Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH)

 - Class of 1924

Page 25 of 90

 

Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 25 of 90
Page 25 of 90



Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 24
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Page 25 text:

THE GOAL Twenty-one Item 4. To Mrs. Everett-A more obedi- ent and studious Occupations Class. Item 5. To Miss Taylor-A deeper and more commanding voice. SECTION II Item 1. We, the Seniors, do leave in trust to the Juniors our slogan: The Faithful Nine. The honor of being the first class to graduate in the new Hi Auditorium. Item 2. We, the Seniors, do bequeath to the Sophomores, our claim and studious dis- positions, which will lead to higher and nobler ideals. Items 3. We, the Seniors, do leave to the Freshmen, a room in the new school build- ing where they may develop a feeling of responsibility and importance. SECTION III Item 1. I, Francis Nussbaum, bequeath my ability to argue upon any questionable subject, to Albert Sindlinger. Item 2. I, Harold Thomas, do leave my position as cartoonist, to Paul Williams. Item 3. I, Gladys Brown, bequeath my greatness to Ruth Milligan, provided same is used only in self defense. Item 4. I, Mary Bender, do will my long raven black locks to Josephine Snyder. Item 5. I, Victor Schreiner, bequeath my social relations with the Sophomore girls, to Leonard Blick. Item 6. I, Clara Mae Reed, do leave my power to charm the boys, to Hazel Gibbons. Item 7. I, Julia Shull, bequeath my deter- mination, to Gail Hamilton. Item 8. I, Mary Pfeiffer, do cleave my musical talent, to Edith Schreiner. Item 9. I, Luther Lindon, bequeath my love for quiet and solitude, to George Wentz. We, the Seniors, do leave the whole school with the hope that it has been made better by our presence. THE SENIOR CLASS Luther Lindon '24 lllillli CLASS PLAY NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH Presented by the Senior Class, May 9, 1924 CAST Robert Bennett ......L .LL.,,...L... - . ...., - .Victor R. Schreiner E. M. Ralston ....... ,... ,,,, ...... , L u ther Lindon Dick Donnelly ,.............. . ..,.-., Albert E. Sindlinger Clarence Van Dusen ......... ...... Harold A. Thomas Bishop Doran ...... A ....... - o...... Francis E. Nussbaum Gwendolyn Ralston .... ........ Clara Mae Reed Mrs. E. M. Ralston ..... 1 I . ..-oMary K. Pfeiffer Ethel Clark. ................ ..... M ary E. Bender Mable Jackson ......... . .... Gladys M. Brown Sable Jackson ....... ............. ......................... . .... .......... . J u lia E. Shull Martha .. ............. ................................................. . . Julia E. Shull TIME-THE PRESENT NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH A bet is made that Bob Bennett can not tell the truth for twenty-four hours, but the hero does it. The bet he makes with his business partners and the trouble he gets into with his friends, his partners, his fiancee and his friends. Nothing But The Truth is one of the most sprightly, popular and amusing comedies that the school has produced.

Page 24 text:

Twenty THE' GOAL poured it on the stone, rolled it around and murmured some peculiar words. Then tak- ing the tobacco from the stone, she put it into her pipe. Lighting the pipe, she asked for my classmates' names and a little description of each. Before I gave her the description of them, I, being curious, asked her what effect the stone had. She said she had never told a person but she would tell me because I was the one that really discovered all. She said, Dear child, I had been hunting this very stone. It once belonged to an old Indian medicine doctor who was able to make prophecies and he had most of his power through it and I am one of his descendants. I have the power now that he had and which, dear child, I would never have had if it were not for you. 'fNow, whom do you want to hear about first? she asked. I began to describe each classmate and she started to talk to me, as she gazed through the smoke from the pipe, and described each so vividly that I, looking through the smoke seemed to see them also. She told me that Gladys Brown had gone to Maryland to take up nursing and had successfully finished her course there and is now Superintendent of one of the big hos- pitals in Columbus, Chio. Francis Nussbaum had graduated from Antioch College and had then taught for several years but is now at Princeton Uni- versity. Mary Pfeiffer graduated from Ohio Uni- versity and had begun teaching in Charles- ton, but is now leaving for California to be a missionary among the Indians. Mary Bender, after graduating had be- come a proprietoress of the Elite Dress Mak- ing Establishment, New York City, then she had married a noted barber. Victor Schreiner is now making his fame as a great ball player, playing at the present with the Cleveland Indians. Victor is suc- cessor to the great pitcher, Cy Young. Julia Shull, thru her great love of history, had followed up this line of work and is now on a tour to Mexico where she is gathering material for her new lecture and securing a number of relics from that ancient Indian city, Pueblo Bonito, for the museum of Gnadenhutten. Harold Thomas went to the Art College, Chicago, Ill., and progressed wonderfully in his paintings and had studied under Madame De Ogden of Rome. Harold is now on his way to America. His famous painting, Ossawatomie, now hangs in the Louvre Art Gallery, Paris. Luther Lindon, having graduated, had gone to live with his uncle in Texas and now owns a large ranch in the southern part of Texas where he and his queen reign supreme. After giving me this interesting history she took the stone, carefully brushed the tobacco from it and wrapped it tenderly in a large piece of linen and put it back into the old chest, promising that at her death it should be mine. To think it all came about through one little hike! Clara Mae Reed '24 Ulillli CLASS WILL We, the Senior Class of '24, having com- pleted our school life in the G. H. S., and pronounced, by the faculty, sound in mind, and by the lower classmen of having a wonderful judgment, do make and solemnly declare this to be our last will and testament, and do wish to dispose of our many and vast possessions in the following manner:- SECTION I Item 1. To the faculty we bequeath eter- nal peace and happiness. Item 2. To Mr. Sindlinger-The privilege of advising us in our final productions. Item 3. To Mr. Kennedy-All of our un- solved mathematical problems.



Page 26 text:

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Suggestions in the Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) collection:

Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918

Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Gnadenhutten High School - Goal Yearbook (Gnadenhutten, OH) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941


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