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Page 24 text:
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JUNIOR CLASS CLASS ROLL Annabelle Armbruster Lewis Brown Joseph Burnett Mary Caskey Hazel Cole Thelma DeYoungaic Harry Emerson Freda Franz Vernon Harcourt:k Miriam Harrison Ruth Harrison Alonzo Hoard:k Fred Holland Boyd McCauIey Genevieve Malsbary William Marston Anthony Pfarr Edith Reynelds Lillian Ridings Kenneth Seaman Dorothy Smith Alva Stouder Ethel Tabor Charles Wene,F Wayne Williams $Withdrawn in course of school year. 20
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Page 23 text:
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bers of our old class. One is Alberta Cutter, the other Clara Jackson. tDinky, is the proud owner of a most exclusive hat shoppe, while Clara manages the La Parisiennel beauty shoppe. nThe next jump will be to Washihgton, D. C. There in the Presi- dentts cabinet we find our old friend, Rudolph Stauss. tRudy, has real- ized his fondest dream and is now the Secretary of Agriculture. Over in the Senate we find yet another member of our class. The last election placed him there, but Ilm sure that Elsie did a good deal of the boost- ing too. Yes, youlre right! Itls Kenneth Franz, our old tEfficiencyf uNext stop, France! Several of our classmates are to be found on foreign shores. In Paris we find two, both of whom have gained fame. Malcolm Creager is one of them. As you all know, Creager was the tAce of Aces during the past war. were all mighty proud of Creager. In the outskirts of tgay Pareel lives Meredith Bodley. Meredith has been for several years an authority on interior decorating, and has written several books on that subject. Now we are traveling through Germany. As we pass the doors of a great auditorium, we hear strains of the most exquisite music ever heard. Going to the door, we see, to our great amazement, Dorothy Jones, seated at the piano. Dorothy has more than realized her ambi- tion, and she has written several songs which will immortalize her name. Accompanying her, is her old friend, Wilma Roush. Wilma was for several years a most efficient Secretary to the President of the United States, but two years ago she left her post to travel with Dorothy. iiWe return to America for some real thrills. We find ourselves in a large baseball park. Before us lies the diamond, and it seems that the national baseball championship is being played off. The fellow who is pitching the Reds to victory is none other than Highland Danby. Right where you'expected to find iDobbyl, ian it? ttAnd now come the automobile races. On the track stand four high-powered machines, each named for the country which produced it. At the close of the race it is found that the itU. S. has won. As the judges announce the winner, we hear: tAnd t0 Hayden Davis belongs the glory, not only of winning the International Automobile Races, but also of establishing a new speed record? And there you tind old tDopeyi. itNow comes Hollywood. There we find that Bill English and Joe Lohr broke straight through to stardom, immediately after their flrst picture was filmed, Bill as the hero, and tDode, as the villain. It was ever thus. tiAnd that, my friends, is all the information that I can give you regarding the whereabouts of your classmates 0f ,28. Good nightfl Georgia Louise Deerwester 19
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Page 25 text:
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JUNIOR CLASS Colors - Blue and Gold Motto e ttNon scholae, sed vitae discimus. ti: 4: d: i4 OFFICERS President - Kenneth Seaman Vice President - Edith Reynolds Secretary - Freda Franz Treasurer - Harry Emerson :1: :1: :i: :k HISTORY OF THE JUNIORCLASS Our class started its Freshman year of 1925-26 with thirty-five members under the supervision of the following faculty: Mr. Perry Potts, Superintendent; Mr. Carey H. Milligan, Principal; Miss Alice Templin; and Miss Ruth Esther Brann. At the end of the year we had lost only two members. At the beginning of our Sophomore year we started out with happy hearts, knowing we could no longer be called ttFreshies of L. H. S. We had an entirely new faculty with the exception of Miss Templin. The new faculty members were: Mr. A. F. Leue, Mr. G. W; Ramsey, Miss Hazel Hosbrook, and Miss Alice Happley. At the end of the year our class r011 had diminished to twenty-seven. How well we felt when we started in as Juniors, thinking we had only two more years of high school ahead of us! We had two addition- e 3.1 teachers with whom to become acquainted: Miss Harriet Shields and Mr. Harold Drewes. We were all delighted when class rings and pins were distributed, but the most exciting time was the night of the Junior class play, ttFiXing It for Father, under the direction of Miss Shields. It turned out to be such a great success that it was twice re- peated in near-by towns. F. F. 21
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