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Page 30 text:
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The C1111 1011 53 Class Llsten mx fIl0llKlS and X011 shall heal Of the llttle Senlors sweet and dear Bettx AklllS a lllllf0I'l'Tl and cap she xxlll vxear And heal slck people exerxvxhere All xou seniors xxlth xoux latest fads Yoll should rernembel the led halr Leilllalll had About Ruth Brovxn xxe mllst tonfess NICE and frlendlx neat of dress Bob Clme vxho has blond halr Is seen sometlmes leanlng back on 15 Blologx chalr Goldle Chapman vsrltes some nexus When she doesn t haxe the blues Here are the Colopv tvs IHS Who ovxn a jolopx vxlth a grln Vwhen Johnnx IS vslth hls gal You usuallx find Tommy vxlth hls pal Although Marx Colopx IS vxlth us evexx dax Joanne Dulbln max not be so bold But for you she has a heart of gold B111 s qulte a gux Vx hen pollshlng shoes he uses Dxe Janet Fesler a qlllet gal N0 quarrellllg vxords alvx axs a pal Jalletta Halns llvelx and full of fllll Can talk a leg off anyone Lunetta H3lIlS xxlth her prettx led halr 'sex 1 SGCHIS o haxe a care Janlce Hoagland has charm ' nd ln the boxs she hnds no hlrlll lox L L'llldlS llxes on 1 farm But doxxn lll T1 xas Iles hel charm Daxld KlLCflllllLll xxlth hls llgllt brovln hall He and xou knoxx xxho xeallx nlakt 1 palr Phxll s Xltxlllllll xxlthollt Knoxxledgf If xpeets next Stdl' to be ln eollege Page Twenty sux Poem en there ls nc st lll c 1 ou knoxx I-Isle X111 X111 al x l htlt 1t as xt lk l-loxd xlho s llkXtl qu A 'lxs xxllllng to be 1 Il t Ruth Nllcklex xxas fllll of chul VK hen sh: vxent Xklth th1t box Ilflll Glul JUTIS lVlllllll9kS llkes bologna And fol hls h'1lr he uses Tonl I N011 I9 exer ln need of 1 fl 1nd good and true Merxxxn Nlllllet xxlll alvx1xs do lfxelxn 'NIOXFIS IS Hllfjthll gixlllfll l1ss But hel box frlends she thooses out of the Qophomore Class We are SUIC Joe Proper knovxs hls A B C s But xxe ale not so sure about Hls to IX VValtel Rlte 15 a farmer at healt Hls H0lSt9lDQ belng the blggel put Jlm Shean a nexxcomel llele Vxe hope he QIIJOXQG D H Q hls S lllOI' xeal Fsthel Sfllall qll18t and go ld Gettlng hel lessons as she should Harold Snlxelx vxlth hls tantx LllIlS Causes the enxx of manx glrls Larlx Smlth anothel lad Certalnlx has the glft of gab Blll shllnlakel a true class mate I svn Qlllt8 often COI'Illllg Ill late Halmon Vxlllttl oul football hexo Alvxaxs A s and nexel ZGIO .Judl Vxolfe a ll9VSL0l'l16l thls xe1l 'K hom xxe elljoxed xxhlle she xxas hut Dman VS olknlan xxho IS o 1 gixlllfll s xear rlllllkw bls LdtXldll Ulll IN most dt1l Conn NliXlIlQ don t be so nastx Rec doesnt llke thtnl xelx slssx VH lldXt dont oul best Toxx1lte1s xu haxe sun 111 1 1 ta Q lt gmd All-1111 illll xlll ent . ' 1' Q' 5 ' .' ' ' VVh 1 5 limi ' tht- Q'lVli'S 'l: ss. ' . ' , .' 1 Y aj, -' ll l'.'t ' ' ' . Ne: : ' .' ' A 'I' 11-I ' ' l'.'.'. ' 2 o . , V A . ' I .' ' ' x '. K' , ' .' B' ' f ' 1' Y I X ' 'I 2 -' x'J 'tl'. ' If 1' I H I' I. 51 . V v L . ' A .Q A .V .2 U K ' ' t , C 1 ' .' C l A ' ' ' , ', be .. , v Y . V. i V Y v L ' , L . L ,. ' . . Her heart is up the Lakeville way. I - J' ' , ' V 1 , Q 1 K- . . . 'X .','3'.' - :1 ' .1 ' l v U ' . ,, , A . ' , 1 ' ' ' als z . ' ' thlq .-1 -. . . . . V I . - ' F' A. A-'J . J. U' x D. 7,2 ,b . fel . Q ' Q 1 . ' .' at ' - . - , A 24.1 ' - A. .,. ' if 'S ' ' 5 H I ,' ii' . '. 1 ' I Sol '11 sf 'k 1 ' all ill full. 1' . .' ji' ' . Si 1 2 . J 2 2 - 2 'I A
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Page 29 text:
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The Clarzofz Class W1ll We the graduatlng class of nlneteen hundred and fiftx three bemg of sound mlnd do solemnly bequeath to the class of nlneteen hundred and flfty four the followlng valuable possessxons Marlene Armstrong her giggles to Ol1ve Sm1th Betty Akms her blushes to Joyce Mlckley Robert Cllne h1S two front teeth to Sara Conkle Leonard Bell h1s trlps to Loudonvllle to Cameron Drake Goldle Chapman her Hances to Nancy Durbln Mary L Colopy her s1de KlCk to Nola Small Johnny Colopy hls urge to sleep late 1n the mornmg to Dalene Workman Tommy Colopy hls ab1l1ty to Sklp school to Dorothy Lvbarger and Kathleen Flnan B111 Dye h1s curly ha1r to Charles Fox Joanne Durbm her Home Economlcs perxod to Joe Weber Janet Fesler her Chuck to Fern Hams Janetta Hams her rxng to Elalne Swendal and LaRetta Holland Lunetta Hams her red halr to Karol Sloan Joyce Land1s her letters from Texas to Marllyn Baugher Elsle Mlckley her baton to Davld Llfer and Paul O Donnell Floyd Mlckley h1S seat 1n Speech to Earl Vllckley Evelyn Morr1s her smallness to Jean Schlsler Jur1s MUFH16kS h1S accent to Dorls Body and Larry Greer Merwyn Mullet hlS Job as manager to Lawrence Huffman Joe Proper h1s ablllty to get thlngs confused to Eugene Woods Ausma POdDl9kS her long halr to Faun Hams Davld McConnell h1s wlsecracks to Joanne Banbury Phyll1s McM1llan her blue eyes to Lyle Kaylor Walter R106 h1S trlps to Greer to Tom Gardner B111 Shumaker h1s brlght shlrts to B111 Summers Esther Sma11 her Stralght A to Warren Myers Larry Sm1th hls sheep to Harold Frank Harold Smvely hls curly halr to Charles Mxller Dean Workman h1s dates to Charles Thatcher and Helen Durbln Jud1 Wolfe her wmters xn Florlda to Ruth Shultz Harmon Whlte hls pos1t1on on the Football team to Don Laughrey Max1ne Yearous her trlps to Howard to Norma Mann As for us you can have anythlng that you thmk IS worth takmg Wltnesses Us They Ruth Brown Janlce Hoagland Page Twenty five '53 Ruth Mickleyi her positlon of Senior Editor. to Conard Treen. We
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Page 31 text:
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The Clarzon 53 HISIOIY of Oh1o The current year 1S an h1stor1c chapter 1n the great Oh1o story A mxxture of prlde and hum1l1tv predommates among those persons concerned wlth makmg th1s our states sesqulcentennlal an event of note For It was not wlthout momentous struggle that Oh1o achleved 1ts present h1gh status among the states of the natlon Long before the vxrltten vxord was known the unlversal forces of nature were shaplng thmgs to come From the North came huge glaclers formlng the basms of the Great Lakes as they continued the1r slow descent Mov1ng southward they gradually dlsappeared but not before leavlng the area now known as Ohio 1n possesslon of SOll of great fertlllty Out of the sllent past another mysterlous shadow appears across the pages A strange rather hlghly developed race of people left mdellble traces of 1ts comlng and golng about whlch there are varled and 1ncon clusxve theorles These people known as the Mound Bullders were very real however as attested to by ten thousand mounds and some fifteen hundred fort lxke enclosures Wh1Ch are scattered throughout the state The plcture IS blurred after the dlsappearance of the Mound Bullders unt1l Europeans brought recorded hlstory to the New World then teem1ng Wlth Indlans It was from one of these trlbes the Wyandots that the name of the state IS beheved to have come Thev called the Oh1o Rlver great r1ver or Oh1O The Hrst appearance of the wh1te man IH Oh1o was 1n the form of the nomadlc French fur trader who moved down from Canada early 1n the exghteenth century A fur trader named Etlenne Brute IS belleved to have been the first whlte man to see Oh1o By 1749 the number of Frenchmen ln the area was very hlgh and the Oh1O Terrltory was Clalmed 1n behalf of the French crown France ordered General Celeron to leave Canada and to assure French control of Oh1o But from the Eastern seaboard many colon1sts were movmg across the Alleghany Mountalns Urged by adventurous splrlts and stlmulated by econom1c pressures brought forth by the Brltlsh these people sought a new l1fe Most of these ploneers were young hardy men and they were undaunted by the hazardous Journey The arr1val of the seaboard colomsts brought new fr1ct1on between two powerful natlons for the Br1t1sh crown had watched w1th 1mper1a11st1c eyes the movement of lts colonlsts Many mlnor SklFm1Sh9S took place and eventually the flames of war were burnlng brlghtly Many of the Indlans Slded w1th the French and when the war was over shortly after the mlddle of the exghteenth century vlctorlous Br1ta1n had many wounds to l1ck But France was forced to rellnqulsh 1tS clalm on Oh1O The ploneers who had come from the East were not bv nature wander ers and soon they set about erectmg homes 1n the wllderness The task was very dlflicult for thelr tools were crude and the land was covered w1th forests But a Splflt of cooperatlon productne Log cablns housed the fam1l1es and large stockades were bullt for protect1on agalnst the Indxans lCont1nued on page 341 I . . . , . V . V . . Y Y ' v , - ' 1 Y Y 1 - Y D Y Y Y . . . . U I ,, Q V o 1 1 1 , . Y 7 V ' Y Y 7 Y 1 Y Y , . Y . , . . Y . , . Page Twenty seven
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