Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA)

 - Class of 1923

Page 24 of 68

 

Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 24 of 68
Page 24 of 68



Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 23
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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 25
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Page 24 text:

14 THE EXPONENT Boss—Yes. He always was an authority on that subject. Say—remember Hiney? Alice—Yes. What’s he up to? Boss—He is called Watson Hindes now, and sings for Victor records. Alice—I can’t imagine it. And say—Irene and Luceyle Griesbach, Genevieve Feyrer, Pearl Hast¬ ings and Hilda Guiney are all running either hotels or tea-rooms and each is making a wonderful suc¬ cess. (Looks at paper.) Whose picture is that? Ro¬ land Mather, of all people! Why, he’s just been the judge in a famous beauty contest. Boss—(laughs)—I can imagine him. What is Margaret Mather doing now? Alice—She’s the head of the English depart¬ ment in a mid-western college and is famous for her lectures on “Morals and Manners.” Boss—Well, I always knew that she’d be a shin¬ ing light somewhere. Did you know that Mary Ma¬ rini is giving elocution lessons in Pekin, China, and that Hazel Atcherson is band director? Alice—You don’t say! Remember Eustace Mer¬ rill? He’s president of a woman’s college in New Jersey. Louise Hunter is dean there, and Doris Hood and Fedora Lamoreau are her assistants. Boss—No, I hadn’t heard of that. But you know Ken. Lyman and Art Merz are ambassadors to some country or other; and Jack Cavanaugh and Babe Carroll, some of our old football stars, are police¬ men in New York. Alice—You remember Arline Manning? She’s dietitian in Lee, Massachusetts. They say the name holds quite an attraction for her. Boss—I imagine it would. Have you heard what Annie Carroll is doing? Alice—No, what? Boss—She’s been writing plays and made a won¬ derful success. Some people sure do have the brains, don’t they? And I guess quite a number in the good old class of ’23 have. Alice—Well, will you look at the time. Here I came to see you at 10.30 and we’ve been talking all this time. Now I came to see you about a job for— Boss—Say, let’s go to lunch now and ta!k it over. We’ve sure had a peach of a time finding out what all our classmates are doing. WADSWORTH CROFT, ’23 ALICE TANNER, ’23 PRESENTATION OF CLASS GIFT We, as seniors, are perhaps the last graduating class to leave the portals of this building after such exercises as we have participated in this morn¬ ing. Oncoming graduates will have their class day ceremonies in the new and larger school now in construction. But we desire that this old High School shall not be forgotten by the future pupils of the new. Therefore at this time I am honored to be privileged to put this link of memory in the chain of remembrance between this building and the new one. May this gift of $250 be placed in the form of reference books at the disposal of oncom¬ ing classes. ROBERT S. HALL, ’23

Page 23 text:

THE EXPONENT 13 tory of Mankind and his Habits,” and that Hele?i Thurston and Dorothy Wait each have had their poems accepted by the New York Tribune. Wagner—My! that’s fine. I saw in the American Magazine an article on “John Woodlock, the World’s Greatest Living Scientist.” (Enter office boy) Office boy—Miss Tanner to see you, sir. Boss—Show her in, Varley. (Enter Alice Tanner) Alice—Hello, Waddy, how are you? Well, I de¬ clare! Elizabeth White and Ethel Parker and Wil¬ lard Wagner. And Alfred Varley, too! Doesn’t this make you think of High School? Boss—It sure d-oes. Sometimes I can almost ima¬ gine I’m back in G. H. S. when I see all these class¬ mates around me. Alice—Speaking of G. H. S. did you realize that two of our class are teaching there already? Boss—No. Who are they? Alice-—Jessie Dwyer is teaching Sales and Ad¬ vertising, and Ralph Haskins is successor to Miss Hamilton in the History department. Boss—Well, I never would have thought it. Oh, you remember Bernice Crane? She’s the most popu¬ lar girl in the Follies now—and her manager— you’d never guess who—is Willett Forbes. Alice—Really? We’ve got two movie stars in our class besides, Madeline Morris and Margaret Hawkes. Boss—Yes, they’re pretty good. And do you remember— (Enter office boy) Office Boy—Telegram, sir. (Exit) Boss—(Reads it, laughs)—Well, of all things! —another one in our class. This is from Professor Wilton Dean, Etymology department, Cambridge university. He wants a pilot for his plane. Let me see—I know just the one for him. Here, Wagner, write to Richard Campbell and tell him there’s his job. Alice—Doesn’t it seem strange to think that our class is now scattered almost all over the world. Leo Burke is in Africa. They say he’s hit upon a plan to change the climate there. And Frank Her¬ ron is up in Alaska doing almost the same thing. Boss—I know it! And Gotthold Faust is the Edi¬ son of uur day. He’s actually discovered something to make high school students study. Alice—That’s surely a miracle! Did you know that Gertrude Murphy is telling radio bedtime stories every night now? Boss—No, I hadn’t heard her. Have you listened tq any of the Gunn-Hall debates? Alice—The which? Boss—Gunn-Hall debates? Didn’t you know that George Gunn and Robert Hall are running for Pres¬ ident and are giving a series of debates in their country-wide campaign? Alice—No, I hadn’t known of it. But they aren’t the only ones of national fame. Robert Harris is now Secretary of Agriculture, and Arthur Kelley is on the Supreme Court bench. Boss—Not Art Kelley—on the Supreme Court bench! Is he big enough yet for his feet to reach the floor? Alice—I hardly think so. Say, did you know who originated the latest dance step—it’s got everything else beat. Boss—No—who started it? Alice—John Murphy! And quite a few of the latest popular songs have been written by May Kilburn. Boss—I didn’t suppose we had so much talent in our class, did you? And that makes me think. You remember Ramona Brown, don’t you? The class of ’43 is making a class gift of one of her paint¬ ings to the high school. Alice—Ramona an artist? I never would have dreamed it. Have you heard what Marguerite Cowan is doing? Boss—Yes. I got a letter from her the other day. She and Mabel Erhart are running a dairy farm in Vermont. (Enter office boy) Office Boy—Radio message, sir. (Hands it to Wadsworth. Exit) Boss—What’s this? Why, Mary Fitzgerald, Presi¬ dent of the Chicago National Bank, wants a trust¬ worthy stenographer. Oh—I have it—Margaret Murphy will fill that job all right. Alice—I never did suppose Mary would be a bank president, but then, “y-ou never can tell.” Boss—I should say not! Did you know that Rus¬ sell Jones is writing “Side Whispers to Girls,” in the Ladies’ Home Journal, under the name of Cou¬ sin Emma? Alice—No! But did you know that Blanche Avery has joined the artillery? You remember she always did know how to handle a “Gunn.” Boss—She sure did! But have you any idea what Malcolm Cameron is doing? Alice—Yes, indeed. He’s running a passenger plane daily from. New York to Paris. I’m going over on it in the morning to watch Jocelyn Harris play for the world-championship in tennis. Boss—Oh! I see. (Picks up book on desk) Say have you read this, “Woman’s Supreme Reign,” written by Lillian Dew and Hazel Bellows? Alice—Yes. It’s quite clever. Speaking of writ¬ ing, did you know that Donald Brown is the author of a series of essays the most famous of which is, “The Value of Speed?”



Page 25 text:

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Suggestions in the Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) collection:

Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Greenfield High School - Evergreen / Exponent Yearbook (Greenfield, MA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926


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