\L:\'\D \H'\"l I
THOS. D. SULLIVAN
T
\Y
Dry Goods and
Ladies' Furnishinf!s
0
T
0
R E
S
Home of f! 'ooltex
Coats and Su its
-l05 Cl I .\RLE . S"I RF E'l
l"l-.LEl'llO"\ I 17(1
O'DO.l NELL COAL COMPA.1. Y
Coal, Coke and N7ood
BR.\'\Cll OFF!Cl :
21 2 ;\l.\Rhl I S(.!_l \IH
Th e
Vincent McCall Co.
K enosha , Wisconsin
Picture Framing a Specialty
All Work Guaranteed
WM. J. THREINEN
WALL PAP ' R, \YINDO\Y HADES AND PAINTS
WINDOW
Telep/zone 688
HADES I
T ALL
SIZE
MADE TO ORDER
5I North Main Street
E. L. GRA1'T, President
DA;-; 0. HEAD, Secretary and Treasurer
THE KENOSHA LUMBER
COMPANY
1064 GRAND AVENUE
[ 114]
TELEPHONE 293
THE FROST
MANUFACTURING
COMPANY
Brass Goods
K E N 0 S H A, WI S C 0 N S I N
TELEPHO~r.
229
PR:\IHir. :\Vf."\l r. :\'\[) CH\RU.S STRLET
~be jiermingbam 1Lumber C!Companp
Let us jurnislz )'Our next lzouse as we carry a complete
line of Lumber, A1illwork, Sizing/es,
Roofing, Latlz and Posts
ESTI:.1:\TES FL'R:\ISHED
THE
ATIONAL OFFICE SUPPLY CO.
\\'I HES TO EXT.E D HEARTY
co TGRAT L1LATIO
T
TO THE CLA' ' OF 1920.
1
1\IAY OL R PLE:\SAXT RELATIO:\
CONTI~
223 \\'lSCONSIX STREET
'E .
KE'\OSH -\, \\' L'CO. ·s1'\
[ 115]
COi\IE !;-;' A:\'D \ 'ISlT
PflOXI:- IJ. 14
S
Imo tbe
~rabuates
£1 place in tbe ranks
Th e
awaits pou
eacb man bas some
part to plap
m:ue past anb tbe fu=
ture are notbing
3Jn tbe face of tbe
stern tobap
Kradwell Drug Co.
Distributors for
Foss', Graf's and Mullane's Candies
and Luick's Ice Cream
\ \ 1. C.\RRY O"LY T ll l· BEST l '\
DlffGS A. D
:\'DRlE
113 l\1A l 1 STHEET
h.r,'\'OSHA, \\'ISCO. IX
Jim Bailey Says:
Tailor Made Clothes ..
The Massachusetts Mutual Life I nsurance
Company issue a most attract ive policy for
all ages from fifteen up.
Cost no more, wear longer and
fit better. This is the time;
this is the place to order your
new form-fitting suit.
Teachers and tudents will find our savings
and protection plan just suited to your requirements.
Louis M. Eiche/man
115 \\ 1scon:;in Street
REMEM BE R:
TH
Call at I 6 lsermmm Building or
Plzonc 1546 and 1658.
The L ast Garage Going North
The First Garage Going outh
NORTH SIDE GARAGE
w. F. R SSELL, PROl'RIFT()R
Studebaker Cars, Federal Tires, Accessories, R epairs
603 M l L \\'A K EE A \ 'E 1UE
[ 116]
The Ideal Place to Shop
for Wall Paper, Window
Shades, Paints, Etc. .. ..
~4.rt Needle
TRU\!\'\ T. P,\Rl'- ER
Work a Specialty
Telephone : Office 230; Residence I 212
R \LPH \ . C.\_\!BLF.
Dr. George M. Mcintyre
Parker & Gamble
ALL LI
Osteopath
l".S OF RFL!ABLF
INSURANCE
HoLRs:
9 \. M. To 5 P. :-.1.
Evenings by Appointment
ROOl\1
16 A'\'D 17, JSERl\1A"\:\' BlJILl)f'\'G
JI, 12 A'.\ID 13 GRO ' \ 'r'\OR BCJLDI'\·c;
TELEPIIO"\E 1658
KE 'OSHA, WI CO.N L'
Splendid Assortment of Cut Flou;cn, }/:ms,
R11lbs and Rlooming Plants in their season
L. TURNER SONS
Tl1e F. T. TJ. Shop
VT~
1VRNE~ SoN~
LO JUSTS
352 PAR" AVE .
Home Is '\'or Complete Without Flowers
Florists Telegraph
Delivery
KENOSHA,
WIS .
[ 117 j
Phone 22S
--
Office and Yards, I59 Ridge , 'tree!
Central Fuel & Ice Co.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in the Best Grade of
Coal, Coke, Wood and Ice
Brick, Cement, Lime, Sewer Pipe,
Plaster, Cru hed
ton , 'and and Gravel
KENOSHA, \YI
co
T
IT
DON'T FORGET-
~cbmitt'~ Jfce <tCream anb <tCanbie~
--~08
J. M. PITTS
Our \\'all Paper, \'arnishe , Paints and
Supplies are of the Best the
1arket Affords
MAIN
TREF.T, KENOSHA, WIS.
Korf's
We Specialize in Summer
and Winter Furs
Picture Framing is Also One of
Our Specialties
270 Main Street
Phone 250
[ 118]
252 Park Street
G. w. TAYLOR
COAL
"Q . LITY FIR T''
JLatuper
Phone 2663
225 MAIN STREET
0. A. McNEIL
600 Sheridan Road
RALPH KARNES
Brass Creamery
Fittings-
Grocery
Fre, h Ground Peanut Butter
433 Howland Ave.
PHONE 2808
SPECIALTY
BRASS CO.
Phone 603
301 l\1AIX
TRI-.ET
KOBE CHOP SUEY
l\e~taur ant
Chinese and
F. J. OZAKI, Proprietor
merican Plan
KE 'OSHA, \\'IS.
TELEPHONE 1798
TIP TOP TAILORS
THE LINDAS Co.
Suits to Order
Sheet Metal 1f7ork
and Furnaces ..
Cleaning, Pressing and R pairing
a pecialty
658 Elizabeth
t., Ken osha, \\'i .
161 MARKET STREET---OPPOSlTE RHODF
[ 119]
520 llrrwlrmd /ht'Jmc
Two Doors North of F,/izabeth
Model Dressmaking and Millinery Parlors
Jladam Ring /,a ,\, fear
Proprietor
EX CLUSIV E P A TTERNS
Open Every Evening
, cratches or hruises removed from
iurniture without need of refinishmg
l attresses renovated.
POWERS & YOU G
Furniture pholstering, Polishing,
Repairing and Refini hing.
Tl l.FPJIO. ·1· 29'J<J
High-G rade D iamonds
W atches and J ewelry--
S. KLUKAN
J eweler
EXPE RT \YATCII R EPAIRT 1 G
FI E E TG RAYI TG
21.l Clll RCI I STREET
Near Bullerj!_v T/1ealle
r;. I· '\OSH .\, \\ ISCO:\SI'\
For .Satisfactory Baking
Always Use
HOME
THE S\\' FETE T PLACE 0
T
EA RT H
GF-:r IT FRO \ I
Charles Carlson
ARDEE FLOUR
T l1e H ighest Grade J?foltr Made
SOLD BY-
IH.AL E.'T.\TE, J'\ , l ' R :\~Cr., LO. :\',
.\ '\D COLLECTIO.:\S
[ 120 l
CARL SCHWARTZ
P hone 720
..
721 Sheri<lan Road
Bread-The Staff of Life
Everyone Pays for the Best
Ho\i\r Many Get It?
U E
KAPPUS' BREAD
Get What You Pay For
[ 121]
Collins' Th eatrical
Enterprises
1. B KI'\'CAI D, l\1anagcr
BURKE THEATRE
High Class Pliotop/ays
and Music
Headquarters for Fancy Fruits
A. J. LAZZARONI
"The '\'orrhwcstcrn Ice Cream Parlor"
lee Cream, Candies, Fruit, Fancy
Fruit Baskets fade to Order, Boxes
of Candy.
Delivery to any part of the city.
Park and S. \\'. Main
Telephones 1650-:1869
From the
Small Diamond
Ring
suitable for a young girl,
up to the large brilliant gem
of }l/2 k. worn by gentlemen, we have D iamond
R ing. for everybody-quality, style and price guaranteed.
L eslie H. Holbrook
J E\VELER
219 \\'ISCOXSI'\' STREET
Our customers are of one opinion
that our fixtures represent the last word in
their line. You'll find them designed with
the ha ic principle of efficiency combined
with artistic beauty. The refl ector radiate
the light where it is needed, t hereby increa ing t he power and decreasing the co nsu 111 pt ion of ga and electricity. \Ye hou ld like
to . how them.
Apex Cleaner .. C1J stal !Vasher
0
COMMERCIAL ELECTRIC
Tl' LVPllO"<I' 3752
321 \1\1\/ STRl·:J•:T
CHAS. H. PFENNIG
l\obe'~ ~tubio
Real Estate
Por trait and Commercial
Photography
1 T l 1 RA 1 CE AN D LOANS
E nl arging and F ra min g
Kodak Fin is hing
PHO'\'E 2872
16J l\1AR KET STR EET
Kenosha, Tf/iscomi11
[ 122]
PHOXE 1659
1124 Elizabeth St.
Kenosha, \\ 1s.
REINFORCED
by membership in the largest and strongest financial system in the world-
The Federal Reserve
System
The Merchants and Savings Bank with its inherent
strength as evidenced by $120,000 Capital, Surplus
and Profits fund- is an ideal institution in which to
deposit funds or to select as a BANKI re HOME.
Small or Large Accounts
Invited
Merchants & Savings Bank
[ 12 ]
Let it be a watch
It's a pre ent that gives plea ure, not merely
. for a few days
. '
but for long months and years
to come-a gift that is constantly in use by the recipient and,
therefore, a constant reminder
of the giver.
ANDREA BROS.
99~
Prairie .\ \ enue
Co nfectio nery
H ome of the Knight
Sanitary Soda
Service
Large As. ortmcn t of
Candies, Cigars,
Fruit
Satisfactory EveryDay Service
HARRY L. JORDAN
Jeweler
Phone '.2-W6
518 Howland _.\venue
Cavanagh & Mittelstaed
LA "
C0
S I I'\
RICHARD P. CA \"A'.\"AGH
G A.
~Vewspapers
PITO'\"ES 940 .. 1005
JOHN B. \VALLIG
1
OFFICE
K F. N 0 S H A, \\' I
Magazines
ff!TFLSTAED
Quality
Sheet Metal lf7ork
Metal Ceiling J .Cornices, Skylights, \ 'entilators, Blow P1p111g, l\1etal, Slate and Tile
Roofing, Fire Doors and \\'indows.
307 Clz111·cl1 St., Kenosha, Wis.
' el!ers of Good Clot/1es and
Fine Furnislzings
~;1mJJN/~
255 MAIN ST.
Tiu• First to Show tl1e Late.rt
[ 124]
BECKER STORES
205 Jtlarket 273 illain
68 !Fest /'vlain
!Vi.rro11si11 Gas & F,/ertrir Offi'e
Cigars, Tobacco, Cigarettes,
Candy, N ews papers,
1agazines
S 0 fl Trading Sta111ps
MrCall Patterns
ARDMORE
WEBB'S
Style Clothes
C. R. \\'EBB, Proprietor
Are certain to set a
rapid pace for young
men who admir
snappy styling in
their wearables
DRY GOODS :\~[) GE" TTS'
Fl -R T JSHI~GS, SECO~DS
===IX HO TERY===
UNDERWEAR
KENOSHA WIS.
IOI5
-Kenosha Shoe
Shining Parlor
Prnirie Avenue If/est of Xewell Street
The HOLDERNESS
SANITARY GROC RY
Home of
The Club House
Brand
l\BET()l\10TES BROS.
316 ~I .\I'\ ' TIU.J:T
Phone 200
516 Howland Avenue
"lie z;.)//O asks a favor, assumes_ tm obligation."
The John Tomlinson Realty Co.
SOLICITS YOUR PATRONAGE
212
larketSquare
Phones 515 and 297
[ 125 J
Fire
\\' ar
Riot
Bombardment
Hail
Tornado
Rents
Profit
;\larine
Use and
OccupanC)
prinkler
Leakage
Explosion
Strike
Liability
Industrial
Parcel Post
\\'orkmen's
Compensation
Teams
Golf
\' essel
Boiler
Fly \\' heel
Contingent
General
Elevator
Theatre
l iscellaneous
lVe In sure A nything .Anywhere
for A nybody
mue jfflillar ~gencp
Insurance
E VE R y
K~ O \Y
KI TD
D ifficult and Unusual
L ines Solicited
368 Park Ave. , Phone 394
KE:'\OSHA, \\'IS.
Telephone 504
435 Baker Block, Phone 51 <;
R AC l'\' E, \\' JS.
Arcoplane
Automobile
Fire, Theft
Liability
Property
D amage
Collision
Accident
Life
Health
Plate Glass
Salary
I ncome
\\'ater Damage
Burglary
H oldup
Theft and
Larceny
R esidential
P er ·onal
Messenger
P aymaster
B anking
' afe
Open ' tock
Surety Bonds
Depository
Fidelity
Court
Contract
Commercial
Mrs. Chas. Tronvig
C.H. Gephart, M. D.
jfancp ~ork
~bop
Offi ce H ours:
I O to I 2, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
R oom 5, Grosvenor Bldg.
Over H urd's D rug tore
Everyt hing in t he L ine of F ancy Work
and H emst itching
PHONE 1960
T elephones 8 0I-802 ; Residence 379
483 GR OVE R ST.
Straiglit or Mixed Cars
The Dunnebacke Company
WHOLE ALE AND R ET AJL
Flour, Feed, Hay, Grain
Cabbage, On ions, P ot atoes, Brick, Li me, Cement,
Sewer P ipe, Drain Ti le, Etc .
Offices and Warel1011ses: ,\farket and ff/est
.Hain Sts. C. & N. ff/. Ry.
[ 126]
and , Gravel,
K E '\OSH A, \\'I SCO'\' IX
KENOSHA SCI-IOOL OF MUSIC
and SH ERWOO D MUSIC SCHOOL
Offers complete courses in Piano, \ 'io lin, \'oice, Pipe Organ, Musical Theory, Dramatic
Art , Dancing and Orchestral l nstruments lnstruction b; experienced and capable teachers.
Free /ldvmztages: Three Free Scholarships, Students' Orchestra, H istory of Music, Recitals and Concerts.
Large and \\'ell Equipped Studios, Big Faculty of I nstructors, ystem of Grades and
Credits, Teachers' Certificate Diplomas and 1\ledals Awarded.
LD~H '()
\ STJ·:LL.\
Director
Kenosha's Most Progressive Music Sclzool
460 Market Street
Kf,,1\/0SH:\, \\' !SCO:\'Sll\/
\\ \\ ESLU" 1,, \ ' IOLl •.TJ'E
4\ssodatc Director
Telephone 2088
~ibnep ~tubio
352 ·1A RKET ST., K E TOSH A, \\'I S.
You are always assured
an hon est deal a nd the largest
selection to rhoose f rom at
Bode Bros. Company
II.f-I20 ,i faiu, 'tree!
Morse Granite Company
"CORl'OR \TVD
ROUGH AND FINISHED GR NITE
!'O R C E:\I ET I-< RY I l\IPRO\'F :\II·
J l 2 Chu rc h Street
r-:. E:'\OSH.\ , \\'I :.
~T
Telephone -!52
[ 1-7)
CHAS. L. ROCKWELL'S
<!Electric ~bop
Home of A. B. \,, Washing
Machines and Royal Va cu un1
Cleaners. . .
.ds Good as the Best and
B etter Th em tlze R est
P lzones 2726 and I386
REMEMBER
That s v nte n years of service, unequalled in dispatch
and regularity, have convinced Kenosha Shippers that
the water way is the best way to move freight. When
you go into business you will do well to bear this in mind.
By Lake is Cheapest and
Quickest
THE
HILL STEAMBOAT I~INE
FAST FREIGHT SER\'ICE
[ 128]
Safety First Always!
' E TD IT TO
UNIO
THf
¥f WORks
TO BE CLEA ~ ' J:<, f) OR DYJ:<.D
TELEPJIO~E
Good Work and Prompt Service
Is Our Motto
656
~be \J irginian ~beatre
Solicits your patronage when you
present that class play
'ERYICE- TRY
S
Try Our
Home-Made
Candies
CORNER SllERlD1l.N A:\'D
D BE CO).T\' IN CED
Try Our
Delicious
Ice Cream
1ARKr.T
TELr PH0''1~ J 289
[ 129 J
GEN ERA L MERCHANDISE AT LOWEST PRIC ES
THE ENTERPRISE
DEPARTMENT STORE
PHO TE 1078
CH URCH A D \\'ISCO SL
Cro\vn Pianos Are
Honest
For the very best possible reason
and tlzat is l!onesty Pays
ST REET
FOR COMFORT
WEAR
Victrolas and
Records
In selling talking machines some
dealers call tlzem Victrolas. You
may as well lzave a
Real Victrola
as one called a Victrola, by buying it at
L. F. BIDINGER'S
WALK-OVER
SHOES
Frank J. Sullivan
P iano and Victrola tore
-!58 MARKET STR EET
Building and R epairing
KENOSHA, \\'I S.
P hone 1633
555 Howland Avenue
Estimates Furnished Free
K. P. KNUDSEN
Carpenter and Contractor
T eleplwne 350
[ 130 l
47J Pomeroy 'treet
Compliments of
FRANKL. WELLS CO.
Builders of
SPRING BED MACHINERY
Corner 'outh and Exchange
ts., Kenosha, \\'i s.
Visit Our Ladies' ew Enlarged Ready-to-ff/ear and Ali/liner)'
Department on tlze Second Floor
Dry Goods, Cloaks, Millinery
Tlze Store Tlzat Saves You Afore
Phone .n58
Dr. J. D. Sullivan
206 P BLIC ERVICl:.
B lLDI~G
Kenosha, \Yi sconsin
67 North ,"vfain Street
HRUPKA BROS.
Meat Market
FRESI-l A ' D S !OKED
1E TS
Kenosha, ff/is consin
[ 131 J
II
I I
Ii:
I
I
[132]
1
Husky Kids Need Plenty
of Pure, Clean
BRUNER MILK
Phone 448
418 Newell Street
Pirsch Fire Apparatus
P.ETER P.IRSCH ~SONS CQ;
[ 133 J
PIJO'\E 1167
911 MARKET
TREET
TH E WEST SIDE FAIR
Paul TFolo.rh111, Pi-oprietor
Dry Goods, Shoes and Children's \Year
Every D ay a Bargain D ay
Ladies' Furnishings
K E::\OSI l A, \\'IS.
0. J. Scholer Co.
Grocers
Gents' Furnishings
\\'E DELIVER TO ALL PA RTS
OF THE CITY
Joseph D. Sullivan & Co.
llba:rma:cist.s
'.223-225 MALT STREET
PHOXF 1670
551 HOWLA . DAVE
E
Betsy Ross Candy--The Best
T ry Our B utter Creanis. B rick l ee Cream.
H ome of the "Real Ho t Fudge Sundae."
Betsy Ross Cand y Shop
356 Park Avenue
A. L. PAULSON
Eighteen Years Experience
in Kenosha
Th e
Live Grocer
Ernest Giannantonia
~ailor
767.Grand Avenue
Phone 2827
I 8._5 H owland /lvenur
[ 13-1]
Super Quality Meats
721 Grand Ave.
216 Howland Ave.
1251 Prairie Ave.
674 Charles St., Cor. , alem
513 Fremont Ave.
878 Fremont Ave.
315 Main St.
211 Main St.
508 Fremont Ave.
The tremendous buying power of 9
modern markets enables us to sell
you better ·m eat for less mane)'.
There's One in Yo R ' eighborhood
"I VESTIGATE"
JOS. HAMPEL
(\\'h olesa le Only)
BRU S\\'I CK TIRES
A TO ACCES ORIFS
"The tore of
tyle and Yalue"
THE TOOL SHOP
HAIR DRES ER
269
1AIN' STRF.F.T
KEXO HA, \YISCOK IX
HAIR GOODS
EMMA SIMONS
Chiropodist
Congratulations to the
Class of 1920.
Sincerely,
PERKINS BROS.
The Home of
Good Thing to Eat
2I2 Public Service Building
PHO"\'E 19T
KEXO HA, \\'IS.
303 Church
treet
Phone 60
PHOXE 1871
The Swartz Nursery
Growers of
Trees, Shrubs, Perennial
Plan ts, R oses,
Etc.
BUCKMASTER
& HAMMO D
Law Offices
hF'\O. ll .\, \\'!. .
[ 135 J
Whatever is really first-rate in pictures
in vaudeville in drama or musical
comedy, you see it at
THE RHODE
The perfect projection- splendid orchestra- roomy comfortable seats- courtesy
- safety- ventilation of this theatre satisfy the crowds who attend daily.
Don't Trwt to Lurk!
Re S1tre! Wi:ar
THE
AUSTIN
SHOE
AUSTIN BROS.
Kenosha, Wisconsin
217 Main Street
J\H .\T.S SLH\'ED .\TALL llOLJRS
DAY '\ '\ D '\I GJ IT
PERFECT SERVICE FOR LADIES
A'\'D GE'\'TLE 1E'\
.C'luirk Service
ROYAL RESTAURANT
Gustave Graham , Propriet01·
165 :\1..\l'\ STRUT
[ 136]
TELEPHO:\'E 627
l ~~~-rJi-zn-~
K enosha-K osed -Krotch
Union Suits
KE OSHA, WI
NEW YOHK
CHICAGO
EATTLE
LOS A GELhS
DALLAS
SA'\' FRAi'\CI CO
Graduation Honors
Are incomplete without being well dressed. P eace of
mind is assured when you wear a Royal suit-built to
con form to your every whim. Try one now! Get t hat
millio n doll ar look!
CURTISS, 319 Main Street
QUALI1T
SER VI CE
Telep hone 715
BR I CK
ICES
Kenosh a's Style Center
for Women's Apparel
Jf/hnlesale and Retail J..fan11fact11rers
51.1 Elizabeth Street
Kenosha, \\'isconsin
221 \[ .\ l
ST IH<FT
KE'.\'O HA, \\'IS.
( 137]
FOR
~oob llbotograpbs
EE
HARRY S. BROWN
2IO South St.,
Kenoslza, ff/is.
SF.RVICF.
EFFICIENCY
KOLPIN'S DRUG STORE
722 Grand Ave., Cor. Ridge St.
Plzones I846 and 43
Edw. A. Kolpin, Ph G., Prop.; :\lfred J. Kolpin, Ph. G.; i\1arshall J. Carlson, Ph. G.; \\airer P. Oechler, :\sst.; Harlod 1eyers,
Paul Nickels, \\'alter Henchen and Ollie Hoff, Relief Clerks; Allen
G. Stanley, Bookkeeper and Postal Clerk.
ACCURACY
PRO 1PT ES
TELJ:.,PHOXE 16
PHOXE '>6
Thomas Hansen
& Sons Company
Frank Nelson & Son
L ivery and Garage
F NE R AL DIRECTOR,
A TJ) E 1BALME RS
Taxi Cabs and
Baggage
Line
Private Ambu/anrf Servire
[138[
HABIT IS ACQUIRED
~1ake
it a habit of having every
member of your family photographed at least once a year and
begin Today.
~cbroeber ~tubio
165-167 Park treet
MAKERS OF FINE PHOTOGRAPHS
Shoes for the Whole Family
WILCKERLING'S
l.Jadies' and Men's Furnishings
82I Fremont /lven11c
..
Phone q56
WE have that player roll or Victor record
you've been looking for. If you can find
it anywhere you can find it here. Also a complete line of Ukeleles and Banjukes.
47.1 M ARKET S TRF.F.T
HIRAM J. SMITH
[ 139 ]
Black Cat Textile Company
Kenosha, Wi cons1n
Announces that its Corporate Title
'vill hereafter be
The Allen A Company
The new Corporate Title represent ' the outgrowth of the
Black Cat Textiles Company and its continuation under the
name of the owner . It is the logical merging of uch
famou brand ' a
BLACK CAT Ho. IERY A D
COOP R' -B
I GTO
SPRING NE DLE U
DER\YEAR
It ymbolize at once the J\llaker's per on al pledge of
responsibility and the standing of the e famou brands
with thou and of merchant and millions of users all over
America.
"Allen"- the name of the lakers; and "A"-the standard mark of first and finest grade.
A in the pa t, so in the future, Black Cat Ho iery and
Cooper' -Bennington pring " eedle
nderwear will be
produced and marketed under the ame labels, by the
original family of Knitters and Textile \\orkers-the family who established the tandard of quality and value and
have de igned, produced and marketed these brands for
over thirty years.
It means adding to the ·e brands the name of the owners as
a per onal earnest of uniform quality and dependable value.
[ 140]
l\emer's JLaunbrp
labone 1017
455 HO\\'LA.'.\' D A\ 'E~UJ:<.
TELEPHO'\ I:. 2302
JOSEPHSO
& ZU\1MERMA
Electrical, Plurnbing and H eatinf!
Contractors
Call or Phone f1 r r. ti111,1te on
all Repair \\ ork
Electrical Fixtures and
Appliances
CH l\RL
FIRST-
L.
DO
B . RB
R
\\'here You Cet the (;oo i 'ut
Baths:
Two Tubs; Shu\\l'l':-;
Kenosha N ews
Publishin g Compan y
259 &
261 Wisconsin Street
TEU.PIIO'\'E-PRI\'ATE EXCHA'\'Gr. -Sl:-. \ ' J:.~'TY-SJX
......
Kenosha Evening NYo1Y)S
The Telegraph -Co~ri~.r
An Advertising Service Completely
Covering Kenosha & Kenosha County
Biggest and Best Want Ad. Medium
in Wisconsin Outside of Milwaukee
......
Printing Service
Commercial Pr in ting, Booklets, Catalog ,
Etc. - A Service nexcelled. in Kenosha
[ 142]
Our Motto:
"Service and Quality"
A Trial Order \\' ill Con vi nee You
Southport Lumber Co.
Dealers in Lumber, Shingles,
Lath, Wall Board, Roofing,
Sash, Doors, Plaster, Cement
ELIZABETH A Tl) SUPERIOR , T RF.F.TS
PIIONI<, 181
Pl10;-..'ES 891 and 331
Lewis W. Powell
~ttornep
255 l\1ain Street
Vincent-Madsen
Sales Company
Kenosha County
Distributors for
Iaxwell, Chalmers and
Grant Io tor Cars
KE:'\OSHA, \\'IS.
'J elephone 260
309-311 Church Street
SCHMITT'S BEST BREAD
Fresh From Your Grocer Daily
ORDbR
LOAF TOD..\\'
[ HJ]
For Long Wear and Hard lf7 ear
Have Your Repairman Use
ALLEN'S SOLE STRIPS
Tanned Expressly for Shoe Repair Work
Manufactured by
N. R. ALLEN'S SONS COMP ANY
EsnBLisHED
18%
KE TOS HA, \\'IS.
PllO'\E 4131
Paksys & Garshman
Ladies' and Gents'
Furnishinf!s, Dry
Goods, Shoes, etc.
52:! GR.\'\'D .\\'!-:.
Of Course It's a Harley-Davidson
That's the bike red-blooded fellows choose choose it
because it stands the "gaff," because it is a bike they
can always be proud of.
If vou want a bicvcle that has the sturdv build and
the ruggedness to· withstand all kinds of hanl riding,
you, too, will choose ,1
0
Harll')'-Davidson Biryde
GEO. B. MEYERS
Harness Shop
Trunks, Suit Cases and Bags
222 Park Street
[ H-! j
KEXOSHA
Phone 956
It's a beauty, too. Class} lines and a clcancut construction. \\"ell designed frame and "soldier" color .
•\ fit running mate for the famous l larlev-Davidson
motorcycle. Dad knows -brim( him with you when you come in to
look at the new models. They're here now.
FRED P. RlJDY, Kenosha, \\'is.
Young Ladies who attend school will find ·
on our great 2nd floor dress requirements
for their out-door life at school or vacation
TAILORED
IT
TAILORED DRE ES
TOP COAT FOR TREET
TOP COATS FOR PORTS
\\'EATER COAT
TAILORED KIRTS
TAILORED BLOUSE
TAILORED MIDDIES
BARDE N'S
R SSELL H . JO:\'ES, ~1an ag er
E. H. \VJLLJ:\J\IS, :\sst . J\l anal.(er
Badger Fuel & Supply Co.
l/7/10/e.ra/e and Retail
Coal, Coke and Wood
-164 Fremont Avenue
King's Delicatessen
ALL
KE TOSHA, \\'I .
Telephone 119
ALFRED L. DRURY
Lawyer
HOME BAKING
210
larket 't.
Kenosha, \\'i~.
310 MAL. STHEET
[HS]
!
The Mother Tongue of
. .4.merica 's Millions--the
Modern Motion Picture
B ABEL crumbles before the motion picture
screen. "A universal language," said Pre iden t \Vilson. The language of the eye and soul,
the mirror of life- that's moving pictures.
An evening at the picture show has become an
important part of the art of enjoyable home
life. The question is asked, " \Vhat's On Tonight?" Don't take chances with your evenmgs. Go where you can see the foremost
stars of the gr ate ' t directors in good clean
picture . And you can be sure of this perfect
entertainment at the
Charles Pacini Amusements
Majestic and Butterfly
THEATRES
(Note: The air in the Majestic and Butterfly theatres
is changed every three minutes, thereby keeping conditions in these theatres absolutely sanitary.)
[ 146]
If You Want the Best
For Quality-S Sake
TRADE AT
Popcorn and Peanuts
McCAFFREY BROS.
Get Thern From
Fancy Groceries
"COFFEE"
(\\'. J. !\.A Fi\1A~)
COR'\TF.R
OUTH ST. nnd SHF.RIDA"\ ROAD
Corner 1a in nnd \\'isconsi n Streets
(!Coliseum ~hating ~alace
R oller Skating every Tuesday, Thur day,
aturday and Sunday evening.
From September I to 1'vfa_v I
Special beginning session every unday morning from 10:00 to 12:00. Competent instructor to teach beginners the art of skating. Special se ion every aturday afternoon fo r school chil dren . The doctors, the world over, recommend roller kating as a
healthful exercise. The management of the Coliseum maintains the best of order and
advi es parents to send their children to this skating rink.
\V. J. FRAZIER, Owner and Manager
PHO:\' E 316
213 P BLIC SER\'ICE BLDG.
FRED F. JOERNDT
Jam es Pennefeather
Staple Groceries for
25 Years
Real Estate, Loans
and Insurance
450 i\1ilwnukee Avenue
KF.:\'O. HA, \\'L.
PH0"\1E 836
PHO:'\'E 649
For Portraits and Pictures Th at Please
NE,VELL STUDIO
Make an Appointment T oday.
velop and Print Films. Bring
Favorite Films for Enlarging.
26I Main Street
C. R. PRIDDI
\Ve D es Your
Phone I294
(147]
MACWHYTE
Wire Rope
f!J
is quality wire rope
MACOMB ,R & WHYTE ROPE CO.
KE:-,JO ' H A, \\'TS.
Branch Offic<"s and \\arehous~s:
XE\\ YORI\.
CHICAGO
l'ITI'SJH;RGI!
BIR:\11'\GIL\:\1
PORTL.\;\;D
TULS. \
ONE TRIAL
Will convince you that you cannot resist the temptations which our delicious ices, candies,
and quick lunches offer you
Fresh Candy Every
Hour
mbe ~lite C!Confectionerp
K enosha's Finest Sweet Shop
[ 1·1:8]
Our display of watches,
rings, etc., never
was better
WE I VITE
I SPECTION
Tr.LEPHO~E 381
COR . ' ER
JOB PRI'\Tl'-.'G ATI FACT10'-.'
c; AR:\:\'TEED
1:\1'\ A:'\D ' O TH ' TREET
\\'ORRIES OVERCOME \\'HEN YO
ARE ATI FLED
"§~pality !Vith Efficiency"
KENOSHA EVENING H ERALD
FOR ATTRACTIYE ADVERT! I G
Pleasing to the Adverti er and Read by the Public
TELEPIIO E 3245
Hours 9-12, 2-5; Evenings 7-8
Suntlars anti llolidays 10-12
214
Phone, Office 828
Res. 5009-F2
Dr. Alois H. Tennessen
Doctor of
Dental S urger)'
159 MAI 1 STREET
KENOSHA, \\'IS.
Goodman Building, Room 4
Six Doors North of First '.\ational Bank
TF.LEPHO. F 468
OUTH
TREET
360 PARK :\\'EXUE
P. N. OBERTIN
mue jf lower ~bop
KF.:\'O HA, \\'l COXST'-.'
[149)
No. 2075
20 inches x 60 inches.
Finished in Brown .\1aho!!any.
Tables in Davenport sizes are particular!~· desirable for the living room now-a-days.
Our X o. '2075, a Tudor Period pattern, in addition to more than JOO other tables in a
wide variety of de. igns and finishes, may be obtained through any reputable dealer in t he
United tates.
Hannahs Manufacturing Co., Kenosha, Wis.
A. H. D.A HL
AUTHORIZED DEAL E R
PASSENGER AND COMMERCIAL CARS
TRUCKS AND TRACTORS
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
Genuine l•ord Parts sed 111 Our
R epair D epar tm ent
[ 150 l
Corner Exchange and \\'i sconsin
Telephone 1686
ts.
A great thing
has happened
It's fine for you and fine
for us; we have Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes for you.
You'll get the mo ' t advanced and best styles in
the country; fine all-wool
fabrics; individual patterns.
\\'e'll get the business of
every well dres 'ed. young
man who likes the newest
style; satisfaction or money
back.
It's fine for everybody.
Hart Schaffner &
Marx Clothes
Florsheim Shoes
Copyril?"ht 1920 Hart Schaffner & Marx
S. R. GORDON
Everyman's Store
219
221
223 MARKET SQ
, RE
[ 151 J
..1/terward
ADVERT! FRS, \\'HO
T OHA THE
\'F llELPED TO 1AKE THIS
BOOK PO SIBLE, \\'E EXPRF , S
OLJR GRF.1,TE T APPRFCJATTO!\'
AND THANK.
[ 152]