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Page 17 text:
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emofzies Gene Frame for his chubby cheeks and baby complexion. Uthana Parker for her beautiful brown curls. William Sturdevant as Mr. Klein's right hand man. Cleva Tennison for her reserved manner and her right answers in grammar. Don Silvey for his bashful man- ner and his fondness for girls with blond hair. Buren Bryan for his lovable dimples. Jack Miller for his black wavy hair and big, big eyes. Harold lBuddyb Ginsberg for his resemblance to the month of March. Garland McKinney, Jr., for his dainty height of six feet and three inches. James Goodman for his exciting, hair-raising short stories. Earlene Russell for her habit of always buying the jumbo bottle of peroxide, and for her affection for blond boys. Carl Livesay, James Lindsay, and Bobby Shaffer for their headaches after Senior Day. Joe Reynolds and Ellis Kirks for their tennis games lHa!l. Anna Jean Frances and Lloyd Pickel for their abilities in figure skating, Ernest Good for his bright-colored shirts and socks, and always-shin- ing shoes. Everett Crandell for his conserva- tive haircuts. Evelyn Jo Morrison and Ann Wal- lace for their vocal abilities. Neva Higbee for her speed in typing and shorthand. Mary Ellen Tracy for her baton twirling as Drum Majorette. Leon Ellis for his What was the question? James Gold, Leon Grace, and John Nelson as D. O. students. Betty Hickman for her dark hair and eyes. Grace Hughes for the long finger- nails she cut off. Doris Lee for her ability to work addition problems. Harold Prewitt fo? his football player's figure. Marjorie De Hart as a new class nxate this year and swell friend to all. Bobby Swyden for his mysterious black eyes. Betty Ruth Robison for her rosy cheeks. , Dorothy Mumford for her laugh- ter in assemblies, especially the solemn ones. Mary Agnes Poff for her letters from and to Shawnee. BOING! Patsy Pinkston for her blond hair. Waunema Riggs because she will always remember Glen W. Barbara Roberts and Margaret Stucks, as lovable, charming and admirable. Kenneth Brice for his charm-girl personality. Last but not least we the Seniors of '48 remember our sponsor, Miss Vivian Watkins. We consider her the best sponsor that any class could ever have. We would like to say that each of us has enjoyed her as a sponsor, teacher, and friend. TRACY'S HATCHERY FEED AND SEED co. 122 NORTH 4th PHONE 489
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Page 16 text:
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emofzies of time Glass of '48 We, the members of the graduat- ing class of '48, remember: Marceau Roland for his I believe I am safe in saying . . Mary Frances Hitt because she was our lovely Football Queen. Benny Leonard because of his irresistible blue eyes and his being our Football King. Omer Henley for his musical ears. They dance while he plays the tuba. Earl David Goldsmith for his but- ton nose. Jerry Nell Hart for her hen- cackling laugh. Pansy Ingram Robertson, Alice Woods Tackett, and Rita Faye Brown Porter because they became Mrs. in their Senior year. Charles Condren, James Archer and George Agee for their Uh, I forgot in history and English classes. Phillip Erwin and Donald Mc- Right for their 'Perry Como per- sonalities. Belva Lou Richeson for her aches and pains, especially in English class. Minton M. lPepperJ Payne as the class bookie. Jack Cameron for his mincing walk. E. W. Berry for his charm-girl figure. George Robert 1BobJ Crawford as the baby of the class ionly six- teen years oldl. Jacqueline Wright for all the ex- plosions in chemistry class. Betty Sue Watzke as Valedic- torian fBrainyl. Ruth Crofut as the shorty of our class. Clifford Prewitt for his motor scooter and his affection for Shorty, James Caywood for being an old married man. Mary Louise Casey as the only redhead in the class. Wilma Shepherd for her perfect attendance in all four years of high school. Patricia Newman and Shirley Walters for being the tallest girls in the class. Mayoma Jean Earthman for her long bob and those smiling brown eyes. Jane Maylen for her black hair and BIG brown eyes. Fred Dean as the Senior class president with the aid of his pri- vate secretary, Betty Sue. Betty Ann Johnson and Andrew Keller we remember together. Pat Hanna as that sound effect man. SILVEY'S GROCERY Slb WEST MAIN PHONE 18
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Page 18 text:
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whafls an 0 name? Oh, taJGEE, don't HITT me any- more! I promise that I won't tell I saw you driving your fcrawl FORD. But come down to EARTH, MAN, and listen to me as I tell you about our picnic. Well, the DEAN gave us all a holiday and we de- cided to have a picnic. The leaves were RUSSELLing and the day was just iw! RIGHT. We were ROLAND along, discussing things pro and CON1drenl, when whom should we see but a 4hickJMAN who claimed to be JOHN'sSON. We PARK- leried the car and asked him the time. He said, It's TEN1nibSON. We thanked him and hurried on. We passed through a small iginsb BERG and slowed down, and it was a GOOD thing that we did. Soon we passed the estate belong- ing to the RICHES4onJ man in town. He once had been a GOLD- SMITH and then a MILLER, but he voted for WALLACEQ he claimed he could TRACfyl his 1mcJKIN- tneyl to STURDEVANT, who was an official in LEE's army He had a valet whom he always addressed as My GOODMAN. He was really just a PAYNE in the neck. Farther on we saw a small FRAME house that was quite run down. The owner had once tried to 4erlWIN at the Little Casino. Now he sells blackBERRYs and wonderful honey from his thigh- BEES. People f1indJSAY that he LIVES lay! on the income from them. We finally reached the picnic spot, said GRACE, and started eat- ing. We had GOLDen butter, PICK- ELS, PINKlstonl salmon on REY molds! bread, dove's HART's and a CASE1y1 of cokes. Then we began to tell stories. ROBERTtsonJ told the story of William Tell, who was an ARCHER. This was a different version from any we had ever heard: Old W. T. had a cold once upon a time. He was in a store try- ing to buy his wife a present. He said, 'WATZtkeJ the BRICE 1rlOBlisonl fri IGGS dress fprem- WITT the lace on the POFFed sleeves?' The clerk said, 'Well. tprewlITT will cost eighty dollars in SILVE1ybR.' W. T. said, 'I wouldn't pay that much for a dress for any one, I'd KELLER first. But I will pay thirty dollars for that blue one if you will QWIALTER it, because I CAME- fronl in here to buy a dress for her. So HAN tnar me that one and I'll TACKETT to her'. That was the end of a very silly story. We took ROBERTlsJ imc!- RIGHT to the river and threw him in. BRYAN by we gathered some tcaybWOOD and built a fire and began a NEW1manl game in which we had to keep MUM1fordl tcrani DELL some one VAUGHNed. DEthartl one that yawned next had to tELLIS a new story. This game wasn't a HUGHES success and we decided to play cross questions and silly answers, for lack of anything lnlELSionJ to do. I had to ask, When did you last see a CROFUT? The answer was, In my LEONARD refrigerator. ' Another question was, Why didn't the SHEPHERD like to eat frogs? Answer- Because they STUCK1sJ in his throat and gave him the hiccoughs when they jumpedf' This soon became tiresome and we decided to do a MAYClenl dance. A lswylDEN of wolves suddenly rushed down upon us and we thought it would be SHAFFER if we went home. We all got into the car safely except MORRIStonr who was carried off by a KIR1ksi. FRANCES jumped out of the car and rescued him and we hurried home because we believe in the saying- 'Any old PORTier7 in a storm -meaning home is all right when there's no place else to go. THE END . . . ABOUT TIME!!! COMPLIMENTS OF. . .
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