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Page 19 text:
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Page 18 THE BEACON June 1, 1937 i A ' . . nf n Y ' E 1 1 1 i . Q'- ' . 0 0 o Z-I.-.X O boo GZ 2 6 00 Z XD oo o a Q oo 'Z 3 CU Oo ? ? A ff Z - in H ' ' ,G j.v. ix ' L. f O an lgiiigiag This one act play was created from HRebecca Of giggEf T?E3 A ' gi Sunnybrook Farmn by Lois Craig, Mary Louise Wilson, gif? jggigggig Janis TrEmper,dMgrylLEcglli Carla, Eliendmotzi Rich! Hnggfp -N.gQ5ifigj '-'4 ard Bail e an i 'c u y un er e irec ion o Ejf?Qu ee Eggggfg Miss Neaderhouser. It was rehearsed and presented Q 5. :af igavgigg as a home room project of room thirty-five. e- rrdys y E Eye ,fggilgiij The announcers are Mary Louise Wilson and Jean Qi EAL ..sr.....,., .,,affg gfgf Forman. And the list of characters are as follows: gy if ,.lJ5 'ggi Rebecca --------- - ------ Katherine Kayser fjwffgfg ggi Emma Jane --------------- Patricia Underhill Qglymgf QE? yr. Aladdin ------------- Harold Werkman Qljghlw ,Mfg Clara Belle ----------- --Berdine Lochner r- T7 'Egg Susan ---------------- ---Ellen Metz I Q! XXXYQ Simpson Twin ------- ----- Mary Lucille Carlo .'. X X535 J ' SCENE I 'X Qiiiig. ff X: E 1 'QE f 4351! x K 1 E3 fffrffffijtlhfi av - REBECCA l8ERDlNE E, LOCHNER Place: Simpson's small home. Time: Late morning. Characters: Simpson children, Rebecca, and Emma Jane. Clara Belle: What can we do to make some money? Emma Jane: Why not set up a candy booth or a lem onade stand? Clara Belle: We have no money to buy chocolate or lemons, and besides, I don't know how to make candy. Emma Jane: I wish we could get some furniture some way. This house is so dreary. Susan: Why not thell thoap? I thaw an add in a catalogue where you could get a bookcathe, a chair, or a banquet lamp. Rebecca: You have no books, you need a banquet lamp more than you need a chair. Everybody: CYelling irregularly.j Let's do get a banquet lamp. Oh yes! Rebecca: I'll help you sell soap. Emma Jane: I'll help, too. Clara Belle: In the catalogue it looks like it's about eight feet high. Rebecca: You'd better measure the walls. Cdone by Susan.b Emma Jane: In the margin here it says that it
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Page 18 text:
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June 1, 1937 THE BEACON Page 17 Hill, Gloria, Staley and yelmg Weilmanl We laughed and talked awhile and I remarked that we had never seen such jovial girls.Sud- denly we heard some shouting and decided to investigate and who do you think was shouting?It was Deb Jamison standing on a soap box yelling for Fascism. He was sur rounded by fellow believers who included Dick Ridlen,Lester Oppen lander,Edward Rehling,Paul Kanagy and Dick Brouwer.We listened to the effective speech for awhile and then hastened on,for tomorrow we were going to Africa,home of the mosquitoes. Speaking of mos- quitoes, the first thing we saw was the sign UJane Yateg and Reba GcpQock's Incorporated Mosquitoe- Netting Company.n Next door was the one and only skyscraper build er in Africa, Edmund Baurer with Richard Nahrwald and Bill Siebold as his helpers. Naturally,we went in and talked to them awhile about the good old days. But our time was growing short so we hur- ried on to a river by which stood Charles Feistkorn and Bob Hines talking with pebbles in their mouths. When we asked what they were doing they said they wanted to be a second Demosthenes who put pebbles in his mouth and went down to the seaside and practiced speaking. As we didn't want to interrupt them, we walked on,and soon came upon this sign, hScholle and Stolte. Dentist and'?aTber work done eheap.UIt turned nut to be David Stolte and Vilbar Scholls! After these staTflLQfTEEEEver ies we boarded a train for Ethi- opia, only to disecver on arriv-- ing in Addis Abba that Florella Shimer,Betty Biregy and getty Bum gartner were running a first aid station for the Ethiopian's who Cthey were slightly were injured. late,only 10 years.DOur attention was attracted suddenly by the steady beating of tom toms and down the street came the Barnum- and Bailay circus. The elephants ,..- ,,............. came first with bareback riders, who turned out to be Wilma Ramel, Miriam Rabel, Elaine Jackson, Eva Jean Wylie, Helen Squires, and Maurine Leas.As they passed three bare back riders came galloping down the street and as they rode by I read on the sign,U Maxine Casej Joyce Cleaver,and Gwendolyn Kelly, world's greatest bare back riders.U Then our attention was taken up by some clowns who came jumping and running down the street and who should they be but those clowns of Harrison Hill Daily Bausser and James'Morrison. Then came the dog trainers,E1leen Goddard, Dorothy Allen and Aline Brockman,followed by the trapeze, wonders Wanda Bowman, Harriet Greer,Barba5a and Margaret Brower After the circus was over and we had watched our old schoolmates perform we went to our hotels and proceeded to pack for our trip home. We all agreed that it was a wonderful trip and we were sorry it was over. The lights suddenly flooded the room and we stared at each other in amazement. UWhy,Hwc ejae ulated, Wwe have seen each one of our 8A classmates as they will appear 25 years henee.n After re- covering cur voices we thanked and paid the fortune teller and left the house talking over our adventures excitedly. The next morning when we told our schoolmates about it they wouldn't believe us, but we hope you have pictured in your imagina tion our travels as we experien- Qed them- . T . E - - r Q GENERAL eowraiereas Q AND Q ENGINEERS isa E. Foster Parkway H-3115 '..........................--.........-..... ..,........a. . J. E. GUMPPER AND sows i
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Page 20 text:
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O 5 dune i, 1957 Tar BEACON Page is I - 3 -N 9 0 gi, gl 1 U 'X O Q Ho um -3 2 g ,za 0 Z Q ne, Of I .9,'...,i.LJ1',,,,,,, 'J Lv, - 1 lil W W 2753213 fl I nf? if . J Q, time lj? . stands two and one half feet high, when set up on a I proper table. Three dollars extra. , SCENE II fgjiy Place: In Emma Jane's attic. E Avggggm Time: Friday afternoon. Wmiygjggwh Characters: Rebecca and Emma Jane qw , QQEEQ 1 me Emma Jane: Can I sell you a little soap this aft i R, 57 ernoon? It is called the Rose Red and Snow White, six cakes in an ornamental box, only twenty cents for the white, twenty-five for the red. It is made from the purest ingredients, and if desired, could he eaten by an invalid with relish and profit. Oh Rebecca, don't 1et's say that. It makes me feel like a fool. Rebecca: It takes so little to make you feel like a fool, Emma Jane, that sometimes I think you must be a fool. I don't get to feeling like a fool so ter ribly easy. Now leave out the eating part, if you don't like it, and go on. g Emma Jane: The Snow White is probably the most remarkable laundry soap ever manufactured. Immerse the garments, Lightly rubbing the more s tions with soap, leave them submerged in sunset to sunrise and then the 'uouhgest wash them without the slightest effort. Rebecca: Of course it's just the same a baby has got to be called a babe or an infant in a curcular the same as it is in poetry. Would you rather say infant? Emma Jane: No, infant is worse even than babe. Rebecca, do you think we'd better do as the circular says, and let Elijah or Elisha try the soap before we begin selling it? Rebecca: I can' t imagine a babe doing a family wash with any soap,but it must be true or they would never print it, so don't let's bother. Oh! Won't it be fun, Emma Jane? At some of the houses where they can't possibly know me, I shan't be frightened and I shall reel off the whole rigamarole, invalid, babe, and all. Perhaps I shall say even the last sentence if I can remember it. We sound every chord rn the mac-ro-cosm of satisfaction. oiled por- water from baby can thing, but Af . ,, . f iv X CJ fx Txl 'W fEg,Jkm 'H ,..: ,. ,.,, .I . In 'Q-5jv'mfu Xi r' I W 'QR - ,,,...-.....-.-...,- 3. r.. . I! f -5 N . 6 9 Xl 'X W vff ' 73 X XX ffl 3 rr-'giif 5 'i': Ziw f,. '. .,.,,,. .li -f-. ' h 2'ii5:L?'T!! I -:1. ..... 1 fi -, ,ri At'--.- if , mgj Ya EMVWA JANE , BERDUvE LQSHNEA
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