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Page 23 text:
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u Dcnc THE SPOTLIGHT C= CLASS GRUMBLER For tin hist four wars we Seniors have l een taking tin 111»h :iml flu downs in high srliool. This being our finishing visu should make us art dignified as most all Seniors do. Som0 of us seem to formet our dignity and are thinking about something; ohe. What this something rise is. I don’t know. Our classes should come first, lmt I'm afraid they don’t sometimes. Mr. F. L. I'rterson likes to remind ns of this, mid gives ns plenty other things to think about. lb tells us that we will have to get pep into ourselves. lr. .Lirown comes to seliool looking fjnite sleepy sometimes. We don’t know what the reason is, hut we think he has hern working late to find something for ns to do. Mr. t’arl I'eterson comes to school all smiles, and looks juite well. The reason for this, I do not know, hut as things are. I Isdieve it is because he succeeded in walking to seliool without Miss Moles nt his side. Mr. I'rterson seems to he afraid or kind of hashful with the fair sex. Miss holes studies all night about how long an English lesson she shall give us, and her filial conclusion is about twenty pages in all. She likes pocket knives. All she says when she sees a fellow with one in the class room is that •■Yon may lie excused.” Miss I oh s enjoys the company of mice that get in her desk. All she does when she sees one is to scream bloody murder and run out of her room. As a whole the teachers are fjnite good to ns at times lmt sometime we change our minds. We ill not have the pleasure to go to school to them any moit . I don’t know which will be the happier, the teachei-s or the Seniors. I think both sides will he eijually happy. We have had many trim Ides this year. I’m! proha lily the largest was the Annual. We printed the Sl'nTLhillT. and something was always wrong. We hoys didn’t fight much with the girls about it for tin simple thing we didn’t want our hair pulled. We let the girls have their own way, and 1 must say that they were spoiled a little hv it. It’s just like a little child when it has its way part of the time it wants it all the time, and we hoys, being gentlemen, did not hot her t hem. When we entered high school, we tlnmglii we were ijnite smart hut the further we went the less we knew. Now we are Seniors and look hark at the Freshmen ami take pity on them. Some of them look so green that it will take more than four years for them to ripen. They think that w hen they get through high school it is all owr, hut vve find it’s just the beginning. P« e 21
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Page 22 text:
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C=□ THE SPOTLIGHT DC DdK SKNIOK POEM 111 till» VfJll Ilf twi‘1'1 V -XCVC1I. i In ;i hri lit September day, A £i onp nf jolly Freshmen To Krady found their way. They were tortured I in flu Sophomores, Made fun of Iiv t In rest. Kilt they lived tliroii li all this nonsense And strove to do their l»i st. Then when that year had ended And the next one had he un. Those w ho had onre I mm 11 Freshmen Now were Sophomores full of fun. They made friends w ith all the tearherx I hinu-h their happy, pleasing ways, And each one will remember II is rmvfree Sophomore days. The third year they wen .luniors Working hard and lonji earh day. To overcome each difficulty They were sure to find a way. A ml now this »ronp are Seniors And before yon here we stand. All our hopes am) si rubles centered In this diploma in oin hand. L. T., ol =n n 3t=i 11 il 1L ir -if- - If ir Paire 20
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Page 24 text:
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0=n THE SPOTLIGHT CDC □cut I have grumbled enough about the Hass as a whole and will now toll each mi« s faults. I won’t mention them all. That would tftkt too long. Hetty Make, probably tin only dignified Senior, is always trying to keep ns on a si might and narrow path. Sin tolls ns what wo should do and what wo shouldn’t. This would Im all right if wo uiindo I hor a little, hut I’m afraid it doesn't do iniirli good. I imdorstand sho has a boy friend; I surely pity the poor fol low. Irma Kank is full of pop and ready to have a littlo fun. She works onro in a while, that is, enough to get exempt. She likes to art on the stage, and especially if there is love to ho made. You might even hear her toll a joke once in a while. Charlotte Thompson seems to bo thinking of .something all tin time. I donht it she is thinking of school at all heoanse she moons around like sin was in trouble. What this is I don’t know hut I believe it is a little love affair. Kvery .Monday sin seems rheeifnl, but as the week comes to a Hose it’s the same old thing. I wonder what causes this. Kstlier Weikuin is thinking of things besides soliool work. also. She is very fond of hoy friends and has had several lately. I don’t know whether she is trying to pick out the right one for herself or not hut I’m afraid she is tak ing chances on breaking too many hearts. Hill Stenlijem has a weakness for a mustache. Ile sjiys I..si have one to strain his soup because it tastes so much better. I wondered a hit why Hill was so thin but I have solved the problem. I have come to the nmrlusion i hat he strains all tin food value out of his soup. Clarke Fontaine is the only one of ns that is good, lie has ;i weakness for cigarettes and cigars, especially cigars. He smoked cigars like a man in the Senior play. He stays ai Mr. F. L. Petersons, and I understand his smoking habit is cheeked a great deal. Also, Clarke likes the company of the fairer sex a lit tie hit. I sim. my classmates liavt my faults also. They didn’t forget me. belaud Carner, an example of perfect inn, is not a horn grumbler. Talk about Ye Knights of Hide making love, Iceland can heat them the stage. We'll venture to say nothing of his private affairs. He sweeps floors, plays basketball, goes occasionally with a member of the fair si x, and yet lie stavs so lien 11 tifully “put.” Lki.. i Caijnku. M Patre 22
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