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Page 4 text:
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I j i j i i i I Published during the school year by The Students of The Arlington High School Entered as Second-Class Matter November 9, 1917, at Boston, (Arlington Branch) Mass. P. O., under the Act of March 3, 1879 Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage provided for in Section 1103, Acts of October 3, 1917, authorized June 6, 1919 | Arlington Sfiglj | Srljool (Clarion ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR Volume II. ARLINGTON (Boston), MASS., MARCH, 1925 Number 3 Clarion Board of Management Acti ng Ed i tori n-Cli i ef Claude Higgins, ’25 Assistant Editor Walter Atkinson, ’27 B usiness Manager Donald Jones, ’25 Assistant Business Managers Francis Vossahlik, ’25 G. Winn, ’2G A dvertising Manager Claude Higgins, ’25 Assistant Advertising Manager Richard Blasdale, ’2(5 Literary Editor Dorothy Dowse, ’24 Assistant Literary Editor Esther Alden, ’20 Class Note Editor Marjorie Manning, ’25 Assistant Class Note Editor Dorothy Blevins, ’2(5 Exchange Editor Helen Joseph, ’25 Assistant Exchange Editors Helen Lowcock, ’25 Louise Bradley, ’2G Albert Brooks, ’2G Athletic Editor Daniel I Toole y, ' 25 Assistant Athletic Editors Francis Vossahlik, ’25 Edith Johnson, ’25 Club Notes Editor Pauline Crowe, ’25 Assistant Editor Rachel Crosby
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Page 3 text:
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PATRONIZE THESE ADVERTISERS READ THE ADVERTISING PAGES AND THEN- TRADE AT HOME! FOSTER BROS. PICTURES AND FRAMES 4 PARK SQUARE, BOSTON SUMMER AND MILL STREETS ARLINGTON COMPLIMENTS OF REGENT THEATRE MARIE JOSEPHINE FRAZER TEACHER OF FANCY AND BALLROOM DANCING 98 OXFORD STREET, ARLINGTON Telephone, Arlington 3079-W ELEMENTARY AND ADVANCED PIANOFORTE INSTRUCTION MISS L. MARSHALL ormerly with New England Conservatory and Faelten Pianoforte School) For Appointments Call Arlington 2181-J 31 FAIRMONT STREET, ARLINGTON OLYMPIA SPA CONFECTIONERY, FRUIT, CIGARS ICE CREAM AND SODA 352 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE Telephone, Arlington 2988 FREE DELIVERY Beware the Germs ThisEmblem of the Air Any doctor will tell you thati lakeshift “window coolers’’ are standing invitation to the fly- lg germs of the dust laden air. Don’t take chances with food’s urity these cooler days. Pro- ;ct that food with ice and at Your Protection le same time protect its value in dollars with le investment of only a few cents a day. We are here to serve. ARLINGTON-BELMONT ICE COMPANY CHATS WITH YOUR GAS MAN WHEN a gas appliance gets out of order the good housewife sometimes thinks that the folks next door should hear about it. So she tells them. She g ' ets sympathy, perhaps, and then the news spreads from neighbor to neighbor. But sym- pathy does not correct the flaw. It is the frank, outspoken, vou- to-us complaint that gets action. Whatever your criticism or complaint, tell it to us, and tell it to us first. We’ll do everything ' we can to remedy the trouble with no loss of time or effort on anyone’s part. That is our business. Give us an opportunity to prove our wil- lingness to make every customer a satisfied customer. ARLINGTON GAS LIGHT COMPANY ARLINGTON 2000
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Page 5 text:
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THE ARLINGTON HIGH SCHOOL CLARION lEMtorials SOPHOMORE ISSUE This issue of the Clarion is culled the Sophomore Issue not particularly because of Sophomore contributions, but because the last three issues of your paper were planned as the Sopho- more, Junior, and Senior issues res- pectively. Owing to the illness of our •little” Editor-in-Chief the work of carrying through this issue was in the hands of other members of the Board. Here’s hoping that ‘“Little Joe” is feeling hale and hearty, ready to re- sume his task of Editor-in-Chief in his usual efficient manner. C. A. H. “LATE HOURS AND BRILLIANCY” Late hours and brilliancy do not go hand in hand. If one desires to be adept in his pursuit of knowledge, then let him shun late hours. If, on the other hand, he desires to trip the light fantastic until the small hours of the morning, then lie must sacrifice any hope of ever being termed brilliant. If one has any wish to reach a mate- rial goal, to ascend to the heights or fame, he must keep that purpose in mind, he must ever see that goal plainly before him, or he is lost. Regardless of the fact that some people can play two games of cards while they solve six problems mentally, I maintain that knowledge is gained by intensive con- centration on a subject. The best hours in which to study are, I say most emphatically, not those just preceding midnight. When one returns from gay festivities just as the dawn is breaking in the sky, l feel assured that he will not consider the writing of an English theme a choice task, nor will he greet it with superfluous enthusiasm. Therefore, the fact re- mains that one must choose, in all things one must choose, with perhaps the exception of the most difficult ques- tion in an examination. There, of course, a choice is never permitted. So, if one would visualize his footsteps imprinted on the sands of time, and his name ranked among the immortals, let him have for his motto, “Early to Bed and Early to Rise.” Margaret Donahue, ’25. NOW THAT MID YEARS ARE OVER— Now at last Mid-Year Exams have come and gone and we feel relieved and satisfied (?). One-half of the school year is over. Unconsciously each day of this first half we have been anticipating the relief we would feel when the exams would be over. Now we have that relief, we have finished this great task and most of us are ask- ing ourselves, “What is the next step? What is our next task to accomplish? Where do we go from here?” Obviously we go on with our work. We open our books and begin to study at the point we left off to review for
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