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Page 31 text:
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QZVMYHQWMHEJWQ 38.505, .ff '1?i5aa3? M .A 5 .mm g g, , i.5:Asr.w.gggf.gg9sg:AL?glffJ?2.x'+fzs2,A514g1 .15 92 12 lLe'z'niamwf:c - -f.nf.m- szursaxmeu in Paris. VVillard Mast, a commercial artist, is living in England. He won his fame through his illustrations of How Older People Should Conduct Themselves, a best seller, written by Elizabeth Bradfo1'd. Katherine Himes, under the name of Hlladame Rousseaufl is conducting an exclusive millinery shop in Paris. Then some have even wandered as far as Asia. Grace Clason, a guard on the All-American Girls! Basketball Team, recently went on a trip to China, where she met two old classmates: llary Beckner. a missionary in Pung Chow, province ot Nfah -longgg and Elizabeth VVohlford, who has dedicated her, life to the translation of Chinese history into English. Cora Hoogenboom and Inez Paff are conducting a correspondence school in Bombay, India. They offer the unusual opportunity of a complete four years' college course in six months. Albert Gill is the owner of a chain of groceries in Siam. Some of his managers are Eugene Koerner and Lewis Griffith. A few of the members of this class have gone to South America, a continent in which the new and unusual things happen. So far, Catherine Evans has managed to answer a heartless No to the entreaties of her many sweethearts. She is, at present, conducting a monkey ranch in Brazil, whe1'e she employs YValter Smoker as her superintendent. A few miles south of her ranch is the Van Diepenbos pony farm. Eldon lX'Iusser 1 movie star under the name of Archibald VVorthinUton is v ' i be i working on a picture in Chile. It will be shown under the name of The Silent Answerfl and was especially written for him by Dwight Smoker. A great majority of the class are somewhere in the United States. Rosemary Harper is president of Bryn llawr, and among the teachers in her college are Josephine Overholt, Arline Eigsti, and vera Hostetler. Cleo Anglin is the world's champion speed-typist, her highest record being 299 words a minute. Harold Nfiller and Raymond YVilliams have shown admirable business ability in their recent pur- chase of Teapot Dome. llarion lfyers, Rlargaret llishler, Eloise Niccum, and Elizabeth Dow have all spoken those fatal words, Hlove, honor, and obey. YVei1' Tritch and Clarence .luday have invented a new radio appliance, which will make it possible to teach school by radio. llabel Parcell and lfarie Thompson were entrants in the recent c1'oss-country hiking contest. llaetta Cripe and Edythe VVissinger are stenographers in the oirhce of the Law firm-Letherman, Luke, and Lake. Leona Dreyer and YVilma Christner, powerful business women in the financial world, have made the thriving city of VVaterford what it is today. YVilbur Huneryager has aided their undertaking with his capitalg and Paul llcblann, with his ability as a civil engineer. Then, some have been contented to remain in Goshen. Juanita Koerner is a sewing teacher, and Gretchen Clason a physical training teacher in Goshen High School. Lowell Farber was defeated in the last election for mayor of Goshen by Lois Porter. Through her private secretary, Fay Arnold, the 'following appointments have been made: Harry Bainter, Chief of Police, Roy Buchen, Fire Chiefg Eliza- beth Osborn, llotorcycle Police. Lois Todd is spending a short vacation in Goshen. having just completed a successful season with lieith's Vaudcville Circuit. And so, my friends, the curtain is drawn upon this illustrious Class of y2.1. for two more decades, when l shall return and tell you more of the marvels and successes they will have achieved. hFather Time, Eloyse Stage. -ml CRIMSON M I 33
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Page 30 text:
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Y LLL... . .- v ff-.,, . ,. - Y , .. . V . ., . , We amvizfafzznaanaezkvrggg -I '1w1 v' :.at1: 1fw?:: MW , , '- 'GSW' If- ff-'NGN lg14:bI.mggg9,gx3:,1fq5:jFf1E.i3grs153wg.sr4L 4Wgg ' 14 -: cfm A smnaussajwg Drawn up this fifth day of June, in the year of our Lord, one thousand nine hundred twenty-four, in the fourth year of our high school career and the first year in the new building. VVitnessed and signed, Lysander Pericles Richard Lake. Class Sonq We're the Goshen High School Seniors- The Class of Twenty-four We stand for fun and friendship- VVe'll be faithful evermoreg We'll ever praise G. H. S., Her wisdom and her fame-- The only school in all this land Our loyalty can claim. Chorus: Farewell Goshen High School To you welll 'ere be true And even tho' we say Good-bye,, Weill often think of you! The friends we've gained will be most dear, For we all love them well, And tho' we part and go our way, Forever memories dwell. We'll try to follow in the steps Of loyalty and right, And never, never, shall forget The Crimson and the VVhitc. -lwargaret Mishle1'. 7 Class Phophecq It has been twenty long years since the Class of ,24 embarked upon the sea of life. During my wanderings I have seen many of the members in various parts of the world and I have found that although they have not all attained the ideals they sought for, they are all happy and I know not what gift could be greater than that. The Class is scattered to the four corners of the earth. Several have gone to Europe to seek their fortune and happiness there. Howard Brady is the present dictator of Soviet Russia, which country he rules with an iron hand. The world- famous Orchestra Symphonique Chinois, under the direction of Lucille Lehman, is now playing in Venice. Some of the musicians of exceptional merit are: Donald Hope, violinist, Max Kercher, saxophonist, Anna Burkhard, pianist: Ted Lehman banjoistg and Ellsworth Garman, drummer. Pauline Miller and Nedra Smith have broken the telephone operators' wrong number record of Greece. Pauline Kundred is a poetess, author of the collection entitled Fifty-Eleven Thoughts. She is living 32
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Page 32 text:
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E VF ' .vamtavzmanraiisfw uf' im we sate! 1ii9Z'5 'iE: 5ffii 5. 7 -.:: -' zazfxsrzs f . i..a ' -4.5 -f tfw surge.:-:moz Class Oration Fellow classmates, students of Goshen High School, ladies and gentlemen: VVe are assembled here today for the purpose of taking part in an event which we, the Class of '24, will never forget and you, as brothers and sisters and mothers and fathers, will no doubt remember for some time to come. VVe have bee-n anticipating this day's joys and sorrows and now we come face to face with the problem itself. VVe are issuing forth today from a life in which we have been pro- tected to one in which we have to provide for ourselves. This new responsibility is going to demand of us the greatest effort which we are able to summon. How fitting it would be for each one of us, of the Class of ,24, to adopt a creed to lead us in the right direction! VVith a creed our efforts would be greatly rewarded for they would then be crowned with emphasis and order. With a standard ever before us, how much easier it would be to meet trials and temptations. VVould we not be better citizens and people of this nation if we knew the full meaning of discipline and obedience? Let us consider what fundamentals must be included in our creed, so that in the swirl of the present day it may still be workable. Today the position of the United States is that of a nation in a crisis. We, as the people of this nation, have just emerged from a war that has revolutionized the ideas of the whole world. In a period such as this the people must do some- thing to strengthen the country for it is in a dangerous position, and is likely to fall. The speeding up of all walks of life has thrown people together more closely, so that a new standard must be formed. In adapting our lives to this quickened pace of living, we have omitted some of the cardinal and necessary characteristics which any people must possess. l would not have you think that I am trying to introduce any reform movement but you will admit that the destiny of this nation is very questionable, unless some radical changes are made at once. And now, ladies and gentlemen and students, this is the message l want to bring to you today: that you, as citizens and coming citizens of America, must do something in your own lives to curb this moral relapse that our nation has suffered. The easiest way in which you can accomplish this end of saving America is by adopting a creed. In order to best serve your country, you must make the best out of yourself. You can not be as great a success without a creed as you can with one. Your efforts, placed without emphasis of logic and reason, do not convey their fullest meaning. Therefore you owe it to yourself and to your nation to make your life a success. By being a success I mean that you should better your- self and your surroundings in some way each day. Now let us stop and regard that which constitutes a creed. All great nations, states and individuals have creeds. Some of them are written and others are not. Some great men, with very capable minds, have creeds that are never written. Yet, in the recesses of their thought, there are certain precedents which they follow. Some people call these the dictates of conscience, which are one and the same thing. The fact is that, by making a sound creed, you strengthen the dictates of your conscience so that as a result you unconsciously become a better and bigger person both mentally and spiritually. Any creed to be a good one will embody some points which will be found in most anything of this kind. So, today, I have enumerated six points in the illustrative creed that l want to present to you. t --1 -CRIMSUN W 34
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