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Page 76 text:
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wml-ummmummmmu:1; :9. .. . ' . . 7 :3; g w E : . .- : '-'- lE : E .- a a e a a E r: a .- 3 .- E: .- - .- .- .- - : ..... -. : 2 u... .- - : - - 3: - - a. .- - n. .- 2 '- h : - - - - 2 .- a a t 2 r: .- : .- 2: : a r. .- g ' 5 , .. :' e - .- - ..- '3': k - .- z 2 .. F ; - g - - . E E 2 -. .- .. h - - .- .- .- : a : - h : - ,: u- - .- - a g r: '1. l : e a: h : R P. : h... -. :' a : Most of them would not ring at all; three or four did ringehut, oh what a painful, sickly ring! Take the one in Room 21, for instance. She would start off by clearing her throat, then she would wake up and begin typewritingeno ring at all, just a tapping on wood,ea11d then all of a sudden sheld take her last breath and shriek out a short, stubborn, little ring. After a few days, none of the bells would go. However, Mr. Howard invented a little machine com- posed of four batteries, some wires, and a bell. These were placed on a little tray. At the end of each period, someone would run through the hall, with the new deviceea portable bell system. IIIIIMIIIIHHIIMIHHlllllllllllllmllllillllllllllllllllllllllhll llllllllllllllmllllllllllllllllmllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllm llllllllllllllllllllllllMN? illllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllmumllHEUlll!llllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllli 5 E z : E E E 2 E a E -.-: g i x 'kx WWII'IIHI imcvnu'mgj 71; . , ;'; ' T .3117. cm in 6 1:3: 3 IWM rM'Wnlulummummmnuum Seventy
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Page 75 text:
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.'- he: , W, ,2 I MilmllmllhII'IHHIHHIIIII IW .- .. Ly vll qzx- 1.3 I . QWHlllllllllllllilllllllIllllllllllE'f III; ' lllllllllllllllllllllllll Hmmmmllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli: Although we may forget all about the fire at Norwalk High, soon after we graduate, nevertheless while we were in school, we thought that fire very impor- tantefor there was no school for two days. 07Ve wontt forget thatl Well, ,twas a dreary, rainy night in the month of February; to be exact, ttwas about six olclock in the evening of the fourth mm. All was quiet in the town of Norwalk, even more so around that part which borders the High School. Suddenly the people, eating their supper after a hard days work, were aroused by the clang-clang of an approaching lire-trnck. W'ithin live minutes the firemen were at work at theeeyes, it was the High School. It took only another five minutes before a crowd of High School students came running from all directions. Smoke was pouring out from all the windows; broken;ebut alas, hthe building stood! The firemen kept up their good work until after nine o'clock. Most of the High School members of the crowd went away satislied that their books had been pretty thoroughly damaged. sNo such luckewe were given only a two-day vacation! As to the cause of the fire, this was generally conceded to be spontaneous combustion. The tire seemed to have started in the coal bin; it worked its way across to the engine room but did no serious harm there, the greatest damage being done where the flames worked up to the Hoor above. Wires were burned as the fire quickly reached the ceiling and ate its way through the hoor of Room 18. This room stood the brunt of the attack; the floors and walls were not only eaten by the flames, and soaked by the stream of water, but also hacked with axes ; the desks and chairs were ripped up. Except for minor damages, nothing else was injuredethanks to ttDocfl Fisher. KtDocfl was coming down the hill past the high school when he saw an unusual volume of smoke rising from the chimney. ttMethinksF said ttDoefl to himself, ttthat such a density of smoke is a bad omen. And therewith he ran to the basement door, unlocked it, entered:- there before him wasemore smoke. ltAhaf, said ttDoe. TI am right? Then he tried to go upstairs to phone the fn'e station but the smoke was so thick that he was forced to go back. Nearly stiffled, but retaining his calmness, tlDocfy rolled downstairs. Then he ran across the way to a neighboring house and sent in an alarm. lllmllllmlllllmlllllllllllllllllmllllImlllWilli lllllllllllllllllmlllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllll l l iIllllillllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllll HllllllllllllllllllllllllllulllIII !!!lllllllllmll HM! llllllllllllllmlllllillllllllllllllllllllllhlllllllllllIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll tLast paragraph taken from Mr. Fishers OZE'IL accountJ When we returned Wednesday, we found that there were just two dith- culties as a result of the fire. The first was that Room 18 could not be used, Instead Room 21 was used. Besides this, the electric bells were out of order. IIIllllllllllHill !llIllllllllllmllllfllmm mumlllllmmIIIIIIIIIlIlellmll yrIllllllllllllllllllllllILIlIllllllllllllll idly. III 1 III. II, Lew .- humans, ,4: rIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Sixty-nine flll 11,1 lllllll'llll'lillll iltllillllllll'tmf M
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Page 77 text:
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, . ; ,x 9?; 31M, Nutmmmmmumwmnmw.1,1 . .. . 1. . mmmmmmuumummllf 4. 93' IV Cfaas QDOQ 4311913 11111111111111!!! IHWIIIIWMIIIIW Best All-Around Girl4Elizabeth Huntington, 43; Cctherine McCarthy, 7. Done H16 11403! for N. H. 5.4Genevieve Haugh, 22; Mary Mathews, 18. Best Namred4Ethel Gelston, 34; Rhoda Jarvis, 11. .Most SindiouswAnna Kessler; 30; Elizabeth Adcsko, 17. Ncatcst4Ruth Loring, 23; Helen Budd, 14. 11103t Popular--E1izabeth Huntington, 29; Winona Hanck, 19. Best 111 A2'g1mlcm44Beatrice Olson, 32; Marjorie DuFault, 15. .11051D611111104C1ar'1Jones 24; Jennie Nordlund 16; lxuth Loring 16. Best Atl1letc4GeneVieve Haugh, 24; Ida ScoEeld, 21. Best Musician4Mildred Cronenberg, 30; Miriam Clark, 9; Mary FOX, 9. WWI! mm!IHIIIIIIIIIWIIIMIU1111111111111111111111JlmlIllill mummmmIIummmmumunummmmuuummmmmnumnmumm .- - .- 3 - 5 un- .- .- - 2 :: .- -. .- E - - - - : - .- - n.- - --.n. - .- -. E .- .- - a - - 4 - 2 .- : ': g 6 .- : .- : u. .. E .- : : - E '3!- :3 h - 9 - - - u... u... E : u - g 6 11 21111111111111111111111111111111111111111111iI1111111111111111111!IIlIIIIUIIHIIINHIHIMWHHI Best Actress Ethel Gelston, 31; Elizabeth 1-1untington, 19. iV'itficsf-Marjorie DuFault, 20; Catherine McCarthy, 15. Prctticsf4Winona Hauck, 19; Ruth Loring, 17. Best Dancer4Elizabeth Huntington, 29; Maybelle Gohler, 11. 11.70131'61214131izabeth Coley, 32; Faye Corridon, 12. 1110521 Popular with FacultytElizabeth Adesko. 28; Ethel Gelston, 17. 11103! Eccentric4Faye Corridon, 31; Elizabeth Coley, 14; Marion White, 14. Class Baby4Howard Newman, 32; Marjorie DuFault, 12. if;1 1111111111111.1111115 1' T 11.11 T-mmu 17.1 :73: 11mm. jg:' mummulminwmuun .$11111111111ml110111111141111! IINIIIIHIIHHHIMIHHIullmmmlIlmmmmmmlh' :2 , 7 :m . Seventy-oue
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