Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA)

 - Class of 1914

Page 1 of 116

 

Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1914 Edition, Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collectionPage 7, 1914 Edition, Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection
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Page 10, 1914 Edition, Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collectionPage 11, 1914 Edition, Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 116 of the 1914 volume:

u Ilm nnll K 1 ,Elle ' CLASS BUOK NINETEEN nuuunfv Ann FUIIRTEEN HAVERHILL HIGH SCHOOL ,nr HIGH 'Q -..ull lg 4 5 llln.- e, ,P 11 l- x I H I, I I K Q x , 4 'ww' U I-in j 'gt f ra . Q.-Q.-xux..Q.-sUQ.-Q.-Q1,5..QUsug--x..s.-x..s-.sux-.Q Ihr Class of 1014 hrhlntrs its QWIIIIUT Dinah to Zllhrrt ilrrnv llhrtlrlt who his alluavs brrn a loval frmrnh to Zlpanerhull ilpugh Svrhool - s , ' c 5..s..,,,X..,..s..s..s..,,., , snsuinxu as-vsus. -sux-vs. -su ALBERT LEROY BARTLETT D ss-.Q--Q-ofasus.-Q-as-as-us-:sans vw Q.-Q01.-5-us.uQ-.1.vsus.-s.-1.-1-.Q--sus. -sus-ss.-sus. .Q-.QUQUQUQ-.,,,Q..,,.,,.5. ,X 4.- ,-.Z ER AN ri MIMIT O X f NN l n 5 I' Nr H Vx V FE Q Nm semis FRED QAGE . num vmscw Q -mms: swmww ' 5'oRiR 'fACOO,Sl- I c1LAw2ENC? GWN5 i EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE 1 mf ax ' is X Q A xx Y , . L. . A '5 IL 7 f Aug, ,, BA., V Q.us--swf.ins--Q.-s-ws--s.fs--s--s--Q.-s-.s..s..g.-Q.-susng.-Q.-sus--5--Q usns- -Q fn Alu cl K CNC IK Shebivvi A I awe v R 19 v s X COLQ ga 5 i .MA. BOOK COMMITEE WA Q S u . 'Y 7 V V N A 5'12! Lui-ss.sLnsvin1-siq.L,,L,,L WALTER DUTTON HEAD Prmcxpal l9l3 1914 5 1-us.-sus.-1--sus--sq-sus.-5. RALPH ERNEST FILES Prlnclpal I9lI l9l2 9 uQo9QsvQusnQniux- vxususns ept Now e Max une une Dec a Aprl Mav une c Nov ox ox ec e Mar lVlar C t C C t Glass Qialenbar Class ol I4 entered Hlgb Defeated Lawrence J 0 H H S claumed champlonshlp of Essex County m Basket Ball 'Vlard1 Crras Class OfgEiI1lZallOIl Prellmmarv electlons Flnal ClCCtlOIlS of ofncers for tl1e JLIIII Organxzatlon of Hooks and Crooks un1or Promenade un1or Semor Soclal Brown Unlwerslty Ctlee Club Concert unlor Senlor Soclal Poverty Party Electlon of ofbcers for tbe senlor year unlor Senxor Soclal Rlndge Tech defeated I7 0 Plnlomatlnan Club organlzed Defeated St ohn s 6 0 un1or Promenade unlor Senlor Soclal Costume Partv Dartmouth Cllee Club Concert Semor Plax Nephew or L nclt Class dance Alumnl dance Class banquet C I'8ClUdllOI1 O NCBI' s 26. 1910. ' ' . 1. 1910. 1 ' . F13.17,1911. . . . ' ' ' 28.IJl2. ' ' . 1 Il.l?I2. ' ' Y ' . 1 I2.I1I2. ' ' 1 ' 'rf . 13. l9I2. ' ' .. Jn. 31913. 1 ' . 1an.31.1913. 1 ' - ' ' . '111.1913. 1 ' . , 16. 1913. 1 ' - ' ' 1 V. 1 3.1915 ' ' 1 . o1.10.19131 '- ' 1 . 8.l9I3. ' . N 1. 14. 1913. ' ' ' . N 1. 27. 1913. .1 ' . D .26,1913. 1 ' . F13. 6,191-1. 1 '- ' 3 1. .13. 1114. . .27. 1114. ' 1 5 1-vxns 1 A Qnsnvs-asus.-xnsnxg HAVERHILL HILL SCHOOL II .Q4 sa:a:eLevgen:evsa:a:a:e.-vusnsavss:za:a:vs:vxa -sees. vzeazzevaeesaaaesalensaaxevxevaaeiaia as sais:- Qllass ilaistnrp freshman Pear To quote Shakspear A woodpecker lrt on a Freshmans head And then began to drnll He drilled all day and he dnlled all night And then he broke hrs bull ET us offer paeons of praxse that such hardness was not the state of the heads of the Class of 1914 when rt entered for the hrst time the Haverhill Hngh School The date of our entrance as set forth ln the annals of tlme was a pretty September morn to be exact the twenty slxth of September mneteen hundred and ten This date was two weeks after the usual openmg of school owmg to the fact that the new bulldlng was not ready Over three hundred pupils entered destmed to burden wlth an untold number of cares the teachers who taught Freshman subjects Some of us came wlth brllllant grammar school records Others had no records to speak of But desplte our records good bad or mdlfferent we certalnly were a green bunch Like the members of innumerable classes before us we were evidently taklng ln our knowledge of a new school llfe thru our mouths But from the very beglnmng we all took great prlde IH our new bulldlng ln which the teachers were to attempt to educate us for the next four years The upperclassmen were secretly as Interested as we but endeavored to hnde thelr interest under the blank and superclllous look so often assumed by them We were notified to march to the Assembly Hall and to It we trooped After a few mmutes of pandemonlum It was announced that the teachers would call the names of those scholars who were to s1t m thelr rooms Teacher after teacher came called a number of names most of which were unfamlllar to us and walked off leadmg her vlc tlms llke lambs to the slaughter We soon settled down to the grmd of llfe varied only ln our Freshman class rooms by the antlcs of Mose C-arbelmck smce fallen who dls covered dlvers and sundry methods for maklng laughs go round the class Hlck Whitmore and Bub Byard dlscovered that after the shop work perlods on Friday on coming mto the Algebra class lf a cloth were wrapped around a finger with a little red ink judncnously applied to slmulate gore expressions of sympathy could be evoked from the teacher wlth a permit to go and wash the fnnger Thus these two conspxrators lost many valuable mmutes The loss of these precious mmutes enabled these mgemous youths to stave off the fate of the unprepared but not for long however Football of course had Interest for a few of the members of our class To be sure school had opened two weeks late but football does not stop for such an unimportant trlfle as the opemng of school ln fact one game had been played before we came to I2 1 4 ' v 1 Y I ' ' I v . , ' , . 9 ' , Y , . ' ' ' ' I I Q U ' 9 1 v s ' . . . . Y , . Y - v 1 1 9 ' ' U I ' ' A A 1 v - - ' - Y V . , , . v v - , , , , . . - I 1 Y , . v Y V v . U Y ' f f ' Q us--sus-.Qs-s.-Q -suss-susns.-s- -s.-s.-s-.s.-sus.vs- -suze-as-sus, .:e.1us.:gns--sn1us- :anis veea 1s11s1eaeox1:g11g11s1:x1eaeen1:g :u::11eQn11vs1vs1:11ez:es ea1ex1vsuQ1eg1eQ vsnxn-s11s1ean111s1 school at all. Three members of our class tried out, they being Whitmore, Laing, and Bagley. However, no man received a letter. On October l0, I9l0, occurred the death of Linwood O. Towne, the chemistry instructor. This event saddened the entire school, altho few of our class were fortunate enough to know him personally. After football, little in athletics occupied our attention until the opening of the basketball season, and probably more attention was paid to lessons. None of us F resh- men turned out for the first team, but the class team was well supplied with candidates. We were beaten by the Sophs, but, glory of glories, we beat the Seniors. After the basketball season, with little else to divert their attention, a small group of Freshmen girls originated, or shall we say perpetrated, a weekly newspaper. This paper was written by one of the girls and passed around for the edification of the others. One of the contributors to this small paper has since risen to a higher position on a digni- fied periodical, and has written many articles for the enjoyment of the whole school. The Prom was not for the Freshies, altho some of us were there, giving promise of yet greater social achievements. A great event of the school year was the Mardi Gras a money-making scheme cooked and served mainly by Tom Wood President of the Class of I9Il and his gang. He harangued us for weeks before the event took place and thanked us after- wards for having donated so liberally to the Senior class funds The committee for the Class of I9I4 was composed of the following members Dorothy Tyler Marjorie Estes Aaron Hoyt and Lloyd Byard Baseball next interested those athletically inclined Byard was the only man from l9I4 to try out for a position and he made the much desired H being the only one of our class to obtain a letter that year With the close of the baseball season came the end of our period of servitude as Freshmen Next year we could take our position among the upperclassmen and feel that we were of some consequence in school Sophomore Bear School opened September ll l9ll with 205 left from the ranks of the Freshman class of the year before The first day we went to the Hall and from our exalted position looked down on the rest of the school How small and insignificant the Freshmen seemed The second day the first call for candidates for the football team was issued Eleven men responded from the Class of l9I4 Collins later elected captain Whitmore Read Laing Bagley Messenger Kief Haley Fernald Hatch and Comeau the last four of whom with the first have dropped from our ranks Haverhill won the State Cham pionship that vear Whitmore Read and Collins won their letters The Class foot ball team led by Captain Moore won the only game they played defeating the Freshmen 43 A number of the beginners in French took this subject in Room IOS This room instead of being supplied with chairs and desks as it is now had long benches The I3 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 . , , , . . . 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 ' 9 1 vs 1 1 ' 1 v 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - , - 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 I 6 . ' 1 1 1 1 21111151 11:11 111eQ11a11g1wa:es::ss::ns11s11e11Q11Q1:Q1eg1ea: snxnze 1s1:111e:1s1:z:::a:z:e:::a1e:::- 1 I Ibnhnxntutnusutovtuse vsninQninQnx4 .QnQsvxnsugnQ4n5.,5,,,, ,qnQ--Q-a1nxuQnQ4vx-:Q-:Qc mformallty of those classes led to many playful pranks which made the study of French ln that room very delightful and enjoyable in the extreme The Debating Club was revived during this year and some few Sophomores were members of it A great many debates were held at its meetings in which the Sopho mores held up the class honor Candidates for the basketball teams were called for and Byard responded from l9l4 Sargent Hodsdon Page Byard Moore Read Downes and Laing won the champion ship of the school for the Class Girls never desire to be beaten or out classed by boys For this reason school suffragettes militant anti and otherwise planned and finally carried out a remarkable attraction One afternoon late in February the gymnasium was closed to the male observer and the girls held an inter class track meet of their own The l9l4 athletes finished third thru no fault of theirs Letters laurels and words of praise were extended to the participants To this day the boys firmly believe that the wonderful time reported for some of the runs was made because no boys were there with reliable stop watches Altho the Class of l9l3 may claim honor and pat itself on the back for having printed a new and up to date school paper all the journalists were by no means mem bers of that worthy and esteemed class Three Sophomore rooms 2l0 2l4 and 2l5 conceived executed offered to the public and finally buried three very Oflglflal and remarkable weekly school papers They were known to the prmters as The Sun Pro Bono Publico and The Daily Smile which by the way was printed weekly The names of their enterprising editors will be withheld for obvious reasons Baseball candidates were now called for Herrick Read and Byard responding from the Sophomore class The I W W as proposed by oseph Ettor descended into the lowliest place in the High School the basement Consternatlon relgned supreme one bright morning in May when it was brulted about that the waiters on the lunch counter had obeyed the mandates of the I Won t Workers or in this case I Want More Free Lunchers and had struck for more than fifty cents worth of lunch per week Even the Boston papers lunch counter after minute and scientific observations found that the strikers suffered not from being underfed but from being underwoiked Therefore they cruelly denied the strikers Sophomores mcluded the extra sustenance which wa demanded Thus ended the strike of the Long Lean Lanky Lunch room Lackeys Two Clee Clubs one for the boys and the other for the girls had been started under the guidance of Mr Keayes It vias decided by the tvso clubs to hold a Joint concert May I6 l9l2 At this affair Fred Moore gave promise of being another Marcel ournet by the deep and impressive way he used his bass voice a promise which by the way he has amply fulfilled by the wonderful solos he has rendered for the enjoyment of the school Soon came the end of school when we were to elect the officers who were to lead us for the next year The officers whom we selected were Hermann K Whitmore Presl dent Erna Downes Vice president Pauline Prescott Secretary and Edmund Sargent Treasurer -I Y , . , , . 1 9 v 1 9 9 , - . , Y Y 7 Y ' Y 5 Y Q , ' , ' 5. 11 ' 7 Y 7 V 1 ' 1 ' 9 if YY ' ' ' ' ff Y ,Y ' ' lf Y, U ' V ' - Q found this event important enough to place it on their pages. The proprietors of the ' ff YI ! l Y - ' . I . Y . . , 1 . , '- t . - . : . . V: 15lilIilliGl1lliCIi5lillHlli5lillilO?5'iii5:9137Lv57Lq52Qi'iG1i 5li6'ilKil'Lliillillhllililliiilihlliliil l QuQuQa.q.vss-QuQ4oQnQenq- ns. msn- ins-ng.vx-vs4vius-asuq.-snxnQ.-50505. At the end of our Sophomore year we learned much to regret that our Pnncxpal Mr Flles was to leave us to take a posltlon as prmclpal of the school at East Orange IN He took wrth hlm our b st wrshes for hrs future success After the electron the doors of the Hrgh School closed upon us not to open agaln untll September when we were to resume our studies as umors Elumur Bear School days school days Dear old golden rule days started for us agam It was on the mnth of September nlneteen hundred and twelve that we entered school to begln our work and play of the un1or year That eventful mornlng we marched mto chapel at the very beglnmng Whlle we were seated there we noticed Mr Head on the stage that IS we thought we drd Splrlt demanded that we clap and clap we drd But we soon found that lt was merely a case of mrstaken ldentlty The man whom we clapped was Mr Stevens a new member of the faculty Flnally the real Mr Head appeared Ever smce that first day Mr Head has been a true frrend of the Class of l9l4 Some of our classmates of the years before were mlssmg Llke the seeds of the Parable some fell by the wayslde and were trodden down But desplte thls the unlor class was by no means small nn slze All told lt contamed I87 puplls Hall the conqueung hero comes should have been sung on that first day Ebeneezer Cordon Barley ofhclally known as the orrglnal and only Georgetown Sneezer graced us wlth hls presence From the very beglnnlng football Interested us Nmeteen hundred and fourteen sent lts usual quota of men to Frght for the Brown and Cold Lalng Whltmore Bagley Vaughn Page Segal Read Greene and Messenger persplred for days tackled the dummy whenever posslble sacrlficed SfllCllCS for the school and fought for the team Every man but one finally had the satisfaction of recelvlng a brand new awe lnsplrlng golden H Room 213 lmmedlately became famous What Whlttler and Chrlstlan dldn t do Harry Cate dld for them Fmally an orgamzed chalk battle took place The part1c1 pants vlctors and vanqulshed came back one afternoon and fought to the frnlsh Thus was the end of orgamzed chalk battles Physlcs was a new study to most of us There we asked foolxsh questlons appeared wrse and enjoyed ourselves IH every way and manner A new organlzatron was lnaugurated by Mr Stevens of the facultv It was called the Hooks and Crooks Club The club stood for two very lmportant attrlbutes scholarshrp and fellowshlp It was one of the most successful orgamzatrons ever started IH hrgh school One day Colbv created one of hrs stlrs The mathematlcs teacher asked Now Colby what does Q E D mean3 u1te easlly done was the unexpected reply from Rats Is v v v v . , , T .I Q 1 v ,I ' vu . 1 a l n - v - Q - I I - v . , . , . - ' v . 4 K . - v 1 - . , . s s - - 9 v , . - - ' - 4 s v 1 r a ' v 1 1 7 V 1 ' 9 1 v 4 - y - 1 y 4 4 - v ' 1 1 v . . ' v , . 5 , 1 Q . . ' 9 . . . I 4 V ' 1 - v , . . . . 4 4 - ' s 9 A 4 1 a r 1 ,, - interim -Q--snQususns- vsnxnxugnxusl :unsung -Q--sus. -Qagnse agnqnxu -QnQuQ4sQnQ..5ug0 veezzezeezeezeege ie:i:0LuviueLe:i::ie:L:ei:ei ea rx as :ana ez-vgesxauslesasg-vs-vgeeiusu-.1o-v.-wsu:-ve Finally the hopes and dreams of the literary stars were realized. A genuine, up-to- date, inspiring school paper was issued. This was mainly thru the efforts of the Senior class. For some time the organizers of the paper were puzzled as to a fitting name for the periodical. Finally Mr. Broderick suggested the name Eltrurian. Everyone was perfectly satisfied with this name. Lloyd Byard was assistant business manager. When it comes to finance, watch Bub. Myron Bagley, from Bradford, by the way, was an athletic editor and illustrator. Ruth Emerson and Lyman Van der Pyl were our class editors. One day in December the announcement of the winner of the W. C. T. U. prize essay was made. Dorothy Pendleton of l9l4 won the first prize. But on january 3, 1913, the big event of the year took place. For some time the Junior Prom was in the minds of all the admirers of the antics of the light fantastic toe. Now the Prom was a reality. A marked feature of this year's junior Prom was the simplicity of everything. Dress-suits and stiff-bosomed shirts were ruled out. Blue or black suits were the only requirements for a fellow's entrance that is, if he had a ticket. The Seniors were more than satisfied with their treatment. Altogether it showed that the Class of l9l 4 had spirit and something else beside. Basketball now became interesting to athletes. The unior Class sent Cireene Moore Hodsdon and Byard to the captain of the team. The basketball season was a very successful one for the high school was defeated only once The l9l4 class team was not nearly so strong as in former years but this can be attributed to the fact that most of our men made the first team A great surprise fell upon our Class and the school as a whole Miss Mabel Smith exploded a bombshell by resigning from the faculty One morning President McKay of the Senior class presented a silver mesh bag to her in behalf of the Classes of l9l3 and l9I4 Mr Sherman took Miss Smith s position as Mathematics teacher and from the very beginning was a friend of 1914 For a few weeks in the winter the corridors were nearly empty Those who by chance passed down these passageways were sad Their shoulders were bent as if burdened with the affairs of state This was because of grim war Volunteers who for the first time in history included girls hastened to the front Many were the ones who fell before the volleys and charges of the invader Who was this enemy3 Measles The baseball season started out with a rush and ended with a crash Armltstead Greene Herrick Christian Byard and Gleason were l9l4 men who won positions on the team Haverhill again won the majority of its games The l9l4 class team how ever was still more of a success Led by Clif Rice l9l4 won the class championship after defeating the Sophomores The g aduation of the Senior class now took place Altho we were not very much concerned some of us felt a vague uneasiness regarding the time when we were to go thru the same ordeal The l9l4 politicians ward heelers statesmen and diplomats now went after votes Hick Whitmore was up for re election He easily secured most of the votes Erna I6 ,l . , 9 , . Y . . I In ' 11 ' , ', I , ' . Downes was re-elected Vice-president, Ruth Emerson was chosen Secretary, Fred Gage, 1 snq.1Q.,5..5..Q asnsus-1x1-sus.-Q ns--sn-sus.nsnxngnx-15-us--Q-1s11x-as--sus- sus vsusns- Treasurer, Mlldred Sherman, Lawrence Greene, and John Storer Mac Dougall, Execu t1ve Commlttee Mr Gav nom announced hls lntentlons of formlng a College Club Anyone who deslred to enter th1s club must have plans for enterxng college lmmedlately after thls announcement Whlttler and Harold Kimball lnformed anv one who would llsten to them that they w re preparmg for West Newbury Agrlcultural College A few days later we left school for our summer s xacatlon TIS sad but true We were not unhappy ln leaung the old school ln fact most of us sang or wanted to slng all the wav home Thus we left school frxends and our umor vear behmd us mth the firm com xctxon of dolng somethmg IH the future that would make l9l4 a collectlon of flgures that would b remembered wlth prlde Swenson' Bear On the brlght morning of the eighth of September l9l3 I7I boys and glrls l beg your pardon I7I young men and women entered agaln mto the bulldmg whxch they had learned to love ln the corrldors one could hear laughter and greetmgs Mm glmg w1th one another were Freshmen full of trepldatlon overbearmg Sophomores arrogant umors and Senlors who were already beglnnxng to look CllgHlf:lCd ln the home rooms there was the usual scramble for seats Suddenly the quarter past elght bell rang lmaglne the feelmgs of the bashful ones The march was begun whxch was so soon to be a sort of second nature to us Good mght' was the thought m most of our mlnds as we entered the Assembly Hall Open mouthed Freshmen gave us a sort of baby llke stare Thls proved too much for llttle Harold Klmball Red ln the face eyes to the front he attempted to appear lndlfferent to the gazes cast upon hum He was woefully unsuccessful ln thls attempt however After that memorable first day we fell lnto the usual routlne of school llfe Book after book was added to our already well Hlled llbranes Nearly every Semor of course there were exceptlons took to hls or her StUdlCS as a duck takes to water One dav ln September a notice appeared on the blackboards of the varlous school rooms It sald Foot ball candldates report to Mr Broderlck after school It 15 almost needless to say that most of the posltlons on the team were filled by Semors HIC Whntmore captam Sally Lamg Ben Bagley Mencxs Harry Segal Larry Greene Bully Herrlck Harry Messenger lm Towne Fred Gage ames La Flamme representlng our Class Bub Byard handled the financlal end of the team It IS a remarkable and almost unbellex able fact but Bub made good ln fact at the close of the foot ball season the hugh school had money to burn that IS as far as athletxcs were concerned Haverhlll Hlgh School won the champlonshlp of the state after defeatlng St ohn s Prep to the tune of 6 0 On Frlday evenmg October tenth the first soclal of the year was held For the flrst tlme those who dld not dance had as good a tlme as those who drd But let xt be said that altho most of the gurls take a course ln Domestlc Sclence they certalnly do not know anvthmg about clothes pms Thlnk of boys beating gurls 1n usmg clothes plDSl 11 ,' v Q c, . . . , . ' 1 , , Y - 1 1 1 1 I, ' 1 1 V 1 1 Q t, . 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 , J ' ' - ' , 4 . 1 1 . . - 1 1 , . .- I , , . .1 - 4 4 - - 1 1 , , ' . . . , , . 1 1 - - A 1 1 1 - 4 4 s 1 . . 1 1 1 1 1 s 4 1 v 4 4 v 1 ' A 4 - v 1 , 1 1 1 1 - 1 4 1 1 . . J . - - s s 1 1 r . 1 . . ' 1 . 1 , . J A . 1 1 - 1 , . 1 1 , tux-ns--svsansnsux-11. vsnsavs-nsnxnnsu vgns--Q-.Q--Q-1sa.savxa -snsnxusnxuuf 1snQnQn10xux- The Hooks and Crooks Club agaln became actnve after the summers vacatlon The officers were Ferdlnand Penwell Fresldent Bermce Ham VICE presldent Paulma Allard Secretary Ralph Green Treasurer Marle Burchxll Etta Laskey Earle DHVIS and Edgar Clark Executxve Commlttee Every officer was a Semor The club increased 1n slze and ln importance untll xt was one of the largest ln the school Students had now begun to notlce Van der Pyl generally carrylng an assortment of manuscrlpts He had a stern and preoccupled appearance Edltlng the Eltruuan evldently was already turnlng thls young man Into a second Horace Greeley Among the other llterary stars of the Class of l9l4 were a few who helped make the Eltrurlan the splendld paper It IS Marjle Adams Exchange edltor Beatrlce Keene Alumm edltor Ruth Emerson Class edltor Ben Bagley Athletlc edltor Rats Colby Class edltor and Bub Byard Buslness Manager were among these Mr Gay wlth the ald of a comrrlttee now perfected hrs plans for the formatlon of a College Club It was declded to call thls new orgamzatlon the Fhllomathlan Club The Semors agam filled most of the responslble posxtlons Lyman Van der Fyl was elected Presldent Ruth Emerson VICE presldent Bessie Bourne and Frank Travers Executlve Commxttee The object of thxs club was to encourage students to enter college The orgamzatlon was well supported by l9l4 The Debatlng Club now sprang xnto notlce Thru the efforts of Mr Sherman of the faculty and Presldent Earle DHVIS this club became actlve after a year of xdleness Many mterestmg debates were held at lts meetlngs excltement that lt had been ln for some time From that moment we felt as lf we were entlrely separated from the lower classmen Why3 Sxmply because Rats Colby appeared 1n school clad ln long Jean A short tlme after the close of the foot ball season Bagley was elected manager of the basket ball team Candldates were called for at once Lawrence Greene captam Bullet Hodsdon Fred Moore and eff Armltstead all of I9l4 made the first team ohnny Staples Cllf RICE and Woodman were substltutes Every man won hls H Altho Haverhlll played a hard schedule nevertheless the Brown and Gold won the majority of 1ts games St ohn s Prep was defeated twlce by Haverhxll The I9I4 Class team lost to the umors and defeated the Freshmen ln the Sophc more game Whltmore and Lamg obeyed that lmpulse and gave everybody the foot ball stlff arm The Sophomores won School closed for the Chrlstmas vacatlon On the mght of the twenty slxth of December the annual umor Prom was held It was a success m every way One Frlday mght early ln February another successful socxal was held Guy Chrlstlan and Haskell our enterprxslng Georgetown beautles left the school on the run It was about eleven o clock at mght They arrlved at the Transfer Station just ln tlme to see the rear of the last car for Georgetown dlsappearlng across the brldge The only thlng that marred the beauty of that mght ID Feb uary was the fact that snow fell ln a most charmlng and entrancmg way Besides Georgetown IS only eight mlles away Chrlstlan and Haskell bemg track men decided that thls was an admirable chance to get into tralnxng To use the parlance of the vulgar they hoofcd lt to Georgetown I ..-.....,....,......-..-..s.....,..,..-..,..-.....,..-.....,,.-..,..,..,..,.....,..,..-..,.....,,.-..-.. 1 , Z , ' I s 2 , 2 , s ' 1 , Q If I9 is ' I Q, - - ' u -- 99 . . . ' , 1 1 . . ' . ll 97 . ' ' ' if 7, 7 Y Y Y 1 Y ' l Cl !l ' Y Y Y ' . , A , . . . . ,. , . . ,, 1 1 ' 9 s On November twenty-first the Senior Class was thrown into the greatest pitch of ' ' lf Y' ' ' ll' 79 s. - 9 . n , , if 7, if ll ' Y ff ,Y ll ' 9, ' ' ' fl YY ' ' Q ' ' ff ' Y, , . . Y . i M ,,,M,,,,,,,,.,.,.,,.,..,..C.-..,.., .,..,..,..-........C.,..v.,...,,.gNW.C.-,.,..,.. 15 Q4 sa snq-.Q--Qui sus.-sux--Quia 1- sux- L--in-ins-,Q-1,, Q pq.-sn, ,,,,s,,5,,,,,,.,Q v5..,.,,,. Durlng that same month the Haverhlll Board of Trade offered several cash prlzes for the best essays wrltten by the puplls of the Hlgh School The Semors carrled off the three pnzes George johnson won the first prxze Dorothy Ferdleton the seccnd, and Zrlpha Wallace the speclal second prxze The l9l4 Chapt r of the Lmt now gave a play for the beneflt of athletlcs It was called The lN1ght After the Came MISS My ra Bartlett s murrmy acted bv Walter Colbv played an lmportant part IH thls theatrrcal performance Several days later l-larrv Messenger wlth hesltatlng VOICC and trerrvbllng knees gave a flfty dollar bnll to Mr Flske to be placed xn the treasurv for the use of athletxcs Track now began to lnterest the sport loxers of the school Harold Drew was elected Captaln and Ferdlnand Fenwell Manager of the school track team In thls branch of athletlcs l9l4 drd not furmsh many athletes But durmg the flrst few weeks before the mter class meet especlally when It became known that the umors were the favorltes new runners jumpers and shot putters from l9l-4 seemed to sprmg out of the ground We were more than surprlsed when lt was reported that bashful and unassummg Guy Chrlstlan was elected Captam of our class team On the mght of the twentleth of March speculatlon ran hrgh as to the vlctor of the meet The Freshmen ran up a total of twenty SIX points the QCHIOYS belng second wlth twenty four Arrangements were now made to have the Dartmouth Clee Club glve a recxtal for the benefit of our graduatlon expenses ThlS recltal took place on March thlrteenth Fromptly at elght o clock the first muslcal selectlon was sung Among the ushers was Van der Pyl who on a dare attempted to lmltate an Englxsh lord He wore a real monocle' What IS more he dxd not crack one smile After the recxtal nearly everyone went over to Elk s Hall There the Dartmouth and Haverhlll undergraduates tangoed to thelr hearts content On March twenty seventh the blggest event of our school year wlth the exceptlon of graduatlon took place The Semor play otherwlse known as Nephew or Lncle was presented to the public A day or so before the play was glven Huck Whltmore our esteemed and worthy Fresldent worked llke a Trojan He even went so far as to pound hls fingers wxth a hansmerl But best of all he proved a theory advanced by nearly every SClCHt1f:1C man of the world Hlck proved much to hls dlsgust that tacks could not be drrven lnto the steel nettlng whxch supports the plasterlng of the walls no As for the actresses and actors Madame Dorslgny I-lortense Flerce Sophle Mlldred Sherman and Madame de Mlrvllle Paullne Z Prescott clad m the latest gowns from Cray Fans really made a hit Y alcour allas oe Kellv was stunmng But the Captain' Thls neat dapper llttle fellow clothed 1n a French Army unlform hls face decorated wlth a rrost charmmg black mustachxo half of which perslsted IH comlng off was Bub Byard Clfanapasre lmper cnatfd by Harold Drew wa as one mlght say th llmlt Forever gettlng both the Captam and himself mto trouble and by luck gettmg out agam gave Champagne en ugh to do ln the performance The Colonel the exact xmltatlon of the Captam appeared on the stage He IS better known to us as plam Doc Maclnlougall or to some as Mac Then Lormeull Paul Woodman mad hrs appearance asmln Frank Malcolm and Anatole Myron B . . , 1 . 1 ' - 3 . , 4 L V . - 1 . , y r 1 I 1 ' . ' 5 .1 , 1 - 1 , 1 A 1 ' 1 J 1 1 1 ' ' , Q ' . . , . . 1 1 - . , . - 1 s 4 1 1 - 1 ' 1 - - - A A ' 1 1 1 - 1 - - s a - 1 1 - - 1 1 , . . A . , . . 4 5 . , , . . - 1 1 A 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 - 1 , , . 1 1 . In - 4 r 1 1 . 1 I - l 1 i 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 . . , 4 s 1 1 - ' , f . L . V . , s . , s, . . . . , , . . . . D 1 4 C , ., . .. , , 'T , , 1 . . 1 1 ' ' A 4 1 1 c 4 - ' 4 6 ' Q 1 X- - 1 1 4-Q-we-Q-11.-Qnsnxn-Q-15.-Qns-.Q-.Q--sus..sus--Q--sus--Q. :Q-:QQ-Q-1Q.-Q1-Q-use -Lnintu -snQuQuQ4 I 9 Morse dressed ln the hyery of the DOTSIQHWS seemed almost hke Frenchmen But Caspar the notary' When not dlsgulsed he goes by the name of ames Lalrlamme Thls neat llttle Frenchman nearly shook the stage wxth h1 dalnty fairy llke tread and brought down the house wrth rounds of applause The play was more than a success It was a masterpxece About thls tlme we began to go to Hastlngs Studro Once more to use the parlance of the vulgar we went to be mugged Many were the ones who appeared and many were the ones who claxmed to haye broken the camera Arrangements were made to have a Class Book A commlttee was appointed to learn the past present and future of every member of the Class of l9'4 Not belng content w1th thrs the commlttee constructed knocks which were to be handed out to the mnocent puplls whose names were at thelr mercy Baseball now became an xmportant factor of school llfe l9l4 sent many men to the coach Bub Byard captam eff Armlstead Bully Herrlck Larry Creene Guy Chrlstlan Doc MacDougall and oe Kelly Van der Pyl now decided to lnvent a new exploslve It was planned to call this new lnventxon Van der Pyllte After brxef experiments ln mxxlng sulphur carbon and potassxum mtrate Van der Pyl had a black mess whxch really looked lxke pow der How eyer that was as far as It went If the battles of the future were to be fought wlth Van der Pyllte there would be no need of Hague Peace Conferences' Une mornlng whlle ln chapel Mr Head announced that a prlvate hlgh school athletlc held would probably be gn en to the school IH the near future lmmedxately afterwards the Senlor Class xoted to glye the money gamed from the Senlor Play as a memorlal to thelr Interest ln the new field When june began to draw near our thoughts sadly for the most part turned towards the future Crand preparatlons were made for graduatlon HIC lost sleep trylng to thlnk up materlal for hrs addre s Blue serge sults became a scarce artlcle on the market As for dresses l w1ll leave that to MacDougall To mght we reallze that we are to be SCHIOTS pupxls of dear old I-laverhlll Hlgh School for a short tlme only We realize that we w1ll soon belong only to the ranks of her Alumnl Many of us wxll leave thls school to enter the world and fight for ourselves Others of us will graduate but to contmue our search for learnlng To everyone who seeks recommendatlons whether 1n buslness 1n professlon or ln school let us slmplx say thls I am a graduate of Haverhxll Hlgh School Class of l9l4 ltoryt ll johnson lnmk I lmttrs ,Qnx-'Q .Q-.Qui sus.-Quxuxutansns--inQQ--Quxns-asus.vsnsns-ws-uq-vQ4oQ4uQnQni-sg.-Q..Qu U -S--sus-vs--sus.-sus.-Q-s-.sus--5.-sus.-sus.-suqux..shsus.-sus.Vs--s..Q..s.-sus.-sus.-5.V 7 7 V' , v . . 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VlN1111 l.1l ll111111.111g1-f111111111I11111:111fl111111 I l41l1l111r1i1Ill1l'll1l l 11l1-. l wi llllx I11i1.X I11-1111-'ll 1xr11'li11I1rlkx1l1 1 ll141t 1111115 l111'11111' rllilll Illillir l 11l1 XNl'llllX 11111112 l1:111lk Flllllll lguvl-i11.11fl Flvps llunlu ins--sus-as-sxusuxns--1.15-ng.vsnsnsnsnxus-nsusns-rx.-sux-me snxuxa 1-vsnsus-oxuQu Cllllass Bruphetp BETWEEN I2 P M AND IVIIDNICI-I1 It was a wonderful IVIay mght The Medlterranean lav sllent and motlonless under the shlmmermg srlver rays of the full moon and the languorous breeze faintly stlrred the perfumed branches of the blossommg lemon trees The wltchery of the nlght drew me lrreslstlbly to my balcony and I stepped half way thru the long wmdow and looked out on the waters that lay as tranqull as our own Kenoza on a calm mght There IS somethlng ln the grandeur of Nature whrch seems to correspond wrth our deepest contemplatxons and the quletude broken only by some dlstant straln of music caused a wave of longlng to sweep over me a longmg for home and mme a1n countree Then I remembered that thxs was the night of the Class Reunlon the tenth of the lllustrlous Class of I9l4 It seemed that the one thlng IH the whole world that I desired was to be wxth my own Class agam to see old faces and to talk over old tlmes when our greatest Joy was to recelve a report unmarked by dxsflgurxng crlmson But a wlde deep sea lay between me and the dear old Class and my eyes blurred wrth tears as I reallzed the 1mposs1b1l1ty of my deslre And then when I brushed them away I stared rn wonder For I was not alone another figure stood on my balcony and whether It had come from the sky the sea or the earth I drd not know It was an old bent peasant whose eyes lnstead of belng the dull expresslonless lmpasslve eyes of the very old were brllllant and plerclng seemlng to read ones Inner most thoughts I-Ier volce was harsh and querulous and she made the usual whmxng request for money I refused her curtly but she grasped my sleeve and whlspered 1n musical Itallan Cross my hand wlth gold sxgnorma and thou shalt see what thou most deslrest For I am MlStfCSS of Eternlty and the swift movlng hours are my ser vants Thou shalt be transported on the wxngs of Tlme across boundless seas and lmpassable mountalns And when thy wish has been fulfilled the wlnds that blow over the unlverse shall bear thee back to thy chamber Cross my palm wlth gold xt shall be as I have spoken Impelled by a strange uncanny power I made a cross on her wrmkled palm wrth a ey es Somewhere a clock struck twelye I opened my eyes and looked about the brilliantly lighted table at whlch I was slttmg Someone was talking to me and I was evldently exp cted to answer I turned to my rxght and looked mto Mlllv Sherman s eves Do you think he w1ll3 she lnqulred Thmk who wrll what3 I asked for lt seemed perfectly natural to be slttlng In the famllrar old gvm talkmg wlth my classmates agam , - , . . . . V. y v ' s , ' T Y ' Y 7 7 I ' Y Y U I Y Y Y Y - ' Y Y I V 7 V I ' gold coin. The old crone muttered. and her body shook and quivered. I closed my I . , , , . 0 ' v a n T Q e ' . f , , T Du ' - sn ' - 7 ' 1 l Q Do you thlnk H1c Yi hrtmore wrll lead rn prayer? You know he ras gryen up l1s rdea of go1ng to war and has hecome a new thcuvht leader Hester Floyd knows more about rt than l do for she IS a sort of H1 h Pncstess and has rrade rrany ccnyerts to the new farth And what are you do1ng Mllly J I asked Oh laughed Mrlly l haye started a new occupatron l am CHQCIHI chaperone at college frat house partres It s just l1ke old tlmes and l hay en t a nernute to n'yself To morrow l start for Tufts and after tnat It s Bowdorn Who are those h1lar1ous grrls that haye just come IDB l asked deslgnatlng two 1nd1yId1. uals 1n rather startl1nU ralment Why dont you rememlzzer the ack g1rls3 uret modest l1ttle persons3 They are chorus grrls at the Colonral and dreadfully popular O temporal O rroresl l exclarmed aghast and the younv man on my left turned to survey me rn drsapproval Cut out the l..at1n he commanded wrth l1s usual courtesy Sh warned lVl1lly That s RICE Haven t you HOtlCCd how neryous he lS3 H made a terrrhle mlstake ln marrlage and she jars upon f1s hlvhlv sensltlve temperament It was really qulte a romance she fell ln love wrth hrs lntellect Cracrousl l exclarmed She must haye read scrre of RICIC s Englrsh themes' ust then two scholarly gentlemen entered deep 1n the dr cussrcn of the value cf a French educatron wh1ch hy the wav has always eluded me l was much surprlsed to recognlze Lyle Morse and Harold Klmhall Thelr recltatrons ID 209 never prophesred that they would become French professors Speaklng of professors yolunteered Cl1f just look at Kelley Wculdnt you know he was a dean For the hrst t1me I agreed w1th RICIC Anyone that looked as hemgn and serene as Kelley couldn t he any th1ng more frlvolous than a dean There s A mrtstead he cont1nued contrary to Mr Cav s op1n1on eff went IH for tne sportlng l1fe and has put lVlathewson and all those other old heroes lntO the shade eff gets smaller every day drsappear soon Hello there s Beatrlce Osgood They say Bee has sung before the crowned heads of Europe and nearly llfted the crowns from the aforesa1d heads And there s Lawrence Greene someone told me Larrv was st1ll trvrng to frnd a place to put all those Hs he won hack 1n the old days At thls moment my attent1on was attracted hy Penwell and Earle Dav1s who were ev1dentlv gett1ng CXC1tCd over party rrghts or platforms and all that stuff we used to struggle wlth 1n lOl At least that was my supposrtron for they were stumpmg the state 1n a mad rryalrv for the goy ernorshlp Whrtrng was the next old frlend to arouse my rnterest He had hecome a poet of great fame some Sald h1s works were hound to become classrcs hut my flrppant ne1ghhor was rmmensely d1sappo1nted because Whrtlng was never selzed wrth a poetlcal frenzy hut dld hrs compos1ng 1n qurte a practlcal manner Some fellows were clrngrng to the1r old occupatrons 1 e Frackleton was st1ll startllng the world Wlth hrs freshness VE ehster was dlVldlDg h1s trme between gr1nn1ng and watch 3 ..s.-susns.-sus.-sus.-Q..s..s..s..s..s..s. .s..s..s. -01. sus.-snsvs. -xnxnsus..s..s.-snsns. 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V 5 6 5 v 9 Y ' 6 6 9 ' ' ' Y' , . - , y , . . . 5 . , . , - . . . 1 , . . , V V - . . , 5' u -K - y 1 1 v r r M Q . 1 , , V 1 K . . , , 7 , V . 4 , . , . - 9 . . , ' 1 ..s..s..s..s..s..s.-s.-sux.-5.-S..s..s..s..s..s..,..s.-5.-sus. 5..x..s..s..s..s..s..,.-sus.-snsns.. rng the grrls Herrrck was strll at hrs hrghly elevatrng amusement of makrng evervbody wrsh he wasn t where they were ust then lVlacDougall happy as ever entered and took away the charmrng com panron on my rrght falso as ever and Bagley promptly approprrated her seat and began to tell me wrth hrs usual readrness all about hrmself When he had exhausted the subject of hrs own artrstrc career parntrng srgns on brll boards he condescended to tell me about old frrends Some of the fellows have gone back to the sorl Allen for rnstance rs a farmer real thrng you know But Messenger specralrzes rn peaches he has any rarrety of krnds just as rn the old days Clark on the contrary rs dorng the same old thrng devotrng all hrs trme to keeprng somewhere rn Paulrna s wrcrnrty Towne rs strll vellrng for the Democrats when he rsn t tryrng to make up the trme he lost rn the Qalem meet Mencrs has gone rnto busrness wrth Henderson and they are dorng everybody Our srlver tongued orator now arose to address the assembly and a deep and respect ful srlence greeted hrm Paul posrtrvely outdrd hrmself never before even rn hrs most loquacrous moments rn Englrsh class had we heard such words of wrsdom such polrshed and wonderfully constructed Englrsh fall from the lrps of mortal' Cot Demosthenes beaten a mrle' murmured mv nerghbor who never was a respecter of persons The Englrsh government has already asked that hrs sacred remams should rest rn Westmrnster Abbey At the end of Woodmans rnsprrrng speech whrch brought tears to many an eye as the audrence recalled the old days rn 2l2 the warters served the first course and among them l saw Haskell and Wagg both of whom l learned were connected wrth Wrllett s A crowd of Unrt fellows were celebratmg old trmes rn a corner of the gym and called Clrfton to jorn them Drd you hear about Hodsdon3 he asked as he rose to depart He rs happrly marrred and rs runnrng a confectronery store on the srte of the old Crown Rachel Magurre and lVlrldred lVlcKay next caught my attentron and to my query as to how the world was treatrng them Ray replred Oh Mrldred has reached the goal of her ambrtron matrrmony and I am just lrvrng at home I trred teachrng but the rest of the faculty objected because I devoted study perrods to teachmg the puprls the new dances I heard that Dorothy Wormell had gone on the stage for a far srghted manager had seen possrbrlrtres of her becomrng a saudevrlle star as far back as the Senror Costume Party Of course Hazel Manson and Zrlpha Wallace were teachers rn college everyone knew they were certarnly fated for that professron But rt was strange to learn that Donald Kempton had mended hrs ways and become prrncrpal of Flarstow Hrgh' Cordon Barley had managed to enter West Pornt rn whrch place he held the promrnent posrtron of second assrstant gardener Bessre Bourne was lrftrng her vorce rn song at the Boston Opera House Helen Gardner and Florence Lor errng were nurses They went to Mexrco when affarrs there reached a crrsrs and whrle applyrng poultrces and bandages they managed to convert the wrldest desperadoes to the ways of crvrlrzatron Beatrrce George had settled down to a peaceful and contented lrfe rn Newton where she frlled the arr wrth 4 ,,,.Q..,, Angus. .Q-.,,,g..g.-,,.q..s..g.-sus.aus. -Q--gnsnsns, .g..g.,,.,,.,,. -1--s--5.5.-Qnns--s v . - u . 1 Y by Q v , 4 . ,, - , H . . . 1 O O V ' I Y n - - V ' U Q 1 . , . . . , L . . . . . 4 . . 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U . u y v ,e ' ' , a v r 7 ' u u r y v v V 1 -ssssasnssong-svssssesSssssisss-s s-sss-s eggs, 2 melody day and night whlle L na Allen held the important pOSltlOn of post mistress rn the Bradford post OfI'.lC6 Ellzabeth True was an artlst s mcdel and rumor had lt that smce that partlcular artlst began pamtmg Betty he had made mlllrons could sell hrs plctures whether they had real artlstrc value or not Llkewlse Marxan Rogers about whose profile people used to rave Katherme Baxter and Ollve I'Noel were stlll together runnmg a qualnt book store on Washmgton Street where one mlght find Mary Curtm Kathleen Fennessey Harold Kennev and George Leavltt ponng oy er the volumes ln characterrstlc studlous fashron When I was just longlng for a new source of mformatlon Aus Turner fell mto the chalr next mme wlth her customarv grace I asked the usual questlon What are vou do1ng3 Same thrng sard Aus as cheerful as eyer takmg care of chrldren my own now There s Ruth Emerson She cast aside all mundane pleasures and devoted all her trme and bralns to poetry wlth such marvelous success that the works of Mrlton and Tennyson have been dropped from the school courses as mere doggerel Hazel McKee with twentleth century contempt for femlmne tasks has enlisted ln the suffragette army and was recently promoted to the rank of lleutenant Anme WllIl3mS3 Oh she couldn t exist ID thls wlcked world long she IS leadlng a lone existence on an Island ln mld ocean surrounded only by books Ethelyn Ramsdell and Ellzabeth Caswell horrlfied by the lncreasmg frlvollty of llfe ln Haverhlll are devotlng thelr young llves to mrsslonary work 1n Indla and lt IS sand that they have had unusual success every natlve IS at ihelr feet IH adoration What IS Ralph Buttrxck do1ng3 I asked He used to get truly remarkable marks ln Engllsh He IS wrltmg a book on H H S as I Have Found It It seems Buttrlck learned 1rony as well as other thlngs ln 2l2 and rt knocks some of us rather hard But he lsn t the only author nn our Class Bub Byard has just published a pamphlet entltled How to Run Everythmg Clrls Included George Smlth wrote an lnterestmg essay on auto moblles whlle he was detalned rn the lower conflnes of the Clty Hall for speedmg That rs a wonderful creatlon adormng Marlon MacGregor s head I interrupted Yes lt came from the Laskey Mllllnery Store Etta and Sadie own a hugh prlced store on Merrxmack Street and every one trades there even Marlon Bryden who moves ln the hlghest crrcles of New York soclety Notxce the gown Catherme Donahue IS wearmg That came from Daphne Dean s establlshment nt IS one of the least complr cated of her creatrons which are the most darrng and orlgmal ln all New York Gage as Master of Ceremonles now announced that we must go up to the balcony as the floor was to be cleared for dancing I stopped to lnqulre for Fred s welfare and havlng learned that after falling as Creek professor at Harvard he was teachlng astronomy 1n Bradford Academy I mounted the clrcular starr way and found a seat rn the balcony Here I found a group of glrls dxscusslng everybody wlth old time famlllarlty and klndness 3 I heard them talkxng about a languld young lady gowned ln the very latest Pans model It was Pauline Prescott who had been on the stage smce she made such a hat IH Nephew or Uncle -54114-Q.-snxuss.Q.-Q.1s.-s-1s.1x.-susan--sus.-Q.-snsnsns.-Q-ss41snQ-1s.1so1Q-vsus. 'unsus- f I 9 - , ., . . , . . . s , V - 1 . . V . . . - 1 U , 1 1 1 , 1 1 ' - . . . . , 5 - . ' ' -1 . 1 , , , . . , . . , 4 . . 1 1 1 ' 1 - ' - 1 1 1 - , V 1 - s , 1 . . . . 1 . . , 1 ' v - 1 . W y - 1 - - 1 1 s A - ' - v v 4 4 - - 1 1 H . . . , , . . . . . . 1 , . . . . . 4 . . , . . . . . . . . . , , u - - - - 1 1 1 - , . . 5 , . . . . . . ' .- , . v 1 1 . 1 . . . . . , - . . . . . . , , 1 . 1 1 1 . . . , - 1 1 1 1 ' 1 v - c' D 1 ' 1 - - ss 11 1-S01--susnsns.as-vs.-1-'sus-1snsns.-s.1s-1s.-sns--snsusnsnsnsa-s--s.11--s-1sns--Qnxusug -5 I sald Yvonne Provost have devoted my llfe to haylng a good tlme When I see Dorothy Pendleton and Gladys Qmlth practlcally fmdmg out a peaceful hermlt age ln order to gam knowledge unmolested I am perfectly contented wxth my own cholce Isn t It great that ohn Plerce IS commg to Haverh1ll3 exclaimed another They say he rs better than Caruso and I shall certalnly go to hear hlm Do you remember how he used to cut a few mlnutes off our French recltatxon by hrs solos ln Chapel3 I-Irs brother Llncoln IS now a doctor Have you heard about Bunker3 He made such a hut wlth the gurls ln the lower classes that everv tlme he goes out he has to be surrounded bv police to protect hlmself from thelr advances Good for Macdougall broke ln a volce whlch I knew to be George ohnsons He let Sherman Kxmball off for the mght Seelng my perplexxty George kmdly elucldated Sherm IS a warden or somethmg llke that at the qtate PYISOD and Macdougall the Progressxve governor of Massachusetts allowed hlm to come to mght as a speclal favor They are talkmg over old tlmes now By the wav My ron Morse IS comedian at Kelth s I am l1v1ng on a new plan sald Elsle Robbms I slmply let everythlng sllde When I heard that Etta Smart was sojournmg ln a samtarlum because she had studled too consclentxously I lmmedlately reformed mv ways Thls from the studlous Elslel Dld you know that Mlldred Emerson had gone to France3 asked PTISCIIIH Thayer She IS Engllsh Instructor IH a convent there and her youthful ways qulte shock the Stald slsters Harold Drew IS m France too for smce the Phllomathlan exhlbltlon he has consldered hlmself a tvplcal Frenchman You know he never was shy about expresslng h1s good op1n1on of hlmself If Klbby had been all he thought hlms lf he would indeed be llttle lower than the angels' He says he IS enyoylng hlmself nearly as much as when he used to try to bluff thru an Engllsh recltatron I prefer Germany and lntend to stop there for a long v1s1t next year Seemg that Rats Colby was modestly endeavormg to attract attentron to hlmself I turned to h1m and sald Well Rats' as happy as when vou were the hlt of the school as the Egyptlan mummy3 Rats blushed and whlspered nervously Please don t mentlon those awful thlngs At present I er I am a mlssxonary FIVE mlnutes later I recovered A grave and prosperous lookmg gentleman appeared who proved to be the ex dntor of the Eltrurlan Of cours you are an edltor Lyman3 I asked What magazme3 Llterary Drgest Popular M chan1cs3 None of those replled Van d r Pyl the Gazette I devote an entlre column to school notes every mght The Alumm department of the Eltrurlan IS remarkably good now Last month I read lt and learned that Celia Carter IS a teacher nn New York drawxng an immense salary because she has attamed more knowledge than any other mortal The Carleton gurls are stlll rustlcatmg ln Rosemont and are ladies of lelsure altho both are accomplished m all the ICITIIFIIDC graces Alxce Cunnmgham IS a stenographer and her engagement to her employer has been announced I -sus.-Q.ts.-s..s..s..s..s..s.-s..,.-5.-sus..s..s..s.-Q.-sux..s..,..,. ,,,.,..,. .s.-Q.-Q.-shsus.-S.. s 4 1 1 - 4 4 . . . Q , . - - , . . , 5.1 ' 7 ' I . , . . . 1 ' 1 Y C I Y ' 'I ' ' ' n 9 V I I K 1 Q I ' ' 9 9 I6 I 1 . - - . u 65 5 1 ' ' ' 7 V . . C S . 1 u Q v 1 u 1 . V , . H . . . . www - v v 1 9 y - V Y V ' . . Y , - . . y Q . , , . . , , . . . 4 , . . . , . . . . . . , , . . . , M . . U . . - , . . 4. . . . . . . v ' 5 7 Q . C , ' 9 - - s u 7 . . , , . v Q - , . - Q - A L 9 - - , . - - 1 Y Y, , 7 ,Q C . C I I V l 6 I ' ' D C , . . . . , . , , o , ., . ll 9 9 ' ' D . . W , e , . 1 . v V 1 - v , . ! 9 , . Q--sus.-gas-vs--5.asus--1.vs-asus-as-vs--Q.-Q.-sux-ns.-sus-usnga-unsung.-Q.-sus.-sux-use sus- And Frna Dow ns3 I asked She rs rn socr ty and entertarnrng Dorothy Tyler at present Dot marrred a forergn count wrth a name as unpronounceable as I-Irc VI hrtmore s mrddle one Frances Page and I-Iortense Prerce have opened a tea room but rt wrll soon be closed because both farr damsels have all they can do to keep the fellows away Grace Sanders Laura Southwrck and Hazel ones are bookkeepers stenographers etc at Frank Trayers n w factory Frank also employs Frank Small and Clrnton Smrth as foremen Here Marron Taylor rnterrupted as usual and asked rf I had heard about Katherrne Weston She rs runnrng for suffragette presrdent of the bnrted States crred Marlon gleefully and I am her prrvate secretary Then she unfurled a banner bearrng the d vrce Votes for Women and hung rt upon the gvm wall This created a general drsturbance among the men and Bralnerd emerged from hrs usual quretude long enough to protest vrolently agamst the proceedrng But Marlon brandrshed an umbrella whrch she carrled for such emergencres and once more peace prevarled Only for a moment however for Cranvrlle began a famrllar drssertatron upon hrs great popularrty at Hrgh whrch Moore promptly disputed Nora Lane settled the matter by saymg that smce both had been so modest durmg therr respectrve careers rn l9l4 no on could justly say wnrch had exerted the most rnfluence on the rest of the Class Tho Maurrce was a lawyer and Fred a judge of the Supreme Court where even a lrfe s nt nce sound d pleasant when grven rn hrs melodrous ton s both voted Nora a comp tent Judge Drd you s the Olymprc gam s last year3 asked Elmer Whrttrer wno had become proprretor of a large hardware concern The Amerrcan team rncluded such stars as Frtzgerald S gal Malcolm and Chrrstran so we had to wrn They made such a hrt over there that they have kept them there and we never expect to see our heroes agarn The orchestra wrth ones at the prano now began a popular prece just about as classrc as rn the days of the Senror socrals and the floor was rmmedrately thronged wrth dancers Over rn a corner I saw Myrna Ray and Bertha Stoleskr frantrcallv endeavorrng to lnstruct therr partn rs Bolan and Caswell rn the art of the latest dance rn whrch knowledge they wer prtrfully lackrng There was osephme Hanscom dancrng as madly as when she used to shock the Faculty almost to paralysrs and was the envy of tnose who could trrp rt less fantastrcally After the first dance Katherrn Sheppard whose gown was even worse than the fabled blue skrrt ga we up m desparr and came to srt besrde me I trred domestrc lrfe sard Kate confldentrally but rt was too much for my rntellect So I came back to the socral yn orld and spend all my trme chaperonrng A D S and Unrt affarrs It rs very pleasant I lmagrned that rt would be Tell me I sard what drd they do for a pramst when ones graduated3 Oh they frnally packed the plano away rn cotton battmg and the Senrors now march down the arsle accompanied by the whrstlmg of the lower classmen ones rs drrector of some brg orchestra she concluded rndefrmtelv There s Margaret Svlvester What s Peggy s latest3 -s.1Q.,s.1111s.'s1.Q.-sus.1s-fs.1Q41Q.1Qns11s11s1.s.1s.1Q.1s.1Q.-s- vxnsn-s11s.1s11snQ-1s. -sus.-Q11Q if ' ' .4 . . , , . . . . . - P , . . 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V o V 7 1 . , , . . . , . . . 4 4 . 1 1 1 1 - , . . . . . . . 1 . . . 1 1 1 1 . , , . . . - 1 . .I 1 7 ' H . . . . 1 1 Y KI . . , , . . 1 1 ,, ' A1 1 1 1 1 1 J . . 1s11Q11s11Q.1s.1s1aux.-s11511x1.sux-1s1-s.1s.1Q1-11-11 1Q.-sus. 1s.1s1-s.-s1-s.1s- -51-sus.-Q-1s11s11s 4 I lts a wonder you dont say who lnstead of what remarked Kate Oh Peggy IS startlmg soclety by the darlng and orlglnal fashion ln which she executes the latest dances Remember how Peggy used to tell about domg all those dances wlth her brother 3 I guess most of us suspected that devoted brother was a myth' How about Paullne Russell3 Where have you llved all these years3 asked Kate wlth evxdent dlsgust Paullne ns the good Samaritan of the Class Instead of rushlng headlong mto matrlmony as we all expected she has devoted her tlme to a translatxon of Caesar and the Aeneld especlally deslgned for Hlgh School students It has been a verltable blessmg every body passes now Look' l exclaimed There IS Crlmmln dancmg wlth Sarah Bowley Can It be true that he has learned the difference between the two step and the tango at last3 uxte true Royce as a prlvate detectlve dlscoverlng other people s secrets just SUltS hlm you know Sarah IS just her own lovable self By the way ohn Staples and hls company Gorlxss and Herllhy are at the Orpheum ohn s lmpersonatlon of lrlsh characters IS absolutely delightful George Laing does fancy dancing wlth Rosana Rlch as hrs partner very satlsfactory to both no doubt Paullne Prescott IS secretary at one of the promment men s colleges ThlS pleases the men and especially Polly Rose Lyon rs 1n New York where she IS at the head of a publlshxng company Dons Barley IS supposed to be her asslstant but she IS still an expert at blufhng The Haverhlll colony in Parls IS quite flourlshlng Fred Anthony wlth hrs usual good humor IS fmanclng every one who goes b oke as all of them do eannette Gleason and Mlldred Gramm are studying the soclal condltlons there and earnestly endeavorlng to uplnft the moral tone of Parlslan life Mary ohnson IS on the verge of marrylng a French count wonder nf she ll brmg hlm to Bradford3 Florence Lmehan IS a sculptor of great note they say all her figures are modelled after her own so of course they make a sensatlon Hazel Stone and Mlldred Warner are pollshlng thelr French preparatory to becoming governesses Harold Woodcock IS a pharmaclst and very popular wlth the Parlslans partlcularly the femmme part of the populatlon Stuart Taylor IS a multl mllllonalre truly a second Garnegle He IS golng to leave all hrs money to H H S athletlcs Rose Sadowltz and Vera Nlsbett are commer clal teachers Where3 I lnterrupted Kate leaned over and whlspered cautnously Lawrence lsn t lt awful3 l reflected upon thls unheard of calamlty for some tlme before Russell Preble at tracted my attentlon A certaln young lady ln Merrlmac had acted qulte contrary to hls expectatxons and Russell fled to the army for refuge At the close of thls dance l escaped to the famlllar old lunch counter ln search of refreshment and there found Charlotte Wormwood who now presnded over the gym and lnstructed the gxrls ln the mysterles of hugh Jumping and basket ball Ill tell you all I know about our classmates she promised obllgmg as ever There are Mildred Manning and Alice Goldwalt both of them ladies of lelsure Bermce Ham IS now a trained nurse wlth a dlstlnct preference for young men patlents Estelle Donathan IS just benng happy Ralph Green xs as qulet as ever but he has succeeded 28 -111-sus-11-vs--ss vsusus-15-ssus. 1x11Q1111 Qusus- 15-15115. 1s,,,..g1 .,,,Q-1, .Q,.5..Q.,5, ,,,.,..,, 1 a 1 1 4 1 ' 4 1 1 1 4 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I s . 1 1 5 5 . 1 1 . . . 5 5 . 1 1 1 1 . , ' - 1 1 s 1 1 1 . 5 5 . . . . . . . . s. . . 1 1 5 5Q . . . . . . 1 . - 1 1 - 1 1 ,I - . . , . . 1 1 1 1 1 1 . , . . A . , . , . , . 5 4 . . . . . . . . . 1 1 Y' 1 1 1 1 . , . . . . , . 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 5 5 . . . . . . . . - 1 1 A A 1 1 - 1 1 A 1 1 - 1 1 , . . , . r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - - 1 1 1 1 5 5 . . . . . . . , . , . 1 1 --sus--1--sus-15.nsusns.-s-vsn15--sus-11.1s-1Q-.Q1-s11s11s.1sns11s-1Q.1s-11-1s11s11sns.1s1-s.-su xerx well fortunatelx he can see thru a buslness proposrtlon more easxlx than he could the questions that confronted hlm ln English Ethel Keohane IS the companlon of a rlch old ladx ln Boston Excuse me l must speak to Clara Beardslex she ns a world famous axlatrlce and made a long fllght to he here to nlght l saw a bowed flgure pacmg slowlx up and down the corrldor bearlng the marks of tireless studx endless braln work It was Daxls Shocked at the change ID h1m l Cllman gazed at me hopelesslx 'Not unless you can tell me what loxe IS Exer slnce graduatron l haxe searched for lt hut 1n xaln It eludes mx eager grasp l stlll know nothlnv about lt' Startled and palned l turned awax and mx unfortunate and mlserahle classmate resumed hls paclng Two w ondrouslx rohed helngs passed me Frances Kllngeman and lVlar1on Ex ans the wlves of mllllonaxres so lmpresslve 1n thelr grandeur that l fled to the gxm once more where Harrx Charles and Edward Kennedx one a l3rewer and the other a lzaker were havlng a hot altercatron over the merlts of thelr respectlxe occupatrons The dxsturhance was quelled luv Cage who so deeplx moxed that he stuttered and some what spoiled the effect of his speech announced that we would slng the Class song We sang Nex er wlll the most wonderful muslc hold such charms for me as drd the old Class song sung luv the memhels ol Nlneteen Hundred and Fourteen that nlght IH the gxm Wlth the last words of the song l heard a clock strlke twelxe The lVled1terranean was washlng softlx upon her shores the NV1DCl slghed thru the lemon trees There was an odd chuckllng sound hx my slde and an old hent peasant woman mox ed nolselessly awax 1HtO the darkness It had been as she had spoken Blarjorze L ldams Beatrice F lxeene 1-1-'tu-sux-asus:-sa-sus--snQ-,Q--Qu-5-nxa-sux us--Q-'Q-asus-vsnxux--q--QnsusnQ- :suse-sux. 'Q touched him on the arm and asked. What is the matter. Gilman? Cant l help you? v . O . V . , J ' . ' 1 ' , . I g 1 . x . ' 1 3 U 1 -Q..1..5.es-as-ss-'sus'vs--su-QHQ.-1.-5nQe-Q..Q.-sa-sux--sq-sa -Q-sung-Qnsususns--Q-vQnsnz FACULTY , - 7 -,-1, '59 ,J I F fx fufigfffl X A Walter D Head Prlnclpal Hall to the chlef For the past two years as prlnclpal he has dex oted hls llfe to the welfare of the school essle H Bourne Head ol Manual Arts Department Mr Bourne IS head of the manual arts department of the Haverhlll schools H IS well llked by all those wlth whom he comes ln contact Not only IS he proflclent ln mechanlcal drawlng and shopwork but ln mathematlcs as well He has taught a class of SCHIOTS thls year lNo one needs to be afrald of Mr Bourne for one can have lots of fun up ln mechanlcal drawlng Myra W Bartlett Sclence MISS Myra Bartlett has worked for Haverhlll Hlgh s best lnterest long and falth fully She can glWC advlce whlch It well behoox es one to follow osephlne L Sanborn Hlstory French MIS Sanborn has the reputatlon of belng a most thorough Hlstory teacher Havlng studled abroad she 15 also able to glue her other classes French as It should be spoken Trulv the room teacher ln ZIJ IS a xaluable member of the faculty George li. Gay I-llstory Whenever Mr Cav IS called upon to glVC a speech he IS applauded untll he beglns to talk and then ex ervthlng IS qulet Mr Cay 15 just a dear old gentleman whom everv body loves and honors and who alw ag. s has a klnd word and a smlle for evervone Edna M Wakeheld Ancl nt Hlstorx MISS Wakeheld comes prettv near belng a motler to the freshman Her hlstory sectlons sav that hel motto for dlsclpllne 15 lllce Mr Clay s l wlll trv to be so good to mx classes that they wlll be ashamed to be OtllCl'XNlSC to me One alwavs flDdS a svm pathetlc llstener and xaluable counselor ln I07 whether one IS freshman sophomore JUDIOI' or scnlol Lester C Rlchardson Physlcs Mr Rlchardson came to the Hawerhlll Hlgh School ln the sprlng of l9l0 to teach phx slcs He has contlnued to teach up to the present xear when owlng to lllness he 3 7 N Y . 5 4 X Q l ii. .1 ' if - me sm... 1.1 1.9- my ' H f'ls....Q-...... ., ,N x 'R f t z-..l..s-2, l me 1 A' ...l l r S fllhlf ' - '-mr X H . - -, - . .5 . - . C , , , . . . 1 . . . , . . . , . . V nl f 7 . f 7 J f e 5 ' . . . . . H . Y 1 ' s 1- . . . f . - , Y , f - , . . l Y Y v ' L . l . C ' a 5 I 1 . . . . . . , . ,, . , V f . . .. . f V , , - . w . V . V . . 1 , . . i . Q , . Y , , , , - . , . - , sus..s..,.-s..s..s..s.,,..,.-5.-susns..s..,..Q..s..s..s.-susus.-s..s..gs.s..,..gasans..-gsfgngngu 1 vs was gryen a years leaye of absence 'Nlr Rrchardson or R1Chl6 as he IS called by thos who know hum b st lmmedlately makes hls way lnto the hearts of those wlth wlfcm he comes ln contact All were sorry when rt became known that he would l'aye to leaye off teachxnv for a year 'Nlr Rlchardson rs faculty member ofthe Ln1tFratermty Robert W Broderlck uperyxsor of Drawmg Xvrth the entrance of the class or lol-l to the Hayerhlll Hx h School came Bull Brod rlck Wxth Blll came the promls of a hl her standard o athletlcs whlch has b n fully reallzed Vlr Brod rlck prxmarlly came as head of the drawlng department ln the scnools ol the clty But hrs Greatest fame has come from hrs abrllty to p oduce champronshlo football teams haymg done thls ID IQIO and IQI3 Brll IS also famous as an artlst ha mg palnted a number of excellent pictures Although lVl1ss VI rrrll does not haye senlors ln her Latrn classes all those w o w re form rly und r her care stxll feel and reallze the benefits they galned ln past years lVl redltn Q Wllllams Chemxstr f Mr W1ll1amS sometlm s looks very cross but there IS no need of fearmg hlm becatse beneath that look there IS much pleasure and sunshlne to be found and one wxll see that he rs just as caoable ol smlllng as any other member of our faculty lVlr WllllamS IS a member of the A D S and rs well llked by all the boys Edrth lVl R1cnardson Latln lVl1ss Rxchardson wno teaches Latrn to all who enjoy that language IS well known to the seniors MISS Rlchardsons home IS not ID Hay erhlll as many mlght expect but ln another s ctlon of Massacnu tt gen rally known as lVl1ll1s Ralph A Stey ens Head of Commerclal Department lVlr Stevens IS th head of our commerclal departm nt and a splendid man he IS for the positron lVlr Steyens IS always verv busy but that does not take awav hrs keen sense of humor and what IS best of all he can reprlmand ln a pleasant but yery effectrye wav as can be seen by the actlons of the class Harrlet L Webster Engllsh Nlathematlcs lVl1ss Webster does not haye any SCIIIOFS IH her classes ln ll6 but ney ertheless the senrors nold fond memorxes f the Engllsh and Algebra whlch she taught them Mabel A Watson English Some teachers Sp6C1allZC rn teaching excludlng all pleasures from the class rooms others attempt to mxngle pleasure and work wlth yarymg success because one must be of exceptlonal abllrty to do two thrngs at once and do them well lVl1ss Watson has pursued the latter method wrth her classes the last four years or more and has not only kept the Engllsh on the hugh plane w hrch rt had attalned l ut ha ralsed lts standmg and 1 1l'10Q 10i1 Quint- Quint- sus--sa s- sux- Q--in-Q. slus-ns.-sus-vsns-asus.-xnsassnxa ll ..-..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..-..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,. N.-. Q , . ,, , . . , Y P - t . Y , . , s ' ' ll ' ' I1 I , . . LJ D I , ' U l ' D D I K3 O' f ' - . - D ,,,, , A G , , ' Y H . g . H . l , . . ' 4 xl' 1 Q a Susan E. lVlerr1ll , r . Latin L S . . , .v .tr D O fi V c . V . V . e . ' , . , 1 I3 ' V . c r , , . A 1 .1 l l 7 . . . , . . . , . . . , , . D . , CD C P V Y . . V sc .r e 1 . 0 A . , - - , 7 I ' . . . v y . . u . y x . , . A . . K1 A B H 1 , . . , . ,,.. r . Q I I , , y, , e c , s V, , --sus--Q.ss--sus--Q-asus.-sn-1-users.-1-vs-as -s 'S-'ins-asus.-1--Q--5-sux--sug.-Q-.1 -Q4-sus n at the same trme made herself very popular Alwavs ready to be of ard socrally and pro fessronally she has won an envrable place wrth those rn the class who have been prryr leged to come rn contact wrth her Anthony H Frske Phy srcal Drrector Tony Frske rs called Trger bv the boys but rt rsn t on account of hrs ferocrty rt s only because he has such dramatrc abrlrty Warren A Sherman Nlathematrcs Mr Sherman came to Haverhrll I-lrgh School early rn l9l3 to teach mathematrcs takrng the posrtron left vacant by the resrgnatron of Mrss Smrth Although of an easy gorng drsposrtlon he IS a dangerous person wrth w hom to carrv fun too far Hrs methods are thus rf a person rs caught throwrng chalk he comes back rn the afternoon and throws chalk untrl he rs good and trred of dorng so Thrs stopped the habrt rn 213 Anna L Clark French MISS Anna L Clark has the reputatron of berng able to teach one how to enjoy oneself as well as to translate French and she has a happy habrt of sparrng the rod ohn L Dakrn Shopwork It rs to Mr Dakrn that we go wrth fear and tremblrng when we want to leave bounds at recess and many are the excuses whrch we lre awake nrghts makrng to offer hrm the next day Alrce T Sherburne Englrsh lVlrss Sherburne s cordral welcome has made her one of our most popular teachers Gertrude E Srmonds French Everybody knows lVl1ss Srmonds and ey ery one who knows her lrkes her Many have spent profrtable hours rn her French classes whrch will not be forgotten soon Mrss Vrola Evans rs often characterrzed as a brrck She leads us thru the mazes of geometry when we are not cony ulsed wrth laughter at the remarks wrth whrch she lrghtens the weary, way Blanche Currrer German Mrss Blanche Currrer s rs the pleasant duty of teachrng our falterrng tongues the wavs of German tho many of us know to our grref that she spends much trme as sentrnel rn the corrrdor ennre M Newell Englrsh There are yery few rn our class who are not genurnely grateful for the work whrch Mrs Newell has put rn to ard us rn our studres and recreatrons The selectrons at chapel whrclr haye helped to brrghten the routrne of each day s work were all the result of her efforts A more conscrentlous teacher rt would be extremely drfhcult to hnd 3 , . ' - . , ! V VI v Y ' ' . 1 . . . f ' ff ' V! , 9 Y , . H. Vrola Evans . . . . . . . Mathematrcs 7 V Y ' 7 V , , . ' V 7 7 '. Y f ' I J . I . y 1 - V r ' y v r ' v ' V Qovga-Q01-'Q-nsus.nq.us--Q.-Q.usemy.QuinQususnx.nzuQ-'54ngnQns.e14-sus.-as-Queen: susan: 2 via enn1eA Vlors Wathematxcs EI1gll5ll We all remember the teacher IH ll-lr who by accompllshlng the drfhcult task of teachmg u algebra enabled us to gam a footmg on the four rung ladder Marguerlte H Lvon Stenography 'Vhss Lyon the commander of Room II2 has always helped the class mth her msdom ln the art of makmg a good tlme Many puplls haye become successful 1n Stenography after studvlng mth Vhss Ly on She IS an earn st worker for the Hooks and Crooks Club R Elamc Lroston English Miss Croston has mth Mr C,-ay formed a readmg class Thls class has progressed yerv rapldly with the assistance of Mlss Croston who has planned many of the eyents Lthel M Anken Lnghsh MISS Aiken IS an Enghsh teacher whom ey cryone llkes and hcr classes are popular mth the whole school Bertha Snow panlsh MISS Snow came to the Haverhlll Hlgh School but two years ago when Spanish was hrst taken up as a study 'I hose who have studled mth her reallae her abllxty as a Spanlsh teacher Florence L Webster French MISS Webster IS another member of our faculty who has devoted tlme and monev to httlng herself to teach French by going abroad to study the language Not only her French seetlon but also her Busmess Fractl e and Commercial Geography classes hnd her a faithful and excellent mstructor Verna B Flanders Ty PCWYIUIIQ MISS Flanders our typewrltmg teacher xs just a sweet faced good natured efhcxent member of our much beloved htgh school faculty Florence M Adams fcnmanshlp Mlss Adams IS a new teacher at s hool but her charm of manner has made her well l1ked by the eommercxal students Helen P Clmes Lltrarxan Miss kalmes has charge of the llbrary She IS yery partlcular who studles there She IS always ready to help anyone ln trouble about any subject Rhobe L West Fhyslcal Dlrector MISS West the glrl s Fhysleal Culture Director has many friends m the cla s ef I9I4 She has tralned the gxrls to plav basket ball and alwavs had a yery good league snsnx-.snQn1. snxnsnxns- Q- sus--scsi-ox-vQuxnos-vs wx-vs-'Qui-:sum ns-.QQ-sag sus.-sa ao -Q--Q--sus.-sus.-sus.vsnQ-ss.,-5-vq..s..s.ng.-1..s..g.vg..,,,,.-gusnss-Q-vsnsainx..sus--gnx., .I Y Q , . . , . . .. , . . Q h Q Q - 1 . r , . . ,' 1 H . , . A ' 1 v v , 1 1 . . e . - . . ' . , , . ' 7 A , . , . , , . . , y , Y U . H .,. . , . . . , , , , , . , . . , V Q Y Q . . . . . , L. . V , V L., as - . - s f f a . r . L v , . v v ' - V x, 1 . ' 1 . , . f r ' . . , . . . . , u' . . s ' .. . .2 , ' ogosuq. vsnsnq. wins.-Qpqpgpq. aquyng ,sox ,Qviniuinsa HERMANN KOTZSCHMAR WHITMORE Hlc lxrcsldcnt umor year Presldent Scnlor ycar A D b Football l9lI I2 I3 Captain of Football Team I9I4 Never has a class been so fortunate as to have a better leader than Hlck A Jolly dlsposltlon com blned wlth all the qualltles of leadershlp has made hlm the most popular fellow ID the entire school '55 s 1 - k 1 1 J . . . . ., , . 4 5 . , , . . . . vxv1ugasQnQnes.:QnQnvQ-vsnnxns.eanxaexnegnxusn:sux -ini- vs- ERNA LlLLlAN DOWNS Vlce presldent of l9l4 Two years ago somebody started a nomlnatlon paper for MISS Downs, 2l0 as vnce president of the class of I9I4 Only a few knew her but the same good luck which has been ours caused her to he elected vlce president She has served falthfully and well upholdmg the dlgmty of her posltxon at all tlmes Since her election Erna has lzecomc very popular FRED HARRISON CAFE Umt Football l9l4 Class Basket lzall Class Treasurer Fred always has a roll of lzxlls large enough to start a bank lzut lt as not hls only the money hrs class has glvcn hlm to keep Hls favorite pastlmcs are danclng and sellmg tlckets RUTH TI-IEGDOSIA EMERQON S Q Vlce president of the Fhllomathlans Executive Commlttec It IS a wonder to most of us how so much talcnt could be stored up m any person Ruth IS an artlst poetess author and ALL AROUND SHARK he IS a very congemal person and would no more thmk of sprmgmg a Latin phrase on one than she would think of saying C-OSH ln the presence of MISS Watson A more level headed glrl would be exceedmgly hard to find She served falthfully and well as class secretary for one year and as we know her more and more we lsegln to rcallze that the semor edltor IS some glrl MARJORY LIVINGSTON ADAMS Marjy Book Committee l:h1lcn'ath1an Marjory whose name appears first on the l9I4 llst was termed Chatter Box on the Eltrurnan Marjorv was the Exchange Edltor of the Eltrunan and always had numerous exchange notes She IS one of the bcst known glrls ln the c ass 3 9 ' . 1 ' . 1 ' 1 J 1 g ' , . s 9 1 LJ . 4 . . . , , - 1 1 , . n.. A s s 1 - - - 1 s f ' ' a s 1 9 - A A - s n , 1 . , A ' ' v f 1 iaviaox 1 1 s nsnxus- .14-snsnsnsus. .1-vs.-Q-sQnQ.-Q. -sn,.,,.,Q. ., . 'J -4- va-A. ,nysvsaasnsninsus-oinsaas.vsux-as-ox-vsns.sins. -sus.-Q FAULINA MARIE ALLARD Book Committee, Secretary of the Hooks and Crooks. Paulina is one of the smallest girls in the class. She joined the Hooks and Crooks Club with the first group of juniors and was always an active member. To her belongs much credit for the success of the club. EVELENA ATTIE ALLEN Lena Lena halls from that part of Haverhill which is so well known Bradford She knows the American History from the settling ln I607 to I9l4 FRANK CHANDLER ALLEN Dmk Track Man l9l3 Frank is a very bright and handsome youth He always shines in English FREDERICK SAFFORD ANTHONY Dummy Frederick comes from over the River Frederick s name IS Dummy not because he IS dumb for he is one of the smartest youths ln the class He has the honor of being the tallest boy in the class If he went to school another year the city carpenters would have a Job makmg the doors larger 3 . , . A 4 - 1 1 A s 1 1 . . . , . L 4 1 1 . . 1 1 1 was.sas-:xaeauxaesaws-esavseexny-ns.-Q--sa-su..Q..g.11s-snsnsnxvi I rgaogavsnsnsnx. viniuiq .s.os.vs--g.vg.eg.-Q--Q.os..gns.fQug.fQ Q.nQ4vsusenQnxnx.o14lsn5,,. .,. .,. . - .-gngakn. .,- .,. .,. .,. .,. .,. ALLAN MCGREGOR ARMITSTEAD Jeff, Allan, although not the smallest in the class, is very small. His size has not hindered his work in athletics, for he won his H in baseball in l9l3 and another in basket-ball in l9l4. jeff is a big favorite among the members of the class. MY RAON WILLIAM BACLEY Count Unit, Eltrurian Board, Basket-ball Manager I9l4. Myron is one of the most prominent members of the class of l9l4. He played football in l9I3e 1914 and on the l9l4 basket-ball team. To him we look for the draw- ing of many designs DORIS HASELT l NE BAILEY ot Fhilomathian Dot is gen rally in a cheerful state of mind with a habit of getting there somehow It is seldom that we are favored with her presence for she attends school on an average of one day a week EBEN GORDON BAILEY Gordon hails from Georgetown He helped serve us many times at the Lunch Counter He is one of the smartest boys in the class H s :D 1 a A A n 1 - - - - o V 9 ' 4 s - 1 v - 1 vas as .-snsaosaesa-me-zevssns-asus: -sus-sxevsusensssgagg gpsugag, A :- x-4., A- if 413, X X 1 Q fe' , 1 I i , uf Y PI .1 XXI XHIIHI xx I , U v L I 1 s xx N if xx.X ,L 11111-1111 X1 1:1111w i 1 C ,111-1. A ' IQ fv 'W Yu. D H1 'A 1 I ' 1 11 I 1 N , 1 I X , 1 1 , ' 1 11 '1 1 I 'X XI 'll IQ HQXXIX '11Xl!i11l1111I '1 X xI1f1'1' 'Nf1'11l1 l'i 1fI Il 1 1.'111i11I111 .I1111 AKX1,-1, V- 1 XIXIQII ,1-1, X11:.1z1I1111'. t1Zt1:1H.. 1 K1 1 I 1 111 .11 11.1ff 11 W-. XX 51 I :ta 1111113 1 XIIEHH li11N 'X UNI x x,.,,.x.x XUN. X X.X.x..N,N. X-xdx. Q- vsnxnx. ssnxnxnxnsnsa vxnsnxnsngnx- asus. ss. :saga esarxa :- RALPH EUGENE BUTTRICK Ralph who llallS from Broadway nn Haverhill, not New York, IS one of the smartest lzoys ln the class and has had h1s name on the honor llst for some tlme LLOYD EATON BYARD U A D S Captam of the l9l4 Baseball Manager of the Eltrurlan Manager of the l9l4 Foot ball Lloyd IS some hustler He took a part IH the Semor play and he always has a smlle for everyone LOIS CARLETON Lols won her H ln the Clrls track meet m l9l3 She always has a smile for everyone especlally lf the name IS George LUCY KELLEY CARLETON Luke Lucy IS a slster of Lols and she also won her H ln the same race with her Sl ter Luke IS a star ln gettlng up entertalnments 41 l I B E 1 1 . . . , 1 l - , . 1 I Il 9 ! ' 5 C U ! ' ' V ' 5 6 I 7 - ' - A 4 s s - . . , 5 , y . . . 5 . ' Q -aa-Q-vs--ge -sus--sa .Q-.sue -Q.-sux.-sus--Q. -Q-fs. -sus.-Q. -sus-vs. 541105051 -to-bvinxns. :sus Qusnsu :Laos-as-nxass--1 is--sa atc - CELIA CLARKSON CART ER. Quiet, studious, and shy, Celia has won an enviable place in the hearts of the members of the class of l9l4. How many of us who first knew her as a little girl who seemed so frightened when called upon suspected that she would be one of the most popular girls in our class. Although in- active socially one always found an enthusiastic helper and worker in our friend from Saunders Hill. ELIZABETH BELLE CASWELL There are some girls and fewer boys who seem to have a faculty of effaclng themselves from the eyes of their fellow students and yet are like pearls in the oyster shell givers of untold pleasure to the one who discovers their worth Elizabeth is one of these girls and many are those who will say after hearing about her from one of her friends I wish I could have known her LEANDER HENRY CASWF LL Leon Leander always looks on the bright side of things and he greets everyone with a smile even his English teacher when she gives him a call down for using bad grammar HARRY EVERETTE CHARLES Tubby Harry is a very fair specimen of the fat man s class H seems to find inspiration in glancing upward towards the ceiling Whether he is estimating his chances of ever being able to ride in an air ship or whether it is to ascend that he aspires is cause for no little speculation among his classmates He is a friend to all 4 1 u I 1 s so as 9 - - u vs - 1 1 as 1 1 . . . , sus--suq.-s.4-sauseasause-su-is-sus-asa-Q-usecs-vQnosu5ususnsns 2 1 CCY NEWTON CHRISTIAN Track Man l9l4 Phllomathlan Base ball C-uy 15 the equal of any fellow as the boomer and repre sentatlve of hrs school and he carrles away the satr faction of havmg made hlmself as worthy a repre entatxve of hrs home town as Georgetown ever had or wlll have As a member of the Fhllomathxan soclety Guy has shown that hls abllntles are not llmlted to the athletrc fxeld Whxle not a bear mth the ladles Cuy has plenty of envlable frlends EDGAR MORGAN CLARK Edgar IS one of the most studrous boys rn the class and one can tell by the expressrons on hrs face whether he IS succeedmg rn hrs studies or not He IS qulet and shy but he IS fond of athletncs and he always IS good natured He IS one of the most actrve workers of the club to whlch he belongs WALTER FISKE COLBY Rats Unit Book Committee Bradford may well be proud of Walter F Colby Any Umt man wlll tell you that Rats Colby IS the best fellow ln the school As a member of the Executive Committee ln the Junlor year he was lnvaluable A group of fellows were trymg to drscover the secret cf Walter s popularlty One spoke up He lsn t any drfferent from the rest of us except that he always looks out for the other fellow first I guess you ve struck rt sand another And he had HARVEY ALLEN CORLISS Our mothers always became SUSPICIOUS when we were young rf we could not be heard ls he rn mxschlef or asleep ns what they sald When Harvey Corhss name came up for a general mformatlon m the book committee there was none forth comlng He wasn t an athlete grmd or rough houser It developed that he could do short hand and unbeknown to the 160 other members of our class he was makmg good It would be hard to find a more qulet and llkeable boy than Harvey Q. -in-xmas-vs-equi. Q- usa wx. xnsnsa-me-Quin nsnsusuxavsnqawsnxa 43 in IiiiliilfhliillilYitfilltiitfillhl'il9Hl?iG'iliil?i59i:?i42'112L15FL1- . . v . .5 . . . c . . ll I Y 1 I . a 4 Y I l I I V Hooks and Crooks. Track Man l9l3. li U V ' ' . KC O U 5 . . 9 ' ll ' Y ' ll I . U 1 1 ' s v - - - 1 ' , U Y 5' '5 5 5 5 501- '54'1noQnxaoxnsnxux-ug. 'sux'-Qnxa saiusa IVIILDRED FRANCES CRAMM Mlldred IS another one of those flne qulet studlous glrls who have made our class famous Almlghty pleasant glrl when you come to know her IS the testlmony of each of her many frlends ROYCE BRAINERD CRIIVIMIN Fhllomathlan Royce started hls hlgh scnool career wlth athletlc as plratlon but a consultatlon wlth the doctor cured them Versatlle as he IS Royce lmmedlately turned hls attentlon towards the studlous branch of school llfe When one glances at the rank sheet ln the ofhce and then recalls the fact that on each of the four years there has been at least on month when lllness rendered Royce s attendance at school lmposslble one ceases to wonder why It IS that the llttle famlly ln Bradford IS so proud of the Fhllomathan student and Classmate ln 205 ALICE MARION CUNNINCHAIVI Ulet and unassumlng Allce makes a mlghty good com panlon any day Perhaps not so well known as some ln our class nevertheless that IS none of Allce s fault but IS due to her llwlng outslde the clty and over a mlle and a half from the car Even lf she IS not so well known It s an even wager that she can cook a better meal than some of the other glrls and thls wlll count when ohnny Comes a Courtln You Walt and see MARY ELIZABETH CLRTIN Do you remember that Qenlor unlor soclal whlch took place IH March Of course you do no one could Iolget the band and costumes There was a llttle SIX year old MISS who trlpped around qulte IH her element We see thls same llttle glrl sklpplng around our corrldors and were It not for the gray matter whlch IS constantly dlsplaylng ltself ln the classroom we mlght easlly belleve that the costume party revealed the true Marx whlle the on know ID school IS the masquerader -I4 . . li ' ' n - . . . , . . - C Y ' ll UV , ' I D c 9 ! , . Q , . - 1 Y , ' S , I ' Y HY ' . l u -j J u . , . , , . , - we in-,QE-..-'Que-..-,g..Q,,,,.Qnq.vxnsususuxus-iusususns- sus- s use -Q.'Q--snsa,5.aQn54s14vqnQ4osux4vx-as-es :ze sais. eguQ.vs4,L:?ga Q EARLE BERTRAM DAVIS Hooks and Crooks, Debating Club, Executive Committee. Earle Davis used to be an unknown and more or less of a freak. In his senior year he became head of the de- bating club, and since then he has forged forward. Partially due to his own efforts and those of Mr. Sherman the debating club is coming into its own. Earle is holding up his end of his class duties. GEORGE GILMAN DAVIS Cil. Unit. For a staunch, level headed, clever friend turn to George G. Davis. Gilman, as he is known to most of us, is very popular not as a sport or anything of the kind, but as a chap who will go the limit for you if it is right to do so. Ask any Unit man or any member of his classes what he is like and the answer is always the same Almighty hne chap It has been said that Gil didnt KNOW how to swear but if he hasn t learned since he started driving that FORD Ill fork over DAFHNE HORFI ENSE DEAN oker Daph Hooks and Crooks Daphne tries to make people believe that she is an angel about to leave this wicked world of sm but when they know her better they find that she is as ready as anyone for a good time GAT HERIIXE EVELY N DONAHUE Kitty 41 l If 9 7 U9 ' li ' YY ' U ' .I . , . . . fl y ,Y Y fl 91 Il Y! Cl V, J , - Y ' 4 I 1 V - 1 ll ' Y, Cur Paris fashion plate who is always on duty. Q.-Q--suse-Qu-vga.-s-wsaeaseg-:Q :Q ea vsus.:1nQ.:g.:-,seg-egg:-..Q. lngnsnxusnsuxa -Qusnsa -Q-ssusa -Q-nsgiusa asus. -sn-gns. ngns. wgng. osngng. -gug.,Q.v14asn-sssxavaug-QQ. 1 I i -Quin su L ESTELLE MAY DONAT HAN Estelle IS a very qulet studxous glrl She IS getting all that she can out of her hngh school course but not wlthout leaving a smile for everyone HAROLD F RANRLIN DREW Drowsy lkhxlomathlan Track Man Lrowsy decided that his only opportunity lay on the cmder track and bendlng all hls energy towards the end he came out for the school track team ln hls Junior year he ran agalnst Malden ln the thousand and got hls baptlsm as a result ln the senlor year his fellow classmates thought enough of hls ambltlon to make hlm captam ln recognltlon of this honor Harold ran the Malden star off hls feet enabllng Dodge to wm As a comedlan Harold F Drew IS a star MILDRED EMERSON Track Phllomathlan Mlldred IS an athletlc glrl ln fact one of our very best ln door athletlc glrls She plays basket ball IS a very fast runner and also does well ln callsthenlcs She took part xn the track meet last year and ln the Fhllomathlans lndlan club drlll thls year She can parlez vous Prancaxs too belng one of the most fluent conversatlonallsts 1n her sectlon The files of the Eltrurlan reveal a few con trxbutlons by our very small but accompllshed frlend She IS a very fine model for some of those I7 glrls to watch MAR ION EVANS She was called IU her freshman year the prettiest glrl 1n the class but either on account of generoslty or carelessness she has allowed the formula to become public When West Newbury surrendered she was a charmlng novelty Now she IS an lI'lt6l'CStlDg bralny attractlve and much sought after glrl Haverhlll Hugh and I9I4 drd It Hitch your heart to I9l4 Marion it s worth lt -I snxlvsnsnsavs-as-:saws-ws.sxusns-:Qu-1-oxns..101-sg. oQnQnqnx KAI HLEEN CECELIA FENNESSY Kath. Hooks and Crooks. Kathleen is one of the several tall young ladies of the class of I9l4, and she also stands very high in her studies. DANIEL FRANCIS FITZGERALD Dan H Track l9l4, Hooks and Crooks To look at Danlel you would not thunk hum an athlete, but you should see hlm ln the Cym HEST LR HOWE I LON D et Hester IS one of the most popular glrls IH the senlor cla s and her delnghtful sense of humor has made many frlends for her not only among the pupils but the faculty as well ROBERT TAYLOR FRACKELTON Class basket ball l9l4 You can never help seelng Frackelton because he IS so large and lf you once see hrm you never forget hxm It IS said he IS very much afrald of glrls but hopes to overcome thrs fear In txmc 4 . 1 - X 1 4 4 4 sl I 1 v C 4- v v 1 - 1- vxnxuxuxuqn:sus-ns-as-exnxuaaexeex: Quin :sux--Q.eQqeLnQ.:L. I -Quang: e e :unxuaewa:vx4vs:v:::ausqeLax.ugssg:v1nx.e-.1Quan- HELEN DORIS GARDNER By a glance at the honor list one can see how fond Helen is of learning whereas a glance at her red cheeks shows that she also loves fresh air. BEATRICE EMMA GEORGE Bee Bee comes from Newton to be a member of our illus- trious class. She is fond of dancing and all entertainments. 4 JEANNETTE GLEAQON eannette would make a fine explorer of the polar regions as she is never so happy as when all others are shlverlng and the glass is twenty below zero ALICE MARION COLDWAIT Hooks and Crooks No one knows any more about bookkeeping than Alice If there IS anything you wish to know on this sulrject just ask her 4b nj v --:a:e1:sa:esus.ns- ezsoxngnzusngs niaessesnxntnin - suuutntc -Q. vs.. anus-ex. -aug: eaaegvsuxnea. vswsua: sans- -1. -sn-sus. -snsnsu MALRICE TUTTLE GRANVILLE M. M. C. Maurice is a zealous member of the M. M. C., whose headquarters are in Bradford. Still, Maurice declares that the one place on the map for him, and the place to which, like Rome, all roads lead. is New Rochelle. RALPH HAVEN GREEN Treasurer of the Hooks and Crooks Ralph is a sports man and is very fond of farming I is hard to tell which he would prove the best at farmlng or insurance LAWRLNLL LDWARD LRLLNL Larry Football l9I4 Basket ball captain l9I4 Baseball A D 5 Larry is one of the most popular fellows in the class He enters every kind of sport and although he has been with us only two years his record comes up to anyone s in the class BLRNICL HAM Vice president of the Hooks and Crooks Bernice although she is very quiet and never makes herself conspicuous is very popular 9 - . 1 . -. 1 A -, -1 . 1 1 1 . 1 I 4 4 v v , , , . . . 4 1 v v - ' u . . , w A 1 4 V . . v , . Qnxnsnx- :ia-Q. -sais -suing -xaviaeasvxaexuinsnegnxsvxnsnx as ,Q safzsfivif fini- 'isfisvansaexaeigexnsu exeosaegnseezeezae-..-eaaega 'Q JOSEPHINE PARKER HANSCOIVI ..Jo.,. Josephine is a very fine dancer: she attends all enter- tainments although she has to come from Riverside. OSGOOD HASKELL Fhilomathian. Georgetown is well represented this year. Haskell, although he has been here only a short time, has made many friends. He is a good athlete, one of the steady kind. who, slow and sure, wins the race. We wish to see many more of the same stamp in future years representing George town ARTHUR RUSSELL HENDERSON Hooks and Crooks Arthur is one of our future great men He IS now a well known poet Fishing in winter as well as all other sports interests him very much WILLIAM FRANCIS HERLIHY 1 Bull is the most interesting translator of French and English that we have in the class He is a good all around fellow . , , B' II. an - a a - ' ' v -.evs..Q.-as ,-vt,-v,.,.:1e:-.ze-.e xmas:-.::1::-ve:-.mangas-.es-,sage as sa'- 5 sq. 'sus--Q4 snsva-as wsnxavxnQ4oxng.vsns4vQus4oQ4nQaoQ.vQnQ. ERNEST FREIVIONT HERRICK Bully Baseball I3 I4 Football I4 Lnlt Bully IS not what hls name suggests rather the oppo slte Such color' Look glrls he s blushmg' lsn t Ie u e Bully has made good as an athlete both ln I:ase all and football but ln h1s studles he has made cheerful faxlures BERNARD HERMAN HODSDON Bullet Basket ball I3 I4 L lt Bullet xs just what hls name suggests one of the Izest asketball players that ever represented the Izrown and gold Hrs athletlc al:1l1ty combined with hrs popularlty has made for hlm an envlable record Bullet IS famous as a general havmg commanded the forces at Cemetery Ridge CLARISSA ELIZABETH JACK Clarlssa IS a verv quiet person who says very llttle but llke people of her type does a whole lot EMILY ARVILLA JACK Ilmlly IS so very much llke her slster that one simply cannot say another thing about her 71 viola sa :Que -Q. I I I I I vs. . cr cn' 0 . I . ' : ' fr D : . u .4 ' 'U I - . 3 t I . - ' I f 2 . ' - . I I A D 14 I . - 2 - A : 4 , . .1 a - Di ' ' I . I - 4 2 . I T ' I , . , , l ' ' ' I . FD I I Iillic'il'54 Tl'Ql'il'Q'liQllQuQ4ei4'Quin:?4nQnnQ.9.:?eeiaei:lQuniaei:lQ4oLg:1v:eA,:. simian signing.nQ4nQuQnQnQ4nQaltnQ4r54pq.nQnQ.uinguig :Quin sr' Glu Q-ex-as-mx. oxnQu1-oQv1nQ- :susan GEORGE HENRY JOHNSON Debating Club. George pleased everybody by winning the prize for an essay, offered by the Board of Trade: this only served to strengthen our conviction that George is destined to become a genuine arc-light in the literary world. MARY ARV ILLA JOHNSON Hooks and Crooks. She is a merry girl and always ready for fun. FRED EARLE JONES Hooks and Crooks Fred has caused our souls to rejoice with harmony for four years in our daily promenade into chapel we have een cheered by his inspiring melodies HAZEL LOIS JONES Hooks and Crooks Hazel is a tall slim girl and much sunshine can be found beneath the thoughtful look which she alwavs wears on her ace 5 Q-'Qu asus-oguxns oxus-vs-use ox-:suing-as-ususaox-:Q--Q BEATRICE ELIDA KEENE ee Eltrurlan Book Commlttee Fhrlomathlan Bee IS a young lady wlth the faculty of havmg her own way She wrltes cleverly and holds a hugh posltron among the llterary members of the class She believes ln Rlghts of Women and talks a blue streak on thls subject whrle oys srt rn absolute helplessness JOSEPH ALOYSIUS KELLEY oseph jolned our lllustrlous class ln the semor year He a calm and unconcerned lDdlVldUal even a most strenu ous perlod ln Enghsh has failed to Jar hrs composure DONALD EUGENE KFMPTON Don Debatlng Club Phllomathlan Donald IS as amusing as a whole performance at the Colonial and absolutely orlgmal Llfe wlthout Don would prove quite stale and the class IS always ready to appreciate hrs frequent sallres EDWARD FRANCIS KENNEDY Edward IS a qulet boy but he has a pleasant dlsposxtlon and IS never or seldom seen ln a sulky mood Qui. Q, ,5. gin .Q,,QnQ.,5,,g.vQns- .sux-oxa sus-us vs D3 v-ve-. .Q-A. .vs-'S4wins:-s-vsn-s..-sus.-sa-sus-vs-ss-'sus--Q.-sus.-sms . MB I 1 s v - I C ! 9 1 . u . . . 5 , . v s A s u v . . - IS , - 4 . Cl 1 ! , . . . . . . 4 . v v , . v v vsusns-ssl: pins- -sux.-sa15.:sux--Que:esusossnsnxuxnxsvsansu :sa HAROLD JAMES KENNEY Thxs gentleman IS so very qulet and unohtruslve that we can only say we are consumed with regret that he has gxven us no better chance to become acquainted wlth hum MARY ETHEL KEOHANE Cookle Her calm sweet face and her love of muslc remmd us xery much of Saint Cecella When speaklng of Ethels qulet manner her friends often say Stall waters run deep FREDERICK SHERMAN KIIVIBALL Sherm Although a qulet fellow Sherm IS there when the clock strlkes twelve He may he seen at any and at all of the social HHHITS of the tlme and IS always 1n great demand by e ladies HAROLD L KIMBALL Harold came to the class of l9l4 in has sophomore year havlng sklpped hls freshman year Although a good fellow not much can be sald owlng to hls bashfulness which has kept hlm from mlnglmg mth the other fellows 54 sa - v q n . . . , V ' ' I l ' P7 v 1 - 4 Sl V! - s A n 1 - Y I v V Y Q- -Q-.s-.sus-.Q-fsns. -s--sn 5ngusns..sus-us-ns-as--s-as-as-'sus -iazuxeea: -sauna: 1 9:4 fxnxa-i4oi.o5uQus..vs.oinsui.vQ-vinviavs FRANCES KLINGEMAN Erances is a charter member of the Don't Worry Club. and whatever may happen, she is always cheerful. One can scarcely wonder at this, however, for her future career is evidently assuredeematrimony. GEORGE THEODORE LAING Sally George won his letter xn football ln the years 1912 l9l3 He also won hls numerals ln basketball when the l9I4 class led the lnterclass league ln I9Il I9I2 Georges favorlte sport IS danclng whlch he can perform to the best or worst of muslc George though not the wlnner of the Carleton Prize IS verv interested m the name Carleton George IS one of the best llked boys ln the class HONORA AGNES LANE Nora Phllomathlan Although not blessed with any great love of books Nora IS qulte an athlete Her chronic glgglmg has dlsturbed the peace and qulet of many a recltatlon ETTA LASKEY Hooks and Crooks Etta IS one of the best known gurls IH the class She IS an actlve member of the Hooks and Crooks Club whlch she jolned when the Juniors were first admitted m l9l3 She IS very much Interested rn titles especlally Earls Su . Q ' Q v , ' A 4 1 v s . . . . . 4 4 1 1 -ge Q4 usniazesgng. -snsuz: vs- o sus nsusnx- wsu-Q. fins- -sn s ns- -1 -swans: :ieeie :L:I2::i:vaeog::s:es:s5n:x:eu:ei:eL::::esa:1:si:e : rbi' SADIE FLORENCE LASKEY Sadie is one of the good lookers of the class. She is quick to make friends and slow to lose them. She is always looking for a good time, and wherever she is, there is a good time. Sadie is of the class comediennes. GEORGE LEAV ITT George Leavitt came from Russia five and one-half years ago to the Land of the Free. I-le had an unusual determination to get an education in the new land. George got busy, covering the work in the grammar grades in one year. He entered high school four years ago. Al- ways handicapped in expressing himself, George found his work somewhat difficult, but with the aid of the ever ready helping hand of the teachers, he is nearing his goal. eorge is the good natured butt of many a Joke but there is not a fellow in our class but would give him all the help possible because all admire his determination FLORENCE KATHERINE LINEHAN Florence is as gentle as zephyrs blowing below the violet FLORENCE HARRIET LOVERING Florence could never be called studious indeed she frames her mind to mernment which bars a thousand harms and lengthens life if G , I , . . . . ' V I sus:us-na:exaveevaensavsusqsvsavsanvpzevgeusaozasns- vs--Q.vsnQ4 .q. X ROSE MABEL LYON Fhllomathlan Rose declded to graduate from the best school ever so she came to Haverhlll Hlgh for her Senlor vear and proved to be a general shark as well as a general favorlte But so bashful and retlrlng IS Rose that she could hardlv tell her name lf one asked lt jOHN STORER MACDOLGALL Mac Commlttee I9l3 Cheer Leader l9l3 As an all round good fellow Mac cannot be beat ac IS a great favorlte wlth the ladles l wonder why Hls good looks or hls automoblle He IS a famous actor IS most famous appearance belng ln Lancelot and Elalne where he took the leadlng part MARION AUGUSTA MACCREGOR Mac Marlon IS a qulet glrl and not very blg but nevertheless she IS one of our happy SCDIOTS and a very studlous one too MARY RACHEL MACLIRE ay Ray IS a Bradford malden wlth a sense of humor She bCllCVCS lmpllcltly that Omnla arror vlnclt nevertheless and spends many evenlngs attemptlng to prove lt is ifviviv-sous-:Q-'11-5011 ususnQnQnsnQ-:Q-as-use oxns- was vin 'Q WI L16bidikailvdliliitiiiiil9LlUiI'iiiiCluiLtIil!i1'blUi Iiliililiiliillil if Y, Baseball, A. D. S., Executive Committee l9l-1, Prom ll VV M . . . . i 9 h. . f ,, . .f If VY l ER .19 .. .. . . . l , ' , snaeoinaeeseviusnasnsaeis L: uni-sas: 1. 'taxa-ina: -znaavxpaa FRANK EDWARD MALCOLM Tris. Unit, Track Man, Hooks and Crooks. Frank is among the most prominent members of the class. One might wonder at his apparent lack of conver- sational power, but his modest hashful nature makes him silent. MILDRED LEONA MANNING Mildred is a very small, dark eyed girl of our l9Ig4 class. She is hard to get acquainted with, and she appears to .be G very quiet and reserved: but when you know her, you will find out that she is just the opposite and she is always making you laugh with her witty sayings and mocking ways, ecause she can imitate a person almost to perfection I-IAZEL CLYDE MARISON Hazel is a steady self reliant member of our class an we shall all miss her quiet shy smile after graduation MARY MCCART HY Mary is one of the few who are blessed with a memory useful enough to make the Burke outline nothing to groan over 58 1 ' v d 5 4 ' ' ' ' snauaeus- :aus--as niusnsnsnausu psnsns. ususus. .snQ, -sus n vin use-Q-'sas'uxavgnxarsnxnxns-vsnQ.-5. as-sxnsuins-as-ognrsnsn 'i MILDRED LOINCFELLOW MCKAY lVI1l lVl1ldred appears qulet to casual observers. but she IS an ardent follower of the Uwhnte llghtsfl and dances possess an lrreslstable charm for her She has an affectlonate nature, too, and an abxllty to express xt to the utmost HAZEL CI-ILRCH NICK EE Phllomathlan She hath a heart as sound as a hell and her tongue IS the clapper for what her heart thlnks her tongue speaks HARRY MENCIS Foot ball l9l4 For a long tlme we d1d not hear much from Harry but last November he electrlfled our athletlc world the game the plucky Haverhlll Center played agalnst St oln s was the grlttlest seen at Athletlc Park for many a year HAROLD MELVILLE MESSENGER Harry President of the Unit Track lVlan He played left half on the foot ball team durlng the seasons of l9l2 I9l3 A smile for all a welcome glad A jovlal wxnnlng way he had 19 s s ' 1 . 1 v v 1 - 1 s . . J y . 1 4 A 1 a I . . , . v v snsusnsnQ-v1nxnQ- vsns- -Q.-Q--Q--ss-sus-os. -Q--Q-vs. -snxnsa rx. sn :sux e 1 5 . vsnsns. sins-we vsusnsa iusns ntnsns. -su -Q-,suse FREDERICK ARNOLD MOORE Unit Basket ball l9l3 l9l4 The Caruso of the senlor class Gifted wlth a deep melodlous volce Fred has often dellghtfully entertalned us wlth his selections This combined wlth his athletlc ablllty has made hlm one of the most popular fellows of the semor class LYLE JEWELL MOR QE P lggle Always qulet when he lsn t nolsy and always nolsy when he lsn t qulet Another brlght boy from Bradford en dowed with the same love for his studles especlally English HOWCVCI he shines at Algebra and Geometry MY RON CLARKE MORSE Myron expects some day to become a great actor and hopes also to be promlnent on account of hrs voice VERA LOUISE NISBETT Hooks and Crooks Vera appears to be a very quiet gurl, and ln reallty she IS quret. but when you know her very well, you will see that she can be verv entertalmng when she rs wlth a company of gnls b fin- vi' 14' vc. 15- vuil'5SPi4Ii:?i:Di:IL4li4Wi0liaUi49illialiliilriltilil I ' . sa v v , , , v V C I ' ' Y ! . . , . , ' . . , . . . , - , . -Q4 ain5ns.nQnsaoQusuQ OLIVE ANN NOEL Hooks and Crooks Olive is quick tempered, but nevertheless a kind-hearted girl and is especially known for her clear distinct voice. Her laugh is of one who does not know any sorrow. BEATRICE MARGUERITE OSGOOD 1 .BCC i y Beatrice is the prima-donna of l9l4. When the girls of 205 proposed a Bachelor Maids' Club, Bee vetoed it. Of course we haven't the slightest idea why Bee should object so vehemently PRANCLS DENNE'l'I PACE Q 5 Q Among many of the well known girls in the senior class is Frances She is very quiet but nevertheless IS very popular DOROTHY IVALOO PENDLETON ot Dorothy Pendleton our famous prize winner is a quiet irl that does not possess much humor but she is very fond of her books and is always striving to be at the head of her class 61 -1 - - 1 4 4 4 1 D v 1 s 9 g Q -x. -xnsneaae-ve ag-eanneexe 1. ei-ana. eaeegezosn eaeexeeqe-1-2+-egagq. asus-ug.sxnsnin-xnx4os4.QnsnQ..5.,5,,5,,Q, sa sg.-sux:-scvsuxnsnxans. wsng- pgns. vs-asus. -Q-.saga Lavinia -Q FERDINAND SOLOMON FENWELL Fred ' Toady IK r sldent of the Hooks and Crooks Track Manager Book Commlttee Fred IS a fellow that IS ever ready for what may come hls way elther Joy or sorrow work or play Although he IS not what we can call pretty he IS what we term just a cute happy go Iuckv sort of human helng HORTENQE KATHERINE PIERCE Q S Q A A Hortense IS another muslcal gCnlUS of I9I4 She IS generally very qulet but has a dlsturblng haI:lt of suddenl statlng her oplnlon wlth great firmness and eloquence LINCOLN CARRET I' IERCE Llncoln has been Wlth us only thls last year He halls rom West Newbury Anyone wlshlng to know where that place IS may look on the map where after scrre dlff' culty he mav posslbly flnd It Llncoln also upholds the RUSSELL ADELBERT FREBLE U Lud IS a very Jolly fellow and always greets vou WILII a broad smlle whlch lndlcates hls good humor 0 97 C YY , . - C . I Q A s 1 , . V Y I- - . . , . . . y f . ' ' standard of the class regarding studies. KIL dy! Q.-gms--1. sgavsus- wins-:sf 'gn-vue 21.-sus.-sa s-asus. Q.-susan-5. Q-:Quia PAULINE PRESCOTT Polly, A. A. In her we place our trust. Whatever may come or go, flood, famine or fire, we still have Polly! FAULINE ZILLAH PRESCOTT Fhilomathian, A. A. Pauline joined us in the junior year. She came from California, and simply brought some of that sunshine we hear about right along with her. She was the widow in the Senior Play. YVONNE. JANILT FROVOST Phllomathian Yvonne is ready for any fun except in school and then she is quiet attentive and ready to get knowledge ETHELYN MAE RAMSDELL Phllomathlan Ethelyn is a quiet girl and is very fond of her hooks 3 w v 9 s 1 v . 1 . -Lua eaeaae -snxngesxusnxs vsnxnzasxngeeza wsuQuansa:i::sa:L::L. -s-vbuQuQ-wQusns- oxnz- ax- ws-'sus :L-wmni-:Le-Q. 'Quia .5 as-use -Qu-Qaeaagpsug. :Q--Qng.-Q.-Qv5a, vnaaeaaeieea.-z:sQ Q, I .,..,.. v-sa o-sav- -we use :xx xugusngnxuxa oxusus- vxugnxn -sn :H .2 , W9 1 Lcegaezeeie gnu-vs.-as vs4sx.eg4:1evs.ss4eaeoQ4os.sgn1nQ4-g4ssuaQavQnQ MYRNA LYLE RAY Myrna is about the jolliest girl in the senior class. She takes everything in a good natured way, and even when told to come back afternoons, she will smile. She is a very pretty girl and is noted for her rosy cheeks, which, with her pleasant ways, bring her many friends and ad- mirers. CLIFTON LAWRENCE RICE Clif, Ricic. Unit. Clif is often afflicted with serious throat trouble when called upon for quotations, and we quake lest one of his peculiar attacks prove fatal! He is the much admired general commanding those wonderfully invigorating physical exercises in 2I2 ROSANNA RICH Hooks and Crooks ust one look at Rosanna s rogulsh eyes will tell you that she is ready for all the fun that may come her way She always has a smile on her lips and her rosy cheeks show that she is fond of Mother Nature EI SIE HAZEL ROBBINS Robbie Elsie is a very obliging person and when we unfortunate people attempt to do German composition we are sure that she alwavs has a correct version of Karl and Erich s adventures This added to her other characteristics gives her a sure passport to the hearts of the entire class I-I ,H .-, .:v1::1::1:vLeoz:cx::L:vi::a:-. , 1 'vsezr-zxzzrzeexaeig-,.:f,::z:::4e1:eae:gnxnie.Q,:1.,i, f in MARIAN ANNA ROGERS Philomathian, A. A. A sedate person is Marian, who evidently feels that she has the dignity of the class to uphold. Well be it known that we need thy serene composure! PAULINE ELIZABETH RUSSELL Pauline is a brunette with big, laughing, brown eyes. She is ever ready for a good time. She is never quiet, not even while studying and her ever present smile tells o a sunny disposition ROSE SADOWITZ Rosy Buster Hooks and Crooks Whenever in Buster s presence it is impossible to be melancholy because her cheerful disposltlon and witty sayings keep you laughing all the time Rose banlshes melancholy and lives joyfully ln the present not carlng what the future may bring GRACE EV ELYN SANDERS Phllomathlan Grace is a member of the senior girls basket ball team She is a star not only in athletics but also in scholarly attain ments 65 Q-agen ? 4? 4? ...,..,..,..,..,. .,.. vs- -....,- -wx use '4? Z ? 4? 4? 4? 4? ? ? 4? 4? ? ? ? 4? 4? 4 4? ? Z Q 4 I Q 4? 4? gs Z 4? 4? gl 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? 4? l 'PU 319: 9,-4 U' WUI :Fl CU IP F' Harry is our offlcial strong man, but one can see that his strength does not extend to French translations. He can play football much better than conjugate French verbs or translate l..'Avare. KATHERINE LEONARD SHEPPARD Kate A A Book COmmlttCC Phllomathlan Q S Kate IS slmply dellghtful especlally when she draws down the corners of her mouth whlle the theme IS passed IH Engllsh And the best part of lt IS that her face expresses the Sentl ments of the rest of the sectlon as well as her own MILDRED ELENE SHERMAN Mllly Executlve Commlttee Senlor Play A A Nlllly IS a charmlng llttle lady and a very busy one too but by her glggle ye may know her for there IS nothlng under the sun so lnfectlous as Mllly s glggle She has so fasclnated the class that were she to leave school the entlre mascullne half would follow lmmedlately although everyone knows that her affectlons are llke a weathervane turnlng to every wlnd that blows FRANK WI-IYTE. SMALL U Bud Small IS what hls name suggests small not so much ln helght as ln vlldth He IS very fond of athletlcs and sometimes spends more tlme ln them than ln studylng Bud IS very fond of danclng the new dances bl -as-su-ages:-Q-es.-gag gefzeenseg :asia sus.-QnQ4,g.,5.vs-.snQnQ ETTA FOSS SMART Philomathian. Etta is a delightful young lady and ever so brilliant, an unusual combination but an attractive one, as the whole class would assure you. CLINTON ALLAN SMITH Smith is one of the quiet but capable members of our American history section. Clinton is dreadfully bashful, too, and a girl is enough to make him blush for hours. GEORGE HENRY SMITH Schmidt George IS a rather good looking motor enthusiast very much impressed with his own importance but making a hit with the girls in 209 nevertheless George intends to move to Turkey shortly after graduation GLADYS MAE SMITH Phllomathian Gladys makes a quaint little lady with her Corkscrew curls and her poke bonnet as all who attended the Senior Costume party can testify But she IS very quiet anyway and her assumed character did not seem at all inappropriate 61 A 4 - v 1 1 1 , . y 9 . - s u -..-eA..-:-..-:-,.-e-.-vQ- :ga-Quxnaesza-sa:s4es:sx-:anesaezezzerzeeaavsavzew -. -ana-vs-:anis og--sus- o-sus-'Qu sing.vQa-1nQ4vQnoxawsnQ.-1usng- ,Q LAURA MARGARET SOUTHWICK Hooks and Crooks. Laura is a quiet good natured girl that does not seem to possess such a thing as a quick temper. JOHN WINFIELD STAPLES Dutch Unit, Basket-ball l9l4. John sees but one side of life, the humorous side. When it comes to dodging trouble: Yes, Dutch dodges into it. ohn is helped greatly bv the Smart company which he keeps BERTHA STOLESKI Bert Hooks and Crooks Bertha is a happy individual always ready for a good time and she has a great many friends She is equally talented in dancing and singing and she has everyones good wishes for a successful future HAZEL MAY STONE Hazel is one of the quiet members of the class but under neath the exterior is a great deal of unsuspected fun and for this reason she has many friends bb 4 A s a U , . . . . . , 1 Y .- 9 5.-Q--s.:Q.:1..,,,- -.gensngt-gag-ax: -as gan:-1: -Qevsnga vs--sa-susa Q-wins:-Q-use suv nxa usnsnensu -sus-as-vxng. -sn -sux.-susnia MARGARET JORDAN SYLVESTER 'Peggy' The man for whom Peggy' IS destined will surely be happy smce she ns of a domestlc nature To all unbellevers wltness she was the only girl ln French lll who knew the receipt for Tartar sauce MARION MANOLA TAYLOR Phllomathlan Marlon IS an authorlty on style the style of fifty years ago for her delmeatlon of an old fashxoned lady at the Semor Costume party was lrresxstlble And when the judges saw her hat they agreed unanlmously that such a work of art deserved the fnrst prize STUART LEFAVOR TAYLOR Although Stuart IS a real Scotch laddxe he has forsaken hls krlt and bagplpes and appears m the prosalc clothmg that everyone else wears But wouldnt It be dellghtful rf he played The Campbells are Commg IH chapel some mornmg just to glVC us an Idea of how hagplpes really sound PRISCILLA ALDEN THAYER Patty Phllomathlan Patty IS descended stralght from the PIlSClll8 Alden of Plymouth and she IS just as plaxn spoken and just as much fun as the famous heroine of Mxles Standlsh 09 1 v 4 1 a . . . - s 1 n v , . . - u - vu - v u H H H . . . . v - u - - an s-asa-sus.-snsuswsaasus--sus.-sus..su-sus..snxns--50505-.5 vs o JAMES GREENE TOWNE lmmy Hooks and Crooks Track Man Football lmmy IS very fond of athletlcs and dnd splendld work IH the football season to help Haverhlll get the champion you to call hlm Sunny nm Instead of just lmmy FRANK ALVAH TRAVERS Debatlng Club Phllomathxan Frank has certamly decelved us completely for whlle he IS supposed to be solely lnterested ln gettlng A ln everythlng he IS recelvlng thlck letters from a young lady ID Rosemont whlch letters he proudly exhlblts to hls envymg classmates And to make matters worse these letters are entlrely llleglble to anyone except Frank ELIZABETH ALICE TRUE Betty Alpha Alpha Betty as she IS called by those that know her best IS one of the most popular glrls of the senlor class u1et3 No not at all I..lveIy5 Yes thats more to the polnt Betty IS all that her name suggests AVIS LOTTIE TURNER Avls ns one of the few clever members of l9I4 Whxle the rest of us are mourmng over brllllantly decorated reports, she IS gratefully recelvlng marks of our faculty's esteem ln the form of rows of A's snsnxug. -g..s.-s4vQ.rQnsns..suQ.-s- -s--snsus.-snsnsnsns. vb 70 ship. I'Ie always greets you with a smile that would tempt in esnsnxa-xn1u1nQnQawsnQnQ--Q--Qu DOROTHY DEWS TYLER ot Dot is one of the most popular members of our galaxy of greatness Her dignified manner and unassuming way have put her on a pedestal above her more frivolous class mates LYMAN MILTON VAN DER PYL Vandi Editor in Chief of the Eltrurian President of the Philo mathian Vandi is one of the most popular fellows ol the senior class It is to him that we look to uphold the standard of the class and there are many knowing ones who prophesy that he will stand highest It can hardly be said that he is a Ladies Man although he may surprise us yet CHESTER GILBERT WACC Waggle Philomathian. One of the quietest fellows of the class but when it comes to posing as a scholar Waggie is there. ZILPHA ERNESTINE WALLACE Philomathian. Zilpha gave the class a great deal of credit by winning the prize offered this year by the Board of Trade. She sees that ignorance is the curse of Knowledge, the wing where- with we fly to heaven. TI susnsns-.QHQUQQ.,,,5.nins,-Q-'Quia-14 .Fins-ns. -sus--Q. .suv-5. -gnsusn l gl l 4 Qi Q I it vs.vaugs:z:vs--Q-ezeczwnsea eneegwiaixg ,a..gns.::a-sus.-g:.1::1eeg eg. MILDRED ISABELLE WARNER Mildred IS a glrl, who, ambltlous for a better education than her home town afford has been with us the four years of our career One would know from her manner that she comes from that part of the New Hampshlre vlllage called Sweet Hlll CLARENCE LOWELL WEBSTER Webble Unlt Always looklng for mlSChlCf and nme tlmes out of ten he hnds lt He IS the speed king of the Senior class when lt comes to drnvlng automobiles Clarence carries hlmself wlth Grace KATHERINE SARAH WESTON Phllomathlan Madame Perrxchon nn the French Play Katherme jolned the class m the Junlor year commg from Vermont We can easlly belleve she was brought up ln Pleasant Valley for she IS a proverblally cheerful person endowed wlth so much of Nature s colonng that the vlvldness of her cheeks dellghts us ELMER JEROME WHITING Tmlcer Debating Club Never try to argue wlth Whltlng you re never beaten but wholloped if ELMER FRANCIS WHITTIER Rough house IS the only word ln Whlttler s dlctlonary A happy nature combined wlth a fun lovmg dlsposltxon has made hlm one of the comedlans of the Senior class I has also made for hlm many afternoon sessions SARAH ANNIE WILLIAMS Phl lomathlan Annle IS clever studlous and wlse and very popular among her fellow students She IS a gurl on whom every one both teachers and pupxls can depend HAROLD SUIVINER WOODCOCK Wood1e Class Basket ball l9l4 Many of the teachers wlll breathe a slgh of rellef when Wood1e steps through the door for the last tlme No Uenfant terrlblen could hold a candle to Wood1e when It comes to asking questlons PAUL DAVIS WOODMAN Basket-ball, Phxlomathlan Paul IS versed ln the manly art of debatmg, and when he beglns to argue ln 2l2, the dxctlonary ltself turns green wxth envy. Yet argumentation with Miss Watson, is, at best, a precarious undertaking. and often our flowery oratorn subsides in ignominious defeat. sQ4osasQni-vsasx-:Q-as-mx. vxuxuxuxusnxn nsnsusnx-us-as. vsnsa :Laing 'se wsu -14 73 Q- Q. Q--s vs- s '1- Q, .f I' 13 .ff ii Q. 5.-Q DOROTHY RLTH WORMELL ' ot. Dot has a very cheerful disposition. No matter what goes wrong. she bobs up serenely and dispels cares with her gentle laughter. CHARLOTTE RICHARDSON WORMWOOD Hooks and Crooks. Charlotte comes from Ward Seven but that does not depriwe her of laughing and being just a happy member of our I9l4 class. NEPHEW OR UNCLE CAST 4 - iutu Q- i 'i 'L' ivivi-at QL--ia L viuiu 5 Ln Lui in into i jiepbztn nr Mncle Presented by the Class of l9l4 There has been much talk both outside and 1ns1de the high school as to School Spirit Many claimed that there was no real sprrrt when rt came to supporting athletics which were the cause of all the talk Everybody knows how very near athletics came to being entrrely abolished by the school board All this talk aroused the members of the present Senior class although then undergraduates and the outcome of their feeling was shown rn their definite proof of School Sprrrt by presenting after much labor the play entitled Nephew or loncle the proceeds of which were to be given to athletics Principal Walter D Head wrth the assistance of Mr Prrnce Ellwood made the success of the undertaking posrtrve from the very beginning The setting of the play was Parrsran of the present day the time scheme covering the early evening the next mornrng and evenrng Each act of which there were three took place rn the Carden Parlor of Colonel Dorsrgny s house The play rtself which shows the humorous results of mrstaken rdentrty was most rnterestrng to the large audience which viewed rt Colonel Dorsrgny had promised hrs daughter Sophre rn marriage to hrs friend Lormeurl although she loved her cousin Captarn Dorsrgny The captain hearing of their engagement disguised himself as hrs uncle as they looked greatly like each other and came to hrs home while his uncle was away No one recogmzed him so he drscloseu rs compelled to sign hrs uncle s name to a check and Champagne the servant of the Captarn grves hrs message to the Colonel by mistake Lormeurl comes the Colonel comes and Lormeurl often confuses nephew wrth uncle At length however each learns hrs mistakes and Lormeurl falls rn love wrth Madame de Mrrvrlle the Captarn s sister at which the Colonel consents to the marriage of hrs daughter and Captarn Dorsrgny Peace rs once more established rn the hearts of all It was almost rmpossrble to tell Lloyd Byard who took the part of Captarn Dorsrgny the nephew from Storer Macdougall the Colonel hrs uncle each taking hrs part wrth unusual skill Hortense Pierce as Madame Dorsrgny made a remarkably fine elderly French lady whrle Mildred Sherman as her daughter Sophre portrayed equally well the young French Mademorselle Pauline Z Pre cott Madame de Mrrvrlle Sophre s cousin could not have been rmproved upon Harold Drew as the valet of Captarn Dorsrgny carrred the strong comedy role of the play rn a manner seldom seen among arrateurs oseph Kelly as Valcur and Paul Woodman as Lormeurl seemed rrght rn tl'err element whrle no one could have portrayed C-aspar the notary better than drd ames La Flamme Frank Malcolm and Myron Morse as the servants asmin and Anatole were rn the same class wrth the others ln all ways the play was a great success and the Class of l9l4 rn producrng rt has made a strll better name for itself and accomplrshed somethrng that has not been done before The committee rn charge of the play was composed of Herman Whrtmore Frank Travers George ohnson and Fred Cage IW se-snsns--Q.-sus.-snsng.-1-Quang.-sus-ogngavsars-vs.--sus.-Q.agus.-Q.asus--swung--Q-vsus-ns.'14 4 . 1 1 ll ' 9 . . . l . H . . ,lv - ' Cl ' UV v ' , 1 . ' . . ' , . . . I himself to his sister but not to his aunt. Then follow mishap after mishap: the nephew l ' 1 7 y l l v ' , n 1 ' Y : . s , , , . ..,..-..-.....-..-..-..,..-..,..,.....-..-..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..-..-..,..-..-..,..,..,..-..,..-. -snsnsnsu ans- vs-vsuox. -sn-Qns.-Q-as-ng. -Q-vsnxnxnsa asus- wsu vQnx-ox-:sux-:suse-Q. -susnsa 1 'I M fn, fl! tx Q f SGDCIQLJ From the tlme the commlttee on the unlor Prom went to the Cnty Hall about the date for the event untll December of l9l3 the plans of the soclal commlttees clashed with the ldeas of the powers that be At that time some of the regulatlons seemed unjust and old maldlsh but we now see the wlsdom of these same regulations and congratulate ourselves that we had bralns enough not to make a klddlsh fuss Commencmg wxth our Prom whlch was placed wxthxn reach of every one thanks to Mr Head s suggestlon that dress sults and flowers be dlspensed wlth our soclal attalnments have been flattenng ln the extreme By maklng thxs our flrst attempt a signal success financlally and socxally we lard a farm foundatlon for our next soclal 1n the sprxng At this tlme the ban had been placed on the new dances and also comment had been made that a dance was the only form of amusement that the two upper classes could contrlve Although thls had no lmmedxate effect the seed had found good soll and the dance whlch was held ln May was the last of lts kind Plans were made for a play to be held ID une but they dnd not materlallze untll March of I9I4 as multltudes of unfore seen compllcatxons arose However ln the lnterlm the three most successful soclals ln many a year were held The flrst occurred ID October The members of the tvso upper classes met to enjoy an evenmg of intensely xnterestlng and amusing games About one hour was all that could be spared for danclng The next occurred three months later and lf posslble was more successful the xdeas for the amusements bemg much the same as those of the fxrst soclal Next came the banner event of the year The Executlve Commxttee decided that there must be a socxal before Lent but on attemptlng to set a date they discovered that the only avallable evenlng was the first Friday ln February Plhls gave them ten days to work up some new stuff It was all that was necessary for on the mght allotted to the affalr ladles ln the garb of l8l2 61 1875 l9l4 and l920 arnved ln the company of some of the most grotesque and cleverly attlred personages ever on exhlbltlon All natlons blrds and stations were represented The costumes alone would have been sufflcnent to open I ' - -I - s 4 u ' 1 ' ' u v u . ' v s ' - A A v v - - - v v 1 . . . . . ' v - 1 1 v v v v 1 v , . ,I 1 v ' - v Q v - a a s 9 a v . 1 as v 1 v Q v v . . . v v v v - . . . . . v s n . ,, vss-sngns4.s.-sus.-s- asus.-susus.-s--s.-s01.vs-ns.-Q-us--Q.ssns.-s.ususus--Q.-Q--sus.-1.-sn r up the mrrth boxes but the commrttee had added burlesque rmpersonatlons tableaus dralogues and readrngs of all kmds and descrrptlons The ,lumors contrlbuted a mowle play and then the assemblage adjourned to the gvm where a pee rade was held Three quarters of an hour s dancrng termlnated this highly successful affarr Prevlouslx the Phrlos had gnen a very successful exhrbltlon rn whlch sexeral Semors partlclpated The tremendous expense of presentrng the Dartmouth Clee and Mandolrn Club the last week rn Februarx was undertaken but the publlc responded and the ex ent was a trrumph Meanwhlle the long delayed Senlor Play was berng rehearsed and on Frrday March 28 Nephew or Lncle was presented This was the first stain on our soclal calendar for the Class drd not turn out Instead Of lifflflg able to C0UUll3UtC N30 to athletrcs a mere thrrd was all that was cleared The plav rtself was a scream and those who drd not see It made a great mrstake Wlth thus record b hlnd us the Banquet and Class Dance had to be a success We started bv maklng money on a very successful From and went through the two years wlthout losrng a cent on any of our socrals and at the same tlme spared no expense rn makxng them the conquests whxch they were The socral commrttees must be congratulated and also our hard worklng presldent who has been the goat every tlme Ones head and shoulders strffen wnth prrde at hearrng the teachers remark Whlle your class may not be the l:ra1n1est rt IS one of the best oclallx and one of the pleasantest to get along with l ex er met jfuture Grrupatron nf 1914 Actresses Arctrc Explorers Artlsts Artrst s Models Bank Presrdents Blg Came Hunters Brokers Broke Chorus Glrls Chorus Men Confidence Men Detectlves Cow Punchers Dancmg Teachers 9 as--1 uma sxnsusnsnsa-Q .sux--sq vsuqns- sq-n Cabinet Members Dressmakers Governors Knights of the Road Lawyers lVlarr1ed Nobel Prrze Wrnner Opera Smgers Organ Crlnders Presrdent of the L S Prize Frghters Teachers L S Consuls sus -sus.-5 vs.-sux-vs -Q. -..,.N.-..N.-..,..-..-..,..-..,..,.,...,..-.....-..-..s..s..-..,..,..,..-..x..,..,..,..-..,..,..-..,. , . , . , . , - , . . . . . . . , , . , , .x , , Y , . . ., .. , , . , Q , . . , , -..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.., . . 2 . 4 I k oxnxnsususus- nsnsnsn :sus--Qs -Q1-11111 ngnsususeosunxwgnx- ez:-Q. eguexui: insnaeaeeesnsu The Qfltrurnan N response to a much felt need the Class of I9I3 started m anuary of that year a school paper An edltorlal staff was chosen and after no llttle dlscusslon M Broderick christened the paper the Eltrurlan As a result of the able efforts of Edltor ln chlef Edward Moran Buslness Manager Charles Havener and thelr asslstants there were slx numbers of the paper publlshed ln September l9l3 Lyman Van der Fyl now Edltor ID chxef and Lloyd Byard Charles l-lavener s asslstant the prevlous year shouldered the responslblllty of mann talnlng the standmg and lncreaslng the clrculatlon of the Eltrurlan The paper this year was no novelty and ln consequence the work for the edltors and managers was much harder They responded nobly to the task set before them and as a result ten were put on sale Bagley s cartoons and athletlc department together with Beatrice Keene s Alumni notes and Marjory Adams exchanges have played no small part ln the success whlch our school paper has enjoyed Last year the burden of malntalmng the paper was carrled by the two upper classes but this year the two lower classes have bv their subscrlptxons and llterary contributions aided very materxally m lightening the responslbxllty The edltorlals short storles and grlnds stamp old Haverhlll Hlgh School as deserv mg the recogmtxon whlch lt and the Class of l9l4 have galned We hope that the classes 1n the future prohtmg from our mlstakes and successes will contlnue to publlsh the Eltrurlan and make It every year a better paper fa K K ' 7 Y ' 1 1 ,I 1 - 1 1 , f . - - 4 1 1 1 1 ' ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' ' 1 1 , . . . . . . , .- . . - ' ' ' ' 1 s - 1 1 - 1 1 1 - 1 1 1 1 . . . , - - 1 . 1 1 1 1 Y 1 - 1 1 1 1 . . . 1 s - 1 1 - , . vxususangusnsneavxng. -:eos-1sngusnsnga1Q- -1nQwx-as-azuaux. ogeegnsa nz: -sux:-. va 'Q-15.15414 I vQ4.1nQ Bbllumatblan T the close of the school year rn l9l3 the students of the Hugh School who were preparmg for hlgher xnstxtutlons of learnmg, followmg the example of the com mercxal students of the 'Hooks and Crooks Club ' declded to have a society of thelr own Accordlnglv the members of the Senlor unlor and Sophomore classes who were interested met on Tuesday October twenty hrst organlzed themselves as a school club and adopted a constltutlon and by laws The charter members numbered twenty hve Senrors twentv mne UDIOTS and twenty four Sophomores The followxng ofhcers were elected Presrdent Lyman Van der Pyl Vrce presldent Ruth T Emerson Secretary Ollve S Hunt Treasurer Robert C Emerson Marshal Paul W Blye Executive Commxttee Senlor Class Bessle Bourne Frank A Travers umor Class Clara V Sargent Roberts Tapley Sophomore Class Dons Curtls Harold Fellows Twenty slx new members have been lmtlated s1nce last November and at least eleven more wlll Jom the Philos at the next regular meetxng In December the soclety had as ltS guests graduates of the Haverhlll Hrgh School who are now attendmg higher lnstltutlons About fifty such graduates were present and short speeches were glven by representatxves from Tufts Harvard Bowdoln Smlth and Mlddlebury Colleges Massachusetts Agrlcultural College and Boston Umverslty The Debatlng Club of the High School challenged the Fhnlomathlan Soclety to a debate The subject chosen was Resolved That the Unlted States should not mter fere rn the trouble rn Mexlco Mlss Wallace Mlss Pendleton and Mlss Miner debated for the Phxlomathlan Club against Mr ohnson Mr Kempton and Mr MOYFISOH for the Debatmg Club The Fhllos argued on the negatlve SldC of the questlon and won On March slxth the Fhllomathlans gave An Old fashioned School Exhlbltlon the Hlgh School hall The programme consxsted of muslcal selectxons scenes from a French a German and a Latm play CXCTCISCS 1n physlcs and chemlstry a French recrta tlon a declamatxon and dumb bell and lndxan club drllls The exhrbltlon was success ful ln every wav and was appreclated by an audlence of over SIX hundred people On Aprll seventeen Paul P Cram a Junlor at Harvard College gave an mterestlng lllustrated lecture on Unrver rty Llfe at Harvard The Phxlomathran Club has a brlght outlook for the future and promises to cultlvate an interest m advanced educatlon and foster hrgh rdeals of scholarshlp and conduct ln the Haverhlll Hlgh School for years to come 19 v . 4 . . . v , . . J . v ' - v - V - , V - 'J y - , , . v ' v - , . . . , . 1 u ' - J , . . . - v - ' s . . . , A . , , . v 1 s s v v . . , . - - v v . J , . , . . . . , 4 . . . . , , . ' , ln - v f v Q v y ' ' , .- - , .. - v 1 . 5 t . Q . . , , Cf . ia -sua.-Q-nsaoxaoxn-Q-nxanxa ssnsnsnQnQn-su1--Qnsa-susnxo 'sn-sus--sunxq-se-susnxnsvsa as-axe nsnxnsnxaox.-xuQnsnxnQ-sxuQuQ-:Qui-'Qs-xavxe-QnqngnQnxuga-Q. 505,-sos-.,,.,,,Q. ibustnrp of the Zlauoks aah trunks Klub N September l9I3 our Hxgh School welcomed Mr Ralph A Stevens as head of lts commercial department He IS a man who takes much mterest ln the course and ln November of that year he lnterested the shorthand students IH forming a club under the name of the Hooks and Crooks Thls club consists of all puplls of the Senlor and umor classes takmg shorthand and gettlng an average of 85 0 ln that subject a passmg mark ln all other subjects IS required December thlrteenth l9l3 an mltlatxon of umors and an lnstallatlon of ofhcers took place The officers of the Dedham Hlgh School where the club was first formed Vlce presldent Ernestme Shevenell Secretary and Leslle Cetchell Treasurer Every Monday afternoon a busmess meetmg was held and after the busmess meet 1ng a short entertamment of some kmd was glven An mxtxatlon was held February thlrd for the admlsslon of four new members and an entertamment was glven for the freshmen who were taklng penmanshlp At thls entertamment lt was announced that a prlze of Hve dollars ln gold would be awarded at the close of the year to the best penman in the Freshman class at that tlme March thirty first an entertamment for the members of the club was glven Mlss Lyon who had charge of thls entertamment planned a very enjoyable programme May twenty slxth all the members brought thelr luncheons and went rlght from school to the castle on a l1ttle plcmc It was a Monday afternoon and so the club combmed thelr regular meetmg wlth the plcmc on the Dudley Porter Road near the fountam At eight o clock on the mornlng of a brlght warm day the seventh of june a large number of young people were seen at Rallroad Square wlth lunch boxes under thelr arms and evxdently waltmg for a car Upon mvestlgatlon lt was learned that these people were Hooks and Crooks golng to Parker Rlver for a day of sport such as rowlng tenms baseball hide and seek tag and many other games which nearly all young people lndulge ln Thus was the last meetmg for that school term The members that graduated and left us are still contmulng the club but under the name of The Graduate Degree The Freshman prize awarded to the best penman at the end of the term went to Miss lvah Wagg ln the fall September twenty nmth the past umors who are now Senlors held a meetmg for the purpose of electmg new ofhcers The offlcers chosen were Ferdlnand Penwell Presldent Bermce Ham VICE president Paulma Allard Secretary and Ralph Green Treasurer The mterest taken ln the club this year grew very rapldlv and the number of umor candidates was much larger than last vear .-...Q-.s.-S.-Q--s..s..s..-..s..s..-..s..s..s..-..s..s..-..-..-..,..s..,..,.....s..,..,.....,..,..,.,-. 80 nxns--suse-s.-Q.-snsus,4vsnQnQ-eases.-sua--snsaegasxa aeeans-vs.-ga-Q-:gusngug:,g,.g.,g,,g ' 4 . I , , came to install the officers who were Leonard Davis. President: Carolyn Washburne. - : ' , . ' . . , - 7 - y . . ' . - . . 9 . Y 1 1 ' ' v 1 ' ' ' ' if I9 v ' I v J ' u I 1 , ..., . vs-usaasus-ns-ins-as-usevqanxnsnsnsusa.Qnsu-Q-.1--505.-swing-.s..,,.Q--5. sgusug.-g..,,.,,,, An initiation of Juniors and an installation of officers took place December fifth. at which time the past officers installed the new' officers before some members of the faculty the Graduate Degree the regular members and the unior candidates These officers when installed initiated the new members A skating party held anuary fifth at Lake Saltonstall was one of the enjoy able features of the year The members all Joined in a merry good time having built a bon fire to keep things looking lively and cheerful Since many umors had become so interested in this club and had y orked so hard to get the mark it was necessary to haye another initiation This took place anuary fourteenth IH room 20l our regular meeting room As new members of the club are required to giye an entertainment before they can be called bona fide members and as the number of umors was so large they planned to work together and February second they furnished a verv enjoyable entertainment The interest which lVlr Stevens has aroused in the shorthand students certainly is worthy of high praise and the vim with which the students work is remarkable S great were the desires of some pupils to enter this club that manv of them prevlouslv not even getting a passing mark worked up to the required average of 83 The club now has sixty members and we sincerely hope that it will continue increas ing in numbers and in helping the pupils to excel in their studv of shorthand or Hooks and Crooks Mass btatnsturs Most Popular Most Popular think Best Athlete Class Beautv Homeliest Biggest Roughncck Most Bashful Woman Hater Biggest Bluffer Sportiest Sportiest Cthinks he Windiest Most Gonceited Freshest Biggest Bonehead Wittiest Biggest Prey aricator Class Shark Slickest Grafter Best Dancer Class Baby s he ISD bl H Whitmore lVl Granville L Greene C Rice S McDougall M Bagley W Herlihy B Hodsdon H Messenger G Smith H Drew lf' Woodman F Trayers E. Herrick F Gage W Colby H Segal L Van der Pyle L Byard G Laing F Moore v v . . J . . v V , . ' 1 - 1 , ' .1 ' ' . , . , J V f f , , ' - ' . 1 . . , , . . . . . . . , . , , . O .1 . 1 EO' .V J ' .. ' . . . . . . . , 4 w Q Q--Q.-Q-.Q--1.-sus--g.-Q.-s--sux.-xa-sus.-sa-s..s..sns--Q.,..--Q.-Q.-1.-sux--Q-.1.-sus--Qng--Q. . . J 1 r r . . ..,,.. . Y 1 -sus.-Q-.s1.Q..Q. -Q-as-.sa-Q..,,,,, ,,.,snsa.,..s.,s-.Qs-,,,,..s..,..5ns,.-snsns-.QnQa-Q.a1.-sus--1 Che Zbaherbull laugh ivrhnnl Behatmg Qlluh IN l907 sex eral boys of the hugh school decxded to form a club to encourage debatmg The result w as the hrst debatlng cluh that IS known of ln the annals of the hugh school The arm of thls club was to promote argument and sklll xn extemporaneous speakmg A number of successful debates were held the first year and the club soon became known as one of the most 1I'1HUCI'ltlHl among the soc1et1es of the hlgh school Wlth the adx ent of the new hlgh school lsulldmg and the gain 1n student actxvltxes the dehatmg club waned the first year only three debates were held although each of these was verv lnterestmg The ofhcers for the ensulng year were elected at the end of the fnrst school xear IH the new lculldmg plans were made for lncreaslng the member ship among the puplls on the return ID the fall and much enthuslasm was aroused How ever the plans made ID the summer drd not mature and the officers of the club larled to arouse the Interest that was planned for at the close of school Nevertheless they kept llfe IH the orgamzatlon lVlanv meetmgs were held although few were ln attendance Un the openlng of the term of school 1n 1913 the ofhcers who were elected the pre X xous une started wlth renewed enthuslasm and the plans for a successful season were pushed on unt1l much splrlt was aroused among the lower class men who have glven much of thelr tlme thxs year to the furtherxng of the mterests of the club Much gratl tude IS due lVlr Sherman of the faculty for the assxstance he has glven the socxety ln the SIX debates held thrs year all of whreh haxe been successful Dow x S P IERL E Q Otm sHERwAN WHI T woRr xx EB S TER HFRLII-h BYARU sm P LFS wH1Tx1O Rl Rl Cr HLRRH k woOot or k x1rsseNer R mt Dou Nl 1 R Ac krtrox SHERX1AlN KI me EMAINN ADAMS RAY PRescoTT 1JoWNS EMFRNON FX Ass IRONOST sl-IEPPARD IH ER PRFSI OII not 1 RS xxooml xN X I mf uoUr Al nAf1H TRMFR' X1-XI Cor xl mmm S -Q.-sus--Q--Q--Q.-sunny-sus.-gms.-Qns.-Q.-s.fxns-vg.'s..1-.Qns-.QQ-Q-ng.-Q--Q--Q.-Q.-sus-.sn , . . , v y ' V , , v v v v Q , . . , ' s v ' V 1 ' , ' . ,, H 1 v ,- . . I . , D 1 . , , . , . v . - 1 r I . ' ' ,UsUs..Qus..,..s..Q..,..Q-.sn5.-1.-sus-sg.-sus.-sns-.5 .-sux--sus.-Q. -1.-5 , , . , - f . . l 1 . A ' l . 1 f I . T . L 1 , . . 1 1 . n . f . l FA ' 'lvl' ' ' J ' 1 . , ' us.-Q..s.-sns.-s.-s--s-fQ--5.-Q.-Q.-sus.-say.-sus..Q--su, .,..s.-,.,s..,.., .., N- 1 ntuiluininin'i4'i'1ilIini Itnini Quililvilvilntlltniuininininini li0LuinlLuliuinliniuievititnioi I . 1 l Q I . Z I 5 I . XXIEQJUU TISS BJ Qthleturs I Never has athletlcs been at such a hugh standard ln the Haverhlll Hlgh School as during the past four years Thxs may be attributed to two facts namely excellent materlal from the Class of 1914 and the coachmg abllltlCS of B111 Broderlck Captaln Malcolm at the commencement of school lssued a call for football candl dates A large squad reported at the gym among whom were Myron Bagley and Hermann Whltmore of the Class of I9I4 Mr Broderick soon showed hls hand at the coachmg game gomg at It ln a busmessllke way In a couple of weeks the squad under the skilful hand of B111 had rounded 1nto fme shape and was ready for the opemng game Haverhlll played lts Hrst game wlth Rmdge Manual the score after four perlods of hard playmg was 0 to 0 Methuen met defeat at the hands of the Brown and Cold wlth a score of 31 to 0 Next came Danvers Agam Haverhlll showed its superxorlty defeatmg Danvers by the score of I4 to 0 Haverhlll nearly met defeat at the hands of Nashua wmnmg by the small score of 2 to 0 Salem Hlgh also proved a hard propo sltlon Haverhlll wlnnmg by the score of 5 to 0 In the game played wlth Revere Haverhxll was scored on for the first tlme but won to the tune of 10 to 2 Next came Boston Latln and for the second tlme Haverhlll battled for four perlods to a scoreless te Haverhlll met 1ts first defeat at the hands of Beverly losmg 5 to 0 Next came Commerce and agaln Haverhlll played a tle game the score endlng 6 to 6 Haverhlll defeated xts old rlval Newburyport to the tune of I4 to 6 ln a close game Medford met defeat at the hands of Haverhlll wxth a score of 7 to 6 Lowell gave Haverhlll lts second defeat wxnnmg by the small score of 6 to 5 ln the last game of the season Haverhill defeated her old rlval Lawrence by the score of 5 to 0 Summary Haverhlll Rlndge Methuen Danvers Nashua Salem Revere Boston Latin Ben erlv Commerce Newburvport Medford Lowell Lau rencc NX on 8 Lost 2 Tled 3 bl sag-ng ug. -Q.-5.-sus. -Q--Q. vsns-sg.,-5nQwQ. -sus. -snsnxn-54.5. .qnQns.nQnQnQ. -sang-.Qu sxngugn ' 1 1 - - . . . 5 , . , , . , . - Q y ' v - 4 4 f - a - - v - 1 ' 1 . . , v ' ' v - y , . Q l . , . u v - , . v ' 1 31 0 ' 6 , ,, rt 5 0 1 . n v - Q-.gs-Q-as. cava: Qnsnawgs 1:11054 -any-1: -mug. -54.54 'Q-vsusa -sus-use-Qvxa-Q.-Q. .QusuQnQuQ- eaeeaasg-:zee1.:g.:z::s4:x-:ie-snsneaea. sans. eg.-Qns.:14vn:va:::avxuQ. Us--mug sxnsnxngnsnx- During the month of December Captain Brrckett issued the call for basket ball candidates A large squad of promising candidates reported Under the hand of the coach, the players rounded into form, and the outlook for a successful team was bright The first game was with the lntercollegiates Haverhill wmmng with a score of 27 I3 Next came Boston Lniverslty Law, and again Haverhill won to the tune of 67 8 Ames bury High proved an easy mark for Haverhill losing by the score of D6 4 The Lowell Y M C A also proved easy for the Brown and Cold losing by the score of 73 II Haverhill defeated St ohn s by the close score of I8 I7 Boston Law proved easy for Haverhill losing by the score of 48 9 Rlndge Manual was the next victim Haverhill winning 25 9 For the second time St ohns and Haverhill met again Haverhill defeated her rival the score 23 I0 The Kana a local club was Haverhill s next victim losing 42 I7 The last game of the season was with Exeter and again Haverhill showed its superiority wmmng by the score of 35 I3 Summary Haverhlll lntercollegrates Boston University Law Amesbury Lowell Y M C A St john s Boston Law Rlndge St john s Kana Club Exeter Won I0 Lost 0 Tied 0 Early in the sprmg Captain Brlckett issued the call for baseball candidates which brought forth a large squad Under the skilful eye of Bert ohnson the squad soor became proficient at handlmg the pill Haverhill s first game was with Newburyport and after nine mmngs of hard playing the Brown and Gold was victorious 4 3 Next came the New England League who shut out Haverhill I0 0 The next four games I6 3 Amesbury 6 0 Again Haverhill played Manchester this time winning only by one run score 5 4 Boston English High fell before the Brown and Gold to the tune of 6 4 Then came the High School of Commerce who after nine innings of hard ball received the short end of the argument Iosmg 4 3 Berwick Academy also was defeated 7 2 St ohn s came and gave Haverhill its first defeat wmmng by the score of 7 D Burning over their defeat with St ohn s Haverhill easily defeated Arlington to the tune of ll 5 The game with Newburyport will long be remembered by the Class of l9I4 for Bub Byard pitched the Brown and Gold to a 9 4 victory The next few games were easy for Haverhill defeating Exeter 9 6 Melrose 9 4 Rmdge Manual 8 2 Nashua I6 I and Beverly I2 2 Haverhill met its second defeat at the hands of Lowell losing by the score of I0 7 Thlrsting for vengeance Haverhill met Lowell again this time coming off the winner 7 2 The last game of the year was with the Haverhill New England League Team who again defeated the Brown and Cold I I J 50 I . 'I I , 6 ' . . . ' ' 26 I3 'I ' ' 67 8 56 4 . . . . 73 II . ' I8 I7 48 9 ' 25 A 9 . ' 2340 424 I7 35 I3 1 I. w ' o is ,'sI v I were easyg Haverhill defeating Manchester I2-3, Nashua I4a4, Sanborn Seminary asa -sus-as--Q-as-as.-Q-1Q.-suns--shi.-Q.-gnQ.-Q--suQ.-Q-nsug.,5.,,,,Qn5.-ss-Qnxus.us-vsuQa-Q--sn Summary Haverhlll Newburyport 4 3 H New England League 0 I0 Manchester I2 3 Nashua I4 4 Sanborn Semlnarv I6 3 Amesbury 5 0 Manchester 5 4 Boston Engllsh Hlgh 6 4 Hlgh School of Commerce 4 3 Berwlck Academy 7 2 St john s Arlxngton Hrgh Newburyport Exeter Melrose Rlndge Manual Nashua Beverly Lowell Lowell H New England League Won I7 Lost 4 Tied 0 To the school prospects for a champlonshlp football team looked small for many of the stars of last year had graduated After the squad had been called out by Captam Collms and had rounded lnto shape thlngs looked brlghter As usual Rlndge was Haverhlll s flrst opponent and after four perlods of hard playmg Haverhill was vlctorlous wlnnlng by the score of 5 0 Beverly came next playmg Haverhlll to a scoreless tle The next four games were easy for the Brown and Cold defeatlng Worcester I2 0 Newburyport 37 0 Revere I0 0 and Dummer 27 0 St ohns and Haverhxll met agaln thus tlme playmg to a 0 0 score Lowell scored on Haverhnll for the flrst score of the year but lost 9 6 The last game of the season was wlth Commerce Haverhlll wlnmng 6 3 Summary Beverly Worcester Rex ere Newburyport Dummer St Johns Lovs ell Commerce Won 6 Lost 0 Tled H . ' 5 7 ' ' Il 5 9 4 9 6 9 4 ' 8 2 I6 I I2 2 710 7 2 . 5 ll Haverhill Rindge 5 0 0 0 ' I2 0 f I0 0 370 270 . 0 0 f 9 6 6 3 ' 2 Basketball started IH wlth a rush Haxerhlll defeated Qalem Ccrrrrcrce I3 -I ohn s defeated the Brown and Qold -II 20 Salem 'Ncrrral prox ed easx fer Haxerhlll losln -ID I6 At the hands of ulncx I-laxerlelll met 1ts seccrd defeat hx the score cf 30 20 The remalnlng four ames were easx for Haxerhlll defeating Drummer 36 I6 St ohns 35 27 Boston L Lax D3 I2 and Alumnae 26 I8 Vixth the teams were Bx ard Hadsdon and Nloore of the class of 1014 ummarx I-Iaxerhlll Salem Commerce St ohn s Salem 'Normal UIHLX Dummer St ohn s Boston I nlxersltx Law Von ost 7 Tlc 0 Lnder the dlrectlon of Williams the phxslcal dlrector a class track meet was held The s mors were the xxctors but were eloselx pressed hx the sophomores who TCCCIX ed second honors the juniors and freshmen were thlrd and fourth respectlvelx Segal was tne star man for the class of l9l-I Baseball was ushered IH earlv ln the spring Ameslsurv was Haverhllls hrst opponent loslng bv the score of I8 2 Wlnthrop was second also lcslng 7 D wlhe next fine games were dlsastrous for the Brown and Qold losln to Manchester -I I Exeter 2 7 Harvard Freshmen 6 7 Dummer I0 D and Bexerlx I0 8 Xlew Hampshlre was defeated 5 I Agaln Haverhlll had a loslng streak Iixelng defeated by St ohn s J -I Lawrence I0 0 Bexerlx 8 6 Alumn17 2 Lowell II 8 and Nlanchester 6 2 Hauer lull won lts last game played wlth Lawrence hw the score of 8 2 Summary Hax erhlll Ameshurx Vlflnthrop Wlanchester Exeter Harvard Freshmen Dummer Bex erlx New Harnphlsre St John s Lawrence Bex erlw Alumni Lowell Manchester Lawrence 8 7 Xvon -I Lost Il Flled 0 -Q-wx--s -sa Q- Q -sa sn Q -sus.-Q -sus--Q s sux.-Q -5- Q Q -sus Q -Q Q Q -sn sus 1 -5 5 N ' 7 . ' ' V , . F . St. -g - ' I . A' ' 1 I, , ' . f . . . S- 'z ' ' ' 73 -I ' 20 -Il ' .I -I5 I6 Q ' 20 36 A' 36 I6 ' ' 36 27 u - 'U' ' 33 IZ Alumnae 26 I8 X 6. L -. Fd . ' ' -' I8 2 ' 7 5 I I -I .. A, 2 7 ' . 6 7 5 I0 ' 1' 8 I0 . '. -I 5 ' 0 IO .. , 1, 6 8 ' 2 7 .. , 8 II .. 2 6 vxususaal ususnsnsus- asngue .Qngnau ins- wx.-sus--s-asa us. .5..Q,.xng-ag sg..5..Q.ns--sus. I9I2 I3 Prospects for a strong team looked good after the football squad had been practlsmg for two weeks The class of I9I-I was well represented by Messenger, Greene Whlt more Bagley Lalng. Segal and Vaughn The first game was w1th Beverly, and for the flrst tlme Haverhlll defeated her bv the score of 20 0 The next few games Haverhlll won wlthout bemg scored on defeatlng Nashua 46 0 Exeter Second I3 0 Newburyport 26 0 Quincy 20 0 and Medford I2 0 Everett proved too strong for Haverhlll the Brown and Gold loslng bv the score of 33 0 Determmed to wlpe out the remalnmg teams Haverhxll defeated Melrose 33 6 St ohn s I4 0 and Lowell 7 0 For the second tlme IH two years Haverhxll was defeated thus tlme by her old rnal Lawrence to the tune of 22 6 Summary Haverhlll Beverly Nashua Exeter Second Newburvport umcy Medford Everett 3 Melrose 6 St john s Low ell Lawrence 6 Won 9 ost 2 Txe When Captam Brasseur lssued the call for basket ball candrdates a large number reported Among them were Moore Hodsdon Byard Greene and Sargent of the class of I9I4 The first game was wlth the Alumm whlch proved an easy vlctory for Haver hrll by the score of 49 8 Dummer Academy was the next v1ct1m losmg 36 I8 The Lynn Engllsh 30 ZI St ohns 33 24 and Massachusetts lnstltute of Technology 26 20 The final game wxth umcy gave Haverhlll ltS first and only defeat lo mg bv the score of 27 I9 Summarv Haverhlll Alumnl 4 8 Dummer 36 I8 Manchester 33 27 St john s 39 30 l..XI1HET1gllSl1 30 2I St John s 33 24 Mass lnstltute of Tech 26 20 umcy I9 27 on 7 Lost 3l3lCll 0 ' f 2 0 46 0 I39 0 v 26 0 Q ' 20 0 I2 0 ' 0 3' I 339 e . ' I44 0 ' 7 0 ' 22 . L . ' d 2. next few games were easy for Haverhill, defeating Manchester 53 St. .Iohn's 399930, . . 9 W . I. ' ' . Track was commg more and more unto prommence The lnter lass meet held on Washington blrtndax was an ex en greater succe than the one held a xear ago Lp to the last ex ent whlch was the relax race the senlors were leadln bx two Polnts ox er the JUHIOT and freshmen who were tled for econd honor The enlors ucceeded m making the be t tlme and emerged wnnner bx th clo e tlm of four econds ln the flrst dual track meet ever h ld ID th new gymnasxum Frldax aft rnoon Februarv I-I for the Brown and Cold wer 'Vles enger I-I Daxls I3 CII ID Towne I Summarx 'Nla c cn I-laxerhxll fsole xault 20 vd dash 300 yd dash Broad jump I000 yd run Hlgh jump 600 yd run I2 lb shot put Relax lander the practiced eye of Blll Broderlclc the baseball squad who reported when Captaln lVlcKay xssued h1s call for candldates soon rounded mto shape and were ready for the first game New Hampshlre was defeated 8 0 The next f1VC games were easy for Haverhlll who defeated Newburvport J 0 and ID I4 Punchard I2 7 St Anslems I2 II and Wmthrop I0 9 Manchester gave Haverhlll nts first defeat wmnmg by the score of J I Then Nashua and Dummer fell before the bats of the Brown and Gold to the scores of 22 3 and 9 2 respectlvely Wuth varylng luck Haverhlll lost to Harvard 2nd 9 J defeated Lowell Il 2 lost to Beverly 8 6 and to the Alumnl 9 5 defeated Gloucester I0 8 lost to Beverly 21 6 defeated Groveland 6 2 and St ohn s 9 3 again defeated Croveland and St ohn s bv the scores of I3 Il and 22 6 Lowell turned the tables on Haverhill IH the second game of the season defeatlng Haverhlll I I 5 Haver hull then defeated St ames 2 0 and ln the last game played wlth Manchester lost I3 I Summary Haverhlll New l-lampshlre New burx port D 0 I D I-I Funchard I2 7 St Anslems I2 I I Winthrop I0 9 Vlanchester I D Nashua 22 3 Dummer 9 Z Harvard 2nd J 9 Lowell I I 2 -sus.-Q -sus--Q uxnsuusnsnasusnxns-I-.usa-sus -1--Q-as :sus--Q -snsus nsnsnq.-sn-snQns- .................,..,..,..,.,...,..,..,..,..,..-..-..-..-.N.-.....,..,..,..,..-..,..,..,..,..-....,,. ' ls ' ' i' ' ' K ss j . Y r v . v -y . l v I g if v ' 7. s . ' ' S s. s S ' 5 ' . 7 s V' e s ' e s . e ' 2 ' ' . A ' ,' e . . , ' . Haverhill met Malden and was defeated by the score of 49-28. The men who starred ' 'ei S '. '. 'roy . 'f'5. I I I ' ' ' ' ' -I 5 Y . 8 I ' . -I 5 ' 6 3 . 8 I ' ' 3 -I' . 8 I . I 8 V' 3 I 0 . Y . 8 O .. , Y, Haverhull Beverlx Alumm Gloucester Beverly Croxeland St John s Croxeland St john s Lowell St ames Manchester Von ost 7 Tred I934 Determlned to make the year I9I3 I4 the best ever a large Iootlsall squad came out at Captaln Whltmore s call for candldates Soon the men were ln condltlon and ready for the opening game Haverhlll easily defeated balem Normal by the score of 33 0 Manchester came wlth champlonshlp hopes but her hopes were shattered for Haverhlll won by I3 0 Haverhill and Everett agaln met but thls tlme the honors were even the 26 0 Beverly 28 0 LowellText1Ie I4 0 Exeter 2nd Z7 0 Newl:uryport8I 0 and Rlndge I7 0 The Alumm scored on Haverhlll for the hrst score of the year but were defeated by the score of I4 8 Lowell was swamped by Haverhlll loslng to the tune of D-I 7 The last game of the season was wlth St ,Iohn s the game was of great lmportance for nelther team had been defeated After four hard periods of flghtlng the Brown and Gold were vlctorlous wlnnlng bv the small score of 6 0 also mnnlng the tltle of champlons of the state Summary Haverhlll balem Normal Manchester Ex erett Tllton Bev erly Lowell Textile Exeter 2nd New burx port IQlfldgC Alumnl Lowell St john s Won Lost 0 Tre I 6 80 O 8 3-I When Captain Greene called the candxdates for basketball prospects seemed extep tlonal for a mnnlng team The season opened brllhantlv with a I0 I4 xlctorx our I ' J 6 8 ' 5 9 ' I0 8 ' ' j 6 ZI ' 6 2 . ' 9 3 ' ' I3 II . ' 22 6 ' 5 Il 2 U A' I I3 X I5. L . ' 0. I I . score ending 0 0. The next games were easy for the Brown and Cold. defeating Tilton ' I 38 0 I3 0 ' 0 0 ' ' 2 0 .. , 2 f ' I4 0 ' 27 .. , -, I 0 ' I7 0 l I4 8 ' f ' 7 . ' 6 0 II. . ' d . Tech I7 The s cond game was wxth the Alurrnx endln V1 a 44 39 xlctorx for them The next two games were easx for Haxertlll defeatxn Tufts I7 29 21 and Franklm 21 I4 Fallrng down to an rnferlor team Hax erhlll x as defeated l'x Dummer wlth the score of 30 ZI Stlngmg with the defeat hx Dummer Haxerhlll downed Tilton hx e score of 33 26 Hax erhlll then journex ed to Danxers and defeated St ohn s 32 70 For the thlrd SUCCCSSIXC xear Haxerhlll met and x as defeated at the lands of UIHCX wrth a score or 33 20 ln the hnal ame of the season Haxerhlll defeated Ct ol n s lor the second time 46 I9 Summarx Alumm Tufts I7 lgranklln Dummcr Tllton St ohns umcx St ohns Won 7 ost Tre Soon after the close of basketball track came into promlnence The hrst meet held was wlth Malden Achlng to et ex en with Malden for l-lax erhlll s defeat of last season the Brown and Cold gave 'Vlalden a severe trounclng to the tune of 46 Z2 Haxerhxll Malden IJ xd dash l000 xd run Hlgh Jump 300 xd run Shot put 600 yd run Broad jump Relax race Haverhill next met Newlzurxport. and for the hrst txme IH twenty hxe xears was defeated Score 39 29 Haxerhrll Newburx port 20xd dash 300 xd run 3 6 600 xd run 3 6 l000dx run 4 J Standlng hlgh l 8 Shot put 6 3 Relax 0 D Standlng broad 4 D -S-'S--sus--Q -s fsvs- s -s-'sus sus ss. Q-vs. Q -Q 1- Q -sus -Q -s-:sux -sus--sus x. 5 s- - -. 7. . - s. I Q ' 1. u u g . - U .J KA ' Haverhill Tech.'l7 lf? I4 ' 39 44 -- ' 29 21 ' ' 21 I4 A 21 30 '- ' 33 26 ' 32 29 '- Q ' nf 20 33 H .J ' 46 I9 ' . L 2. ' d 0. x' . g f ' ' . F j . 8 l J' . 4 3 ' ' 3 6 1' . 6 3 8 l ' . 9 0 ' 8 I -' 0 3 1' . 8 I Qugns--Q.ng.mx-ng..Que,,..gnns,Q,.nl-sus.-g..s.-Qnxuxns.-snxns--Q-'sus'-sus -Q.-x..Q.ns4-gn ln the last inter-scholastic meet of the year Haverhill met and defeated Salem High to the tune of 56 Zl. Haverhill Salem l000 yd. run 9 0 I5 yd. dash 8 l High jump 2 5 300 yd. run 5 4 Shot put 5 -l 600 yd. run 9 0 Broad jump 8 l Standing high jump 5 4 720 yd. relay 5 0 ln the last track meet of the year. held between the four classes. the Freshmen were victorious, winning by a small margin over the seniors. A large squad reported for the baseball team. and high hopes were held for a good team. The first game was with the New England League, the High School losing by the score of 3 0. The next game was with Exeter and again the High School were losers by 9 0. For the third successive time the Brown and Cold were defeated, losing to Lawrence Academy to the tune of 8 l ln the fourth game of the season Haverhill won from Gloucester bv the score of 9 l Summary Haverhill N E. League Exeter Law rence Academy Gloucester P 1 f H 9 0 ' f 8 I -sus-vsnsnsug.-snxus. gnsug.-sngusns.-xox.-S..gnu-.sng..s.-Q.-s..g..s..g..s..s.'s..,..g.. I . sus--Q.-Q-.501--Qnxnx--Q.-susns-.5-wing-vs-. D dl Y ' .sa Z2 laouchdown Touchdown Haxerhlll Touchdown Touchdown Haxerhlll Touchdown Through the guards and round the Touchdown Haxerhlll Touchdown Hammer Haxerhlll Hammer Hammer Haverhxll Hammer Tackle thru tackle End round end Hammer Haverhill Hammer Ho d m Haverhlll Hold Ho d m Haxerhlll Hold m Ho d m Haverhill Hold m Ho d m Haverhrll Hold m Ho d m Hawerhlll Hold m Ho d m Hawerhlll Hold m Ho d m Haxerhlll Hold m CIII Ho d m Hax erhlll Hold m Plawers name a rah Plaxers name a rah Rah Rah Rah CFI:-nw er s name Sub Cheer Cplaver s namej a rah Plaver s name a rah Rah Rah Rah Csubs name ,H CHS sus.-snsns.-snsusngnsnx.-snsnxuvg.-Q-asus-vs-vs K D EERS Boom C IC Boom C IC Boom Chic a la Boom C IC chlc a llc Chlc a la Boom C lC boom boom ChlC a boom Boom C IC boom boom boom a boom boom boom chic a la H H S rah rah rah Boom C xc Skvrocket Skyrocket whxstle boom boom Haverhlll Long Yell Spell out HAVERHILL HIGH SCHOOL Hoorah Hoorah H H S Rah' Rah' Rah' C-rldlron Yell HAVERHILL HAVERHILL HAVERHILL Rah rah rah Rah rah rah Rah rah rah HAVERHILL HAVERHILL HAVERHILL Rallroad Rah rah rah rah rah rah rah gomg fasterl rah rah rah rah pause Whxstle I-IAVERI-Ill L CID ' CID h' al.a ' V 1 h' ala ' , , , h. ala . . . - ' d h' ala ' ' V ' h' ala h. I . I n 4 4 a a C25 . 3 O7 C P u l 'e ' ' l 'e ' ' 'e ' I 'C , ' 'C . . . . . . l 'e ' 'e l 'e ' ' 'C Q45 ' ' l 'e ' ' 'e l 'e C' ' 'e Hold 'em Haverhill Hold 'em l 'e ' ' 'e CHU . C .' ' P3 - C .' ' P'- -' ' P - . C 7 'J , ' '- c ' E C -' ' 53 - D , 1. --s.,g..s..s..g1-s-.Q--sus.-1.-sox-.s..s..g..s..s..,, bangs. HBOOLA BOOLAH Boola boola hoola hoola Boola hoola boola hoola And we ll rough house poor old nllll she hollers Boola Boo Rah Rah Old I-lax erhlll Old Hax erhlll Qld I-lax erhlll Qld Hax erhlll And x e ll rough house poor old Txll she hollers Boola Boo AS TI-IE BACKS CO TEARINC BY As the backs go tearlng bw On thelr wax to do or dxe 'Vlanx slghs mam cheers Mxngle wlth old or poor cheers o As the hacks go tearlng hx Maklng galn and steadx galn Hax erlull IS gOlDQ to mn to daw Hax erhlll lSEOUI1d to mn to dav As the hacks go lCfil'1I1g hx CRcpeatD Ab WE CO VIARCHIIXC As xx go marchlnsz And the rand lseglns to p l a V You ll hear the students shouting For Haxerhlll Hlgll s golng to mn to das Ram Ram CRepeatD ONE LITW LE TOUCHDOVCW MORE VC e mll make one llttle toucl don n more An then me ll all 1 I Co rome XC e re here to cheer mthout a fear Our team to xlctorx Stand men and fight them T111 xou Xe won the dat lim we will make one llttle touchdown more then me ll all I Co meme 4 .sus tCZil'S ' r N' -' V I l f V . v A , 1 . C D C r r , v t Y r ,, . 1 V,-, ' C, M. I . .. - Q C ' 'D Y - 1 . 1 . I ' A I ' ' , . ' ' , ,' 1 ' Cl 1 U tt A111 . l . , . . , . 1 , ' ' . ', 1 ' .And 111' lnhtl . l . . .-sus..s.-sus.-s..s.,,..s.-Sns..sus..s..s..x..s..s..,..s C , STAND LP AND CHEER Stand up and cheer Cheer long and loud for dear old Hay erhlll For to day we ralse The brown and gold aboxe the Our men nom are fighting And we are golng to um or dle We ue got the um we re golng to mn Come gne three cheers for Haverhxll Hlgh CRepeatD Old l-laxerhlll Hugh has alwavs shown Her spnrlt on Thanlcsgwlng Day Through thls our fiercest fray xs wallmg her banners tralllng Whxle Haverhlll marches up the held to honor and victory Chorus We ll cheer Old Haverhlll Hlgh forever We re always loyal to Vou and true Our men are wmnmg to them we re sxnglng Here s once more for you Rah Rah Rah Crashxng they re always smashlng Through the llne so weak to day Poor old see how she tremhles For she fears Haverhlll and Vxctory I9ll STATE CHAMPIONSHIP FOOTBALL TEAM sus -sux-.ge-suQnsusnse-xuQnQ-:Q-as-wx .Qui-usavsns-:sus 91 ,.N.-.....,..-..-..,..,..,..,..-..,..,..,..-..,..,..,..,..-..-.., I I , Vu . Y y - Q ,Q . 1 I . - The Brown and Cold shall always wear . . Q V V 1 1 - -Y 1. 1 u . V. , . , . v - . s..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..-..,..,..,..,..,..-..,..,..,..,..,..,..- ,.,,-sngnsn-sus-ns.-5.-5.-sux.-g.,s,,s,,,,Q.-g.,5,.s l9I3 STATE CHAMPIONSHIP FOOTBALL TEAM I9I3 I9I4 BASKET BALL TEAM J Q--5.-s..s,.,.,,..s ns--sus..Q.vs.-Q.-Q.-Q.-1.-Q. .Q--1-ns wg.-s..Q--susng.-sus-as--Q l9I4 TRACK TEAM I9I4 BASE BALL TEAM 1 hlihliitiiliilvtsihlihiit 'T 4 1 XIxxon VN BagI x Lamcncc Greene EIIIL I I1 I-ICIHCIX Allan IXI Arnntstndd Lloxd IL Bxard Can XIIAII Xlmltblcad l L 5 A453 'lgf I UOI BAI I V Gorge I I axng, I-Iarrx Menus IHIfnoId IVICSQCngCr BMI HAI I C ux N CIlrlSIldIl Laurence If. Qrcnnc Ntorer 'VIacDou aI I5fX5IxI I ISAI L BQIIVIICI I-I I'I0cI IIr n Qncnm Ciptnn I rcccllf Numa I RALL. lX CI1r1s Ilanul I51t1s1C1dInI x mnIx Nldlu Ill INK x Uh 1 U I'Iar1x SegaI ames Towne Hamann K VI Intmorc C nt 1913 oscph KcIIr x CIIIIOII I. R110 I71uI D VX oudmdn Harold 'NIC scngm Inlx 30 a ,jf-53? , In , ai r ' f' Q17 or - , gg HE , 1 .II 'j- I ,L Egy I. ,W 4 r Y 5 I 43 'I V! A ,L I . QQ' ,I I I. 4' 1 '-:s '. w.. j .X an . I QL J ,. ' . I 5 Q .' . I A' Iirncst I'IerrICI4 U' I. D . Vain I II-I ' ' . I H xl: Q .' g II,aw1'cm'c I' I '. 2 2' . IPI4 I NIVQIQ A. JI . . I' ' CL1.'I-Q. 'xtian 7 7 If S Q ' IIan'nILIIJ1'cN'fCaplz1il1D I'I ' . ' 'J I1 .I g I Ia IQ II' '1 Q F 6, .LQ 5 6' J 1 TER lhe lunch room that mecca of hungrx students and facultw where tomato soup llke to amhrosxa lb serxed dallx to 31X hundred famlshed puplls For tho the mathe matlcs rooms max hold lllill' charm for some and the free hand drawlng room for others the lunch room VCCCIXCS a unammous vote as the most popular place rn school Ile Senlor class extends lts heartnest appreelatlon for the good ll1lHgS wlth whrch we have managed to sustam lxle from I2 70 to I 43 and x e shall look hack Mltll regret when Ill our college careers we are dining on the prox erhlal prunes Swain Suesrnan W mo 15 lt keeps the dust so scarce5 Sam Suesman W o Who Who W o Who V o Who XY o ' o opens doors for late arrlwalsf Sam Suesman s alwaxs sweet of dlsposltloni Sam Suesman sprlngs the chestnuts wrth dehghti Sam Suesman IS lt klds us all alongJ Sam Suesman stxcks to all the teams thru xlctorx or deleat3 Sam Suesman knows each plax er by hls name and nex er vets lt stra1Q,1t3 Sam Suesman IS It serx ed for fortx xears ln Dear Old H H S 5 Sam Suesman alwaxs got and gave a smlle no matter what the faulti Sam Suesman IS ex ervbodx s friend from facultx to freshman5 Sam Suesman 'FI -..N.,..,..-..,..,..-...,.N.-.N..,..-..,..,..,..,..-..,..,.....,..,..,..,..-..-..-..-..,..,..-..,.. I 1' l ' , I . V . . 1 , f O , 5 x .. I f , I , A- I' K H -. ,. . 'I , ' - X ... . . N . ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,,..,..,..,.,-..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,,,.,,,,,..,..,..,..,,.,,.,.,,.,,. I h ' ' In - uv , x li f f f V 1 . D K ' Wh ' ' f 1 .,..,..,..,..,..,..-..,..,..-..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..s..,.,,..,.,..,..,..,..-..,..,..-.., 5-Hass Zleugbtnn Ziiunnv 'Xllss Bernree l elglrton IS the Xlrnerxa who presldes rn the ofnee known to us 1nt1 matelx as Bunnx VR hen me nrst arrrxed at the lseglnnlng of our un1or xear and found that slme had usurped tlme posltlon of the lbelox ed VVIISS Dulqx ue regarded her as a sort of meclranlnal dence for deallnv out sllps lor tlellets program cards blotters and otlrcr fulnlcs of dlxerse nature and use or as an lnlormallon l ureau where one learned anx tlnng lut the SOlL1tlOD of a matluematlcal problem or the l.TaHSlatlOl1 of the Latlll lesson tlme onlx knowledge Bunnx ever refused to dlspensc was the sort requlred Ill tlme class rooms Vi e soon learned lrowex er that Bunnx vsas a refuge and that slue could malntaln 1 rcmarkdble and Cll9LI'CCl sllenee INIPRSOX GRPEN Hum RNUN R -XNINDHI IJAXIN IXALOO 1RS,XIRN NPNBI1 INK DMB wr SIIJN Sxursnu 1nARn Anil xwlTx1om WHWORI Hrmuf ' '1 Nl L IRI Exf rRErxr HPRIQIL lx Ric E XR ITIAID I DREW ISNXRD x1lsSfxr X ,M ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..x..,..,..,.,-..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,,..-..,..,..,..,..,..,.. ' 1 ' lt 09 - 5 K . V . - - N , I ,. .. . . 1 . . .,..,..,..,..,..,.,,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..-.,,..,..,..,..,.,,..,..,..,..-..s..-..,..,..,..,..,. B ,A e K .,1 . N, 1 -. '. rm, 1-A 1 L . L .- X15 i. ,Ani-. , 1- If-R .1r,Ss-,. ,I-R ..,..,..,.,,,. , , H , , ,, U , . .. . ,.,., , ,.,..,..,..,..,..-...,..,..-..,..,..,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..-..,. 0 W KNOGKS fi, ln Phy slology Teacher What might be done to prevent a person s snoringf Rice Wake him up Math teacher What does the E D that you have put at the end of your proposition mean3 Colby uite easily done History teacher Why IS Socrates name mentioned in our Christian pulpi s3 Whitmore Because he was the first missionary to Greece Miss Sylvester Pluto ohnson in English Shakespeare died when he was fifty six and Milton was born when he was forty eight Segal translating French Being as this time he went without shoes he could neither see nor hear Drew in French It wasn t the first time that this gentle voice had rapped in s ears Segal Cin oral composition Lixingston was one of the few great men of the English language Pupil What did vou get on your English theme3 Whittier B Pupil That s nothing l got A Whittier Tam t so worse as l used to was One day Cage was engaged by Mr Cage to gauge a piece of wood The gauge Cage gave Cage was out of gauge so when Cage gauged the wood with the gauge Gage gaxe Gage Cage gauged the wood wrong Then Mr Cage gave Gage direc tions how to set the gauge so that when Cage gauged the wood with the gauge Mr Cage gave Cage Gage gauged the wood right for the gauge Mr Cage gave Cage was gauged rig t IU ilIhslLa1iuvHql1l'illilIh4'TAUQOVTIlilO1llil'ilIilVi4OQ4!Ll Pill! 'bllillLnvhliTl1iliLliLllTl ITHTHLII .fx gk 1, : 55 Q K 'Y 'gg ligg X , -ig x l i I ' . 9,5 -an QV ' ll ' 1' .e 1 r . Teacher. Name a famous erson who visited the court of Dion sius. P Y . ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' hi - ' an H I D Mr. r Mr. r . ' . . ' - ' h . .,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..-..,..-.....,....N..-.,..,..,..-..,..s..-..-..,..,..,..,..-..,..,..,.. l 5950505 'inini''iniwinia1LnLnQuL..i,,i. Lngcia ini4IihLnLuinL liuinLuLc-La inininin Colby defining Albegra ' Algebra IS a study Hlstory teacher Who was presxdent when vou were born, Greene? ' Greene john Adams Teacher Tell us about the battle of New Orleans S Kimball The New Orleans was a shlp that salled down Chesapeake Bay met a Brltlsh shlp and had a battle Accordlng to some Semor exammatlon papers Sydney Lamer was of Pugenot descent He lnked old legents Klpllng wrote the Wage Sage Tomblersome The Truce and the Bare Rosettx was frlend of Homer Some people sald that ROSCttl s poems were centural The Whlte Shxp was a great Latm epic Engllsh teacher What IS the fallacy ln the sylloglsm Drew just gave All babxes wear dresses women wear dresses therefore women are bables 3 Bolan Fallacy of mlstaken cause French teacher Translate uestlon femme Segal Woman suffrage The teacher had read KlpllDgS Bell buoy to the Semor class ln Engllsh O two test papers the followmg descrlptlons of the poem were found One of ROSCttl s poems IS The Bell Boy It IS taken from Kxpllng s poem The Bells One mlght thmk from the tltle that The Bell boy slgmhed one who works m a hotel but 1n reallty he meant xt to be the story of the boy who rang the church bell The story IS a sad one specxfylng the hard tlmes of the Bell Bov of whom many heard llttle altho at txmes he mlght have saved thelr llves by a qulck act The story of the Bell Bov s preference of h1s work above all others shows that Klpllng IS lndependent as to employments and that hls poems are wrltten for the humble as well as the well to do The sentlment of the play shows the feelmgs of the Bell Boy not know better It also helps others to have hxgher ambltlons than those of the Bell Boy altho hls xs shown to be honest Drew U1 vous ax ant tous crus morts Whom you see as bemg very much dead R Emerson The woolly sheeps followed hxm Whltmore Ah monsxeur doucement Ah monsleur a document Mr Head Why are vou late thls morn1ng3 Whnttler There IS sickness ln mv famllv Mr Head Well that s too bad who s srck3 Whrttler The dog L1 I 4 y or s ' if ' U ll VV Y I fifl VY ' ' an sv as ww 44 '- ' Y V1 fiilf ' YU . - . n u ., . 4 , . . . 1 4 v ' , a ll 1 ' as to his job. and it shows in general the ambitions of a poor uneducated boy who does 7. YMQ - I In as ' .. I . .. ll' shiuufmz l'n',m, Butlmz, ,Ut .,..,..-..,..-..,..,..,..,..,.-..,..-..,..,..,..,.-..-..-..,..,..,..,..-.,,..,..-..,..-..,..-..,..,..-..- IU- f'Hl'IIl0il'5 jflrmoirs


Suggestions in the Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) collection:

Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Haverhill High School - Thinker Yearbook (Haverhill, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923


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