Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA)

 - Class of 1947

Page 22 of 72

 

Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 22 of 72
Page 22 of 72



Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

THE AXTONIAN The Last Will and Testament W E, the class of 1947 of Axton High School, make this our last will and testament to take effect at 11 P.M., June 4, 1947, when we shall have departed from this high school life forever. We hereby revoke all previous wills and jointly and severally dispose of all our possessions and privileges in manner and form as follows: To our principal, we leave our sincere appreciation, deepest respect and loyalty. To our beloved sponsor. Miss Norvell, we leave our gratitude for her untiring efforts on our behalf and a quieter, better senior class next year. To Mr. Tavenner we leave all the athletic ability of our present senior class and all the future farmers in the Axton community. To Mrs. Barker, we will a helicopter to fly to and from Axton High. To Mrs. 0. W. Hairfield, we leave a big room to hold all who are promoted to the fresh- man class next year. To Mrs. Bryan, we leave an up-to-date set of kitchen equipment, in appreciation for the nice teas given us in the home economics cottage. To the juniors, we leave the privilege of having a home room to themselves. To the sophomores, we bequeath our dignity, so that they may be accustomed to it by the time they become seniors. To the freshmen, we bequeath all our ambition and dreams. May they not be tarnished by the time they have spent four years at Axton High. Individual bequeaths are as follows : I, Ralph Wright, leave Roberta McMillan my happy smile and a portion of my wit. I, Cyrial Ray Jones, leave my good disposition to R. J. Barker. I, Lyne Starling, leave Billy Riddle my habit of studying quietly as he will need it if he expects to graduate. I, Cleo Martin, leave my talent to interpret the southern negro dialect to Rosie Burnette. I, Dil- lard Gravely, will Isabel Wray my ability to know the right answers at the right time. I, Peggy Billings, will Eloise Barker my ability to get along with the teachers. I, Charlie Agee, leave Juanita Manning some reducing tablets, so she may acquire a streamlined figure for that sailor dream boy of hers. I, Mildred Holland, leave Maude Brown my skill in playing basketball. I, Katherine Moss, leave my high temper, with a brace to keep it down, to Faye Wyatt. I, Melvin Jones, leave Raymond Elliott my ability to pitch a base- ball. I, Billy Lawrence, will Gene Gravely a new baseball glove with the hope that he won’t miss catching the balls next year. I, Martha Holland, leave Irena Barrow my ability to hold one man. I, Julian Compton, leave Cecil Carter my mechanical habits. We, Charles Manning and Norman Cassada, leave Carl Eggleston our skill in getting by without studying. I, Gertrude Watkins, leave Alice Eggleston my quiet ways with the motto “Silence is golden’’. We, L. C. Hankins and Mack McDaniel, leave Dale Matthews our lessons in history, prepared outside class for Mr. Long. I, Anna Mae Ashby leave Ma- rie Wilson some stationery on which to write to a certain boy friend. All the rest of the property, not disposed of, we leave to Mr. Long to distribute as he deems best to the pupils of Axton High School. We hereby appoint and designate the said principal executor of this, our last will and testament. Signed : Witnesses : Charlie Agee Mrs. 0. W. Hairfield Attorney-at-Law Mrs. P. H. Barker Mr. R. a. Tavenner Page Eighteen

Page 21 text:

THE AXTONIAN A confused scene now appears. Finally I catch a glimpse of a young woman. Why, it’s the former Martha Holland, who has just completed a course in interior decoration. She seems to be trying her newly acquired skill in her own home in the Leatherwood section of Martinsville. Her husband is landscaping her yard and garden. A young man appears now. He is Charles Manning and he is moving from place to place in his helicopter. Charles is a high class mechanical engineer and has his head- quarters in Lansing, Michigan. Soon I see within a large library building, and Gertrude Watkins is librarian. Gertrude is answering a long distance telephone call from her fiancee, who is on a business trip to China. She is discussing their marriage on his return. The scene changes again and I see a familiar face. There is Mack McDaniel waiting with Dillard Graveley to take a plane from Martinsville to carry them to the Minnesota Farm Association at St. Paul. They are delegates from the agricultural sections of Axton and Dyer’s Store of Henry County. Out of the mist comes someone else waiting for a plane, southbound from New York. It’s L. C. Hankins, a well known entomologist. He is all packed up for a trip to Africa to search for a new specimen of the African beetle. Then out from the cloud steps an automobile agent. Julian Compton is the leading salesman for the Ford-Compton Pygmy Auto Company. This special type of small auto was the outcome of Julian’s inventive mind while working in a Ford factory. We all said Julian would be the head of something some day. At this moment the mist completely disappears from the room, for Madame Houdini has shown me the last of my classmates. “0 wake once more ! How rude so’er the hand That ventures o’er thy magic gaze to stray ; 0 wake once more! though scarce my skill command Some feeble echoing of thine earlier lay; Though harsh and faint, and soon to die away. And all unworthy of thy nobler strain, Yet if one heart throb higher at its sway. The wizard note has not been touched in vain. Then silent be no more ! Enchantress, wake again.” Cleo Martin Class Phophet Page Seventeen



Page 23 text:

Senior Superlatives (Left to Right) 1. Most serviceable — Billings and Agee. 2. Valedictorian and Salutatorian — L. Starliiig and Martha Hol- land. 3. Best all round — Agee and L. Starling. 4. Wittiest — Watkins and Jones. 5. Most athletic Mildred Holland and M. McDaniel. 6. Most intelligent — L. Starling and Billings. 7. Best dress — Lawrence and A. M. Ashby. 8. Quietest A. M. Ashby and C. R. Jones. 9. 10, Best looking— Moss and Agee. 11. Most popular— Martha Holland and Lawrence.

Suggestions in the Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) collection:

Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 18

1947, pg 18

Axton High School - Axtonian Yearbook (Axton, VA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 34

1947, pg 34


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