Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL)

 - Class of 1949

Page 58 of 120

 

Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 58 of 120
Page 58 of 120



Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 57
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Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 59
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Page 58 text:

LET ME OUT OF HERE '00 S ..A. . ,, ornetime in pril the seniors presented the play, Let Me Out of Here. They were under the sponsorship of Mr. Dell Atkinson. It was a great success. It takes place in the apartment of Bona and Eve. The time is the early fall in a mid-western city. Eve's aunt, Aunt Angela, wants Eve to marry Gifford Morton, but Eve wants to be independent and has told her aunt that she is going to an exclusive girls school while in reality, she is earning a salary. Aunt Angela and Gifford are coming to pay Eve a visit! While 'Eve is out trying' to get a friend of hers to pretend she is Eve's teacher, Bona's brother, Garret, arrives with a friend, Victor Ward, who came to town on some important business for his father. Victor tears his trousers and Garret leaves to have them mended. Bessie Fhodes, the nosey landlady, almost discovers Victor, but he puts her off of the track by pretending to be one of the girls with a bad cold. Aunt Angela ana Gifford arrive. They see Victor, and think they are in the wrong apartment. They report to the landlady and she thinks he is a burglar. Garret comes back with Victor's pants and is forced to change clothes with Victor. Victor's father appears, dirty from changing a tire. While he is clerning up, Garret steals his clothes to get even with Victor! Then all fhe people come back and Victor's father gets Garret down and starts taking his clothes off him. Garret yells, Let me out of here l JUNIOR PLAY CAST '0' Left to Right: First Row-Bob Adams, Joan Price, Betty Carey, Dorothy Goodwin, Beth Wolfe, Miss Yarber. Second Row-Nelson Reiber, Gene Johnson, Marjorie Price, Frank Higgins, Ryland Webb, Dick Breen. Third Row-Alicia Beasley, Wilma Hussey, Diane King, June Spray, Carolyn Trimble, Edith Thompson. The Junior Class Presents LOVE IS TOO MUCH TROUBLE On November 18, 1948, after two weeks of hard practice the Junior Class presented Love Is Too Much Trouble. It was under the able direction of our sponsor, Miss Betty Yarber. It was considered one of the best in the past few years. It was a comedy of college life. The setting was somewhat different-a tea room known as the Poison Pot. The characters Joe and Pinky are beset with numerous difficulties, financial, amatory, and scholastic, before the final denounce- ment. There was humor sprinkled strongly throughout the play. The cast was as follows: Toasty ...................... ...... B eth Wolfe Connie ..---. ........ J oan Price Pinky -.-- ...... J ames Wolfe J06 .........-........ . ..... Frank Higgins Oggy ..-..-..---.--..----. ..... R yland Webb Cliff Hayward ..... ......,.. B ob Adams Ebb .................... ............ D iane King Flo ..................... ...... M arjorie Price Monica Bates .... ....... A licia Beasley Miss ROSS ........ ...... D orothy Goodwin Sugar Lou ...... ............ J une Spray Mrs. Bates ..... ................................ B etty Carey Shirley ............... ............................. C arolyn Trimble Doctor Pillsy ..... ...............................,...,,.., D ick Breen Managers ........ ........ N elson .Reiber, Gene Johnson

Page 57 text:

ODDS AND ENDS IF FOR A GIRL WHO'S GRADUATING If you can hear the whispering about YOU, And never yield to deal in whispers, too: If you can bravely smile when loved ones doubt you, And never doubt, in turn, what loved ones dog If you can keep a sweet and gentle spirit, In spite of fame or fortune, rank or place, And though you win your goal or only near it, Can win with poise or lose with equal grace: If you can meet with unbelief, believ- 1118, And hallow in your heart, a simple creed: If you can meet Deception, undeceiving, And learn to look to God for all you need: If you can be what girls should be to mothers: Chums in joy and comrades in dis- tress, And be unto others as you'd have the others Be unto you-no more, and yet no less: If you can keep within your heart the power, To say that firm, unconquerable UNCH, If you can brave a present shadowed hour, Rather than yield to build a future woe: If you can love, yet not let loving mas- ter, And keep yourself within your own self's clasp, And not let Dreaming lead you to disaster, Nor Pity's fascination loose your STSSPS If you can lock your heart on confi- dences, Nor ever needlessly in turn confide: If you can put behind you all pre- tenses, In mock humility or foolish pride: If you can keep the simple homely vir- tue, Of walking right with God-then have no fear That anything in all the world can hurt you- And--which is more-you'll be a Woman, Dear. TOOT! TOOT! A peanut sat on a railroad track It's heart was all aflutter, The 2:25 came hurrying past, TOOT! TOOT! PEANUT BUTTER! WHAT A FUNNY LITTLE THING A FROG ARE What a funny little thing a frog are, Ain't got no tail almost hardly, When he hop, he iump, When he jump, he sit, On he little tail, what he ain't got almost hardly. Time passes quickly, therefore what you do with the present moment would be your greatest concern. SIX AGES OF WOMEN 1. Safety pins. 2. Whip pins. 3. Hair pins. 4. Frat pins. 5. Diamond pins. 6. Clothes pins. A Senior stood on a railroad track, The train was coming fast, The train got off the railroad track And let the Senior pass. Joe was dead and Bernard called on Rose Marie to express sympathy. Joe and I were close friends, Bernard said. Isn't there something I could have to remember him by? Tearfully, Rose Marie raised her eyes and whispered softly: Would I do? James Watkin looked up at the cashier and asked what it was she had around her neck. It's a ribbon, she said. Why? Well, he replied, Everything else is so high around here that I thought perhaps it was your garter. Mr, Hensley: What's the difference between a sigh, a car, and a donkey' Mrs. Hensley: I give up. Mr. Hensley: Well, a sigh is 'Oh dearl' A car is too dear. Mrs. Hensley: And what's a don- key? Mr. Hensley: You, dear. He never smokes, he never chews. He doesn't know the taste of booze. He never swears nor wants to fight, He doesn't stay out late at night. He never flirts with pretty girls, Nor carries samples of their curls. In fact he really is awful nice, Immune from every sin and vice. Perhaps some day he'll change his ways- His age is only seven days.

Suggestions in the Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) collection:

Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 36

1949, pg 36

Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 60

1949, pg 60

Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 97

1949, pg 97

Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 92

1949, pg 92

Allendale High School - Memoirs Yearbook (Allendale, IL) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 62

1949, pg 62


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