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Page 53 text:
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1 '1 fl . e-Hg., - 'M 2---yi-'A . 3.1,.',,, '1:r3,,.,5,,.1'-.igwi .Qg'g.,1hn445s,g1g!a4-4,:.Hg t-vw Ni' -mi H i g h l i g h t s Ghosts Abroad - N'E1-:lun silence greeted the gruesomely dressed figures as they were . 'ushered into the room. Pale yellow streams flickered down from two candles and a jfack-o-lantern p1acede.high-up' on a shelf. All gathered in a circle. Only the thumping of excited hearts cut through the blanket of mystery and suspense. A shrill scream! A sudden flood of light! Laugh- ter! The party was on! P -The stage on which the scenes of hilarity, me1'riment, and mystery were enacted was the Graf mansion, the players, the pupils of the senior cl-ass, the time, eight o,clock, Thursday evening, October the thirtieth. - Everyone was in an exuberant spirit. It .was Halloween, and Hartwell had beaten YVyoming not more than three hou1's before! There were games, dancing, wisecracks, jokes, and refreshments. .VVhat a treat! . Ate the bewitching hour, when the hands of the clock langged for rest, Kearney Avenue was lively in uproarious shouts of glee, honking of horns, muttered threats at the heartless ones who had let the air escape from the tires, and a barrage of good-byes. Slowly and snakelike the final cavalcade moved down the driveway, streamers of whitewaving in the breeze as'the last car disappeared. J Five Fathoms Deep N DECEMBER NINTH, Robert M. Zimmerman. famous deep sea diver, and for the past two years Linder contract with a movie company in the Q filming of several great sea productions, held the Hartwell audience spellbound with the thrilling accounts of his experiences with sea monsters and his discoveries of barnacled ships sunk near the bottom of the mysterious sea.' Of no less interest was the demonstration of the modern divingequipment. The stage was a riotous mass of lovely coral, fantastic plants, 'and the remains of deep sea animals, all of which ltlr. Zimmerman had collected -in his fourteen years of diving. ' l41l
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Page 54 text:
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American League Umpire Here EORGE MORIARITY, well-known American League baseball umpire, visited Hartwell school. Mr. Moriarity has always been a baseball enthusiastg he took the game up as a profession in 1905. From 1909 to 1915, Mr. Moriarity played with the Detroit Tigers, It was while with this team that he established a most unique record of having stolen home seventeen times in two' successive years. Since 1917, Mr. Moriarity, not wishing to lose silght of the game, has been 'acting as umpire. Thekeynote of Mr. Moriarity's talk was that honesty is the best policy, and that baseball teaches people to be honest with themselves. The outcome of a very important game, Mr. Moriarity stated, very often depends upon one decision. An umpire, therefore, has to put aside all prejudices and all the insulting and biting remarks of an excited crowd, he must have the neces- sary strength of character to stand up for his own moral convictions, no matter how anyone else thinks or acts about his decision. Girls Score With Herbie uiim: short whistles, two long, and one short! VVhirr, clank, clank, and- on goes the flood light! Televox Qnicknamed Herbiej has again answered the code message of his demonstrator, Mr. VVheeler! Televox, a VVestinghouse creation, is 'a fascinating mechanical man who seems destined to become an intcmgral part of our modern industrial world. Telcvox is far from beautiful. He has veins of copper, and bones of porce- lain, with binding posts for ears and hard rubber for skin. One thing, though, that compensates for his homelincss is his faithful obedience to his master's voice. After putting the robot through its paces, Mr. 1Vheeler, demonstrator, called for two boys and two girls to give Herbie some code messages. Herbiffs gallant response to Martha Sawtelle and Betty 1Vistner proved that even mechanical men are not immune to feminine charm. Africa Speaks oon oU'r! Gangway! E-eg-e--ek! Help! VVhat caused all that noise? VVas it the high-school students going to lunch? No, merely a real, live lion and two bears stalking through the halls of Hartwell. No wonder there was pandemonium! Mr. Harwood, noted authority on wild animals, on April ninth, paid Hartwell a very interesting visit. Mr. Harwood, in his talk on VVild Animals and Their Habitats, told many seemingly incredible stories of jungle life. He b1'oke down the traditional idea of the lion as the King of Beastsf' It l42l
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