High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 30 text:
“
19 EXETER HIGH SCHOOL YEAR BOOK 38 CONTRIBUTORS Listed on this and the following pages are the names of those who generously Contributed to our book. On behalf of the senior class, I wish to thank each and every one of you for your splendid support. Without your Hnancial aid, our year book, and the SchoOl'S first, could not have become I1 reality. MR. SAMUEL T. ADAMS THE BAKER AGENCY MR. ARTHUR J. BAXTER MR. GEORGE BEAN MISS BEBE BELL MRS. MARY BENNETT MR. GUY BROOKS MISS MABEL BRUTON MR. w'II.l.IS D. BUTTON MRS. BARBARA CAIL MR. CHARLES W. CALDWELL MR. OCTAVE CARBONNEAU MRS. OcTAvE CARBONNEAU MR. VICTOR CARBONNEAU MISS NANCY CARTER MRS. IDA CASTON MR. FRANK CILLEY MR. THOMAS W. COLE REV. DANIEI. J. COTTER COMPLIMENTS OF 'THREE FRIENDS MISS RACHEL CONANT COURT STREET GARAGE MR. GEORGE DEARBORN MRS. GEORGE DEARBORN MISS PRISCILLA DEARBORN MISS MILDREB DIMAN MR. JAMES DoNovAN MR. WALTER DORMAN MR. ALBERTUS T. DUDLEY DUGGAN 8x PAQUET MR. FRANCIS ELIOT EXETER HI-Y CLUB EXETER LUMBER Co., INC. MR. LEWIS FIEIELD MR. W. FLANAGAN MISS HARRIET M. FORD ALvIN E. FOSS, County Com'r. MR. DONALD C. FULLER L. GAIREO AND SONS MR. PERLEY GARDNER MRS. EDWIN GRANEY MR. JOHN W. A. GREEN IOKA 'FHEATRE MISS HELEN JETTE MR. WILLIAM JETTE MR. ELMER JOIINSON MR. GEORGE JOHNSON MRS. MIXRGLTERITE JOHNSON F. L. JUNKINS AND SON MRS. JOSEPH KENICK MRS. JOSEPH KLEMARCZYK MRS. CARL KORZIENIEWSKI MR. ROBERT II. LEES DR. JAMES M. LOGAN MR. RALPH LOVELY MR. FRANK R. MACMACKIN MRS. IIELEN MACNABB MISS MARIE MARKEY TIIE EDITOR. MRS. BARBARA STEVENS MfkI'RIiR MISS BARBARA NIARTELI. MARTI-:LL'S MISS SARAH MASTERMAN MR. HAROLD MCBRIDE MISS MARY MCCARTIIY MR. JACK LICGAUGIIEY MR. J. YVILLIAM MCNULTY MRS. J. WILLIAM MCNULTY MRS. CHARLES H. MCmiILLIAMS RALPH E. MERAS Co. MISS EDITH MERRILL MISS FLORENCE MERRII.L MOORE'S SHOE STORE MR. FRANK B. NAY MISS RUBY NICHOLS MRS. JOSEPH NOVAK AN OI.D GRAD MR. RALPH H. PARKER MR. PERLEY H. PEASE MR. FRANK PEAVEY D. POGGIO AND SONS MR. GORDON RAY MR. DONALD RICHARDS 28
”
Page 29 text:
“
ft L9 EXETER HIGH SCHOOL YEAR BOOK 38 American History. In 1935 a constitutional committee was appointed: Edwin Wiggin, Verne Smith, and Kenneth Jewell, now of the class of 1939. 'I' he club work is carried on by boys of Classes I and II but at that time it was agreed that any boy in the High School who had been a member the last quarter in his Class II year might remain in the club as an honorary member and participate in field trips. Elmer Stevens, Robert Winkler, Thaddeus Klemarczyk, Raymond Martell and Robert Crosbie, now seniors, have been loyal supporters throughout their six years at High School, have been on nearly all trips, and have been of great assistance in helping to share the responsibilities of the club. In 1934 the club made Mr. Willard Rowe the first honorary member of the club. In 1937 Judge Henry Shute was a guest speaker at an open meeting when the club invited the entire student body as guests. Judge Shute read selections from one of his own books and the boys greatly enjoyed seeing and hearing him. To show their appreciation they invited him to become another honorary member of the club. Many interesting places in southern New Hampshire, Maine and Massachusetts have been visited. These trips are usually made on Saturday. We leave in the moming, carry a basket lunch, and return late in the afternoon. A school bus is usually available and about iifty cents apiece covers all expenses. Mrs. Richard Shute, who is a most loyal supporter, has twice accompanied us in her own car, thus enabling a larger group to go, and aiding in many ways. Beside the Cincinnati House we have visited the Garrison House in Exeter, the Old jail in York Village, Maine, the Bartlett house in Kingston, where Mrs. Levi Bartlett, a most gracious hostess, thrills the boys with her tales of Revolutionary Days and Josiah Bartlett, the first occupant of the house and a signer of the Declaration of Independence, the Whittier birthplace and the Captain's Well in Amesbury, Mass., Odiorne's Point in Rye, the Woodman Institute in Dover, Fort McClary in Kittery, Maine, and the Frost Garrisons, in York, Maine. Captain Adams at Adams Point made one trip an outstanding one. The boys were his guests at his home on Great Bay where they crawled all over his gundelow, then in the pro- cess of construction, being hewn out by hand as in the days when gundelows were used on the Exeter River. On April ro, 1937, we ventured farther than usual and spent the day in Lexington and Concord, Mass. We visited the Lexington Green, the Hancock-Clark House, and the old Belfry in Lexington, the historic North Bridge, Colonial Inn, the Wright Tavem, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, and the Public Library in Concord. An unexpected treat was a stop at the Mohawk Trading Post in Concord. When some unusually good moving picture of historical interest comes along, we plan a movie party, attending in a group. Rarely our business meetings are social. One held at the home, of the club adviser will long be remembered for the puppet show put on by Robert Crosbie a tire in the neighborhood barn to which the boys hurriedly fied, and delicious cakes made by understanding mothers. The club records are a constant source of enjoyment for they contain pictures taken during the trips, reports of all meetings and trips, and letters from the late Edward Tuck, Daniel Carter Beard, the late Ambrose Swasey, and several others, when in 1933 the boys carried on a citizenship project. At present a stamp unit is a new feature of the club. Lionel Carbonneau has given talks on stamp collecting, and we are starting a stamp collection of historical stamps of the United States. Our club is an incentive to better work in history, it furnishes much pleasure, and it points a profitable way to spend one's leisure time. The interest it creates is far reaching and it does much to develop civic pride. We trust the boys who carry it on in years to come may continue to make it a very worthwhile project. HELEN B. MACNABB, Club Adviser. 27
”
Page 31 text:
“
19 EXETE E R HIGH SCHOOL YEAR BOOK 3.2 MR. GENE RICHARDSON MR. JOHN RONALD MRS. JOSEPH Ross MR. WVILLARD I. ROwE MISS JESSIE SANBORN MRS. ALICE M. SCOTT MR. J. E. SHONE MRS. VIRGINIA SMITH MRS. KATIE SPRAGUE MR. R. H. STANLEY STAR LAUNDRY MR. ELMER G. STEVENS MRS. ELMER G. STEVENS MR. W. E. STREETER Best all-round boy . . Best natured .... Most business like . Best looking . . . Best sports .... Most Studious .... Most likely to succeed Class Sheik ..... Pessimist ..... Optimist . . . Most care-free . . Quietest .... Noisiest . . . Most popular . Best dressed . . Most bashful . Athlete . . . Class baby . . Class blulier . . . Favorite teacher . . Mrss VIRGINIA TARR MR. W. M. TEMPLE MR. CYRUS THOMPSON MR. CLIFTON A. TowLE MISS BETTY TYTUS MR. CARL VOSE MISS GERALDINE WALSH MR. JAMES WALSH MRS. JAMES WALSH MR. WILLIAM WETHERELL MR. JOHN C. WINKLER LOUIS WINKLER, D.M D MR. WALTER WOTCICIL! MR. L. V. WRIGHT SENIOR CLASS BALLOT ..CLAUDEDORMAN . . ROBERT WINKLER ELMERSTEVENS . . . . . . . . . . .ROBERT WINKLER, CLAUDE DORMAN . , ROBERT WINKLER, CLAUDE DORMAN, RAYMOND MARTELL .......,............EDWARDERTEL . .................. ELMER STEVENS . . . EUGENE RITZO . . THADDEUS KLEMARczYIc . , . ROBERT WINRLER , . . . CARL SCHUR . . . . NEvE DIMOCK . J. WILLIAM MCNULTY . . RAYMOND MARTELL . . . EUGENE Rrrzo . EDMUND WASIEWSKI T. FRANCIS WALSH . . . . JOSEPH SUSKA . EDMUND WASIEWSKI . . . MISS DIMAN 29
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.