Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT)

 - Class of 1937

Page 117 of 206

 

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 117 of 206
Page 117 of 206



Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 116
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Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 118
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Page 117 text:

I l ll I ll ll ll I THE SCOTTY, GLASGOW, MONTANA Page 61 I, RECREATION K QQ 5: if LUNCH COUNTER I Q1 Dr. C. N. Gray ,, Q ICE CREAM - Sgli'?I'sgllINKSI - CANDY ig if Dentist I' I HOT DOGS - HAMBURGERS ll - ff Second Avenue South and Seventh Street I Medical Building - Phone 275 IE ROY KNIGHT, Prop. It ' 'b if Where else but... il 1, 1' if , E' If Dr. G. A. Clark if FLATE N s I if EE Q . . . for the smartest if il Denhsl Wearing Apparel! :I :I Youef Building - Phone 429-R Ig Save More at the . . . E if ' I North Side Cash Grvcery I IE T'i'if'3.f..fff..'if'.?',!?.'f. .i'?.I CO' I 3 LOWEST PRICES IN VALLEY COUNTY! :I :I pclasgow, Mon tana y Q Phone 3 - We Deliver I, , II II ll ' ,, Roman s Wreckmg Yard SE L Coleman Hardware I 'Z Phone E E Quality Hardware I1 ll U U Thirty-seven Years in Glasgow II All Kinds of New and Used Parts ' I Il C0 gEU'alif2 ,3g0 the 55 5, Geo. W. Ruffcorn 1: ag ii gf Attorney at Law i 5 E. L. J' 629 Second Avenue So. - Phone 171-M I :E Jeweler - Glasgow, Mont. 4' ii Glasgow' Montana ::L-x-:::::,--::xeexxe J :,:::x:,::::: xxj

Page 116 text:

Page 60 THE SCOTTY, GLASGOW, MONTANA Comes Spring, and your inquiring reporter thought it would be interesting to get the views of the different groups in school concerning this very disturbing season, so we go out mingling with t'he masses. First we'll ask this superior looking person her opinion of the matter. Hello, my good woman, would you mind answering a few simple question? Say, listen, you. All I ever do is answer questions, and l've ceased to be terribly amused by those Voice of the People surveys1so on your way! My, she's quick on the come-back. She's probably a senior: they're all prbblem children this year. Yes, but listen. All I wanted to ask was what are your reactions to Spring, Spring, beautiful Spring, and then out of your life forever, honor bright! Well, l'll tell you. In the Spring I get the most ab- surdly mixed emotions, l feel too, too, divinely elated over graduating, and then I have moments when it seems too, too sad to leave all this 1 my Alma Mater and all that sort of thing, you know! Yes, yes, go on! Well, l simp-ully hate to go to classes, and lots of times I just forget them and go out and commune with nature1over a coke1you understand. I positively yearn for excitement, romance, and all that sort of thing 1 just as if anything could ever happen here! We seniors have our troubles in the Spring. We just wonder if we're going to be graduated nicely or simply be asked to leave quietly! We won't be the only ones to be happy at our departure: the whole school will probably send up little prayers of thanks to think that we have finally left. Yes, well thank you. What's that? No, we don't need accompanying pictures or autographs. Thank you, any- way! No, I don't know any movie producers! Good-bye, now! . I-lere's a sort of interesting looking individual 1 probably one of the juniors. I-li, bud, would you mind answering a few questions on your reactions to Spring? Mee, l'm glad when it's Spring, 'cause then we can go to Prom. After all these years! Think of it! All the purty girls in formals and people stepping all over other peo- ple's dresses! Anothertring about this joyous season is that we're practically done being the underdogs around this place. Next fall we'll be seniors and We'll be much better than this year's crop. We won't pollute morals, we won't be too independent. We will be the pride and joy of our Alma Mammyln Yeah, that's what you think, now, just wait, my friend, just wait! Check one more off the list. Now to find a talkative sophomore, a task which should not be diffi- cult. l-lello, my little man. Would you be a good little boy and answer in your words a few questions I am about to ask? First 1 do you like Spring? Answer yes or no. Okay, big shot. l'll talk, I'll talk! I like Spring be- cause it's so warm and nice and I feel so darned good. I just wanna get in the grove and do some rug cutting. I get all jitterbuggy and just wanna start jiveing in Eng- lish. Then again, l don't like it, because all the juniors and seniors are getting ready for Prom and I feel so left out and all alone. They can go and dine and dance and all we sophomores can do is just play tiddly winks, for all tney care. just wait'll we get big. We'll show 'eml Yes, l'm sure you will. You have that look in your l'll walk eye. Now just be calm and run along and play l Now for a freshman. l'lere's a little fellow. Say, down t'har! Can you hear me? Do you ever have Spring fever? Sure I do. I have'it practically all winter. But it's worse in Spring. I think l've got it bad right now. Sure is funny. You don't think it's fatal ,do you? You never heard of anyone dying from it, did you? I don't wanna die. l'm much too young to die. l'm not even in senior high school yet, and I do so wanta be a senior some day. I love life, and I wanta live! I'm so young, so fair, my years so tender! Gosh, son. Nobody ever passed into the great be- yond yet as a result of Spring fever. So you take care of yourself, and l'm sure you will live to be a senior 1 and even graduate, if you don't shoot yourself in the middle of your senior year Say, you! Are you by any chance one of the little folks attending seventh or eighth grade? Well, do you have Spring fever? Uh-huh. Do you get it bad? Uh-huh. I-low do you feel when you get it? Extremely uncomfortable. l'd rather be out in the great outdoors, seeing the beauties Lady Spring has wrought, Mother Nature's handiwork, watching the birds and the bees, the robbins, the first harbingers of spring, and all the animal kingdom welcoming her return. Thanks, Prof! They certainly are educating them thoroughly theseldaysl Here comes a dwarfish little crea- ture 1 must be a kid from grade school. l'le'll talk like Einstein! Say, little one, how do you feel about Spring? Fine, I-low are you? Fine, thanks1l mean, do you feel different in Spring? Better or worse? Better. There's all the nice gooey mud to wade in, and I can jump rope and play marbles and write things on sidewalks and roller skate and ride bikes and 1 H 'Nuff said, small one. I know all about it. I too once knew the joys of child'hood1trailing clouds of glory and all that. Backward, oh, backward turn1no, not you. Pardon me, ma'am. Are you a teacher? Could you spare me a moment? Do you like the Spring? UNO! I hate the Spring 1 wallowing in mud up to your waist, trying to instill a little knowledge into minds that are out playing marbles. Trying to keep my mind on the too, would rather be outside. Nobody teachers! They think we're mean, nasty in reality we're afflicted just as bad as don't know what we go through! It's a 'un lesson when l, understands us old ogres, but anybody! You hard, hard life! Yes, very hard! Thank you, ma'am. My heart goes out to you!1 Say, mister, what's the matter? 'Tm tired. Yes, I notice you look a wee bit listlessf' I'm tired. l'm tired from sweepin.'1 all I do is sweep and clean. Clean and sweep up after a hoard of kids1 all day slaving and sweating over a broom, dumping wastebaskets1sweeping up mud! Gosh, l'm tired! That's what Spring does for us janitors1just work, work work 1 l'm tired! And here, dear reader, is as far as we go. 1 Barbara Anderson,'39.



Page 118 text:

BLATS FROM THE BAGPIPE A WORD T0 THE WISE A one-pound box of candy is an appropriate gift to a girl who has no brothers1if she has no brothers. If she has brothers, add two pounds for each brother. Laura Belle Combs1Now It Can Be Told fagain and againl. Ruth Ness and Slippery Robertson1The Kiss, Dorothy C. 1Song of the Range fMagic Chefl. The Clarinets in the Band 1 Polka and Fugue fpro- nounced Phewl. Tiny B. 1 Five Foot Two. Runclle1l'm Madly ln Love Witth You! Mrs. Stieler to Billf-Can She Make a Cherry Pie, Billy Boy? Pee Wee 1 Marie. Any Scotchman1l Can't Give You Anything But Love, or even The Penny Serenade. The Whole School to the Seniors 1 Out the Window You Must Go. Kids away at school will be singing this spring 1 I'm Goin' Back to See Those Homely Country Cousins of Mine. Agnes Buen 1Wha.t Goes On Here in My Heart? Theresa 1 You Have to Give a Little, Take a Little. Thelma Hopstad 1 My Heart Belongs to Daddy. Katie P. 1 My Buddy. Jerald Ness 1 Oh, l Must See Annie Tonight. Ruth Leedharn1 The Campbells Are Coming fmayw be., Bobby K. 1I Won't Tell a Soul I Love You CTO Rubyl. Shirley Oliver1There's a Faraway Look in Your Eye. Pussy P. 1 Pease Believe Me. Ed MCG. 1Tiny's Little Fingerprints. Charlie B. 1 l've Got You Under My Skin flichief. Horace G.1 QTo his jallopyj Ride, Tenclerfoot, Ride. Gade ,Iohnson1You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby! Chink B. 1I Buy All My Papers from a Kid Named Joe. Tillie Thill1That Old Gal of Mine. Bert Osen 1 Have You Forgotten So Soon? Helyn Mitchell 1 Bye, Baby Buntin. Everybody caught in the flood 1Oh, I Wish I Had a Red Canoe. Friedl, Butler and Rybock1Ten Pretty Girls. Nadine Pederson 1 Deep Purple. Harold Magruder1What Have You Got That Gets Me? Boys who worked for WPA 1 Old Man River. Helen Mill 1 Beautiful, Beautiful Texas. Laura Egstad Twhen It's Springtime in the Rockies. Harold Feldt1I Love to Whistle. FayiNess1With You on My Mind CI can still wear my Beaniej. Mark Etchart 1You're a- Sweet Little Headache, Gordon Vallandigham 1Why Don't Somebody Tell Me These Things? Leo Fitzpatrick 1 This Can't Be Love. Jere Davis 1 No, No, A Thousand Times No. Orma Enger-Love's Old Sweet Song. Senior and Junior Girls Chorus1I've Got a Date With a Dream. Jack Burgess 1 I've Got a Pocket Full of Dreams. It seems that those two sophomore girls, Alpha and Albana, are really twin conscious. We hear that their eyes and attentions are wandering in the direction of the Cornwell twins. Mr. Hunton: Priscilla, did your father write this essay? Pussy: No, Mr. Hunton. He started it, but mother had to do it all over again. Griff: Weber, will you please tell the class what an octopus is? Weber: It must be a cat with eight sides. G rand 1Turk Miller. I.. ittle 1 Junior Putz. A mbitious 1 B. Cabell. S ophisticated 1 Gene Coleman. G lamorous 1 Elaine Newton. O ccupied 1 Dotti Bretzke. W illful 1 Lorraine Jensen. I-I andsome 1 jere Davis. I rish 1 Kathleen Gallagher. G ooney 1 Ed McGlochlin. H ealthy 1 Pat Campbell. S hort 1 Harry Farrington. C ute 1 Ferdinand the Bull. H opeless 1 Wayne McCoy. O ptimistic 1 Emma Olinger. O rnamental 1 Lillian Grotjan. L onely 1 Hazel and Leona QPhone 157-MJ Fgggggggggggggg:::,::::::::,::,,:,:,::::::: n ll Il , nr gg American Cafe if FRONT STREET if Where You Always Can Meet Your Friends! n QE Good Coffee II L:3:3::::::::::::::::::::::::::::1:1::l:::::f z'::::::l::::::::l::::9oo0oC: ll Ll ll 222 PHON E 222 ll Q 24-HOUR ssnvlcla II GLASGOW TAXI U nu Ib

Suggestions in the Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) collection:

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

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Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 17

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Glasgow High School - Hootman Yearbook (Glasgow, MT) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 141

1937, pg 141


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