The SPY 1925
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The SPY 1925
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The Kenosha High School Year Book, The SPY, for the 1924 to 1925 school year.
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4/18/2017
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01/01/1925
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Kenosha High School Yearbook Club
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27550543 bytes
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School yearbooks
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text
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Kenosha (Wis.)
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Yearbook
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Kenosha (Wis.)
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eng
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Published by
tlze Students of
KENOSHA
HIGH SCHOOL
KE:\O ' HA, WISCOi'ISI'\
D
EDICATION
TO the Board of Education of Kenosha with
appreciation
of
their
sincere interest in the
yo u 11 g people of our
city, as shown by tlze
e r e c t i o n of the I\' e·10
Central High School,
·we dedicate this book.
r
'
F oREWORD
TJIE ro111pili11g of a high srhool 'j'Par
h()ok is 111'1'1'1' an Pasr task. Ours this
year has he1•n esperially di/Jirnlt.
//'orki11g in rroivded q11artcrs and
lu1111j>l'l'ed fi11a11rially by the lack of
(Ill)' plare in whirh lo hold 11u111e}'
111aki11g arth•ities, we lun•r had /fJ gh•e
11p 111a11y ()f our plans. l/'e do 110/
ro111plai11, howe'l•er, for wr arr the
/(Is/ staff that will hai·r to do ·work
1111dn t/11 .11• disad'l •a 11lagrs. Tl11s a111111al marks the end of an epoch i11
lhl' history of Kenosha lligh Sehr)()/.
Sl'xl year our work will be done
1111der the bPst (()11ditio11s that hm•e
/)('I' ll ro11cei'l•ed by 111oder11 ed11rntors.
Those wh~1 co1111' af fer us hrl'l.'e 11111ch
in store for them, and much will hi'
l'xpected of them. If they mak e use
of their ruh•antages in t/11 new q11artl'rs r1s well as our prrdl'l·es.1·or.1 hrw1•
of lhl'irs i11 the old, Kenosha If i_qh
Srhool will hm•e a great /11turt".
0
CoNTENTs
ADl\fINISTRATION
CLASSES
AC1IVITIES
ATHLE1ICS
HU~10R
ADS
Gey F. Loo~u A. B., A. :\1.
Superintendent of
chools
GEORGE N. TREMPER, A. B.
Principal of Kenosha High School
Page Fourteen
Page Fi/tun
TEACHERS
GEORGE :\'ELSO TREMPER, B. A.
llniver,ity of Michigan, Berlitz School of
Language,, l'niversity of Illinoi' Graduate School.
Principal of Kenosha High School.
0 ' A A:\'DRE\VS, B. A.
University of ~'i,comin.
A! athematics.
MYRTLE A. BA:\'G BERG, B. A.
l niver,ity of ~' i,comin.
English.
CLARENCE BAYLOR, Ph. B.
Illinoi' State :\'ormal l'niver,ity, l'niversity of Chicago.
Af athemalics.
NORAH BELLE BL '\IE, B. A.
University of Wiscomin.
History and English.
FLORENCE E. BI BEE, B. A.
Oberlin College, University of Chicago,
Univer,ity of outhern California.
English.
BERTHA BLANCHARD, B. ., A. M.
immons College, Columbia {'ni\•er,ity,
II ome E conomirs.
EDYTH M. BREEN.
Northland College, Columbia Univer,ity.
Typing.
EDNA CAMERON.
Lawrence Conservatory.
Supervisor of Afusir.
JOH:\' D. DAVIE , Ph. B.
Ripon College.
Public Speaking.
MARY DOHERTY, B. A.
Iowa State Teacher·, College.
Chemistry.
CORA FABRICW , B. A.
Univer>ity of Iowa.
Biology and Physiology.
HARRIET FARLEY.
Whitewater Normal.
Shorthand and Typing.
HE:-:RIETTA . GRAYBILL, A. B.
James Milliken l'niversity.
Spanish and French.
JOHN GUTHRIE, A. B., LL. B.
University of Indiana.
Commerce.
MRS. ANNETTE HALL, B. L.
niversity of Michigan, Graduate \Vork
at the University of Chicago.
Spanish.
HOPE HA TIN , , A. B.
Oberlin College .
•\fodern If istory.
CAROLYN G. HOLAH, B. A., M. A.
Univer;,ity of Wi,consin.
Latin.
ETHEL MAY JONES, B. A.
Beloit College.
Commerce.
Page Sixteen
HARRY W. KIRN .
Bradley Polytechnic lmtitute.
iii a11ual Trai11ing.
C. L. LEWI , Ph. B.
l"niversity of Chicago.
Iii story.
ERNE TINE LOCKETT, Ph. B.
University of Chicago.
English.
ISABEL R. LOW, A. B., M. A.
Northwestern University.
Iii story.
J. B. MALONEY, LL. B.
Chicago College of Law.
Head of Commercial Department.
NELLIE L. MALONEY,
Milwaukee :'\ormal.
Bookkeepi11g. ·
WILLIAM G. McCAW, B.
Univer;ity of Indiana.
,\!athematics, .4 lhletic Director.
LOI E. NORTHWAY,
1ilwaukee Normal.
Shorthand.
OLIVE REID, B. A.
Beloit College.
English.
LA GRA SCH UL TZ, B. A.
Lawrence College.
Frp11ch.
MARGARET "CH l L TZ, A. B.
Oberlin
ollege.
Latin a11d E11glish.
DOROTHY LATER, Ph. B.
Milwaukee Downer College, University
of Chicago.
Librarian.
MR . G. "J. TREMPER.
University of Illinoi,, Univen.ity of Cincinnati.
Srrretary.
WILBl R TOCUM, B.
o,hkosh )formal, l'niver,ity of \Vi,consin.
Jfanual Trai11ing.
E. B. V ALENTL E, A. B., LL. B.
University of Michigan.
Commerce.
MARIO VE EY, B. A.
University of \Vi;.consin.
English.
C. H. WALTER, B.
Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Physics.
S. W. WARD, B. A.
University of Indiana, Indiana tate Normal School, University of Chicago
Graduate chool.
11 ssistant Principal.
MARY LOUISE WILLIAMS, B. L.
Smith College.
Jf athematics.
•
THE SPY
Argyle
Berg
Brenaman
Chromec
1'1ID-YEAR CLASS OF 1925
CLA
OFFICER
President .. ... . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Helen J. Argyle
Vire-President ............. .............. Lester E. Brenaman
Secretary . .................................... Edwin C. Berg
Trearn rer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............... Frank A. Ch romec
LA s }.loTTo-"Poss1111111s Quia Posse T"ide11111s"
CLASS CoLORs-0/d Rose and Tf'hite
CLASS FLO\\'ER- weet Pea
HONOR ST DENTS:
l\Iary Elizabeth Robinson,
Elizabeth l\Iary Bonson,
Lucy V.
·icolazzo
Page !l·inetnn
THE SPY
HELEN JEAN ARGYLE.
" Tiny"
Class President 3, + ; Setterepeps + ; Treas.
' ec"y; Cheerleader +; Lyceum League 3, +; Class
Play Cast ; Spani'h Club + ; ergeant at Arms;
PY l"ue Contest 3, + ; third winner +; G . A. A.
K. H . . +; Campti re 2, 3, +; Pres. 3; Gym Club 3.
Cla"ical +
"Quality and Quantity <work o..vell tog ether with
her"
FRANK BALL
"Flank"
emina r 3, +; C. L. D. . 3, + ; Basketball 2, 3.
" .'1 good sport-al all times"
EDWIN BERG..
"Eddie"
Football 2, 3; Basketball 2, 3; Track 2, 3, +;
Manager Football +; Student Council 3, +; B. A.
A. K. H. . 2; Cla" ec'y +; Class Play Cast '25;
SPY Sta ff 3; Chief Typist: SPY +; Baseball Club
2; Varsity Club +.
English Course
"For lie -u.·as more than head over heels in love"
ELIZABETH M . BO:\ O . '...
......"Beth"
Lyceum League +; Spanish Club +; Pres. +;
Student Council +; SPY hsue Contest 4; Second
\\' inner +; SPY Annual Contest: Second Winner
2; etterepeps +; PY Issue taff +; Kappa Kappa
+; Honor tudent ; alutatorian.
Classical +
"Shall men wasting in despair
Die because you are so fair?"
GLADY
BLOXDORF_
."Lefty"
Cla.s Vice Pres. 3; Lyceum League 3, +; Secretary +; Kappa Kappa +.
English Course
"Does she do a lot of things you can't resist?"
LE TER BRENAMA'.'\ ....
."Les"
Cla" President 2; Class Vice Pres. +; Hi-Y 3,
+; Corr. ec"y 3, ec"y +; PY hsue taff 2, 3, +;
SPY Annual Sta ff 3, +; B. A. A. K. H. S. 2; Football 3; C. L. D. . +; Phonozzlers 3, +.
Cla"ical +
"The world loves the spice of -u.•ickedness"
ELIZABETH BPECHNER ..
"Bits"
Lyceum League +; SPY Annual Contest 2; Glee
Club 3, +.
English Course
"She's pretty to walk with and <u.:itty to talk with"
FRANK A. CHROMEC
"Pancho"
SPY Issue 3, +; Editor +; Hi-Y Club 3, +;
Treas.; President of Conference 1925; Hi-Y Honor
Award; Varsity 3. +; Varsity Board +; B. A. A.
K. H. . 2, 3; Baseball Club +; Phonozzler 3,
+:Pres. 3; Vice Pres.+; B. R. P. 3; C. L. D . . 4;
Class Treas.+; Basketball 2, 3, 4; Track 2, 3, 4;
Football 2, 3, 4: (K) 3, +; SPY Annua l : Assist.
Bus. 1gr., ubscription Mgr., Adv. Mgr.
cientilic Course
"Ninety-nine per ant Genius"
ELLEN J. DOBBL S.. .. .. ......... ... ......."Dobby"
Lyceum League +;
etterepeps +; Class Play
Cast '25.
Classical 2
"Sing ao..cay sorrow, sing away care.
I'm off for a good time, come if you dare."
FLORINE FEGAN ................... _ ... "Flossie"
Girl couts 2, 3, +; G. A. A. S. 2; (,iris' Glee
Club 2.
Classical 4
"II lass with quaint and quiet ways"
.Oag~
Twenty
THE SPY
AR l'Hl'R GETCH 1AN
" ,./rtie"
Phonozzlers +; Sheib 3; Orchestra 2, 3, +;
5emina r +; Via tors 3; B. A. A. K. H. . 2; Ba,,ehall 2, 3, +; Track +; Basketball 2, 3; Football +.
Cla"ica l 2
"l'vr dug, dug and al last I am through"
MANDEL N. GOLDSTEIN ...
.. ".Handy"
Spanish Club +; emina r 2, 3, +: Pres. +; Beta
Phi Kappa +; Vice Pres. +; Basketball +; SPY
Annual Staff +; B. A. A. K. H. . 2.
C'la"ical 2
"iii r this u11chartrd freedom tires
If eel the <u:eight of chance drsires"
ESTHER
GROTSKY ...
Commercial Course
"/ like lo he like l/1av:atha"
...."El'
GRACE JACKSON
"Jackie"
Lyceum League; etterepeps +.
English Course
"A laughing girl without grief or care"
ROBERT L. JAEGER
B. A. A. K. H. . 2, 3.
English C'ou rse
"Be wise-do11't work, just bluff"
"Bob"
EDNA C. JENSEN
" \ rd"
Cla"ical +
"And her face is eq1rr pleasant"
A"'.\N A. LANE.
·----··· "Trixie"
Lyceum League +.
English Course
" •./ dreary place v:ould be this <U.'orld
Were there not little people in it."
.. ''f.' m"
E\.1MA M. LASSE:\
Lyceum League +; Girls' G:ee Club 2, 3, +.
Cla"ical 3
".1 s merry as the day is long."
FANNIE T. MAXWELL
. --··· ·---- "T"
Lyceum League +
Classical +
"Though quiet it is said she has thoughts."
.. "Guggy"
GLADYS M. McCARRO"'.\
Lyceum League 3, +; Girls couts 2; Seminar 3,
+; Setterepeps +.
English Course
" I am alv.:ays in haste, but ne'l:er 111 a hurry."
Page Tv.:enty-one
THE SPY
•. EL O'\
"II ocky"
Lyceum League +.
Engli'h Cour'e
".-/ gay li ..•ely girl 1s a joy for e<t•er."
HELE~
u·cy '\ICOLAZZO
---· ........."Lu''
Honor 'tudent; Lyceum League +; Cla" Hi tory.
Commercial Cour'e
"Xone but herself can hr her para/Ir/."
«.lR:\IA .. CARL PIER. O'\
"Pinky"
Harmelodian' 3, +; F >t all +; (,olf Club 2;
Tenni' 3.
Engli'h Cour'e
"ll'ork--'<:.:herr did I h1·ar that naml' before?
.\!OR ro.
PJ:\"E
..".l!ort"
B. C. :\L I, 2; tudent Council 2, 3; Ba,kethall
3, +; f.,othall 3. +; Track 3, +; T'enni 3; B. A .
. \. K . H . . . +; Ba,eball Club +; Tenni' Club;
\ "ar,ity Cluh.
Cla--ical +
"Life's greatest pro hi em."
BER. "ICE POWELL
"Bennie"
.PY .... taff 3, +;Annual+; Lyceum League 3, +;
\'ice Pre-. +; Glee luh 2, 3, +.
Engli,h Cour-e
"And trul> she has not begun her bright carur."
.\LO:\IE RACK .
."Sally"
L'ceum League +.
•
Engli h Cour-e
"Likr a cirde t'nding nH·er
doth her tongue go on jorr•:rr."
CL. RA E. RAI:\IA .•
"Doll>P
L\ceum League+; Cla-- Pia,· Ca-t '25.
.
Commercial Co~r e
"So quzet, so modnt, so '"·inning, so S'IJ:l'et
so many 'i.'trlues I lo'i.·e to repeat."
~A \H.EL
RAK . . A. ·y
"Sam"
Ba-ehall Club 2; eminar 3, +; \·ar-ity Club 3,
+; tudent Council 3, +; Football 1 earn 2. 3, +;
K·, 3, +; Ba- ethall Team 2, 3, ; K ", 3, +; Athletic Board +: Hi-Y Honor A \3rd (om.
cientitic Cour-e
"Josten him as a natl in a sure plaa"
ELIZABETH ROBI ..... 0 .
Lyceum Lea ue +; .pani-h lub 3; ettercpep+; Honor Roll; \ aledictorian.
la- ical +
"lf'it arrd '<..-isdom are born '"it/1 hu."
GEORl
=. . CHW. RTZ
~ient ic
P ge T- l' IJ-1- o
C r-e.
".-//"-- JS doing something."
THE SPY
DOROTHY
SIIOSTED
Commercial C<n.1r'e
"I likr my li1tll' Ford."
.... . "Dot"
. "Et."
SJ"IGLER
Engli'h Cour'e
"She's lll'rr, I hrard hrr gl{J!/lr."
ES rIIER
"/)a11"
DAN SMITH ..
Sheik- l, 2; Ba,ketball l, 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3;
Football 2, 3; l'honozzlers 3, +; llarmelodian' 3,
+;Sec.Treas.+; Golf 3, +; Swimming+; Capt.+;
'\ational lnter-Schola,tic Meet +; Cla" Play ·2s.
Engli'h Cour'e
"Oh horu.• I love lo da11rr."
MANFRED STROM.... ..... ...
Scientific Course
".1 per/NI lrase ."
",l/ an"
GLE"\'\
SCH\\' ARTZ
Commercial Cour'e
"Quiet, /Jut Juli of f u11"
"Glrn"
LEO TII0~1EY
Baseball Club +.
Engli'h Course
"Thrrr rhrrrs for Burk."
.. "Bur/.:"
"Jo.,
JOSIE Tl RO\\' KI
Lvceurn League +; Student Council 3, +; Cla"
Poem.
Cla"ical Cour'e +
"Good 11aturr a11d good se11sr must e'l.·er joi11."
."Ste/."
SI ELL\ 0. ZIELE'\ 'KI.
Cla" Secretary 2, 3; tudent Council 2, 3, +;
L\reum Lcagu~ 3, +; Pre•. +; Karnera Club 2:
SPY l"ue 'taff 2, 3; Campfire 3, +; Cla" Prophecv; Cla" Pia' Ca't '25.
.
·
Cla"ical +
"The hardrr I try the gooder to /Jr thr ~~·orsrr
I am."
THE SPY
AT THE CROSSROADS
You to the left and I to the right.
For the wa\ :-; of men must severAnd it well . may be for a day and a night,
And it well ma\· be forever.
But whether we .meet or ·w hether we part
(For our ways are past our knowing),
A pledge from the heart to its fellow heart
On the ways " ·e all are going!
Here's luck!
For we know not \\·here we are going.
\Vith a stead) swing and an open brow
\Ve have tramped the " ·ays together,
But we're clasping hands at the crossroads now
In the Fiend's own night for weather;
A nd whether we bleed or whether we smile
In the leagues that lie before us,
The wa\s of life are man\· a mile
And the dark of Fate is· o'er u"
Here's luck!
And a cheer for the dark before us!
You to the left and I to the right,
For the v.·a\·s of men must sever,
And it wel1 ma\· be for a da\ and a night
And it well ma\· be forever! · ·
But whether we live or whether we die
(For the end is past our knowing),
Here's two frank hearts and the open sky,
Be a fair or an ill wind blowing!
Here's luck!
In the teeth of all winds blO\\ ing.
-RICHARD HOVEY
Page Tv.:enty-f our
THE SPY
Moeller
De Vol
Mc\\'illiarm
JUNE CLASS OF 1925
CLAS OFFICER
Presid1•11t ....................... ......................... Edward : Hoeller
! 'ire-President. . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . ................ Oli\'e :.\Ic\Villiams
errctary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............. Kenneth
avage
Trearnrer. . . . . . .......................................... Doroth)
De Vol
Cus }foTTo-"Del'ds 'Sot Dreams"
CLASS
COLORS-Peach and Sili•er
CL \SS Furn ER-Sunburst Rrm·
HO~OR
'TUDE,_T
}laric 'turzenegger
Kate :.\I. 0. :\eergaard
\ ' i\'ian J. Odelberg
:\label \\'alters
Doroth) I. \Valdo
}lar) A. Bri,tow
Emilie C. Bogvilo
Stella Schantek
Page T'l.t:enty-fiq_·e
THE SPY
ALLEN,
EDWARD _________ ............ ··-··········-··"Ed."
".·1/<u:ays steady a11d rrliable."
BEAUPRE,
BYRON ________ ...
. ............. .."Barney"
Basket Ball 3; Base Ball 1, 2; Football 2; Class
Play '25; SPY Issue 3; Hi-Y 2, 3; C. L. D . . 2;
SPY Issue, PY Annual 3.
"A11 all arou11d fellow."
BOGVILO, EMILY ····-············- _____ -----------·-··" A11gel"
Class Treasurer 2; Glee lub 2, 3, +; Lyceum
3, +; Class Secretary +.
"Site doetlt little ki11d11esses that others leave
undone."
BORESCII, CA THERINE ..
Lyceum +.
........... __"Catlt."
"011r of t<u:o you al<u:ays see together."
BORKE:\'HAGE:\', BER:\'ICE
....."Porkir"
Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Pre,. 1, 2; Student Council
1, 2, 3, +; pani,h C lub 2, 3; Setterepeps 2, 3,
+; Lyceum +; C lass Play '25.
"Cheerful a11d gay."
BRI'\'ER, LCTHER
"Lute"
Debating team +; District Oratorical Contest;
Track 2, 3.
"A quiet a11d i11dustrious youth."
BRISTOW,
MARY __________ ..
"Sis."
Camp Fire 2, 3, +; Pre,. 3; etterepeps 2, 3;
Spanish Club 3; Lyceum 3, +; Girls Reserve +.
"Si11cerity is the cor11ersto11e of /rie11dsltip."
BRLTSS, EVEL.YN ...............................
"Smiles"
"A ki11d word a11d a smile /or all."
BlT:\'DA, LILY BELL
......
"Girlie''
Gir l Scouts 2; A. A. K. I I. S. 2; Setterepeps 4.
".-1 bell al<u:ays bri11q good clterr."
BGSWELL, MABELLE
.. ·-············· .".ll abel"
"Cheerful and happy."
Page T_<u:e11ty-six
THE SPY
CHRISTENSE., CATHERINE ........... ...."Slim"
"AJ merry aJ the day u long."
DAVIDSON,
HOWARD ...
:'/)ave"
"lliJ eyn tv.:inkle v.:ith miJChirf."
DOERR, HOWARD ..
Ba,eball 3; Phonozzlers +; Football +.
"Sixteen creditJ on a Jmilr."
"Slim"
____ "lor"
FOX, JO ' EPH ..
"If e <u'aJ a man-take him for all in all."
"Gene''
GALDABL I, El'GE:\'E.
Radio Club +; Basketball +.
",\'ob/e in thought and v.:ord and deed."
DeVOL, DOROTHY.. .
.......................... "Dot"
Camp Fire 2, 3, +; etterepep' 3, +; Lyceum
League +; Tenni' Club +.
",\fodnt, Simple and Sqcret."
GOLD, ABE......
. "Babe"
"// bie did it."
·GOODMAN, MARGARET'.
................. .."Buck"
Camp Fire 2, 3, +; Glee Club 2, 3, +.
"Alqcays with a Jmile."
. ...."Dot"
GRANGER, DOROTHY ................ .
Entered from Northwestern High, Detroit, Mich.
Lyceum +; Sec. +; Sette re peps +; Vice-Pre>. +.
"Everybody likn a rnrrry girl."
GREE:\', MARIO:\'...
....."Bob"
Camp Fire, 2, 3, +; G. A. A. K. II.
2; Setterepeps +; tudent ouncil +.
"Good natured and liked by all."
Page Tv.:enty-uq•n1
THE SPY
HAA ' E, MIL TO:'\ ........ .. .................. ....."J,filt."
"Still v.:ater may run deep."
IIA'\'\O:'\, SClll"l.'LER ......... ..... ....
"Sky"
Ba,ketball I, 2, 3, +; Captain 3; Track 2; B. A.
1\. K. H. S. 2; Football 2, 3, +; Student Council
Seminar 3, +; Varsity 2, 3, +.
' .\ othinq 1s impossible lo the man v.•ho stri'l.•es."
HA:'\SCHE, ALTHEA
..... ." .11/ie"
"I like to ask deep questions in Physics class."
HAMMO:>/D, KA fHRY:'\ .... ...
"Kay"
Glee Club 2, +; Lyceum +; Gir1' Re,erve +.
"Good natured and happy go lucky."
J·lAR1T:'\G, CRAYFORD
..."Cray"
Ba,eball 3.
"Spuial deliveries are his lot."
"Oscar"
HEGSTROM, 0 CAR .
Spani. h Club 3; Debating Team +.
". J frllov.: v.:hoJr v.:ords carry a deep impreSJiun."
"Bobbie"
ll IELSRER<.;, ESTHER ...
Glee Club 2, 3.
"She sees thr v.·orld through glasses of v.:isdom."
"Glad Ice"
HILL, GLADYS
(,irl Scout' 2, 3, +; Spanish Cli:h 3.
".1/v.·ays 011 the job v.·ith a v.•inning smile."
"Em."
HOMER, E~IMA ....
Camp Fire 2, 3, +; ettereps 2, 3, +; Spani,h
Club 3; Lyceum 3, +; Girls Resen·e 3, +.
"If' e v.:ill miss her angel face."
JOH'\ O:'\, WALLACE
"Slov.: but sure."
Page Tv.:enty-right
"If' ally"
THE SPY
Kt'Ell:'\, WILHEL 1
"II 11/"
Track 2, 3; Student Council 3; Debating Team
4 ; Radio Club +.
"II e poured !tis s/rrngtlt in eq;rry deed."
KRUGER, JDA
"Olt, v.:ltrrr is our ga11!1 ! "
"/' !)''
KRPMPOS, CARROLL _ -··
."Krump''
"I/ e 'l.<:as a man r•vrn if lte 'l.<:as small."
"Irish"
LA'\SDO\\''\'E, FRA'\'C'ES
c.;irls Scouts, 2, 3; Srndent Council 2, 3, +;
Spanish Club 3; Camera Club 3; Lyceum 3, +;
Treasurer 3, +; Girls' Rescn·e +.
"Jl'lty should life all labor bel"
"Dnn"
LE:\'CIONI, DA:'\IEL.
Prom Committee 3; SPY 1\nnual +; Debating
4.
"He lives al peace v.:itlt a'I mankind."
"Del"
u·cAS, DELMAS
Debating team +.
"Well done is heller titan v.:rll said."
"Dommir"
LCKACSKAS, DOMIC'ELLA
illodesly ts tlte color of 'l.•irtue."
MA DAR, A '\NE .
".1 l<u.•ays merry-a.''l.t·ays !/fl)'."
MADSEN, RIGMOR LOUISE..
..... ..........."Rig"
"Site is one v.:lto d'1rs ltrr o<u.·n tltinking."
MARTIN, LUCILLE.
Ci rls Scouts 2, 3, +.
"Quiet and go1,d iJ site."
"Toots"
P111r T'l.t'rnly-nine
THE SPY
1A Y ETHEL ... ... ....... ..
"Slivers"
Girl Scouts 1, 2, 3; Glee Club 1, 2, 3; Student
Council 2, 3, +; Lyceum 3, +.
"Oh , Dear I Had To /furry ."
McCLA VE , FLORE:'\ CE LEO:'\A
..."Fl o"
Lyceum + ; Girb Re,erve +.
"Su ch a Fresh , Blooming, R osy , Cozy, 1'1odnt
Lillie Bud."
McNEIL, LAVERNE ........... .
etterepeps 3, +; Lyceum +.
"Honest and Truly. "
" 1lfi cky"
MEDARI ' , TOM ..
........... " Tom "
Debating Team + ; tudent Council 3, +; Cla"
Play '25.
"T om, llfy Dearest ."
MEDLEY, DOCGLAS .. . ..
"Do c."
la's Treas. 2; Class Vice-Pre" 3; Student
Council 3, +; Seminar 3, +; Botan) Club +; Pres.
+.
MILLER, HARR\.. ________________
. "!tarry"
Entered from Beloit High ' chool ;Track 3, +;
SPY l"ue ' ta ff +; Student Council +; eminar +;
Debating Team +; Captain Di,trict Oratorical
Conte,t, National Oratorical C'onte,t.
"/\'othing Is Impossihle to the .\Ian Who Stri<t•es."
llLLER, RUTH ................... ..
"Rufus"
Setterepeps +; Lyceum +;
tudent Council +;
SPY Issue +.
"The Girl Fnm the Big City ."
MlLLER, ROY .
.."Douggy"
Entered from Sheboygan High School; Radio
Club +; Vice Pres. +; Botany Club +; Vice Pres. +;
Phonozzlers +.
"Ask me-I know all about Radio."
MILLS, GUERDON ............ .
Entered from Coronado, California;
nu al Staff 3; Cla" Play '25.
"Lurd Bless Us All."
"Bishop"
PY An-
MOELLER, EDWARD C.
.. "Eddie"
Class Vice Pres. 2; Cla,s Pre" 3, +; Football
2, 3, +; Captain + (K) 2, 3, +; Track 2, 3, +;
Captain+ (K) 2, 3, +; Hi-Y 3, +; Vice Pre"+;
B. A. A. K. H. S. 2, 3, +; Phonozzlers 3; Varsity 3, +; Varsity Board 3; Via tors 3; SPY Issue
ta ff 3; SPY Annual Sta ff 3; tu dent Council +;
tudent Council Board +.
''II e Though/ and Worked for the Good of the
School."
Page Thirty
THE SPY
MURPHY, ANNE MARJORIE ........ "Butchy"
L\ceum +.
"Can the Irish heat the Dutch. "
"Kate"
NEERGARD, KATE .......... .
"She is wiu who doth talk hut /illle."
NELSE:-.1, HANS ..
"Always a gentleman."
..."flunuy"
NIEUWE ' IIUYSE, CORNELIA
Setterepeps 3, +; Lyceum +.
"Happy and gay is she."
"Corky"
.. "Bonnie"
NOWACKI, WANDA ............. .
An energetic and quiet person."
ODELBERG, VIVIAN ] ...
"Silence is golden."
"/~iv"
"Swede"
OLSON, OSCAR ...
Ili-Y +; Secretary+; Football +; (K) +; Varsit} +.
"/\'eat, chubby and genial."
OTTO, ZIEBELLE ..... .
..
-''Z'~
"Everything is 'Z' easy lo some."
PATTERSON, Rl'TH ..... .......... ............. .."Pat ..
Camp Fire 2, 3, +; Kappa Kappa 3; Lyceum
+; etterepeps 3; Pres. +; PY Annual Sub,cription Contest 3.
"11 lover of absolute independence."
PE TRELL, ARV I ..... ...... ..... ..... .
Radio Club 4.
"A true friend."
". 4r~/'
Page T hirty-ont
THE SPY
l'ETZKE, ALWIN EDWARD
Botany Club +; Debating Team 4.
"/11 frir11dship he is true."
.... ." :11"
POSTA, ANNA
" A quirt u11nssummg maid."
"Ann"
"Lucille"
QCIGLEY, 1ARGARET LUCILLE
Spani;h Club 3; etterepeps 3, 4; Prom Committee 3; Lyceum 4; eminar 4; SPY Annual Staff.
" ../ <u.·in11i11g <u. ay, a pleasant smile, a kindly 'U.'Ord
for all."
0
Ql' IRK, HAZEL
Camp Fire 2; Glee Club 3.
" .-1 quiet Im/ practical maid."
"llazie"
J<.Al'E:\'. LEO'.'\ARD
"Bologna"
Cla" Sec. 2; Vice Pre>. 3; Track 2; Basketball
3; Football 3, +; Jli-Y 3, +;SPY Annual Staff 3, +;
Chief Councillor +; tudent Council.
" li e is the kind of a frllov.: we want for a friend."
REBER, IIAROLD
Baseball lub 3; Radio Club +.
"Silence reigns herein."
"Reh"
REXINE , ALICE
.. .. ... ...... ... .."Rex"
Lyceum +; Setterepeps +.
"Keep that school girl romplexion."
RIZZO, LOl IS ALBERT
"Louie"
Football 2; B. A. A. K. H. . 2; Basketball 3, +;
Cheer Leader 3, +; Phonozzlers 3. +;
panish
Club 3; ec. 3; SPY Annual 3; Via to" 3.
"Like a ,-irclr nt"vrr r11ding, dors his tongue go on
/orl'ver."
"l'i"
ROBl'.'-ISON, VIOLET ...
Camp Fire 2, 3, 4; Treas. +; Basketball 2; Lyceum 3, +; Pres.+; PY Issue Staff+; Class Play
'25.
"The meeting v.:ill romr to order."
.... "I~ al"
ROLFS, V ALERJ\
Lyceum +.
"ffer air, her man11rr, all v.:ho srr, admire."
Page Thirty-two
THE SPY
ROSTKER, JO EPII ERl.El:\ .....
Botany Club +; Radio Club +.
"Onr you seldom hear."
".\lurph."
Rl'DWELL, JOHN
Track 2; Football 3.
"An industrious frllov.:."
"Rud''
S:\FTIG, LORAI'\E .
..
Setterepep' 3; Lyceum +.
"/ like a Chevrolet car."
"Lorry"
"Ellr11"
SAM OE, ELLEN
Girl Scout> 2, 3, +; Orche,tra 2, 3; A. /\. K.
H.
+; Setterepeps +.
"An ambitious and cheerful person."
SAVAGE, KENNETH
"Tom"
Student Council 2, 3, +; Football 2, 3, (K) 3;
Ba,ketball 2, 3, (K) 3; Captain +; Baseball 2, 3,
4; Baseball Club 2, 3; Hi-Y 3, 4; Var,ity Club
3, +; President 3; Secretary +; Phonozzler' 3, +;
SPY Annual taff 3, +; SPY bsue Staff+; Cla"
Secreta rv +.
"ile hath an ryr for shr that is fair."
SA WYER, Rl'SSELL.
Debating Team +.
"I knov.: my o<u•n mind."
SCHANTEK, STELLA ..
"Smile and grov.: fat."
"Stella"
"Vorry''
SCIIEU:\'EMAN, '\ORMA ........ .
Lyceum +.
"Bettrr to stay a <u·hile than lo hurry through."
':iFYl\IOt·R, GORDOC-.
"Gord"
"Jfy occupation in life zs lo bother thr girls."
SIIA W, GRACE
Glee Club 2, 3.
"Ha•ve you seen Hazel?"
"Grace''
Page Thirty-three
THE SPY
STER:'\, HELE:'\
"fl elen"
' etterepep' 2, 3, +; PY l»ue +; PY Annual
+; Lyceum League +.
"Try to ARGL'E if you can, for I can beat most
any man."
'ITRZE:'\EGGER, MARIE
..." ,lfolly"
Seminar+; Lyceum +; SPY I"ue +; PY Annu al +; Botany Club +.
"Quiet and reserved is she, a student of the first
Degree."
SC'BLISKY, JOH:\' ..... ....... .. ..
Debating Team +.
"Carefree and Happy."
"Sub"
SC'POVIT, NATHALIE ........ .
.... "/\'at"
Entered from Jordan High
chool, Lewiston
Maine; Lyceum +; Setterepeps +.
"A sweet little dame from Jlaine.''
S\'\'IFT,
FRANCIS ..
"Slow but sure."
.."Speedy"
THELEEN, ]A:\'ET ..
"Jane"
Golf Club 2; emina r 3; Student Council 3;
Sette re pep> +; Tennis Club +; Girls Reserve +.
" /V e would that all could he as independent as
she."
THOMSEN, OAGE .....
"Quiet at all times."
."Oh
Gee"
VOELZ, ELDON L ........................................ "I' o!ts"
Orchestra 2; Baseball Club 3; Radio Club +.
" In friendship lie is /rue."
VRUELS, CONRAD M.
..."Coonie"
SPY Annual +.
" He is unassuming, but oh my.''
WALDENMEYER, JULIAN ...... ... ... ........ "Julie"
Track 2, 3, 4.
"A true man at all times."
Page Thirty-four
THE SPY
. "/Jot"
WALDO, DOROTHY
(;lee C'lub 2; Sette re pep' 2, 3, +; Lyceum +.
"Jf?it and wisd ; m are horn in some."
WALTERS, MABLE
"Jf?isdom was horn in her."
... "Jlae"
WEEK , FRA:\'CIS .. ..
"Skinny"
Football 2, 3, +; (K); Track 3, +; (K); Student
Council 2, +; Va r'ity Cl uh 3, +; Ba,kethall +.
"Study 'U.'as not meant for all."
WEISS, EDWI'\'
" / love to
.. .."Eddie"
ln1se
the girls."
WEN 'ING, KATHERINE ..
Cla,s Treasurer 2; Girl Scout> 2, 3.
"An all-around girl."
"Katir"
"Rose"
\VERVE, ROSAMO:\'D ...... .
Setterepeps 3, +; Lyceum League +.
"It does not bother some whether school keeps
or not."
\VOODBtTRY , MARIO:\' .. ... .......... "Freckles"
Girl Scouts 2, 3, +; etterepeps +.
"She is lillle but oh my."
GlESECKI, ERNEST
HOFFMAN, MARGARET
SENO KI, JOHN
VINCENT, WILLIAM, JUNIOR
WATERSTRADT, JOHN
Page T liirty-five
Page Thirty-six
a
~
u
z<C
a>
<C
Page
T hirty-u~en
Page Tliirty-eiglit
Page Thirty-nine
Page Forty
THE SPY
THE 1925 SPY ANNUAL STAFF
Editor-in-chief ....................... Harry J. Pious
Faculty Advisor ............... . Jliss Dorothy Slater
Busine s :Vlanager ................... Kenneth Clark
Advertising Manager ................ Dai•id Phillips
Administration Editor ............... Leonard Rauen
Associate Editor ................... Robert Burt
Cla~s Editor ....................... Lucille Quigley
Associate Editor ............... Richard Sullivan
Activity Editor ..................... Byron Beaupre
Associate Editor ................... I oe Sweeney
"
" ................... . Stella Zielenski
Athletic Editor ........................... Ben Zeff
Associate Editor .............. /Filbert Catterton
"
"
................. U'illiam Funk
Humor Editor ...................... Conrad Vruels
A~sociate Editor ................. !Wswortlz Riel
''
''
............... . ll1ary DoherlJ'
Art Editor .......................... Philip Sander
Illustrator .................... Richard S ulfrvan
................. JI arie turzenegger
BUSI TES
STAFF
!gr. ................. I oe Rostker
" ............. Robert IVilliams
"
"
............ Dan id Lencioni
"
" .............. Russell l olz11sto11
" ................. . lack lf'hite
Staff Typist ....................... . LeRoy Langer
Ass't Advertising
"
"
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Helen Stern
Staff Bookkeeper ................... Violet Robinson
Subscription l\Ianager .................. Harry 1ll ill er
Pa:1e FJrty-tlirn
Pa9~
Forty-four
Pagf Forly·fi<t•f
THE SPY
THE SPY ISSUE STAFF
Top Rov.:: Sul!i,·an, Stern, Beaupre, Kitzrow, ~ander, ~turzenegger, Riel.
.lfiddlr Rov:: llahn, Rohimon, "'hite, Clark, Phillip,, l'<l'ta, Goodrow.
Bollom Rov:: Plou,, Ch romec, Zeff.
THE
TAFF
Editor-in-Chief ................... Frank A. Chroml'C
Asrnciate Editor ......................... . Ben Zeff
Business :\Ianager .................... Harry ]. Pious
Advertising :\Ian ager .................. Da•vid Phillips
News Editor .................... . Lillian Goodrow
Assi tan ts ......................... Byro11 Beaupre
Dorothy Hah11
Virginia Kitzrow
Literarr Editor ...................11 arie Sturzenegger
A .. i;tant .......................... . Helen Stern
Athletic~ Editor .................... . Kr11neth Sm•age
Humor Editor ....................... Ken net h Clark
Assistant ......................... Ellsworth Riel
Exchange Edi tor ...................... Harry JI filler
Facult\· Ad\·irn r ................ ..Hiss Dorothy later
Illustr~tors .......................... Philip rmder
,lJ aril' Sturzenerrrrer
Dick ulli~•a11
B11sin1ss ~ taff
Assistant Adv. :\Igr. ................... . lack Tf'hite
Assi tant Ad\'. :\Igr. ............... . Robert lf"illiams
Assistant Adv. :\lgr. ..................... Ed. imons
Bookkeeper ......................... T"iolet Robinson
Distribution ........ ..... ........... F..dith Redmond
taff T} pist ......................... LeRoy Langer
Assistant ........................... H ele11 ler11
A:~istant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A 11w1 Post a
Page Forty-six
THE SPY
LY EUl\1 LEAGUE
OFFICER'
President ....... .......... ... ... .. Violet Robinson
Vice President ................... Olive ~Ic\Villiams
Secretary ........ . ............... Dorothy Granger
Treasurer ............. .. .... . .. Frances Lansdowne
Advisor .............................. :'.\1iss Farle)
HI-Y
OFFICERS
President ... ........... . .......... Kenneth a\·age
Vice President . ............. . ..... Edward :'.\Ioeller
Secretar) .......... .. . ............ .. . 05car Ofren
Treasurer ....................... \Vilbert Catterton
Ad\'isor ............ .. ................. :\Ir. Lewi~
Page Forly-se<1en
THE SPY
PHONOZZLERS
OFFICERS
President .......................... Donald Powers
\Tice President ...................... Frank Chomec
ecretary , ............................ Harr) Plou~
Treasurer ............................ Louis Rizzo
Advi. or .............................. l\Ir. \Valter
SETTEREPEPS
OFFICERS
President .......................... Ruth Patterson
\ -ice Pre·ident ............. . ...... Dorothy Granger
ecretary ..................... .. .. Doroth) De Vol
Treasurer ............... . ........ Xorma Robinson
Advisor .................... ... ........ ~Ii ss Breen
Pag e Forty-eight
THE SPY
SEMI AR
OFFICER
President ......................... Douglas l\Iedley
Secretary ................................ Ben Zeff
Vice President ................... ~larie Sturzenegger
Treasurer ............................ Joe Rostker
Advisor ............................. Miss Doherty
JUNIOR PROM COMMITTEE
Top Row: Perkins, Mi'' Binnie, Living>ton, S>11Ji,·an.
Bottom R ow: Clark, Priddis, Burt, Anderson, Plou,, Chairman.
Page Forty-nine
THE SPY
GIRL SCOUTS
TROOP I.
Top Ro«i.::
Mi" ' ulJi,·a n, Mahan, Peter,on, Tambellini.
l\Iiddle Row:
Hay, Gross,
Bottom Rov.::
Loomi,, Sams.ie, Hannahs, Larsen, Hannahs, Holm, Mark.
eeberger, Clausen, Lester,
chmelling.
TROOP II.
Top Ro<u•: ;\nderson, Regh, llaubrich, Kollman, (,ray, l\.1agaro .
.lliddle Ro<u·:
Bottom Rov.;:
Page Fifty
am,oe, Hill, Michels, Falk, DeBerge, Grasser.
Bog,·ilo, Gozen,
1r>. Frost, :\.1ichels, Langer.
THE SPY
GLEE CLUB
Top Ro•w:
Larsen, Hannahs, Magaro, Regh, Haubrick, Goodman.
Jliddlr Rov.:: Robinson, Tambellini, Elfman, Schmidt, Mi" Cameron, Kollman, Critchlow,
Loomi-.
Bottom Ro<t~·:
Klotz,
1onticelli, Schmitt, Augustine, Elfman, Lubkowski, Magaro, Rizzo.
RADIO CLUB
OFFICERS
President ........................ \Vi!liam Vincent
Vice President .. ................... .... Ro~ :'.\1iller
Secretary & Trea:urer ................. Eldon \'oelz
Traffic :'.\Ianager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... John Herzog
Advisor .............................. :'.\Ir. \Valter
Pagr Fiftr-onr
THE SPY
\Vinners m the District Commercial Contest held
Ill
Racine, Saturday, April 18.
Reading from left t~ right they are:
Kate Neergaard-ht place Shorthand; Ann Velo -3d place Jr. Typing; Clarence Elmgreenbt place ] r. Typing; :\'orrna Scheunernann-3d place Shorthand.
These young people represented this District in the
water, aturday, }Ia) 9.
tate
onte t held m White-
THE AxxuAL Co:-.t\IERCJAL CoXTESTS of this tate in recent years have become
a very great factor in standardizing the cour>es of study of the Commercial Course offered in the High chool - of the tate. They offer a strong -timulus to the teachers
resulting in a more p·ychological presentation of their subjects, a more thorough
elimination of errors on the part of the students, a more careful checking up of the
final results obtained by the tudent-, individually and collective!), and most of all
have added zest and intere t on the part of of the students, one tu dent . aying: "I
. hould think any student would be proud and ha pp) at being chosen to repre ent her
school in the Di trict Conte:t with the chance of getting into the tate Contest."
The) make the work of the class, as a class better, for the teacher, is more alert
and more anxious to bring the classes up to the standard she has seen establi hed by
other schools participating in these contests.
The work accomplished b) the 'horthand and Typing Departments of our High
chool Commercial Department this year ha far excelled the work of an) previou
year a evidenced by the accomplishment of these young people who are only types
of almo t every other member of their clas es in their respective subjects.
( igned)
(Signed)
Page Fifty-fq.::o
Lois E.
orthway
horthand
Edyth :\I. Breen
Typing
T
I
THE SPY
REVIEW OF THE 1924 GRID SEASO
Our Football Team
FOOTBALL
KEXOSHA HIGH's gridiron repre5entation was perhaps not all that could be deired so far a the core end of the game showed, but in bringing out material for next
year, and in showing the school 5pirit and the attitude of the school toward athletics
Kenosha had a wonder searnn. Perhaps you ren~ember that for two week before the
Racine game the boys were out every night and also that for tv.·o weeks before that
game snow fell nearl) ever) day, the cold was biting, yet our boys appeared in the practice field undaunted and worked all the harder to show what Kenosha High chool's
real spirit was. The Red and Black team pulled the surprise of the year in outplaying
and outfighting, outpunting, and outpassing the Racine team. The final score was a
6-6 tie but the real victory was Kenosha's. Our team bucked up against the state
title claimers, J\,Iarinette, and gave that team the biggest scare it has received in four
years. Leading until the last few minute by a seven to six mark the gods of luck
pulled their favorite trick of smiling upon our opponents and Kenosha was defeated
on a fluke by a 12-7 score.
Page Fi/ty-fi<.•e
THE SPY
Captain Edward "K" :'.\Ioeller leads the
list as one of our most versatile linemen.
Eddie won the American Legion ~\Iedal for
the most valuable man on the team. He
has played tackle and guard on the fir t
team for three years and has established
himself a one of k. H. S.'s leading athletes.
D
Captain-elect Rudolph "K" Pe n z a
played tackle and fullback. Rudy filled the
bill wherever he was and many an opponent
can bear out this statement. "Lil Eva," as
he is affectionately called br his team mates,
is a valuable man for hi steady going, firm
manner in all he undertakes.
D
Captains
Edward
foeller
Rudolph Penza
chulyer " k)" "K" Hannon pla) ed quarterback on last year's team. Tho e who
saw him in action will always remember him as a flashy consistent ground gainer and
a true, efficient general.
D
Floyd "K" \Valenciak played his first 'ear in fast com pan) at half back, and
he filled the bill like a veteran. Floyd will be a tower of strength on next year 's team.
D
Sam "K" Raksany occupied the pos1t1on of end in a way that made him known
wherever he was seen in action.
am was undoubtedly one of the best punter in the
state; in all the eight cheduled games his reliable boot has not met a superior.
D
Frank "K" Chromec played a very consistent game at right guard. This stocky
young man made a ferocious appearance in the last part of the season due to a "black
eye," received in the Beloit game, which undoubtedly made his work more effective
in "knockin' 'em down and draggin' 'em out."
D
Ben "K" Zeff, one of the smallest men on the squad, proved himself worthy of
a berth on the team by his spectacular tackling. His specialt) was "nailing" men
who broke through the line. :\Iany runners can testify to the dead tackling of our
diminutive quarterback.
D
Elwyn "K" Zacke playing at center made a name for himself which will not
soon be forgotten. " ock" was a tower of strength on the offensive and defen ive,
and it was his touchdown on an intercepted pass which gave 1arinette, tate champions for four years, the biggest care they received in many a season.
Page Fifty-six
THE SPY
\Vilbert "K'' Catterton at end and quarterback distinguished himself for his
coolness and ever scrapping courage in time of action. \Vill wa - al" ays on the go,
pepping things up and encouraging his mates.
D
John "K" Dicks, too much cannot be said of our "pocket edition" fullback. This
little load of 1-1-0 pounds of fight didn't kno\\ \\hat stop meant. Altho a little man
he made big teams look small.
D
:\Lorton "K" Pine pla) ed end last ) ear, and his hanhrnrking stead} pla} ing
''as one of the high lights of the season. ":\Iort'' graduated in Februar}, but he'll
not be forgotten soon.
D
Oscar "K" Olsen at guard was a bulwark of defense on our team.
know what "quit" meant, as many opponents can te tif}.
Oscar didn't
D
Leo "K" Porwaniecki \ms one of our most versatile linemen. His good natured
face was a to,ver of mental strength during our games until an unfortunate injury
in the l\Iadison game forced him to retire.
D
Frank "K" Curtiss. this lank} half back, made himself famous for his con ·istent
playing on both offense and defense. ''Jack", ns he is called by his friends, was m' incible on backing up on the line, and he was ''greased lightning" with the ball.
D
\Villiam "K" Funk "as another first year player who made the team at end.
"Bill" was right there on 'pearing fonrnrd pa:.-ses and his specialty was tackling
halfbacks.
D
Edwin "K" Berg took care of the business end as 'tudent l\Ianager.
was an efficient, careful manager.
" tep on it, kid!"
"Eddie"
Page Fifty-seven
THE SPY
OUR 1924-25 BASKET BALL TEAM
KENO HA HIGH's basketball sea>on was one of heartbreaking ill luck. Coach McCaw was
forced to start the season with e\·ery former basketball player ineligible, and had to mold an
entirely green Mjuad into '>hape. In spite of old man Jink our coach worked a team together
that forced Racine to the limit to win an O\ ertime game, and our boys played agaimt seasoned
veterans.
The students who attend all the games could mark the improvement shown hy the players.
By the middle of the season all the opponents of Kenosha could easily expect a battle when
they faced the Red and Black. The feature of the 192+-25 season wa' the game with Racine
at Keno>ha. Two weeks before Racine had crushed Kenosha by an avalanche of baskets in
Racine to the tune of 29-12. The second game at Kenosha found Kenosha the under dog,
hut fighting fiercely for revenge. It was one of tho,e bea rt-rending, nerve-racking game"
which first saw Kenosha leading, and then Racine. All the players were on edge and gi,·ing
every ounce of strength to turn the tide of victory in their favor. The crowd responded
frantically to the good fea1' of the players and when the whistle blew at the end showing a
tie, the spectators literally raised the roof. In a brilliant O\•enime period Keno,ha scored one
free throw and the Lake Shore rivab, two free throws and a ba,ket. It was the >Ort of game
that will liYe forever in the heart> of every loyal Kenosha fan. It was somewhat a repetition
of the Battle of the Marne. The Kenoshans, overwhelmed lw a stronger and more formidable
opponent, rallied to the Kenosha banners and checked the onslaught of the enemy. The game
was a fitting end for a mediocre season and left in the minds of the supporters a good opinion
of the team and a wonderful outlook for next year. For next year Kenosha has unbounded
dreams of success, and with every man from this year"s team back, we can readily see that
success is inevitable. Coach McCaw and Captain-elect Rudy Penza have an optimistic outlook
and are sure that Kenosha will be represented at the district as well as at the State
Tournament.
Page Fifty-eight
THE SPY
BASKETBALL TEAM
Captain Clayton "K" Binninger pla} ing at center in spite of his handicap in being short found very few superiors at the tip-off. Clayton is a fighting player who
ne\'er says die.
D
Captain-elect Rudy '' K" Penza gu:ird. Rudolph is undoubtedly one of the
Rudy is in a class with "Big Foot"
most versatile athletes K. H. S. can boast of.
:\Iuhlick as both are the onl} players that played four year- on a football team
and three on a basketball team.
D
Donald ''K" Yule. Don, although young and light, was a flashy Ii tie forward
and a consistent scorer ior the Red and Black. Don makes just one half of the
"fll!htin' Yule" combination.
D
Gordon "K" Yule at center was a formidablr player for an} team the K. H.
basketeers stacked up against. He is the other half of the '·fightin' Yule."
D
\Vilbert "K" Catterton pla} ing a consistent game at guard is famous for hi hard working characteristics in e\ erything he undertakes. "\\'ill" was made Captain of
the all-city mythical team in the past season tournament for southern \Visconsin.
D
Elwyn "K" Zacke played guard, and rarely it was that a man got by him.
Elwyn made an admirably apt mate for Rudy Penza and between the two-well, if
you saw any games. you know the rest.
D
George ·'K" Kolar was the smallest bunch of player on the team. George
made a great impres -ion by his elusi\'e qualities and his ure-fire basket shooting at
forward. George is only a ophomore, too,
D
Robert "K" Genske, another of our tiny players, played guard and forward
equally well. "Bob" is also a 'ophomore and has two year yet to show his wares.
D
Kenneth "K" Clark was
like manner.
tudent l\Ianager and held up his end in a truly business
Page Fifty-nine
THE SPY
1925 TRACK
192+ TRACK TEA:\I
THE 1925 Track season showed a marked increase of abilit\' and interest on the
part of tudents of K. H. . over any previous year. There \~ere more meets this
year as a comparison of schedules will show, and the Annual Cross Country run wa
again the feature of the pre-season interest in track. This was a three miles cro s
country affair over a course filled with hazards of the approved type. Cups were
awarded to John Dicks, Francis \Vee ks, and Peter Presta, who finished in the order
named.
Keno ha was represented by a relay team this year. The men ran a half mile
each. The te1m was composed of Francis Weeks, Frank Curtis, tanley Iwaskewicz,
Ben Zeff.
The constellation of this ) ear's team is compo. ed of the follov,,·ing stars: Captain
Eddie :\Ioeller, weight man with the discs, javelin, and shotput. Francis Weeks, distance runner and holder of the school mile record, can make a good account of himself
in any race from the ++O yard dash to the three mile run; Frank Curti , another distance man who eats up the miles; Ben Zeff, a third year man, whose specialty is the
half mile; Stanle) I waskewicz, a new di ' tance man; Peter Presta, another distance
man; Julian \Valdenmeyer, Henry Mills, Errol Evans, and James Livingston, dashmen and hurdlers; Earl Erdman, high jumper and pole vault. The business end of the
Spring Athletics was taken care of by George Perkins, Student Manager.
Track is undoubtedly the most strenuous port in K. H. S. To workout every
night, rain or shine, and to have a short season without a home meet so that the school
can see what the team is doing shows a very commendable school spirit on the part
of the track ~quad.
Page Sixty
THE SPY
SPRING ATHLETICS
KE:--.OSHA HIGH SCHOOL started it · 1925
pnng season with a vim that
spoke well for its athletic spirit. The track call was answered by two score thinly
clads, while the spring football squad was composed of about thirty aspirants for
positions on our 1925 football te:11n.
Tennis was inaugurated this year by having both girls and boys organize tennis
clubs, and a team of boys under the leadership of Fred Rode with matches scheduled
at Shorewood, Racine, Cudah) and \Vaukegan, practiced hard e\'er~ night on the
courts at Lincoln Park.
Golf, with :\Ir. \Va rd as its sponsor. met \\ ith an enthusiastic response on the
part of the boys interested in that sport. Kenm:lia held meets with Racine and Bay
View and entered the tate meet at Racine.
Football this year showed a :rroup of enthusiasts that made it advisable to
lengthen the spring ~eason from t\\·o \\·eeks to fiYe. The material that has exhibited itself thus far this ~ear has pro\·ed to be of championship calibre and Coach
~IcC'aw and Rudy Penza are looking forward to a banner season as only a few
letter men ha\'e graduated and the bulk of the team will be back.
D
Curtis -(lecturing on football team)
D
D
Heard on the
ideline
"And if you will heed my words and
follow my steps you will be a man
among men."
"The American football team 1s well
named."
Ultra ~Iodern Young Brother-''But
I want to be a man among women."
''First the team kicks, then the umpire kicks, and then the crowd kicks."
"Howzat ?"
Page Sixty-one
THE SPY
OUR COACH
~TE HAVE as
a member of
o u r faculty a
man who holds
a very high
place in the esteem oft he
tudent b o d y.
Hi name i
William
G e o r g e l\lcCaw, but to us
he is ' Bud. "
"Bud" came to
us two years
ago and took hold of the athletic
rein with hi characteristic energy and integrity and began to
mold a football team worthy to
bear the colors of Kenosha
High School.
In spite of many difficultie~,
green material, injuries, and ineligibility, "Bud'' succeeded in
forming an eleven which was
feared throughout the state. His
ba ketball team was another example of his ability here. "Old
.:\1an Jinx" still camped on the
team trail but .:\1cCaw gave us
a team which surprised everybody.
Pagt Sixty-/<u;o
For track he
developed a
number of
stars who
made names
for themselves
and for K. H .
., on the cinder-path and
field. His second regime began rather auspiciously with
the defeat of a
team of alumni veterans by a score of 12-0.
Aside from developing team
and making Kenosha's name
known on athletic records,
"Bud'' has created there an impression which has developed
almost into hero worship. His
companionship with the boys as
man to man ha done more for
them than any team work could
possibly do. His influence has
been of the be t, and many boys
are better for it. We hope that
our coach spends many years
here with us, and we know that
he will always give the best in
him to us. And we sav, "Nine
rahs and a tiger for- 'Bud 1V1cCaw.'"
HUMO~
•
THE SPY
This particular old gentleman once m~nt into the Post Office,
asked the clerk for a ,heet of red two cent stamps, pointed out the
one in the \·eq center and said, "Please give me that cute stamp."
D
D
D
Guerdon 111.-''Going out for the class play?"
Tom JI.-" 'ure."
Guerdo11-"Had anv e\.perience ?"
Tom-'' ure. had rn"r hand in a cast once."
D
D
D
Old Jlcn-" on, can you direct me to a bank?"
Kid-"Yessir, for a quarter."
Old Jla11-"lsn't that mighty high pa)?"
Kid-"~ot for a bank director, mister."
D
D
D
!11 Cross ff'ord Puzzle Land
Eom and eras in this clime
Of endle:'s leisure measure time:
Distance is reckoned b,· the ell
Across and up and do~vn as well;
Amid the fauna roaming round
Emus and elands most abound;
The flora too, is \nird and cryptic\Vild upa tree and eucalyptic;
The best known river here is Po,
:\lonosdlable in its flow.
The g~d most revered is Ra,
The parent chiefly honored, Pa;
\Va is the language most!) spoken
(Indo-Chine~e but badly broken).
The native~, notable go-getters,
Engage in hunting missing letters;
o even· man you n.eet there carries
Two, three, or four great dictionaries,
Bowed 'neath which fearful weight he gropes
Groaning, but still buoyed up b) hopesThe lexicon true puzzlers hail
Contains all other words but fail.
Keith Preston
Page Sixty-{i'l:r
THE SPY
~Al
Page Sixty-1ix
tmN£
THE SPY
The other day I met a pup
He sure!\' did look sad.
For a little stump of tail
\Vas all that he had.
I sez to him I sez sez I
"\Vhat can the trouble be?
And he looked up, so sweetly
And told this tale to me:
"I'm down and out, and sick of life
I don't know what to do.
\Vhenever I try to wag my tail,
I find, 'Tis an act
I can't pursue."
D
D
D
I've witnessed an obdurate :Mah Jong fan
Succumb to a crossword puzzler.
I've seen an inexperienced drinking man
Reduced to a bay rum guzzler.
I've cheered while treacherous miles of sea
\Vere spanned by blimp's propeller,
But here's to the phenom of the century;
The Thesaurus is now a best-seller!
I've listened to radio addicts get
Some noises they claimed were music,
I've heard a most elegant five-tube set
Belch sounds that ~vould render a gnu sick,
I've lived in this age of mechanical joys
That once were deemed fictionary
But little I dreamed I would see my boys
Fight for the dictionary!
D
D
D
Cantilever
I tood on the bridge at midnight
And I sang that good old song,
"I tood on the bridge at Midnight,"
But I didn't stand there long.
I stood on the bridge at midnight,
While a steamer whistle blew,
And the bridge where I stood at midnight
Divided and let me through.
D
D
D
Epoch, era, aeon, age;
Temper, anger, ire and rage;
Do-re-mi and fa-so-la;
Egyptian sun god-Ra! Ra! Ra!
Pagr Si:r:ty-uq•rn
THE SPY
Page S ixty-eight
THE SPY
Krazy Kracks
Give me a . entence with the word:
1.
escalator
"l\1} girl forgot to phone me so I'll e~calato r."
2.
Schenectady
"~I} radio is dis- chenectady said."
3.
Sahara
"It's ahara wing experience."
4.
trousseau
"He trousseau much bull I couldn't believe him."
5.
sincerely
"I've had a toothache sincerely this morning."
6.
metaphor
" ' he had a lot of money-that'· what 1 metaphor!"
7.
superficial
"Toda}' Friday, ::\like, so I gue. s superficial do."
8.
disguise
"Disguise been after me all day!"
9.
flotilla
"I got along fine with flotilla 'nother fella cut me out!"
0
0
0
First A id to Crossu•ord Fans
A kind of over shoe worn by flapper -goulash.
An adjecti\·e w.;ed to describe a man who drinks con. tantly-mvertebrate.
A tube leading from the middle ear to the throat-crustacean.
Vaccination to prevent disease-intoxication.
The . peed at which an object travels-velocipede.
An implement for tirring a fire-ochre.
A devil fish-octagon.
A drinking vessel-calaboose.
Odd or strange-bazaar.
A hon•e with a low, curved back-zwieback.
A male flirt-mashie.
A small absces - on the eye-stymie.
A writ requiring a perrnn to refrain from doing a certain thing-conjunction.
A young cow-zephyr.
A union of three-dryad.
0
0
0
Dick chmitt-"Did \OU know the new postal laws prohibit the :-ending of love
letters in the mails.''
'Bitts" Burns-"~o. wh\ ?"
Dick chmitt-"To prot~ct the lJ. '.males they tell me!"
Page Sixty-nine
THE SPY
The conjurer stepped forward to the front of the tage and said: "Ladie- and
Gentlemen, if there is an) young man in the audience who would like to know the
name of hi- future wife, will that young man kindly stand up. I will undertake to
inform him."
Up jumped a young man.
"Thank you," said the conjuror.
• ow I alway like to do business is a proper
business fashion. \Viii you kindly tell me ) our name?"
"Certainly," said the young man. '' :\I) name is Jame· Jackson."
"Thank you again," ~aid the conjuror. "Then the name of your future wife will
be l\Irs. Jackson."
D
D
D
Lucille ./.-''Your mouth is open."
Eddie 1ll.-"I know it; I opened it.
D
D
D
''\Vhat would you rather loose, \·our moner or rour life?"
":\le loife; I'n~ saving me mone) for me oid age."
D
D
D
\Villie, aged 5, had been taken to a football game by hi father.
That night. as he knelt at her ·ide, hi. mother was horrified to hear this prayer:
''God bless papa! God ble:· mama! God bless \Villie ! Rah! Rah! Rah!"
D
D
D
"Yes, Daniel, a per-on who lives on vegetables i-; a vegetarian, but a man who
live· on meat is not a meteorologist.
D
D
D
H elen-"I was at a :ymphony concert last night, and heard the fish symphony."
Cornelia-"You rriean the fifth symphony don't you?"
H elen-"N o, this one wa: full of cale~."
D
D
D
T'incrnt B.-It took me fi,·e \\-eek- to learn to ride a horse."
Don P.-"And ,,·hat did you get for your pains?"
T'incl'llt B.-"Liniment."
D
D
D
ludge-'"The decision of the Court is that you be entenced to life impri onment.
Ha,·e you any request to make?"
Condi mned-"Yeh, Can't you knock off the month I have already been in jail?"
D
D
D
Dorothy lf"aldo-"I sing a little to kill time."
Oliv.•e J/agaro-"\Vell, you certainly haYe a deadly weapon."
D
D
D
BarneJ-"\\'hat did you do last :ummer ?"
Oscar H.-"I worked for m\ father."
Barney-''\ Yell. I di<ln 't do. an) thing either."
Page Se'l.•enly
THE SPY
Perhaps not all , tudents who are struggling with the "Commentari('~ of 'aesar"
are aware that the econd Book contains a love ston.
It reads: "Caesar comes to a river and proposes tc; Bridget."
D
D
D
Leonard Rauen-"\Vise people hesitate. On!) fools are certain."
Dick ullh•an-"Are you sure of that?"
Leonard-"Absolutel} certain."
D
D
D
Casi111er S -"See that guy over there. That's Ed :\Iocllcr, captain of the foot
ball team."
lanatha P.-"Ho, yes."
Casimir S.-"See that pencil m his hand."
lanatha P.-Yes, I see."
Casimir S.-"\Vell he sharpened that with my knife."
D
D
D
Conrad Vreuls-"I have just received five dollars for In} late~t joke~."
Harry Plous-"\Vho from?"
Conrad Vreuls-"The express compan). The.v lost them."
D
0
D
Bell II op-" Did you ring, Sor?"
Guest-" ·o, I wa tolling. I thought you were dead."
D
D
D
Leona L.-"How dare \Ou kiss me?"
Georgi P.-"That's all ~ight. I ate a box of paint when I wa young."
D
D
D
Jliss 1l1. Schultz-"Did you ever hand in your outline of Kelley?"
0
0
0
ll-1iss Reid-''\Vhy ,were so many gentlemen of the ixteenth century po-ed with
one hand reaching in, ide of the lapel of their coat '"
Eldon Vocltz-"They're after their fountain pen~.''
D 0
D
,lfiss Bisbee-"\Vhat i the principal part of
speech?"
Rusu! .-"The tongue."
D
0
D
Sanders-''Ever have any experience m art
work?"
u·eeney-"Ye , I wa janitor in the Field
~Iuseum.
0
0
0
A poor iello\\· who-e hou e wa- i a ed m a
'-'OU thern malarial di trict wa a- ·ed he que ion,
"b life "·or h li,·ing ?"
Hi. an,wer wa
by a damp e. "
0
0
0
Dick wa · alm :t dro\\'fled la~ ni!!h .
". •o ! How is he? How did it 1. ppen ?'
"The pillo" ~lipped. the bed ;;pre. d. nd he di in o ·he ,
in_.
p _,
THE SPY
S"~R -
RAt-4. 1 \
01.i 111y 11 E.. : .. -
1'A""tl:R CT 'FIL\VS
51c 'EM
Page Seventy-two
THE SPY
Cross lf'ord Li111tricks
A girl not so tall, but quite ...... ( 1)
\Vas a terrible shock to her ...... ( 2)
\Vhen she \\'ent down the ...... ( 3)
If a fellow she'd ...... ( +)
She'd wink-and then run like old ...... C)
I. ) non} m for skinny.
2. Relatives.
\Vhat will keep you out of heaven.
3.
imilar to a\·enue.
+. To encounter.
A ...... ( 1) man who had a S\\'ell manner
...... (2) on a rejected bannanner;
The ...... ( 3) that he said
As he ...... ( +) on his head
\Vouldn't do for a ...... ( 5) school banner.
+.
l. ot old. 2. An involuntar} slide. 3. \Vhat the dictionary is full of.
The way a
candle is when it is burning. - The <la) between 'aturday and :\Ionday.
A poet went out in the ...... ( 1)
To gather some flowers and ...... ( 2)
As he stooped o'er to ...... (3)
A wasp cried: "\Vhat ...... ! ( +)
I 'Ce a ti rst-class place to ...... " ( - )
1. The time of }ear a young man's fanq light!) turns to the thought · of love. 2. \Vhat
some neighbor thinks she can do. 3. To pick, as feathers from a chicken. +. The
most popular lad) in the ,,·o rld. 5. To pierce, '' ith a sharp pain.
Said a fellow, a handsome young ...... ( l)
"Let us kiss 'neath the maple tree's ...... (2)
Said the girl: "Don't you ...... ( 3)
Or you '11 get a black ...... !" ( +)
And that's why she died an old ...... ( - )
1. Part of a knife. 2. \Vhat you hunt in the summer time. 3. To make an effort.
What people use to wink "ith. 5. \Vhat fellows spend mone} on.
0
0
+.
0
Blue eyes mean you're true;
Gra} eyes mean }ou're gracious
But black e}e> mean you're blue
In several other places.
Page SN•rnty-three
THE SPY
rrgeant 1llodler (In Camp)-"O,car, did you ever drive a donkey, back on
the farm.
Oscar Olsen-"Ye . ir!"
Jloeller-"\Vhat did mu say to him " ·hen you \\·anted him to go ahead?''
Oscar Olsen-"Get up!"
ill oeller-"All right.
quad, forward march! 01 en, Get up!"
D
D
D
"That rouge certainly look. natural. I thought for a long time that it ''"as really
rour skin.''
.
"\Veil, it's the next thing to it."
D
D
D
Edimrd ,Jl/e11-''\Vell, I ans,,·ered a question in clas · today."
Dominick-"\Vhat an:\\·er did you gire ?"
Edward Allen-"Present."
D
D
D
Frances-"\Vhat do the cannibal. do \Yi th the heads of their victims?''
John-"Probabl) make noodle soup."
D
D
D
Jliss Doherty-"\Villiam, what do ) ou know about nitrates?"
Tl'illiam-''I don't know much about them, e:-.:cept that the) are cheaper than <la)
rates. "
D
D
D
D
D
D
"Play golf?"
"Yes."
"\Vhere at?"
"On the hnx of cour~e."
Father-"\Vell son, how did you get along at school today?"
Louis R.-"~h physiology book . ays that the conver~ation at meals should be of
a plea·ant character: Let's talk about something ehe."
D
D
D
"\Villie," asked the teacher, ""hat was it that ir \Valter Raleigh aid when
he placed his cloak on the muddy road for the beautiful queen to walk on?"
\Villie, the ultra modern, gazed about the classroom in disma), and then, taking
a long chance, replied:
" tep on it, kid!"
D
D
D
.lliss Holalt-"\Vhat is meant b, Pax in Bello?"
Ellsu.orth Ricl-"Free from ind(gestion."
Page Srvrnty-four
THE SPY
"Friday's fi h day again," said the co-ed as she hung up the receiver after
had telephoned asking a date for the day after Thur.da).
D
D
rchie
D
Professor (to class in surgery )-"The right leg as you see, is shorter than the
left, in consequence of which he limps. .. O\\ what \\Ould you do in a case like that?"
Bright Student-" Limp too!"
D
D
D
\Vhere doe· the hole go when you take your finger out of the water?"
The same place the white goes when the snO\v melts.
D
D
D
"Don't you like dri\'ing in the country."
");o ! I can drive for hours without hitting anything."
D
D
D
]udge-"Guilt) or not guilty?"
Rastus-"N ot guilty, suh."
ludge-"Ha\'e you ever been in jail?"
Rastus-"1 ·or, uh, ah never told nuthin' befo'."
JI other-" Late nighL are bad for one."
Fforence Jl!.-''Ye , but they are well for two."
0
[l
c
Doc.-'' I ha\'e ju t di CO\ ered a new di ea e."
Patient-"Call it Xz\CJgria."
Doc.-''\\-h\· ?"
.
Patient-.. ~~ that it'' ill fit my new cro -word puzl'le.'
u
L:
0
L. .-"I'm doing In\ be t to gtt ahead."
.Hiss. ·orthuaJ-"Y°ou cer ainl} need one."
0
c
0
. mong- he man} hing "e canno under and are: \\'om ·11, • ond-hand
and er -\\ ord puz:rl .
econd-hand car are all righ a far a tl1e} go.
I in' so much "ha a man and for a "ha h "ill fall for.
ar ,
THE
FRE~HMEH
5UBC:
DO L.tKt:
Pl E.
Page Seventy-six
THE SPY
The blank in each case is a word of four letters and the same four letters spell
each "·ord:
Londlord, 1111 the flowing ..... .
Until the ...... run over
And we will ...... upon the
ntil "e ...... to Dover
D
D
D
dggriei•ed Person (A cross-word puzzle fan)-That girl in there carries a joke
too far. I goes in and ~a) s jovial like: "I want a drop of liquid refreshments in four
letters," and lumme, ~he brings me a glass of milk.
-London !!11111orist
D
D
D
!/'here ls He?
\Vhat's become of the fellow "ho used to cheat himself at olitaire? Still up to
his old tricks. He' . blackening in the crossword puzzle squares he can't fill with the
right letters.
D
0
D
It is rumored that several prominent Congre,;smen have discontinued reading the
Congres ional Record because it does not print crossword puzzles.
D
D
D
First Lady-You ·rotund, decangular, eolithic, ferruginous, ?\ europathic cassowary, you!
econd Ladr-An' ,,·mild rn Ii -en to the langwidge of 'er since she\ been <loin'
cro:sword puzzl~~ !
.
0
D
D
The moving finger write. and, ha,·ing, writ, move-. on to another place 111 the
cros. word puzzles.
D
0
D
:\lany a true word ha. been spoken between fa! ·e teeth.
D
D
0
Iather-''\Vhat' the matter. "On?"
011-"l 'm trying to write the \rnrd 'will' but I can't
find the other '!'."
c
0
0
.11 i.s .1 ndreu •-"\Vhat is the binomial theorem?"
G enl'f"in:e 'ab111-( \\' earih-) "I pa
.lliss .J ndreu -"You're n;i,taken. You flunk."
::J
D
0
.lliss Lr,w (in American Hi tory cla )-". 'ame an i land po.,,e
United ~tate .. "
ll'allare ].-"Huh? \Vhy a .. "
.l/ i s Lr,w-"Correct. ''
11111
of the
Pa9P SPvP11ly-srvn1
THE SPY
THE EDITOR of the 1925 SPY ANN AL
wi ihe to take this opportunity to express hi
appreciation to the following people for their
kind assistance in making this, our 192" Year
Book, a succe . For the beautiful view of the
immons Library we are indebted to ~Ir. W.
D. Sydney. To the Jahn and Olli er Engraving Company of Chicago and to the Fowle
Printing Company of ~1ilwaukee, we are indebted for the splendid co-operation they
have given us in the compilation of the book.
We are especially grateful to the business
men of our city whose willing respon e to our
advertising olicitors ha made thi book a
possibility. Let us how them our appreciation by giving them our undivided patronage
whenever the opportunity presents it elf.
Page Seve11/y-eighl
Copyright 1925
The House of K.uppenheimer
\VE HA VE THE CLOTHES WIT'H
THE KEEN, CLEAN LINES
Not one or two-but a rich variety of handsome fabrics; of the new, lively hues-of the crisp youthful
models that young men want.
\Vide sloping shoulders; smooth slim hips;
straight, funnel trousers - Kuppenheimer
tailoring translates these features into
"An 1117.·estment in GfJod Appearance"
You <1.1:ill he drlighted v.:ith our assortment of moderatrly priced Suits
$30 to $40 With Two Trouser
ISERMANN BROS.
21-t-216 ::\IARKET QlJARE
-the housi of Kuppe11hci111er good clot/11 s
P11gr Eighty-01u
H 1GHLYS
ATIS FACTORY
THE
universal opinion expressed by the graduates of
the June class 1925, whom
we have just photographed.
You may feel assured of the
same feeling of satisfaction
should we have the pleasure
of serving you.
Page Eighty-two
JOHN MADAR
&SO
Quality 11-lerchandise
at Lowest Prices
( :\ orth
ide Cl othier> )
Phone 775
113 Milwaukee A'·e.,
DRINK
IN BOTTLES
KENOSHA COCA-COLA BOTTLI~G CO.
Telephone 3273
307 Elizabeth St.
IF
You Are Walking in the Right Direction You
lf7ill Beat an A utoniobile on the Wrong Road.
Tho e who are enjoying the good
things of life today stuck to the right
road.
They owe their comfort to not spending all they made.
They laid their foundation in a Bank
Account. You can do the same.
Our Bank \Yelcomes You
UNITED STATE
NATIO'.\AL BAl\"K OF KEi\0 HA
KE:\OSH \, \VI CO:\SIX
['11der J1Jperct•isio11 oj the ['. S. GN•rrnment
Page Ei11hty-thru
IDqr 111irat Natinual ~auk
of
iKrnn.aqa, 11l1Iisrnn.attt
Established 1852
··< ) 1 - - - - 1 9 ..
Capital, Surplus and Profits
$950,000.00
Deposits
$I I,480,000.00
DIRECTORS
C. C. Allen
C. \V.• -ash
A.H. Lance
Clark . Judd
J. T. Wilson
Chas. H. Pfennig
Chas. C. Brown
OFFICERS
Chas. C. Brown, Presid<'ni
C. C. Allen, Vice-President
~I. G. Boerner, Cashier
Jos. Funck, T' ice-President
J. \V. Blair, Asst. Cashier
\V. H. Purnell, T'ice-President
Bruce Eastman, Asst. Cashier
Page Eighty-/011r
Expert Shoe Repairing
Say It
PAUL HAUBRI H
SHOE SHOP
All Cut Flowers and Blooming Plant>
are grown in our own greenhouses
\Vith Obertin's Flowers for
P. \Y.
BERTINS,
Kenosha's Leading Florist
Phone 70+
159 .Market St.
Phone .+68
360 Park Ave.
IDqnn, A. ~ulliuan
Two
tores
" TYLE PLrS QUALITY"
111 erchandise
311 MAIN
519-521 HOWLA~D AVE~GE
TREET
PABST BROS.
GARAGE
THE BE T EQ IPPED GARAGE IN THE CITY
223
OUTII RIDGE
TREET
TELEPllO:-JE 586
Page Eighly-five
ORTH SIDE
BARGAIN STORE
Solid Leather Footwear
in all grades
That's All
High in Quality
Low in Price
\Vhen in i\eed of I\1erchandise
Give Cs a Call
F. GO ERNDT
Cor.
29 ~. ~Iain St.
heridan Road and Broad Street
Luick Ice Cream
\Vhitman's Candies
1Krahwrll 1llrug illnmpauy
THE ~IOST
219 ~Iain
P-TO-DATE DR G
TORE I
treet
THE CITY
Telephone 13
We want you to make
GOTTLIEB'S
your Shopping Home
We want yo u to fee l th at this is yo ur store and we
wa nt to feel th at w henever yo u thi nk of Pe rsonal
dppare l, D ry Goods or Goods for the Home yo u
w ill th ink instantly of-
Page Eighty-six
ONEY will not bu y a more co mfortable
M m a ttr es s than th e Simmons Purple
Label. Y et long life makes its daily cost
surprisingly low, only two or three cents.
Between two deep cushions of new curled
hair, 810 sensitive small springs, in separate
fabric pockets, form a base of wonderful
buoyancy. These coils meet every curve of
your body, coaxing weary nerves and muscles to relax and rest. Automatic ventilation keeps the mattress fresh and sweet.
If you want luxurious comfort and lasting
economy, ask your merchant to show vou
or secu;e for you a Purple Label mattr~ss.
18IO Pre111itr wire Jpri11g1 m
J£parate pocket1 JUpport et'ET)'
rurr;e if your bod)' luxuriou1f;· .
T wodaplaynifhigh-gradt,
new c.irled hair art liand-/111,;
1md ha11d-111fted top 1111d bollom .
l t1 pofect, 1111to11111tir 'zte11t:la11011 keep1 the P 11rplc Lab£•
ah1Jt1yfrt'Jl1 a11d1weet a11d clean .
Fabric pocketJ c111 away J/iow
cot! Jpri11gi if P re111ier wire.
Si do , md1, top 1111d boll om
h11r•t Jtllltf co111true/1011. Ca11r•a1 ba1e preve11t1 Jtretd1i11g.
F inn i 1111,/ 111011 durable
cor;er. T iu 1111prri11/ roll edge
dreun the bed udu11 111ade up.
2
3
4
S
6
§liMMON§
UJdJ J/1,a;IJJLJJH c:fp.riJJgJ:c13uil{forcf/pppand BEDROOM FURNITURE
R••ur1111ou
findtlti11 laO-lon
tltr•IHJ1 'flU.iJJmn t uou bv11
Page E igh ty-1eq•n1
Dollars
to Have More
Cents, at
KUBE C'S
18 Years in Our Present Location
R ight Weig/it - Right Quality
Right Prices
Sterling Value
at
B BIEN's P HAR~I ACY
Remarkabl) Low Prices
S. S. Bubien, R. Ph. G. Prop.
r
PRESCRIPTIO'.\'S
Drugs,
Ca ndies,
Ice
Cream,
Fi lms,
Statio nery, Schoo l Supp lie,, Etc.
Your Druggist l s ,1 /ore Than A
J! Prcliant-Try lf im
First
LEVITANS
Creator; of
Ladies' JI' earing d pparel
67 .N. ~I ai n ' t.
Page E igh ty-eight
Ph one -+308
537 M idd le St.
Pho ne 4955
Lo,.u.·er the cost
The Safe Jf7ay to Better
of
JI ea! I lz
dressing 'irell
u'/1rn you drink our milk you u·ill
by 'u:earing
l[ain it.
Kirsrlzbaum Clothes
:\IO:\TL\IL RRO BROS.
~rrrning· B
DAIRY
Qtlotl1rn
For Purr, Clean Safe
~!ilk
§f1oµ
Phone 3100\\'
Sr :\Iarket
t.
553 HO\VLA DAVE.
SoLAR
LAMPS
"Slzo'l.t' the If/ ay"
ON
~10ST
HIGH GRADE AUT01\10BILES
.Jlade by
C. 1\1. HALL LA:\ lP CO.
KENO HA, \VI .
Page Eighty-nine
Three Great Plants,,...,
7,000 Nash Workmen
It is difficult for one who has never
vi ited ~ash Motors to appreciate
the magnitude of its vast factories
from whose doors hundreds of thousands of motor cars have is ued
since the formation of the company
nine years ago.
Today, more than 2,894,365 square
feet of floor space in three huge
plants located in Kenosha and Iilwaukee are occupied by the various
departments.
One hundred seventy-one acres of
ground are devoted to the production of Nash Special and Advanced
Six models.
And a great army of 7,000 highly
killed workmen ~re carried on the
Nash payroll.
The equipment of these factories is
as fine as can be found in the industry. At the Kenosha plant alone
there are more than 2,200 different
types of productive machine .
But even these vast facilities are
taxed by the mounting public demand for the Special Six and Advanced Six.
And Nash has recently concluded
further factory extensions which
add 254,236 square feet of floor space
and $1,500,000 worth of new plant
machinery of the most modern and
advanced character.
With these great resources of men,
money and machinery, Na h today
ranks as one of the finest equipped
and most pmverfully manned organizations in the automobile industry.
The Nash Motors Company
Kenosha, Wisconsin
Pag e Ninety
(1 781)
PHONE 1985
Pictures Framed at
Jrlttrr Jturttiturr
& ilrhhtttg ~torr
PITT'S PAINT STORES
3 Stores
225 PARK ST. 520 IIOWLA~D AVE.
Phone 1+
Phone 250
The Store Unique
969-71 Elizabeth
KE~O
722 MIDDLE ST.
Phone +552
treet
II!\, WIS.
HAVE YOU A VICTROLA?
Victrola prices range from $15 and up
Our Term Are Convenient
A. J. SCHNEIDER MUSIC CO.
306 :\IAL '
T.
The Ideal Place to Shop for !Vall Paper,
TFindmc: Shades, Paints, Etc.
A rt ~Y eedl e TF ork a Specialty
Telephone 6p
260 ),fain Street
Pagr Xi11rty-011e
Cleaning, Pre"ing and Repairing
£,·entually
Ab,olute
you "ill deal with the
BAI~
Guaranteed
Ha,·e your clothe, made to order by
JE'\S T. THORSE~
HARD\V ARE CO.
,\ orth of First \ atio11al B1111k
Phone 70
Sati,faction
161 :\Iain Street
.llrrcha11/ Tailor
relephone 337
307 :\1ain St.
Second Floor
Keno,ha, \Yi,.
\Ye are factory repre entatives for :\Iehlin & Son
STEIX\Y.\Y PL\:'\OS
E~IERSOX
CH.\SE BROS.
LYOX & HE.\LY
C\BLE-~ EL ox
P .\CK .\RD
1
Victor Victrolas and Victor Rerords
Complete Line of Radios
L. F. EIDINGER
228 :H arket Street
Phone 5+S
Compliments of
1tliurrut-flrQiull Qln.
--------Kenosha, lf'isco11si11
Page Ninety-two
Portrait TFork () ur
SjJecialty
EDW. H. KIMME R
Sanitary Meat Market
Fiesh and S111okl'rl Jl1'r1ts
~IAIN
STREET
STl DI
Quality and Price' Right
Gi<t•e u·s a Trial and Br Co11vi11crd
35 ~. ~lain Street
Phone 2090
Telephone 1019
+-- HO\dand A,e.
900 Salem Ave.
Telephone 2302
3Jnnrpqnnu & ltmmrrman Oin.
Elutrical, Plu 111bing and Heating Contractors
Efrctrical Fixtures and Appliances
Call or Phone for Estimates on All \Vork
Kenosha, \ Vis.
Qt aft
Page 1\'i11 rly-l/irre
Kenosha News
Publishing Company
261 & 267 Wisconsin Street
Telephone-Pri\'ate E:-.:change--4-900
+
+
Kenosha Evening News
The Telegraph-Courier
( Daily )
( Weekly )
An Advertising Service Completely
Covering Kenosha and Kenosha County
Bigge t and Best Want Ad Mediun1
in Wisconsin Out ide of wfilwaukee
+
+
Printing Service
Commercial Printing, Booklet , atalogues,
Etc.
A
ervice lJ nexcelled in Keno ha
Page 1\"inely-/our
lfl e Do the Best
f!1, ~rrrntng
llairrnlli11g and Shi11g/i 11 g
SHOE STORE
Quality shoes for the
whole family
1003 Prairie AYe.
CHA ' .
DOBA~
BARBER SHOP
16+ W!SCO'\ 11\
Phone H09
Flowers by Tf7ire Every:T.c:here
THE F. T. D.
~ .1\JRNERSrJNs
.<' ~··:-:
I ; 3~
P'AR..K AVf
lrt:NOSHA ~\&·
·.::_., ·- ..
HOP
''Say it with
Flowers''
' \ "'·~
Kenosha's Telegraph Florist
L. T R TER SO:\
BLOCK BROS.
BIGGER BETTER
DEPARTl\IL TT
TORE
"ROS ENTH AL'S"
''We Keep Quality UpBecause Quality Keeps
Dry
s Up!"
Goods, Ladies' and
Furnis hings and Good
Gents'
hoes
for All t he Family
ll'ith lmpro~wl Facilities to Care
for Its Ezoer I11creasi11g
'f
Trade
Howland AYe. at Dayton St.
Page i\ i11rly-fi'<'t
The
American Brass
Company
Kenosha Branch
Page /\'i11ety-1ix
K enoslza, Tf/isconsin
Haag and
The
A. B. C. l/'ashing illachincs
Royal r~ac Cleaners
lffrymau'a
C. L. ROCKWELL
Cloaks and Suits
ELECTRICAL CO:\'TRAC l'OR
90~
Elizabeth
tore of Style and T'alue
t.
229 :\Iain St.
Keno ha, \Viscon in
\VE
PECIALIZE IN FA\IIL Y \VA HING
KENOSHA
LAUNDRY
\VET
\VA H
598-600 Elizabeth
t.
ROUGH
DRY
Tel. 3+3
WHAT IS MORE APPROPRIATE FOR
THE GRADUATE THA A GIFT
OF HABERDASHERY
FRON!
"The Shop for lvf en''
27-1- :\Iain
t.
chwa rtz Bldg.
Page Ninety-se<.'fn
E. ]. FILBIN
Qualit} Store and Costs
" o :uoRE"
COLLE E TOGS\Ve specialize in advance styles for
young men and the high school chap
"Styles of today with a touch of
tomorrow"
Choice ,1[ eats and Fancy Groceries
561 :'\ewell
"If It Comes From l\Jcf'icar's
It Must Be Good"
t.
Kenosha, \Vis.
Phone 1569
fir llftrur <!tnmpatty
Tailors and Haberdashers
16+ \Visconsin
t.
: :
chwartz Bldg.
Schwartz Furniture Co.
Tl 'here Quality Is Higher
RL'G I LI:'\OLEC:\ 1,
TOVE' A. 'D Fl'R:\'ITCRE
Eas)' Terms
Cash or Credit
PARK AND cm R H
PHONE 919
All Roads Lead to
1001 PRAIRIE A\ TE.
Page ,\ i11ety-eight
T
E
T .
CO:\IPLI1\IE1 TS OF
~1. ::\1ADSE
C. A. PETER 0
::\1. H. COL\VELL
Madsen & Peterson,
Inc.
General Contractors
Builders Exchange
i\1I
EAPOLI , ::\UN
We specialize in
School House Construction
and
Public Buildings
Pagr !l'i11rly·11i11e
DAVE'S CLOTHING
HOUSE
F. GETCHMAN
Ql'ALITY GROCERIES
220 MJ\l'\' ST.
[ ' p-to-na11 Clothing and Furnishings for the lligh School
Young Jlan and
liis Dad
Phone 670
660 Exchange St.
Sprag11c-lf 'arn1 r and Co.
Richelieu Brand of Pure Foods
SCHMITT
THE BEST
Makes
HOLE Tf7HEAT BREAD
in tlze lf7orld
TRY IT
Tf7
Orders Taken for Any Special Bakery Goods-Parties, Etc.
Wqr if(ruonqa 14umbrr o.tnmpany
Sp ecialists in Good Lumber
and Mil/work
106-t GRAN D AVEN E
Ph one 170
Page One Il undred
K enos ha, W isconsin
Graduation Gif Is
DAVIES BOOT
SHOP
lllarrn 1.G. 3f orhau
JEWELER
Footwear for the Family
Satisfaction Guaranteed
01HI TG OVER
Phone 2+06
$6
522 Howland A\e.
CHARLES H. PFENNIG
212 :llarket
q.
Phone 2S72
A SAFE INVESTMENT
Pfennig's First Mortgage Real Estate Bonds
llminrouniu ~an & 1.Elrrtrir Qlompauy
G,\ , ELECTRIC LIGHT A:\'D POWER
"THE LOGICAL PLACE ro PuRCHA E APPLIANCE "
KE:\'O'HA,
WLCO:\' I:\'
D. & E. SP RTING
GOODS CO.
"Better Athfrtic Goods"
PORTI""G
Gooos ExcLLSIVELY
ALFRED KROGH
Tailor
\VHOLESALE PRICE TO SCHOOLS CLL BS
510 Howland Ave.
352 Park A,·e.
KE:\'OSHA ,
Phone 1120
W!SCO'\SI~
Telephone 2390
Page On e llundred and One
tudents Attention!
Eat at
" JACOBS"
Delicatessen
®rpqrum
Keno -ha' Half :\lillion Dollar
Theater
\Ve Serve
Lunches - Sandwiche
Of All Kinds
\\'e cater to parties, entertainment , etc.
\Ve deliver
Edward Dayton, llf anaqer
JU T PHONE 3301
Also Operating the
366 PARK AVE.' UE
RHODE
BvRKE
l\lAJESTIC
ltfqntngrapqn
j or people of
discriminating
taste •• •• ••
~yhnry-~rnwn ~tuhtn
216 SO TH
TREET
Pagr 011r !11111drrd a11d T<u.·11
KL 0 HA
A Kenosha Product with a
National Reputation
IHJ;_HSI
~URN
ITU RE
for th,e 1.Giuittg iRoom
of th,e
fllllohrrtt J\mrriratt 1iome
HANNAHS MANUFACTURING CO.
\\.ISCON I
KE OSIIA
lJ. S. A,
Pa111· 011,· l/ 1111drrd a 11 d Tlirrr
iEurrytl1ing (l)oull to lEnt
CORNWELLS
at
WALL
BETSY Ross
.\XDY SHOP
Ice Cream, Cand) and
Daint) Lunches
3 56 PARK .-\VE.
PAPER,
,\\\'~I~G
,
PAI~TS,
'Vl~DOW
GL\ S
HADES
Year Round To) Dept.
PHO~E
TEL. 270
137
158 l\L\I~ ST.
W. I. BRENNER
Electrical Contractor
Phone 16+9 -
251 Milwaukee A ,.e.
KE 0 IL\,
FELLOWS!
l/7 e are in a position to
give you nierclzandise at
Popular Prices
/
:·:
\VI .
We Are Designers,
Originators and
Creators of Distinctive
Millinery, Exclusive
but never
Expensive
/
THE
BELL CLOTHING
H OUSE
II do/p/J EpJtein
The H ome of Hart, Schaffner & :lfaric
Our IIats ,Ire Different
MISS
L.A. BURNS
Three Hundred Twelve ,)fain Street
Page One lfundred and four
S. R. GORDO
Danish Pastry
Cor. l\1arket Square & Church
Home :\lade Bread
Featuring
at
Hart Schaffner & 1arx Clothes
P. H. Norregard'
90.+ Salem Ave.
t.
Bakery
Florshiem Shoes,
Phone 1516
tetson Hat
l\Ianhattan Shirts
IDI,r 1Juuouatiou . . .
Fo r those with D iscriminating taste
Confections & L unches
Telephone 2971
26-t ~ IAI.:\
KE 0 HA, WI.
TREET
GIVE
A WATC H
FOR GRAD ATIO
Korf's
Store
From
R EGNER
Your Jeweler
l\IAI
T
T R EET
" I t Jl!akes .1.l le111 ories Last"
Page 011r ll u11drrd and Five
Fram es for
Photographs
Kodak Views
En la r).!;ements
Certificates
KENOSHA
Diplomas
Drawings
Portraits
Paintings
CLINIC
Cor. Chicago and Wisconsin
BR ING IN YOUR PICTURES
Streets
and see for yourself the PLEASING EFFECT to be obtained by
using our
c. H. GEPHART, M. D.
]. F. II \STINGS, M. D.
ATTRACTIVE
NE\V Yl O LDINGS
A. L. M \YFIELD, M. D.
c. G. RICHARDS, M. D.
G. ].
CWARTZ,
GENTZ PERRY,
BYRO'/
IDf1rrittrn Jaint
B.
M. D.
M. D.
NIXO'I
SP.\ULDl!\G
HILL
~torr
51 ~.
1ain
t.
Phone 688
Tel. 4750
Wqr iarhru ~tnrr Qtn.
H. E. Barden, Prl'Sident
Entrances on Two StreetsChurch and Wisconsin
K enosha
Page One ll undrcd and Six
Wisconsin
Conklin Fountain Pens
Conklin Pencils
Schaeffer Lifetime Pens
Johnston's Candies
Eastman Kodaks
Luick's Ice Cream
Pure Drugs
THE BROW
ATIONAL BANK
916 ELIZABETH STREET
lf7 e're in Business for Your
H ea/th
I nternted in the successful develop-
If/ e Hand le Only the Best
111ent of young men and women.
OSCAR \iV. HAERTLEI:\1"
Druggist
901 Grand Ave.
Keno ha, Wis.
Resources $1 ,250,000.00
A GOOD START
OJ.\ LIFE'S ROAD
Is lf7ith a
CHEVROLET
The Coupe-$715.00 F. 0. B.
DOW EY-RECHT l\10 T OR CO.
216
outh
treet
Page 011e Jlu11dred a11d Seven
PllO~E
JM7
1 HE LI TDAS co.
OFFICE HOl'RS:
10 to 12 .\.
2 to 5 and 7 to 8 P.
1.
I.
heet ~Iet a l \Vork
E. D. Argrave , D. C.
and
Doctor of Chiropractic
Furnaces
555 '/2 Howland Ave.,
Over
Kenosha, \Vi;,.
Telephone 1626
ullivan\ Shoe Store.
658 Elizabeth
KENOSHA, WIS.
C. M . A~DERSO~, Pre,ident
MARTI:--: PEDERSE:"\, Vice-Pre,.
C. WM. A~DER ON, Secy. & Treas.
Main Office and V\'orks-Kenm,ha, \Vi>. Branch \Vorb-.'\lbion, N. Y .
E'tab li,h ed 1907-Incorporated 1912
SPECIALTY BRASS COMPANY
{Incorporated )
lvl anufacturers of Quality Brass Goods
'Memher N'ational Dairymen's Association
\Visconsin :.\I anufacturers' Association
Kenosha, \Vis., U .
. A.
Telephone 325
FURNITURE, STOVES, RUGS, ETC.
BODE BROS. CO.
House Furnishers
116-118-120
1ain Street
W. MADSEN
Keno ha, Wisconsin
lf'hen you think of Barberin!f
Think of
Tailor
91+
a lem Ave.
Phone 5080
Cleaning, Pressing, Altering
Ladies and Gents Garments
Page Onr ll1mdr Pd and Eight
THE
PALACE
Barber
hop
Regner Building
t.
HOR E
HOE TIRE
Auto
Tire Repairing
KA~L\I TIRE
upplie
ERVICE
"The Ser'l.1ice Y 011 trill A pprcciate"
25 7 Church Street
ANYTL\IE
Phone +02+
D iamonds, W ate hes, and l ewelry
of the
Finest Q uality
at
HOLBROOK JEWELRY STORE
219 \Viscon. in
treet
The Three Leading Stores in the State
THE BUFFALO
Candy Kitchen
Home Cooking -
\Ve
Plate Lunches
erve
Homemade Ice Cream -
Candy
1+12 \Va,hin12:ton A\•e.
t. RACINE
25+ fain St.
KE:\'O HA
+33 Main
Chiropractic
( SPINAL )
s
E
Remove the A
Cause of
~ATIONAL WOOLE
T
~IILL
Oldest and Reliable
Adjustments
Will
"Better Clothes for Less ,1foney"
s
+ooo+
E
J. \\'. KLDL\, D. C.
P. S. C. Chiropractor
162 Main St.
Phone 882
Tels.: 2394-2395
Page One J/11ndrrd and Nine
"Jahn and Oilier Again''
T
HE largest personal service school annual engraving house
in America. More than twenty years of successful experience in Year Book designing and engraving. Three hundred
craftsmen, specially skilled in Annual production. Over 40,000
square feet of operating space in our own fireproof building.
A specially organized system of production that insures individual attention to each Annual, efficient manufacture, and
on-time delivery. The personal co-operation of a creative and
research service department with a reputation.
TH IS
ANNUA~
~NOPAvto
BY
JAHN & OLLIERENGRAVING CO~
"P!JotoRrap/lers. Artists. and M.ak..ers of
Fine Pdnting Platesfar 8/acl< or Golotf
817 Washington Boulevard-Chica90
(COR.GA£EN ST.)
I
Page One llundred and T en
A !ways Lowest Prices
Try Our Ice Cream and
oda
~urh '!l mrug ~torr
IDqr nlhr,at ht tnwtt wttq tqr mu.at mnhrrtt ,ay.atrm nf
hnittg bu.aittrs.a
MAI:'\ STREET
TWO STORES
::V1ARG,\RET jOHXSOX,
D. C.
The Only Lady Chiropractor
in Kenosha
FREMO:\'T AYE'\UE
VICTROLAS
VICTOR RECORD
R DIO
lf"e Repair and ,J djust Jill lllakes
Talking 11lachines
Orpheum Bldg., Room 201
Phone .J.706
J. i\1. JENSEN
970 Elizabeth St.
Phone 3061
National ®ffirr §upply Qtompauy
223 \Visconsin
treet
Books, Stationery, School, and Offic e Supplies
\Ve Treat You D All the Year 0
Kenosha, \Visconsin
Page One Hundred and Eleven
LUICK ICE CREAM
FRED p _RUDY
1
HARLEY-DA nD ON
eu• Cozy
Confectionery
:\IOTORCYCLE
D. LE
cro I
Kenosha, \Vi con in
Cor. Grover &
alem
Phone 3107
=·=
~
=·=
~
BADGER FUEL f5t SUPPLY CO.
-l-6+ Fremont Avenue
Telephone 119
VALETERIA!
the new way of pressing that shapes your clothes
PHO~E
+660
"Hm:e it cleaned the unique u·ay''
Page One flu11dred and Tv.:elve
COAL
Telephones
228, 229 and 91
CEXTRAL FVEL & IcE Co.
OAL, OKE, WOOD, ICE, BUILDING MA rERIAL, SAND, GRAVEL
JOHN . GREGORY, President
Re,idence Phone 2180
159 Rid!!;e t.
Kenosha, Wi;,.
GUERN EY
CO-OPERATIVE ~1ILK
CO:\IPANY
lvlil k and Cream From Our
0'1.c:n Tuberculin Tested
Herds, Exclusively
1208
alem Ave.
Phone 1-t21
FRANK LUXEM f§f CO.
lVholesale Car-lot Recei'l.·ers & Distributors
of Fruits & Vegetables
172 Ridge
treet
A D esirable Place to Wark
THE FROST
MANUFACTURING
COMPANY
KE 0 HA, WIS.
II' e ,lfake Plumbers' Brass Goods
Page One Hundred and Thirteen
In corpora ted
Phone 4-52-993
fOor.ar ~ranttr
Qlowpany
Rough and Finished Granite
for
C1 metery lmpro ·l'e111e11t
c naj>j>y
hoe Styles
for Young \ Vomen
and Young :\ Ien
COH :\ '
305
1ain ' t.
HOE STOR E
'\ext to Hurd\
\Visconsin and Exchange
outhwest J\.1ain and \ \'iscomin
1'.
Telephone 1686
t.
A.H. DA H L
.duthorized Dealer
Lincoln-Ford-Fordson
LINCOLN
an hono red name and the fin es t ca r in Ame ri ca
FORD
Year in and year o ut the m ost economi cal car on the m arket
Lou:est in price-L ou•e st in up k eep- H ig hest in quality
Page Onr llu ndred and Fourteen
Pt1ints, Supplies, W t11f Pt1Prr t1nd Gitlss
I mported Li11e11s, Lt1ces t1nd
J:'mbroidrries
POTE -TE DECORATI!\G CO .
3 6+ Park A \"enue, Phone +078-\V
JO'. WEI'\ER
G o to the Un iversity If Y ou Can- If Imp ossible
Tf7 e A re at Y our S ervice
I
TER 1ATI0l\AL CORRE PO ' DENCE S CHOOL
CRA:\'TO:\', PA.
GEO. ~ LA:\'DA'\E, R~.
Home Phone 3 308
H,\ROLD H. WARD. Rep.
Horne Phone 513 3
DI TRICT OFFI CE
316 ' ch wa rtz Bldg., P hone +023
A Special
Chiffon Stocking
Built for Dan cing
ALLEN A
HOSIERY
All silk where it shows, invisibly strengthened at heel and
toe.
Allen A has designed a special Chiffon to serve this purpose. It is filmy sheer. But it
is invisibly strengthened at
points of strain.
For J1Jen, W omen t111 d Childr nz
NDERWEAR
For /If en t111d B oyJ Only
Ask your dealer for
o. 3785, No. 3780,
o. 895
Page On e llundred t1 nd Fifteen
"Phone for Food"
LAKE \TIE\V PRI TI TG A TD
OFFICE UPPLY CO.
BROTHERS
PER KI
H. A. BROSK, Prop.
Grocers
"faw)'thing for the Office"
Phone GO
305 Church
Quality and Service Our Motto
Quality
PHO~E
2022
256
1AI
T.
erv1ce
Reliabilit}
Phone i-309
910 alem Ave.
KENOSHA FURNITURE CO.
GASUL AND BARR, Props.
Complete Home Furnishings
Kenosha, \Vi .
Let your next Photographs be from the
Jrthhta ,§tuhtn
"The other P hotographer in your town"
Kodak Finishing and Enlarging
315 l\Iain
treet
Pn11e 011r Hundred and Sixteen
Phone 3277
t.
Telephone 801-802
THE DU NEBACKE
C0.\1PANY
Flour, Feed, Potatoes,
H. E. Remer
Forbes & Son, Props.
Electrical 111 erchandise
Radio els - Parts
Building :\Iaterial, Etc.
Market and \Ve,t Main
GREY ELECTRIC
COMPANY
t.
Phone 198
270 \"\'i,comin
t.
A. Fransway
Remer's Laundry
Family Wash a Specialty
"If water won't hurt it, We won't"
922 Elizabeth St.
Phone 1017
We cordially invite all to visit our new home. Our five
rooms in our modern bungalow
are changed each week
Page One llundred and Se<i•e11/ee11
Send us your vacation cleaning
Y
O 'LL need our ervices before you go Vacationing! In fact, we may
eyen be able to save certain togs you thought useless! Our mail Service
is a happy thought for those ummering out-of-town. Send us ) our things
with instructions to be cleaned. \Ve'll return them Parcel Post.
"The House of Seri•ice"
111CC
1905
Phone
TD~UNION
656
152-156
'IL WORKS
RACINE
KE OSHA
Market
t.
WAUKEGAN
.AN
INVESTMENT
In purchasing eyeglasses, you invest a great deal more than the
comparatively trifling sum you
pay for them.
In a s nse you invest your eyesight, and against the
impairment of that Racine-Kenosha Glasses constitute
a tried and dependable safeguard.
EYES EXAM l:\' ED
GLASSES DE ' !G:\'ED
RACINE-KE OSHA OPT! AL CO.
K e11oslw's Foremost 0 ptometrists
ORPHEl':\-1 BLDG.
P ll O:\'E +81
Open Tuesdar, Friday and Sat urday Ei•1 ni11gs
E. D. :\'EWMA:\', OPT. D., Optornt>trist
Page O n e ll undrrd and Eightreu
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
Allen.
A.
115
96
American Br:tss Co.
Andrea, Jack
Argraves, E. D. D. ('.
Badger Fud & Supply Co.
Bain Hardware C< ..
98
...108
..
92
106
104
Barcle-n Ston CcJ.
Bell O<thing llouse
Betsy Ross
11~
·-·- · ........ 104
92
lli<lingcr ).[usic Ston..'1
Block Bros.
Rode Bros.
. 95
...... 108
Rrenner Electric Co.
104
..... 107
Drown Xat'I Bank
lkhirn Drug Co.
Buffa!< Candy Kitcht·n
Burns. L . .\.
Central Fuel Co.
Clapp Studio
Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Cdm Shce Store
C'on1wall Paint Store
Curtis, IL C.
Dahl. ,\, H.
Dave· s Clrthing l louse
D'a ,·ies Hoot hop
De Berge ,\rt Shop
D. & F. Sporting c;oods
Duhan Barber Shop
Cown<y-Recht :lktur Co.
Dunnehacke Co. .
Fill· n, E. J.
First :\at'! Bank
Fischtr Cafe
Frost ~!fg. Co. .
. . 88
109
104
113
82
•.. 8.1
114
........ 104
97
.... .... 11!
.... 100
101
. 91
101
95
.107
Iii
. 9S
.... 84
93
. 113
Getchman, Frank
G(,ernt, F. ···- ..
Gordon, S. R.
Gott lieh.
J. Co.
Greening, (11as. \\'.
Greening, H.
Crey Electric Co.
Guernsey ~[ilk ('o.
Hat."rtline Drug Co.
Hall Lamp Co.
Hannahs ~lfg. Co.
Hauhrick 1 Paul
Heyman's Store ..
..
c.
Kt.no"ha
Furniture Ct.
!Oii
.. 9.l
. 88
98
117
~9
Perkins Bros. Grocery
116
Pfrnnig. Chas. .
IOI
91
Rxkwell, C. I..
Co.
115
lib
Co .
105
117
Remt:r's Laundry
97
95
112
100
91
98
87
R( scnthal's
Hudy,
Fred
Schmitt Baker~
. _ chnc.ider -:\fusic Store
Scl1w~1rtz
~·mmc;ns
Furniture Ce.
Co . .
!-'pt•cialty
Bra_ s
Co.
Sulll\·an. Thos.
105
.... ydnt.y· Brown .. tudio
Thorstn, .Tens Tailor
Threint:n, \Ym. J.
Tunu·r, L. & Sons
l"nion Dyt> \\"t rls
10~
............ 85
l'. S. :\atirnal Bank
\ incent ~[cC'all Co.
\\'ein<:r. Jos.
\\ i~c.
Ca~
11~
8.l
81
lllO
116
.... 99
Thomas
113
107
89
101
93
IO'l
11.l
8.1
)[orse Cranite Co.
..114
Xa,h :lfotor Co .
90
Xat'l Office Supply Co .
111
Xational \\'oolen :l!ills
........... 109
::-,, rregaarcl Bakery
!OS
:'\orth Side Baqrn1n Store
8h
Ohertin Flower Shop
...... 85
Orpheum Theater
102
Pabst Bros. Garage
Palact- Barher .._hop
... 108
Peltier Furniture .Store
91
.._tore
Ill
~8
Ill>
112
.. ...
lh·ctor & Paton
Regner Jewelry
111
& Zimme man
Kamm Tire Scr\'ice
Kt::nosha Clinic
.:\[C'ntemuro,
Co.
89
9.i
.117
Jrnsen, J. ~!.
J< hn..,on, ..\Iargaret
Jo~ephson
Furniture
Opt.
102
J C'rdan. H. L.
l\fica
Hacitlt.' Kenosha
110
&>
101
88
&;
Jacr.hs. ('has.
105
108
Pctente Decorating
Priddis Studio
Jahn & Oilier
93
109
Levitan, Harry
86
105
..115
94
Limlas Co. ...
l,uxem, Frank
)Jaclar, John &
111
:\lad sen · Peterson Inc.
:II ad sen, \\'alter
:\lain Street tudio
:llcXeil. 0. A.
\!c\"icar Co.
Pitts Paint Stores
103
........ 85
..... 97
97
100
Kcrf's Store
Kraclwell Drug Co.
Krogh, Alfred
Kuht•c O'ry Goods Store
Lake \'iew Printing Co.
Lencioni D .
100
109
Ho: brook Jewelry Store
. ..... ..... 111
Hurd Drug Co.
] ~-t>rmann Bros.
Inm \"ativn
I.
s.
Kenosha Laundry
Kenosha Lurnber Co.
Kc:nosha '\ ews ..
Kimmer, Edw .
Klcma, J ..\l. D. C.
& Electric Co.
\\.isc. Pni<tut· C!t>ancrs ..
102
92
Hl6
95
II.
- . 83
. 92
115
IOI
112
Pag e One l!undred and Nineteen
2039-8
22-05
I