Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA)

 - Class of 1922

Page 18 of 44

 

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 18 of 44
Page 18 of 44



Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 17
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Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 19
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Page 18 text:

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Page 17 text:

BEATRICE SMITH Here is a specimen of feminine creature rarely found a good girl. “Bea” is cne who has her likes nd dislikes and expresses them, too, yet she can e on good terms with everyone although we have never discovered the secret of it yet. SEWARD TYLER Seward is a sporty looking fellow who can always tell a story you haven’t heard and who always has a picture of a different girl. He is going to Dart- mouth and doubtless will come through with flying colors, for he is a wonder in mathematics and in science. ESTHER WEBBER Our pianist! Esther can play almost everything going and we simply could not get along without her, particularly in chapel. She is mild and sweet tempered and we never knew her to raise her voice above normal or disagree with anyone in a class- meeting. ROSS WHITTIER “Whit” is president of the class and of various other organizations. If he had a dollar bill for every meeting at which he has presided he would have quite a bit of spending money. He is a good speaker and debater. “ Whit” is an athlete of ability, for he has made his “M” in football, baseball, and track. 15



Page 19 text:

THE UNITED STATES SINCE THE WAR. The effects of the World War on the United States were many and varied. In some fields it has put us in a posi- tion to dictate to the world and in oth- ers it has caused us to fall below pre- war standards. In a financial way America is the most powerful of the na- tions of the world. Politically we have added to our international prestige and at the same time we have taken impor- tant steps at home. Industry in the United States has been in a depressed condition since the war but is beginning to get back to a normal basis. Social conditions have been worse than for many years but society should follow the upward trend of industry for one depends on the other to a great extent. During the war enormous loans were floated in the United States by foreign nations, France and England in particu- lar. France borrowed $2,750,000,000 and England $4,860,000,000. At pres- ent there is a great deal of comment in these nations concerning these debts, and some people in the United States think that they should be canceled. But if we cancel these debts I am looking at it from a purely selfish standpoint, these nations free from debt will be able to compete with American manufacturers and America ' s merchant marine. We cannot afford to allow the foreign na- tions to do this, for our industries, as I shall show you are in no condition to compete with foreign cheaply manufac- tured goods. Besides this we should be giving up our world-wide financial supe- riority without a struggle and very like- ly be throwing the nation into a business panic. It seems very unlikely that these debts will be canceled but the govern- ment may do something to lighten the burden. Politically we have added to our pres- tige abroad, everything considered. The Versailles Treaty and the Controversy over the League of Nations directly after the war had the effect of making the foreign nations distrust America and her policy. This sentiment has, however, been generally nullified by the Disarmament Conference at Washing- ton. This conference showed that the United States is working for the best interests of the world in general. It made plain that while the United States did not join the League of Nations and refused to ratify the Versailles Pact, she does not mean to hold aloof from international affairs. Woman suffrage while not exactly an out-growth of any war conditions, de- notes a great step forward in national politics. It puts the woman on the same plane as the man politically and they undoubtedly deserve to be there for the average woman of to-day is as com- petent to vote as the average man; if she thinks before she votes. During the war the industries of the United Stat es were running full blast; time was an important factor; money was not. When the war was over and factories and mines were coming back to a normal basis, men were turned off by the thousands. A large proportion of these had flocked to the city to reap the advantages of high wages and they were extremely reluctant to work any- where except at inflated wages. This was the cause of much of the unemploy- ment during the past winter. During the war time the farms of the United States were called upon to sup- ply a large part of the world with food. The farmers, those of the Middle West in particular, hired expensive help, bought expensive machinery, raised bumper crops and then were obliged to sell their crop for less than cost to men 17

Suggestions in the Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) collection:

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

1921

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

1923

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Ipswich High School - Tiger Yearbook (Ipswich, MA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925


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