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Page 33 text:
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THE BEACON 121 University and is now an instructor in the Business Department of the Walter Reed High School. And so ends the account of the do- ings of the “Brave Fourteen.” We found life very full and rich with blessing ' s, and we would not forget the part played by our school in mak- ing possible that much we have done. The associations of those days are very dear to us and often present in our memory, and perhaps there are those among us who would fain turn back the hands of Time and tread once more the halls of the “old school.” £bri$tma$ flight The beautiful doll is broken; The little tin horn won’t blow; The tree is shedding its tinsel; And the sun has melted the snow. Hushed are the bells in the steeple, And hang silent every one; And the children’s lids are drooping; For Christmas day is done. Yet we sit by the fire in the gloaming, 1 And we yearn for nothing more; It matters not that broken toys, And ribbons strew the floor. For our hearts are linked together, As we sit in the family ring, With a chain of the sweet old feeling, That only this day can bring. FRANCES GRAY, June, ’22.
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Page 32 text:
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120 THE BEACON finest spirits ever sent among grow- ing boys and girls and now President of Elkins College in West Virginia. CLASS OF JUNE, 1910 Ten years ago last June, there graduated from the old High School Building, which was later destroyed by fire, a class of seven boys and seven girls, known as the Class of June, 1910. Today, we feel rather proud of our class as a whole, as we hear of the achievements of its vari- ous members in their chosen paths, and we feel, with what we consider a pardonable show of p ride, that we reflect only honors and glory to our “old school.” Our contribution to the World War included Steward Andrews, Parker Host and Jack Fitzgerald, all of whom served as officers in the U. S. Army. Stewart is now connected with the firm of Benson-Phillips, coal dealers of this city; Parker is the Manager of Hasler Company, one of the largest shipping agencies in this city, and Jack is still in the Army, Lieutenant Hugh John Fitzgerald, and at present is attending the Cavalry School at Fort Riley, Kansas. Archie Shankland is a very suc- cessful business man, holding a posi- tion of note and of lucrative return with the Bethlehem Steel Works, Bethlehem, Pa., in their Chemical De- partment. Duval Hudson, our old foot ball hero, continues to hold a responsible position with Saxon W. Holt Co., local wholesale dealers. David has been with this company during his en- tire business career, which speaks for how well he has performed his ser vices. The last news we had from New- man Bennett was that he was in Alexandria, Va., in the employ of the Southern Railway Company. “Pete,” as he is better known to his old class- mates, went to Alexandria to live shortly after his graduation, married a young lady of that town, and has visited back here, but we are unable to say at this writing just where he is. In a new office building on Twenty- eighth Street of this city is Dr. A. G. Morgan, Dentist — no other than our friend and classmate, “Green” Mor- gan. We have heard many expres- sions of satisfaction from Dr. Mor- gan’s patrons, and we are sure he has a successful career before him. In this “history” we have seemed to give our boys precedence, not from design nor from a feeling that their achievements have been more note- worthy than those of the remaining seven of our class, as we would now seek to show. The Class Valedictorian, Laura Carver, married shortly after her graduation to a young business man of this city and is Mrs. William Spen- cer. Flora Lash, the “artist” of the class, has been living in Philadelphia for the last four or five years, where she has made fame for herself as an artist, and has recently been honored by being given the position of Secre- tary to the Print Club of Philadelphia. Ruth Hudson moved away from Newport News several years ago and we are unable to find out just where she is or what she is doing. Lutie Morrison, after teaching in the local schools for a few years, mar- ried and is now Mrs. Jack Dove of this city. Elsie West was married a year or so ago and is now Mrs. Norvin E. Green of this city. Theo Harwood is the wife of Cap- tain Richard Cave, U. S. A., and is now making her home in Norfolk, Va. Eline Krisch, after attending Farm- ville, became a primary teacher in the local schools. Last summer Eline completed a course at the Columbia
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