Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA)

 - Class of 1930

Page 23 of 56

 

Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 23 of 56
Page 23 of 56



Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 22
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Page 23 text:

BOURNE HIGH SCHOOL 21 Donald Fisher and Tom Stockley run a radio station. Donald does the announcing (Miss Dill always thought him a great talker) and Tom signs and cracks jokes! Earle, look! A plane has landed! Do you know who the pilot is? He looks familiar. Why, yes, that’s Dick Jackson. Something seems to be the matter. Please excuse me a moment. (five minutes later) Carolyn, I have some more news for you. Dick just took Har- old Weeks to the Pocasset Hospital. Harold broke a leg and an arm when he crashed in his new plane, but he will be O. K soon, because Helen Roza is his nurse. What a tragedy! Speaking of Dick reminds me of Lester James. What became of him? That’s right, too. Well, Carolyn, I’ll have you to know that B. H. S. graduated Yale’s star basket ball player! We leave here sharply at 2:15 and it’s 2:10 now. There is the plane you are going in. While I’m making my reports, you had better hop aboard. ‘Thanks for giving me all the news, Carolyn. It was a real pleasure. I hope you enjoy your trip. Thanks, Earle, it was a pleasure to me, also. Goodbye. C. F. L.— M. E. C. COOPERATION WITH OUR ADVERTISERS T he greatest source of aid to students publishing a maga- zine is from the business men of the community. These men are the ones who give necessary advertisements and often help the school by buying tickets to various school benefits. The student, however, rarely reciprocates. When they buy clothing, things needed in the home, or even automobiles, they go to the stores of the city whose residents care very little whether the students go to Washington or make the school magazine a success. This is not the proper cooperation which, in these hard times, is more necessary than ever before. The local merchants suffer from the results of this manner of trading. Every high school student should strive to cooperate with those who help them most and are most interested in their welfare. Harold L. Colbeth ’32

Page 22 text:

20 APTUCXET Milia Puukka — Owner and Manager Florence Burrows and Margaret Ortolani Star Performers for this week only. Well-known on Broadway as “The Giggling Twins.” “Carolyn, last Sunday afternoon an aeroplane landed here to refuel and I went over to speak to the pilot. Who do you suppose it was?” “I don ' t know, I’m sure.” “Bernard Hyllestad, out for a little spin in his new aeroplane that his father had given him when he graduated from Annapo- lis! He had a certain friend from Brighton with him. They had just come out for the usual Sunday afternoon ride and had decided to see Old Cape Cod a moment.” “What are you doing now, Carolyn?” “I’m teaching Geometry at East Greenwich Academy. Mr. Coady and Mr. Peebles always said that they had never seen or heard of another pupil like me.” “The other day Bernice Cunningham and Arlene Thompson gave me the pleasure of their company. Bernice is Dean of Lin- coln Academy, and Arlene is the Latin teacher.” “Friday I met Marie Crosby, Nellie Dill and Virginia Brackett in Wareham City. They are stenographers in Flora Phinney’s millinery shop.” “Earle, have you seen Hope Swift or Albert Johnson lately?” “Yes, they are both coaches at B. H. S. The students say that they never have seen coaches like them since former ‘Coach De- mers’ left!” “I read in the New York Times, Earle, that Constance Pope is travelling between New York and Paris buying dresses for Madame Irene Taber, designer and owner of 5th Avenue’s most famous store for ladies’ wearing apparel.” “I noticed that the former Keith car shop has a large sign on it, ‘Charles McGowen Car Shops’ Managed by George Hunt ” “By the way, what became of Ralph Ellis, Donald Fisher, Tom Stockley and Carl Chase?” “Well, let’s see, Carolyn. Ralph Ellis is fish and game warden of Sagamore and is living in peace because he made a lot of monev trapping in the Bournedale Creeks. Ruth Schroeter is his private secretary.



Page 24 text:

22 APTUCXET AMBITION A mbition is the spirit which urges men on to do greater things in a greater way. This spirit is always busy, urg- ing men to work harder for higher positions, urging chil- dren to study and work so that some day they may be of some use in the world. The ambition of a child is generally greater than that of a man, as they set such high standards for themselves. For instance many children have the ambition of becoming president some day, or of being like Washington, or Lindy. Even though they do not reach the height of their ambition, it helps them nevertheless. All great men of history had ambition. Abraham Lincoln had the ambition of freeing the slaves, Lindy of flying the Atlantic, and their ambitions were realized. Can you think of any great man who has succeeded without ambition? The people of China are not ambitious. They are content to do things just as their fathers did before them, never trying to better their country or themselves. Today, China is one of the most backward of nations. Man, if he has enough ambition, may overcome the odds against him no matter how great they are, and reach the stand- ard he has set for himself. Therefore if you want to get ahead in this world, be ambitious, set a goal for yourself, and you will reach it. Ralph Ellis THE BRICK CHIMNEY O NE day as I was passing along an old street with a friend I noticed a tall brick chimney standing amid ruins that were now covered with grass and weeds. My friend, seeing that I was interested, offered to tell me the following story: “Once, five years ago, a wealthy invalid lived in the house which stood there. He lived there quietly with no one but a housekeeper to care for his needs. She was a queer old lady and was seen very seldom. One night as I was returning home from work I heard a cry and looked up in time to see a hand waving a green handkerchief from one of the upper windows of this house. Since an automo- bile happened to drive away from the house at that particular moment I took the waving to be merely a farewell sign and thought no more of the incident.

Suggestions in the Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) collection:

Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Bourne High School - Canal Currents Yearbook (Bourne, MA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939


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