Petersham High School - Hilltop Yearbook (Petersham, MA)
- Class of 1950
Page 1 of 180
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 180 of the 1950 volume:
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I 1' f I 1 ' 0 fr, 1.4 M I A A. - Y .. .. ., V AA , .h:,Q1L.,'h14L? - ,. ,, ,, dicatid Eamn-Cunnmgham Company , Kansas Ciry, Mo E WE, THE JUNIOR AND SENIOR CLASSES OF PETERSHAM HIGH SCHOOL, ARE VERY HAPPY TO DEDICATE THIS ISSUE OF -2122 HILLTOP TO MISS AMSDEN, WHO HAS BEEN OF TREMENDOUS HELP TO US DURING OUR YEARS OF SCHOOL. SHE HAS ALWAYS BEEN UNSELFISH IN HER WORK FOR THE STUDENTS OF THIS SCHOOL. WE WISH TO SHOW OUR APPRECIATION IN THIS WAY. MISS AMSDEN CAME TO OUR SCHOOL IN 1926 AND STARTED TEACHING ONE DAY A WEEK. IN 1934 SHE BEGAN TEACHING FULL TIME, AND SHE NOW CONTINUES TO WORK WITH US ON THAT BASIS. HER SERVICE TO THE SCHOOL 'HAS BEEN LONG, AND ALWAYS SHE HA-SHOWN A HEART-FELT INTEREST IN THE WELFARE OF THE PUPILS AND OF THE SCHOOL. I Photo by Norma Gray 1 'V-1,.if' x QS HAP Zen-Moak Stqff Editoreeoee Business Manager . Sports Reporter. . Activities Reporter Alumni Reporter. . . Humor Editor . . Literary Editor. . Picture Layouts. . . . Circulation Manager. . . Class Reporters: Senior Class. . . Junior Class. . . . . . . . . Sophomore Class . . . Freshman Class. . Junior High . . . Yearbook Adviser .......... Art Adviser and Advertising Layouts. . Typing Supervisor. . . . Typistleeeeee e . .Carol Cooper .Constance Barnes . Ernest Phillips . .Lucille Cooley . Shirley Dorow . .Sally Harris . . June Legare . Marjorie Harper .Constance Barnes .Constance Barnes Frederick Elliott . . . .Ann Bryant . . Jane Iott . .Robert Recos Beverly Dorow . .Mr. Bagley . . Miss Amsden . . Miss Dawson . . . Nancy Adams Marilee Burnham Lucille Cooley Carol Cooper Marjorie Harper Page Decorations . . . .Flora Fisher Group P1Ct'l1I'98 Q e e e e e e e e e ure Van PETERSHAM HIGH SCHOOL PETERSHAM, MASSACHUSETTS if V 22, -Q2 6 . Wfwuwll- - V B '7 This annual, which is published by the students at Petersham Center School, does not tell about the little things in the daily school life. It does not show a girl adjusting to her society, nor a boy controlling his temper, nor a teacher influencing the careers of the many students. These are very important happenings in our school, yet we cannot report them accurately because we cannot ob- serve them accurately. The countless experiencasfinally total the pupil and his per- sonality. Many agencies contribute to making him as he is, and the school is one of these. This yearbook serves to record the high- lights of the activities which have taken place during this school year. Sometime, somewhere, somehow the influence of the public school training in America will be fully recognized for its importance in the improvement of our civilization. The constant emphasis on free- dom and the democratic way in our schools plays a great role in the history of mankind. William P. Robbins, Principal - X ll lllg xi '-.Q2:S7 YL 4:ji4q4:7Qnq5S73 A-'f i ., .L S H 1 1 1. QQ' A X swfgfq ,L -fuq,3va-' - sr. 3 -a I 'A I 4 v . 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COnStanC6lBdfQiSf5Fff jlnC0hn18' valeaieecejgiinef e l l l Preeidentjla l o lller o ller o Secretary Treasurer 2, 5, 44 Cheeroleaderlto. e Hilltop 2, 3, 4fe Senior Play 3, 4. Connie is the only girl in the class.e She is alsovab- ediotorian and therefore the class brain. Connie hopes to be a ship stewardess. Bestof luck to you whatever you do, COIll'118o ' James Johnson nJim 1eW Saletatorian Vice-President 1, 3, 4. President 2. r Basketball 3, 4. ' Hilltop 1,l2, 5. Senior Play 5, 4. U Baseball 1, 2, 5, 4. , Jim ie was captain ofleet year's baseball team. we ex- pect to see htm in the big leagues soon. Beat of luck to you nhatever you do, Jimmie. i AGeorge Hecos l mGeorgie' Class Histo e l President 5, 45' so1 o o Vice-Presidentr2.lel l l Secretary and Treasurer 1. ,Basketball 5, 44 Hilltop 5. of r eSen1or Play 4. X Baseball 4.q K qu eoihht l are ,Qs UQ VUE? QQ SENIOR CLASS NEWS High school opened last September with three Seniors. They were Connie Barnes, Jimmie Johnson, and George Recos. A class meeting was held soon after school opened, and officers were elected. George Recos was elected President, Jimmie Johnson, Vice-President, and Connie Barnes, Secretary and Treasurer. Miss Amsden was our class adviser. Our first activity was a Halloween Barn Dance held on October 28. The dance was a big success, with music furnished by Bargeron's orchestra and refreshments sold by the Senior Class. Our next activity, held on December 16, was the Senior Play, Aunt Emma Sees It Through, a farce comedy in three acts. The play dealt with two young girls, Kathryn and Louise Adair, kept in seclusion by their old maid aunt, Aunt Emma. Louise determined to break away and marry, and she advertised through a matrimonial agency for a husband. Several applicants showed up, and at first Aunt Emma was led to believe that they were applicants for a job as butler. Aunt Emma put them to work trying out. Eventually Louise confessed her plot, and ln the end, 1,-giiilga- as you might guess, everyone got married, including 7 All Aunt Emma, the former man-hater. Those taking part in ,,f the play were Connie Barnes as Louise Adair, June 3 Legare as Kathryn Adair, Marjorie Harper as Aunt Emma, A ' George Recos as Jack Norris, Alden Phillips as Bud , al ., Gates, Clarke Johnson as Dick Christiansen, and Fred- :El erick Elliott as Joe Sparks. Others helping backstage were Carolyn Thayer and Shirley Dorow, prompters, and Jimmie Johnson on lights and the curtain. Connie Barnes was business manager for the play and George Recos and Fred- erick Elliott were property managers. Mr. Bagley was our coach and Miss Amsden helped with advertising and properties. We wish to thank all these people for helping make our play a great success. Our class is now planning record hops and food sales, which will help us earn money to go to Washington, D.C. in April. We are all very excited about our trip and plan to work hard so we can make it. Connie Barnes '50 kxfzfdvl -an-...., I -fa-n... 1--,... --.. ...-... r.Z',7w-:Q l Q-.J 4Z'..:'- ...-as -f..: I .2ZIf Xi:-45' 542'-.. '4- W -wuuff W ,,, N227 1-,X--....j -M ' f iii' I dh., ., X , 9 KA o D frulxuffx ,Aff Q .,,NvTN1wQSf,,fQpv mi' 4 lift , 5 ' F' .,, F. W-nf-Qfacfhfk-f I .i ti. M it V' I ilfflffu 1 ,N-'v ' f PM I E 53 , ,- - -9 WE f' 3 23 1 '.f ,- , Ad . , 1 xa- -. f 'x O, J 5 Q: .1 g . .2.. x wm- b C53 -' -5B27w.:,lv:.::.!iN 45 1 1- ,., in . , H , HS-sup'-Ag luqq f ,A,, N S an . I it J, -Q nzhg '1 XA? ' C wwf, E Ni -'f, -:.-..----h-ff ff' 2 ., l qM '.M .. -W '1L.,,,- 'p q 3: U 'W 4 , , , , 1, 2 5 F 57 U ,Q E. K .5 r Llniatb TLV, ' ATM! 'IH 1.T'k'iI'7X+ ' 'k 1- . f I'E ,I , , -xg,TQlY,Y'! '1k hTL'H' 1 wf A.-1,,,,.. M1 .LJ .. U ,X.,1A ,.-L,1.., 4.,1 ..L, ,.. .., W - 1.,.,.'x2, ., ff 1 BARBARA .xT1flELlT'i . f'fAIV.,-l. EL ,AP Q, 'Pf-V, E'5'?,'Pk VI K 'l.I.i 'VI , 3 ' ' . ,,. , .LN , .Lf-.J,: .ma iQ. SEATI:D,LEI-'T TU EIGHT: niAi JOElE', HAFFEQH, CGTQSTIQ-CEL BARNES, SHIFYLLY P,'Fi0 'I'rIAYEE1, A1513 JUNE LEGARE. 5'l'AiwDlEfG: 2 HE.DI:.RlCIi ELLIOTT 'WOPYET PLCU? AIIIT PHILLIPS, c1,Ar-KE JOHNSON, JAMES Jameson, AND MR. 1aAGLE:5f. 'M A H .... 3 vm ls JUNIOR CLASS NEWS The members of the Junior Class this year were as follows: Lucille Cooley, Carol Cooper, Shirley Dorow, Frederick Elliott, Marjorie Harper, Sally Harris, June Legare, Barbara Merritt, and Ernest Phillips. The class officers were: President, June Legareg Vice-President, Frederick Elliott, Secretary and Treasurer, Sally Harris. Mr. Bagley was our class adviser. Again this year The Hilltop is being sponsored by the Junior and Senior Classes, and they will divide the profit . We are making plans for the Junior Prom which will be held in May, and which, besides The Hilltop, is the only activity of our class as a group this year. Frederick Elliott '51 GRADUATION As we all come to high school age, And each year comes to end, We sing at graduation time And towards our own we wend. And-when at last that day has come, Expectantly we wait ----- Diplomas are distributed, We pass through school's last gate. We wonder what's in store for us, What waits in l1fe's swift raceg Remembering pleasant times in school, We view each smiling face. We think of all these varied things, As graduation closes. We think of them and reminisee, And smell the scent of roses. Congratulations are freely given, Handshakes and blessings too. And we have earned a priceless thing, To have our whole lives through. Clarke Johnson '55 asses .,. NV.-n.fv,,,..,.. ri A , M .... ,,N.,,,-..,-9,-.Q H ,,,-, V- ua ',Vfl'a-'Z Vw--. ,f - . ..'S'f Q?4Nf' 5 fI '1TEv--'J ' M gl . ' .. . . , , ' ' --. g. -. V ' -V .A M., ,ff . V' wk ,ff 5-f?5V,:n4gVV'fV1.-fPsq-fV:V59V,yg5ggi5f-.. 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K .ff-A ,M-A -5j?j'4,,,f' . mM,::1vu-,-,M -W...-ff-2 ' ' ,TL ..-'- J',,..,,,.A- 1.ff,l,A gf.-. .gf wt 4 'fx ep Q ff - , ,M -mf. ,H ' L14 X n V 'T3 :1..2 ,V -. ,I af, ' I, ,,,V x l , , -- , T25hH1,Q,l 3E',.lf.'YI:.1' LEFT' 'FQ Mawr: mage? mms, ,am Eam'Ar4T, LIARCLYN Tmyw, Am: YONKHR, AND g..-.1..-.f----.-- . , , ,. W T?i, v,af'f:e,'f. sTAr'Q1:Q 3: PQYHMT T2f:,1m, Amyzn PHILLIPS, Am flfmr, NQLIDGR. QEATELD LEFT TQQRTT-IT: BARPAHA PARYES, FLOHA FISHER, JAVE IO'f'T, E2Y.Il1AT??-TFT TJIITER, NARYLEE WWNHAM, A. D BETTY RUSSELL. STQXTJDIIIG: WILLIAM HOOD, KVA ADAMS JWDY BATES hZARlLYN ED.'.'Afms, AND CLARKE Jormsma. ' A ' SOPHOMORE CLASS NEWS If you had visited P. H. S. on the first day of school, you would have seen nine happy sophomores returning to school. They were: Nancy Adams, Ann Bryant, Basil Coolidge, Alden Phillips, Carolyn Thayer, Robert Thayer, Vera Varney, Jerome Walsh, and Ann Yonker. Roger Greenough left us in our freshman year. Later this year Jerome Walsh left us to go to Holyoke, Massachusetts. Our class officers remained the same. They were: President, Basil Coolidge, Vice-President, Alden Phillips, Secretary, Ann Bryant, and Treasurer, Jerome Walsh. The class adviser was Miss. Dawson. In October the Freshman Initiation was sponsored by our class. Each freshman portrayed a radio character and a mock radio program was conducted, with Basil Coolidge as master of ceremonies. It was very successful. Ann Bryant '52 FRESHMAN CLASS NEWS On September 7, 1949 eleven freshman students came back to school babbling about summer vacation. They were! Eva Adams, Barbara Barnes, Judy Bates, Marilee Burnham, Marilyn Edwards, Flora Fisher, Elizabeth Gunter, William Hood, Jane Iott, Clarke Johnson, and Betty Russell. The class officers were: President, Marilee Burnham, Vice- President, Elizabeth Gunter, Secretary, Betty Russell, and Treasuren Barbara Barnes. The class reporter for the school newspaper was Jane Iott. Our class adviser was Mrs. Phillips. Freshman Initiation was held October 7, in the town hall, and I think the sophomores provided a grand one. All the freshmen were good sports about participating. I think everyone would agree it was an especially good initiation program. A freshman girl, Barbara Barnes, was head cheerleader this year, and she did a wonderful job of putting school spirit into every 'Petershamarian' . Two freshman girls, Barbara Barnes and Jane Iott, took part in the annual oratorlcal contest this year. Jane took second prize and Barbara took third. The Freshman Sports Dance was held March 51. This was the only activity sponsored by our class this year. Next year it will be our turn to put on Freshman Initiation. We already have plans brewing and we hope it will be as good as ours was. See you next year! Jane Iott '53 R-, ..,A. -A lm FIRST RQwL6L,f:FT f1iQ EIRSEQ: CAROLYN DOUTHIT, HELRR Pmfmwsw, FRANCES ELLIQTT, FRANCES :rRRAr.f, A:ARsARR'r YQNRRR, BEVERLY DoRow, MARILYN BRYANT, MAE EDWARDS, vzoLA PJRLQQR, AND ARR srrrfm. SECOND Row: RONALD ADAMS, CR-ARLIE PERKINS, Axzyffpa PERKINS, LEE CIRRJZNGHAM, DOROTHY RECOS, JUDITH cooPER, PHILLIU LEGARE 'NILBAR DOHOW, CLARENCE YOUNG, AND MR. OLSON. THIRD ROW: MYRON BATEO, ROBERT? AECOS, ROGER RUSSELL, WAYNE ELLIOTT, JOHN MA ' , ADAMS, DONALD BALDWIN, JERRY WADE, AND WILLIAM VARNEY. ABSENT! PAUL CLARK AND ROBERT UACTPHALEA u'0k'7 SAR whe e's O J'1v1h-152 Z CIMJH, .,.-v Lonnxe. and X Jumvn -14 It 9 3 R 'mf 5 AA? was JUPIQ, Cllotdt 'Ls 'Wu- JUNIOR HIGH NEWS The eighth grade started the year with the following students: Donald Baldwin, Judy Cooper, Lee Cunningham, Carolyn Douthit, Wayne Elliott, Charlie Perkins, Clyde Perkins, Robert Recos, and Clarence Young e The seventh grade started the year with the following students: Arthur Adams, Ronald Adams, Myron Bates, Marilyn Bryant, Paul Clark, Beverly Dorow, Wilbar Dorow, Frances Elliott, Mae Edwards, Phillip Legare, Robert Mack-Hale, John Mayes, Viola Nelson, Helen Peltonen, Dorothy Recos, Roger Russell, Lee Smith, Frances Upham, William Varney, Jerry Wade, Margaret Yonker, and Peter Burdett. Peter Burdett left after the beginning of the year. At our first Civics Club meeting the following people wereelect- ed as officers: President, Wayne Elliott: Vice-President, Marilyn Bryant, Secretary, Beverly Dorow, Assistant Secretary, Myron Bates: Treasurer, Frances Elliott, Assistant Treasurer, Robert Recos. For our part in the Christmas program we recited the poem 'Twas the Night Before Christmas, and we sang the songs Why Doesn't Santa Come -tg Q and Tom Thumb's Drum. We are now planning a one-act play called Business and So Forth. Those participating are: Robert Recos, Dorothy Recos, Judy Cooper, Myron Bates, Lee Cunningham, and Arthur Adams. There will be dancing and refreshments after the play, which is to be given May 5. iHf-JI'4i-'ZI-1'?1'?-ZHl--3!-'l1-ii-6H2'4i-3Hl'-!HX-XI' SPRING Bluebirds and robins away in a flight, Make the whole day seem so bright, And when the robin Starts to sing, It makes you know that it is spring. When you see the gold of the daf- fodils, Sprouting up all over the hill, And the little animals, through their hlbernating, It makes you know that all around you spr1ng's awakening. Marilyn Bryant Robert Recos Beverly Dorow WHEN WINTER IS OVER When winter is over, And The The The And The spring is here, flowers will blossom, birds will cheer. days will grow warmer the sun will shine long, sweet little robin Will sing his song. When the wind is blowing, Gentle, low and cool, The children will think: We'll soon be out of school. Dorothy Recos I ..S -,,, mcxcwtxfx , .., X15 ' x Lf .N-115106 C QQZQKQQ x 4 I , f7 N JWL f 4 M 1 llf 'fl0 fly! 41 3 604-4f'fLL!qg?l,t .,...,.. C6101 -'wma-Mrw U 1.114150 'Wall YW .uvvvw uv. W A 141110 -.N -v-NY? gl lfci Q P QT 5, if L53 Z L-3QE!',k:'E.SJ l?ll' o 0 WO' 'J ep O W' OW , , O 90009 :5 f:9:9' v,ooo'o'.? wav-' GIRLS' BASKETBALL The girls started their practice in October and had practice two or three times a week. They practiced on the outdoor court, as the gym asium was condemned. Twelve girls reported for the first practice Shirley Dorow, a junior, was elected captain. Mr. Robbins was the coach, assisted by Miss Dawson. Despite having no gymnasium to prac- tice in, the girls won four games and lost four. BOYS' BASKETBALL The boys started their practice in October also. Ten boys were chosen to make up the first and second teams. Frederick Elliott, a junior, was elected captain. Mr. Robbins was the coach. The boys did not make out very well in the regular season, winning only one game and losing seven. At the seventh annual Orange Trl-State Tournament the boys won one game and lost one. They defeated Northfield 59-35 in the first game and entered the championship division. A scrappy Petersham team entered the second tournament game against Belchertown with hopes of winning. A strong Belchertown team easily defeated them by the score of 61-23. Summary of the basketball season: DATE OPPONENT PLACE GIRLS BOYS P O P O January 6 Hardwick There 31-44 ' 50-45 January 15 Barre There 55-28 22-47 January 20 New Salem There 22-51 29-58 January 27 Hardwick There 45-59 25-50 February 5 New Salem There 26-52 25-29 February 7 Princeton There 35-30 35-40 February 10 Barre There 58-35 29-50 February 17 Princeton Barre gg-gl QQ-Q1 Total Points 258-280 228-530 In a pre season game against Athol High School junior varsity team on December 6 the boys lost by the score of 54-22. In another pre-season game on December 15 the team was defeated 55- 21 by the Athol Hi-Y team. After the league games, on March 5, the boys lost a close game to Hubbardston, 55- 35. The game went into two overtime periods. All games this year were played away, because our gymnasium was undergoing alterations. Our opponents very generously permitted us to use their courts for our home games, we sold tickets at these games and thereby we were able to earn a profit during the basketball sea- SODA The cheerleaders this year were Connie Barnes, Barbara Barnes, and Beverly Dorow. 4444444444444 JUNIOR HIGH BASKETBALL This year a basketball team was organized ln the junior high school with Mr. Olson as coach. The team had a very successful sea- son, winning seven games and losing only three. Practice was held on the outdoor court. Lee Cunningham was chosen captain of the team. The members of the team were: Arthur Adams, Ronald Adams, Donald Baldwin, Myron Bates, Lee Cunningham, Wayne Elliott, Phillip Legare, Charlie Perkins, Clyde Perkins, Robert Recos, Roger Russell, and Lee Smith. DATE OPPONENT PLACE SCORE December 10 Athol Team A Athol 25-92 December l7 Athol Team B Athol 52-28 January 5 New Salem New Salem 28-15 January 7 Athol Team A Athol 42-52 January 12 Phillipston Athol 51-25 January 28 Athol Team B Athol 29 30 January 31 New Salem New Salem 40-21 February 4 Athol Team B Athol 24-35 February 9 Phillipston Athol 28-27 February 25 Athol Team B Athol 23-27 play-off for the league championship was held between Pehen mm and Athol Team B.. Athol won by taking two games from Petersham. The first game was played March 23 and the score was 55-223 in the second game on March 50 the score was 43-35. 444444444444444444 Summary of the 1949 baseball season: DATE OPPONENT PLACE SCORE Hay 4 Princeton Here 11-10 lay 11 Hardwick Here 7- 6 lay 16 New Salem There 5- 6 lay 25 Hardwick There 7- 6 June 7 Princeton There 9-10 June 8 New Salem Here 1- 2 Totals 40-45 The boys won three games and lost three. 44444444444444444444 Sgt' an n fr P-ff 92? I I an KNEE,LINfG,. LEFT' TQYRIGHT: FREDERICK ELLIOTT, ALDEIN PHILLIPS, ROBERT THAYEE, ANU BASIL COOLIDGE. STANDING: ROBEQFT DOUTHIT, ERNEST PHILLIPS, JEROME WALSH, JIMMIPL JOHNSON, MELVIN MENRITT, CLARKE JOHNSON, AND MR. ROBBINS. SEATED LEFT TO RIGHT: MTM BAGLEY CENGLISHJ, MR. ROBBINS CSCIENCEI, AND MN. 5EgON ISCEIAE SIUDIELS2. STANDING: MISS AMSDEN QARTJ AND MRS. PHILLIPS CHOME ECONOMICSP. ABSENT: MISS TIXWSON KCOMMERCIALJ. F3 zfgl X x 4 Ns . N KX! J fiffz Y f 1 Q f 2 Z . W X U A KX X f agua f ' WXW fn W ve Zuenfd MAGAZINE DRIVE On September 19 Del Obert visited our school once again to or- ganize the annual magazine drive. The drive lasted for ten days. We collected 8512.45 and from that we received 8188.04 to keep for the school. The prizes, paid for out of the school's share of money, amounted to S28.00. Sally Harris was high salesman with S61.5O. Robert Recos was second with S5s.5o. TRIPS Several trips have been made this year by members of the high school. On October 8 fourteen members of the Freshman and Sophomore Classes made a trip to Worcester to visit Radio Station WTAG and two museums, Worcester Art Museum and the Museum of Natural History. On November 5 about thirty students and several teachers went to Worces- ter to Clark University to see a performance of Shakespeare's Othello on a stage done in imitation of the stage Shakespeare used. On 3anu- ary 18 the office practice class and Miss Dawson took a trip to Orange to visit the Minute Taploca Plant and office. These trips were enjoyed by everyone and added something special to our school year. W SPEAKING CONTEST On February l three girls gave speeches they had prepared on some phase of the United States Constitution. The girls were Marjorie Harper, Jane Iott, and Barbara Barnes. Three prizes were given. Marjorie Harper won first prize, which was five dollars: Jane Iott won the second prize of three dollars, and Barbara Barnes won the third prize of two dollars. The prizes were given by the American Legion Post 1415. On February 26 Marjorie Harper went to Wlnchendon to give her speech again, There she had to compete with five others, each of whom had won first place in his school. Marjorie did not win, but she made a very good showing. MOVIES Many movies have been shown this year during noon periods and during class periods. The films are educa- tional and very interesting. The efilms come, for the most part, from the Extension Service at the Univer- sity of Massachusetts. The projector qxr 'we use is still that loaned to the school by the library. '95 QQ W Qs Sorento BILLTOP NEWS This year saw the beginning of a new school newspaper, Hilltop News, produced by the Freshman and Sophomore Classes. The paper has been sent to several schools, including Barre, New Salem, Hardwick, Athol, Orange, Princeton, and Bernardston. In return we have re- ceived papers from some of those schools. We feel that this ex- change of papers should improve understanding between schools. Our paper has given complete coverage to news of the school and has had in addition many interesting special features. The Freshman and Sophomore Classes are to be congratulated on their fine work in pro- ducing this paper. GYHNASIUH On November 9, at a special town meeting, the voters voted to remodel the present gymnasium. The work is now going on and the ' price, according to plans, will be about twenty-one thousand dollars. The ceiling is to be raised and an addition is to be put on for bleachers to seat about one hundred and fifty people. On December 7 the bids for excavation and concrete work were opened. Walter Robin- son was low bidder and the work was done promptly. On January 12 the bids for the enlargement of the gymnasium were opened. The low bid- der was Columbus and Berg, from Gardner. The work is in progress as this is written and should be finished by about April 20. The en- larged gymnasium will be a big improvement to our school. NEW EQUIPMENT The graduating class of 1949 gave the school a slide projector. It was purchased this year at a cost of eighty dollars and has been used to show slides and film strips. It ls available for the use of the entire school. A radio was also gave the school some wonderful play- ground equipment, including swings, a teeter board and trapezesg this was greatly enjoy- ed by the small children, until it had to H given to the school by the P.T.A. The P.T.A U 3' :N ,K be taken down temporarily while the work on the gymnasium was done. The entire school is grateful for these fine gifts. Lucille Cooley '51 .L EA DEQ 513112, lv I . I s.'k:, f??ii.?T 'E . - f fynf- - ih,49-.'f:',-J- ' X . '-YL.-1-is '1,f93'.JQlJ-1 Lal' . ..,. f, . .W ... , K- ,- - 4-Jill , '-21,59 1- Q X 1 1 2:5 , mf - '. -V ., Lfzi gayvfff , 13 -ig N'-f f' 4 x QQ'1Da 05 , Sf . .Y ! 1 if ff Wu, ' 5 wjif f zx 1 -' - wg-uf x ref ff! -ix-' Q' ff - f-fy JN:yf if 1 P gf - 'fy ,f , Qs!'y-5155? ,'f.f-,.f'fr'i5?'.' 'N 1' ' gf iq ' ' 1 A . '75 diff -'X '-vfangvw-fc, 1 .- f. 5 ,455 ,fi f u ffifr-Q-Q W' Rfb' N flvfsw M -+ -fafif-5, f A 5' : W. - ' X-. - W , 5 , -4 ff' .:,.:.,f--'gi gifh N f - . QQ., --ML-, 1.H..W .- 4' 5 ,f','X. f' 1 -1 as fs , ff Q51 1' ...A ' f x f ,Q ' ---- mx J:f,:gu1',f'- - -,S - X ,lx f' g N ,mf A ' ff 'XX VX 'KDE Mi gf 5. fV,,,ff- .f---'W 1' X 1,5 -F J .r .r 1 lf A .N WI ' ' ': 'NW ul-ixxx V ' ' ' 95 -f ' t Q ,Af lll'if-,ff xxx i j 'M -.xx , . W.,3,...f-mn:--.v7:,,,. , x f 'ix-X ,d.y'Q ,t' xyqnf' x . XX.. ,ff ,. 'A N Un 9 ' ,1 ' f .f,f:w' ---R. 3iZf' -V '3' 'f-as-fa ' 'ff7f ,elif ' .. . 4,Qm,,- '-'Fi-uw.,,1 K'-f4.....f -ff y ' ,..,- 5 ' - H- -1 ' xr-Q fl' ,-fn' M4100 I . QM - ., M 22 'W'-R ,Q 1 ' 'h 'Xxx 'l v . E gig. Ay 'f WQQL: ' I 4 N ,. MW, 071025 HONORSgAND AWARDS Each year at P. H. S. there are numerous honors and awards earned by members of the student body. On this page we shall summarize the awards given at graduation last year, last year's baseball awards, and the awards and honors earned by the students thus far this year. 1949 GRADUATION AWARDS 1. For achievement in scholarship in the College Preparatory Course the following were given prizes contributed by the Petersham Villa e Improvement Society: ?aJ To Beverly Elliott, 25.00. Cbl To Melvin Merritt, 15.00. 2. For showing the greatest improvement in English Robert Douthit was given an award of 55.00, granted anonymously. 5. For outstanding citizenship Beverly Elliott was given a certifi- cate and a medal, contributed by the Daughters of the American Revolution. 4. For outstanding ability in spelling the following were given awards contrihuted by the Merriam Dictionary Company: Cal To Beverly Elliott, a gold award. Kbl To Sally Harris, a silver award. Cel To Marjorie Harper, a bronze award. Cdl To Flora Fisher, a certificate for winning the ju ior high school spelling bee. 5. As class valedictorian Beverly Elliott was given a year's sub- scription to Reader's Digest, contributed by the publishers of the magazine. 6. For writing the best essay on the subject nThe Relationship of the School to the Communityn Barbara Barnes was given an award of S10.00, granted anonymously. 7. For proficiency in the study of United States history Beverly Elliott was given the Washington and Franklin Medal of the Mass- achusetts Society of Sons of the American Revolution. 1949 BASEBALL LETTERS The following members of the 1949 baseball team were awarded athletic letters: Basil Coolidge, Robert Douthit, Frederick Elliott, Clarke Johnson, James Johnson Ccaptainl, Melvin Merritt, Alden Phillips, Ernest Phillips, Robert Thayer, and Jerome Walsh. 1949-50 AWARDS l. The leaders in this year's annual magazine drive were Sally Harris Cfirstl and Robert Recos Csecondl. 2. The winner of this year's oratorical contest, sponsored by the American Legion, was Marjorie Harper. Second prize went to Jane Iott, and third prize went to Barbara Barnes. 5. The winner of this year's good citizenship award, including a trip to Boston, was Constance Barnes. 4. The following members of the girls' basketball team were awarded athletic letters this year: Nancy Adams, Judith Bates, Ann Bryant, Lucille Cooley, Carol Cooper, Shirley Dorow Ccaptainl, and Carolyn Thayer. 5. The following members of the boys' basketball team were awarded athletic letters this year: Basil Coolidge, Lee Cunningham, Frederick Elliott lcaptainl, Clarke Johnson, Alden Phillips, Ernest Phillips, and Robert Thayer. 35 Wwp- - game gnvnrvrxsxuc On the whole I would say that I do not care for most radio com- mercials. I wonder if the point of them is to be as annoying as pos- sible. If so, what good do the advertisers think lt will do? My impulse, after listening to some announcer drone on and on, is not to rush right out and buy the product. Instead, I feel that I never want to see it or hear of it again. The soap advertisements can be the most - MH Q31-AH LAH in their fifties, women This may appeal to some have asked about it, it Then there are the The one I object to the i Ei ri-are I ' Wu' x, 2 irritating. For instance, Palmollve--g-you are told about the fourteen day Palmolive plan, how it will give you a clearer complexion, and so on. Then a sweet, feminine voice inquires, 'Will it work on women with ggi skin, oil skin, women whose skin is not cgear?' people. To all those does not. cigarette commercials. most is the Lucky Strike commercial. An ultra-southern voice announces, 'Yeah after yeah ah've seen the makehs of Lucky Strike buy fine, ripe, meller, tobaker. Ah been smokin' Luckies myself fo' nigh ontuh twenny yeahs.' This gets tiresome. The 'tobacco expert' has a different name each time, but the voice is always the same. Another group of offenders are those whose commercials appeal to children, saying, 'Now kiddies, you want to grow up to be big and stro , don't you?' Any self-respecting 'klddy' would never even look at tee cereal, advertise this other offending commercials, the worst. There are ln my opinion, or whatever the product ls again. The products that way are too numerous to mention. but those mentioned are, Some commercials, of course, are different. lost of the watch commercials are perfectly acceptable. One which says, 'Eight P. M., B-U-L-0-V-A, Bulova watch t1mej'followed by a brief statement about Bulova's merits, is one of the least annoying commercials I have heard. Automobile commercials, too, are on the whole fairly good. They speak about the good points of the car and then close the subject If a great many more companies would do this, radio listening would be more enjoyable. Flora Fisher '53 55? 1::. ji? Q Z 1225 TOO LATE TQ REGRET Cynthia Brooks stood outside the jewelry store window gazing wistfully at a small on Wednesday and for her steady, that she must be getting late Later at home she hummed as she did through her head of how the girls at the ent she was going to gold watch. It would be her twentieth birthday almost two weeks she had hinted to Paul Sivad, Suddenly realizing that it and hurried home. wanted that watch. she left the window the dishes. Thoughts ran office would envy the pres- get. Cynthia was sure she would get the watch, for she always got what she wanted. Finally Wednesday came and it seemed an eternity before the office clock said it was time to leave. Cynthia rushed home to dress for supper. Paul had asked to take her to the Stork Club to celebrate her birthday. At six o'clock the doorbell rang. Cynthia answered it and took the package a messenger boy handed her. She sat in front of the fire- place and opened the card attached to it. It read, 'To Cynthia, with love,Paul.n She tore the paper off the package and discovered a box of chocolates. Filled with disappointment and rage she hurled the bo into the fireplace, without opening it. At that moment the telephone rang. She turned slowly and went to answer it. It was Paul. He asked her how she liked his trick of hiding the watch in a box of choc- olates. In dismay Cynthia dropped the telephone and rushed to the fireplace. She was just in time to see the last flame flicker out of the little pile of ashes that had been the box of chocolates. There in the middle of the ashes was a small lump of melted gold. It was too late to regret. Marjorie Harper '51 444444 om NIGHT wma 5 BABYSITTEIX At seven o'clock your chauffeur takes you to your babysitting job. With three tests the next day you think you can surely get all of your studying done while you are sitting for the children. You have two children to sit for, Jean,who is five years of age, and Jack, who is two. They are cute little children and very nice as long as you aren't within throwing distance. For a half hour you have the pleasure of reading to them. 'What will it be, Goldilocks and the three bears?' Very haughtily Jean answers, nNo, the Lone RangerL' The story starts off: 'Marvin had been murdered. We must scrutinize- 'What does scu-ti-ize mean? asks Jean. Next you are looking in Webster's dictionary. It defines scrutinize as the act of scrutinizing. After making a weak explarnticnz to the children you go through the remainder of the story, skipping a page or two. They don't listen and their mother said one story was enough. Skipping a few pages seems the best way of hastening through the story so you can put them to bed. n 1 n ' Of course, there are the usual objections. I m not tired, Jean says. You weaken and say, nJust ten more m1nutes.n If you d1dn't weaken, tears and screaming from the children would make you give in or would drive you mad. Ask any babysitter-they go mad! The telephone rings. nLong distance, New York calling,n murmurs the operator. This must be important, so patiently you send the darlings to the kitchen. Mind?. That would be unthinkable. Then the circus begins. The children start yelling, fighting, and throwing things. You can't hear a thing and in utter disgust the other party hangs up. Just as you lay down the receiver the children become so quiet you could hear a pin drop. Look at the halos around their heads! Who could punish them? Fifteen minutes later you patiently ilike a lionl try again to send them to bed. I'll bet no one ever heard such screaming! Maybe the yardstick you used on them had a little to do with it. However, a little deception is also useful. You tell the children it is an hour later than it really is, and fortunately neither of them can tell time. Finally you have them at the top of the stairs. Getting these two ready for bed is a major problem. Like all children they love to wash their faces and brush their teeth. After they empty the tooth powder on the floor and throw water at each other, the bathroom looks as though the h-bomb had hit it. Inciden- tally, so do you. Children are awfully free about throwing things around. Since it would be unthinkable to write about what happens in the next two hours, your story continues when you have just gotten them in bed. Chokingly, Jackie asks you a and you are not accustomed to his way hend what he is telling you. Finally translates it. From what you gather, sure he will not catch cold, you have ly that poor, darling Jackie is being question. Since he is only two of talking, you do not compre- Jean comes to the rescue and in your thoroughness to make tucked the blankets in so tight- strangled. The children are getting tired by this time and so fall asleep in about an hour. By the time you open a book their parents return, an hour later than when they said they would return. They explain that they are.sorry to be late but that at least they are glad to see you got some studying done. All I can think of as I ride home is, 'Dear God, please don't bless me with two such lovely children, and be good to their parents in heaven. Amen.' Ann Bryant '52 'H--l!-'l'4!-'3!-4i-4f'N-4H1'4l-'li'-!1--ZI--!HH!-'l1 N' How gp- HUNT DEER Would you like to be a deer hunter? I suppose that question sounds strange coming from someone who has never been hunting, a girl at that, but then is it absolutely necessary for me to have had ex- perience in order to teach you how to hunt? Of course not. There- fore I will go ahead and give some of the important points. It is quite necessary that hunters fall into one of two classi- fications: ill male and 12, female. Another thing, they either in the city or in the country. There really 1sn't ference except that the majority of those who live in the absolutely nothing about hunting and can't hide it, while live in the country know almost nothing about hunting but should live much dif- city know those who do a fairly good job of pretending they know a great deal. Now, I think this lesson will be more effective if we pretend that we are all from the city, as that will give us an absolute lack of knowledge to work on. To get the right atmosphere everyone must now dash to his moth closet and put on all available woolen garments. They should be as near your size as possible and bright red in color. If your moth closet cannot fill the b1ll,then you must hurry to your nearestcloth- ing store and buy what is necessary to complete your ensemble. As soon as you are dressed, run out and ju p into your car. Clf you don't have a car, then simply get into the nearest one. After all, this is only an experiment and a car is a car., Is everyone ready and in the car? Well, we'll wait a minute to be sure everyone is ready. Dum-de-dum. All right now? Good. Now then, forget your present surroundings and try to imagine these circumstances. It is four-thirty in the morning and you are packed into a car with nineteen other hunters and everyone's col- lateral. Your feet and nose are frozen, and the horrid music on the radio would keep WhistlerYs mother awake. Nevertheless you must smile pleasantly and not let anyone guess how enthusiastic you.arent.. It seems as though you'll never reach your destination but finally you arrive in all your glory. QV, of Everyone must now jump ambitiously out the car and look around to get his bearings. Of course it doesn't actually matter where you as long as there is at hand an acre of land taining at least twenty trees and a few stones. CA briar bush or two would make for a more real- istic setting but we can get along with none., Next it would be well to unpack your equipment. It is imperative that you have at least fifty BTG COR' .. f different pieces of equipment Cpreferably newl. uf' A ' u,.r in the social circle? :.l.'.l .I X Q fs A rx 'I 1 lf' :fn 'gl , ' null .VLJ l H I Nj 49 It doesn't matter what it is or should be used for as long as you have it. Simply everyone has loads of equipment, and who wants to be a square As a final preparation before you start skitting through the trees, suppose you take one last look at the picture you received when you bought your equipment. That's right, the one of that strange looking creature on four legs, with twolmmnst protruding directly above the ears. Remember a good hunter always A brings home the game he went after. Always look at this picture be- fore shooting at anything! Now everyone may go out hunting for exactly one hour. By that time with luck some of the more resourceful and experienced hunters will have found some nice, sympathetic person with a warm fireside on whom they can impose for the rest of the day. Be back in an hour or find your own firesidel Especially lucky people will catch something they may inform their family is a deer. The rest will have to think of something both believable and thrilling to relate. Those of you who forgot your gun may tell your stupid wives that deer may be killed in other ways. My best wishes go to those of you who can't think of a good story. When everyone has his facts straight and has assumed the right air of superiority he may trek back home. June Legare '51 4654-IH?-Iii?it65'X-X'GHSHE-DHI-EHQKWHHQ GEOMETRY Have you ever taken geometry? We tell you it's sheer torturetry. Arcs, angles, parallelograms, By two-fifteen you're awfully You work and work till you go And then call Euclid an awful The Greeks they founded it in chords--- bored. mad, Asst. cad. their dayg They should have kept it there, we say. Axioms, theorems, and propositions Make for crabby dispositions. When asked a question, answer What's a square? You tell us! we must. But all in all it isn't so bad, Even though we do sound mad. We really don't mind it Khear But see if we take it another us cheerl, year. Sally Harris '51 and Carol Cooper '51 RED TRUCK Freddie own's a red truck ---- Boy he makes it flyl Once he gets it started, He's off through the sky. He takes He takes Freddie's behind the wheel Everywhere it goes. it to the ball games: it to the shows, When nRedd1en breaks down, Gee, that's a shame! But you know that Freddie Get's it fixed again. Poor little nReddieu Really gets pushed around, 000 ..-f- ff--t an lifvrn 4 Mer 'Cause when Freddie get's in it He really goes to town. Shirley Dorow '51 MORNINGS WITH JUNIOR You just had a very wonderful weekend and you're dreaming hap- pily about it when someone opens your door yelling at the top of his lungs. The next thing you know your little brother is jumping up and down on your stomach. Of course the yelling brought you out of drean- land, but you were still only half awake. The jumping wakes you up altogether. 'Get off my stomach before you kill me, you yell at him. Gosh, Sis, I didn't mean to,' he says. After that phrase you have nothing to do but smile at him and say, 'That's certainly all right,' all the time wanting to wring his little neck. At that his freckled little face breaks into a grin and he says, nBut after all it is six o'c1ocklH You give a mighty groan and turn over for some more wel- come sleep. ' But that is not what Junior thinks! The next thing you know he has opened the window all the way and a very cold wind comes blowing in on you Kit is only fifteen below outl. -C-c-c-close that windowln you yell at him. He closes it with a bang that the whole town pro- bably heard. Your mother comes to the door to get Junior down to breakfast. He leaves with her help, yelling all the way that he hates breakfast and refuses to eat it. You turn over for the rest of your sleep, but it seems that you just get back to sleep when Junior is back again. 'Hey, Sis, you better get up. It's quarter past sixln The fact is that Bill won't be by to walk to school with you till eight forty- five anyway. But with Junior up you know you won't be able to sleep any more. As your mother leads him out again you think you might at least be able to lie there and get a little more rest, but again Junior thinks differently for he is now banging on his drum as loudly as he can. Muttering and disgusted you decide to get up. Oh, how you gg love these mornings with Junior! Judy Cooper uxssssssuasuswwswfss THE SECOND CATHY DREW ly story is not a very happy one, I'm afraid. You see I'm every- thing a teenager wouldn't want to be. First of all, my mother named me Abigail, and that alone would, be a black mark for a girl and enough to give her an awful inferior- ity complex. I also have homely brown hair, which is straight as a string, buck teeth, and pimples. I look like a bean pole and, worst of all, I have to wear horrible old metal-rimmed glasses, which my mother says are more practical than plastic ones. Mother braids my hair in little stringy pigtails and I wear babyish cotton dresses, as though I were in third grade instead of a junior in high school. I've never been able to be like other girls my age because Mother and Dad are very old fashioned, and since I'm an only child, they just hate for me to grow up. Today as I was walking home from school all alone, I watched the other kids with their friends, laughing and joking. Cathy Drew and Bob Smith passed me but they neither saw me nor spoke to me. Cathy is the vice-president of the junior class and head cheerleader. Bob is president of the senior class and is captain of the basketball and football teams. After watching them go by I made up my mind that I wasn't going to be an old witch any longer. I was going to be beauti- ful. I had saved forty-five dollars from babysitting and that was go- ing to make me beautiful. The minute I got home I told my mother my plan and to my surprise she approved and offered to help me. Early Saturday morning I left for Kenney's Department Store. It was the biggest store in town and had just everything in it. First I went to the dress departmentswhere I bought the most dreamy little blue taffeta dress. fOhl I forgot to tell you that that night there was to be a big dance and my mother had fixed me up with a date with someone. I d1dn't know who, but I could imagine what he was thinking as he looked forward to our date.J Then I went to the shoe department and I bought my first high-heeled shoes. Then I was off to the beauty salon. I had my hair fixed first and they fixed it to look marvelousg then I had a manicure and next I had a lesson on how to make up. On the way home I stopped and was fitted with glasses. They were light blue K to match my dress? and were shaped like butterfly's wings. When I got home,I was so nervous that I couldn't sit still a min- ute. I couldn't eat any supper because I was so nervous and that up- set Dad because he believed I should eat the right foods'at the right tlmbe After supper I started the routine which had been mapped out for me in the book on dating I had read that afternoon. First of all I layed out all my clothes. Then I bathed and dressed. By seven-thirty I was ready for inspection and the boy CI hoped? wasn't coming until eight. I guess I passed,because my father hardly recognized me. It all seemed as though I were Cinderella and my fairy godmother had changed me into a beautiful princess. At last eight o'clock arrived and at two minutes past eight the doorbell rang. Mother answered it and I heard her say, 'Hello Bobg Abigail will be right down,' but I still couldn't imagine-who it was. Finally I got up courage to go downstairs and who should be there but Bob Smith, the Bob Smith! Well, I can tell you I was about ready to fall through the floor! He looked up and suddenly he looked as though he had been slapped on the back hard. Finally he said, 'Well, hello Abb1e.' Now I had never liked my name, but 2Abb1e' seemed very cute. We went out the door and were whisked off to the dance in his car. All evening Bob kept saying nice little remarks that sent me walb ing on clouds, things such as, Gee you're pretty, or Boy, you've changed.' 'The stag line cut in all evening long, much to Bob's dismay Now it's a month later and how times have changed. I now have a senior class ring on the third finger of my left hand and since Cathy Drew has gone, I'm now vice-president and head cheerleader. In fact I'm practically the second Cathy Drew. Judy Bates '55 wafainwwsuawuisa THE SERENADE Tommy Jordan sighed. He had to sigh several times before his friend, Johnny Lee, asked, 'What's wrong?' 'Everythingi I took Ann to a movie about old Mexico and now she's crazy about dashing Spaniards. Nothing will satisfy her but a serenade in the moonlight, or some such fool1shness,' Tommy lamented. 'The problem is solved,' Johnny said. 'Serenade her.' Tommy scowled and said, 'Don't be funny. You know I can't slngg you've said so a hundred t1mes.' 'That's so,' admitted Johnny. The two sat in moody silence for a while. Then Tommy sprang up. 'I've got itl' he shouted. 'What?' asked Johnny. 'A record playerl' cried Tommy. 'We go and play romantic records under Ann's window and she'll think I'm singingl' 'What do you mean 'we'?' demanded Johnny. 'We1l, I stand in the moonlight and move my lips and you hide ln the bushes and play records,' Tom y explained. Johnny was not enthusiastic but he agreed. Johnny decided to use Vaughn Monroe's voice. Carrying a Vaughn Monroe album, the record player, and a battered guitar for Tommy to pretend to strum, the two set out. When they reached Ann Kings home, Tommy spotted Ann in the win- dow ihe had sent her a note telling her to expect a serenadel, and hastily Johnny, with the record player, hid behind a tree. Tommy stepped out into a patch of light and announced, 'I will sing a sweet, sentimental ballad that always makes me think of you, Ann.' 'Mule Tr-a-a-a1n,' blared the record player. 'Turn it off, stupldi' howled Tommy. But Johnny, sensing trouble, had left the instant he realized the mistake. 'Tom y Jordan, if you think you're funny, you're not! Never speak to me again, you beastl' cried Ann, fiercely. 'What's all that infernal racket2' thundered the voice of Ann's father. '0h, oh,' muttered Tommy. -Hr. King was notably short-tempered. Tommy tried to escape, but Mr. King spotted him. 'I might have known it was you, Tom Jordan,' howled the old gentleman. nYou have humiliated my daughter and disturbed my sleep. I never want to see 'our ugly face again, see? If you aren't off this property before I coint five, I'm getting my shotgun. One--two--N Tommy waited to hear no more. He fled. Three weeks later, after Tommy had moved to another town, he received a postcard from Canada. It said:nDear Tommy, It was an accident. Johnny. P. S. Please send my clean shirt and a pair of socks. I don't think I'm coming home for some t1me.n Flora Fisher '55 auwwwwuwuwswuww Elie' 4' fe- - V l M sift.. Spring ls here, The ducks have comeg Soon duckllngs will be near. Robins again cheep, Nestlings soon will peep, Spring has come. William Hood '55 wwawwuwawswwuuuw BASKETBALL Basketball,as you all know, Has five men. They can't be slow. They get the ball and race the floor And make a basket to raise the score. The two guards have their men to watch, While forwards sink their fancy shots, The center taps the rebounds in ----- That's the way a team can win. A field goal adds two points to the score, While a charity throw may add one more. If the ref makes a decision you don't like, Take it with a smile, don't try to fight. The game goes hard and baskets come slow. After five fouls you're out and must go. After the game you're in the showerg You won the game and feel much prouder. George Recos '50 Frederick Elliott '51 -els we 'HERE LIES HENRIETTA,---' Hello! Let me introduce myself. My name is Henrietta. Yes, Henrietta! Isn't it awful? You don't understand how awful it is to be named that unless you are. For a while I went on strike and refused to answer to the horrible nicknames one takes on, but it didn't work. My mother only got angry because I didn't come when called and when one of my girlfriends called me over to invite me somewhere I d1dn't answer so she invited someone else. I guess 1t's just my lot. My mother can't seem to understand how cruel she was. She thinks it's a beautiful name, but I don't know what I did to de- serve lt. I think when I get married I'll name my daughter Ann or maybe Jean or Nancy--anyway something as simple as possible. I have no brothers or sisters, so they got out of it. When I was little it didn't matter because all the grown-ups called me 'Honeyn, the girls called me 'Gir1ien and the boys just d1dn't speak. Going through the awkward stage was most painful because I not only had an awkward name but an awkward, bow-legged figure and I was clumsy as an ox. Now that I'm a junior everyone seems to notice it more. Always when I'm introduced to someone mother says, 'And this is Henriettaln as though I were a major climax in her life, and always lit never fallsl they say, '0h, Henrietta? My what an odd name. You don't hear that often, do you?' It's always so sweetly done, as if they'd rehearsed it a half hour in front of a mirror. I don't have any name on my warm-up jacket because my Christian name is too long and I can't derive any nickname out of it that doesn't sound awful. It's bad enough when every mornin at school the boys call out, 'Hi Henny,n or, Henry old pall' or ?what's worsel, 'Ettal Long time no seein The girls think they're being sweet by calling me 'Hen, dearln but underneath they're thanking their lucky stars they weren't named what I am. Everyone always asks Mother without fail, Oh was she named for her father?' and Mother tells them every time, 'Oh, no, his name is Albert. We just thought it was a sweet name. We wanted a boy you know. Someday when I'm dead they'll print on my gravestone, 'Here lies Henrietta, who suffered great pain during her l1fe.' No ex- planation will be needed! Jane Iott '55 I' 5 urns : 2 4-IGS 2 Hin m- Z E 77,4 I I I lg: ' IEUFQ. fwnrlh' - 4-' GEXQQEZQ 'YYW Huntin- Hikffi 1 f nr S f- 4 .v ...ff u? U. I Zz? 6 4 0 It i its KW 25 to. TA A late QT ms .ness V4 em h An Eughcc T -'- LVH' LC, His il Ldvuesow-Q, 6 71 1 f PS5 yff' a-SA in ,- ov- o'x :+A vm We vs-'V' L A-Af-3 WA' QQ, :mek 73 U, 1-:omg P , '-I ? Best Looking Best Athlete Most Bashful Most Sought After Most Studious School Giggler Most Excitable Most Talented Best Natured Most Successful Bluffer Least Successful Bluffer Most Indifferent Most Likely to Succeed Nicest Smile Wittiest Neatest Most Talkative Cutest Most Mischievous Most Flirtatious Most Popular Personality Kid Best Actor Best Actress Best Singer 70442: 7040 GIRL Jane Iott Shirley Dorow Betty Russell Carol Cooper Ann Bryant Barbara Barnes Elizabeth Gunter Carol Cooper Sally Harris Jane Iott Vera Varney Jane Iott Carol Cooper Sally Harris June Legare Ann Bryant June Legare Barbara Barnes Barbara Barnes Barbara Merritt Carol Cooper Sally Harris 1-.-1.--:iii Marjorie Harper Ann Yonker BOY George Recos Freddie Elliott Ernest Phillips Robert Thayer William Hood Robert Thayer Alden Phillips Basil Coolidge Robert Thayer Jimmie Johnson Clarke Johnson Jimmie Johnson Basil Coolidge Robert Thayer Robert Thayer Robert Thayer Clarke Johnson Robert Thayer Freddie Elliott Freddie Elliott Freddie Elliott Robert Thayer Clarke Johnson giglg.-u-an-uziinn Basil Coolidge EE ILL W ION PT SCRI 5 DE DISLIKE LIKES E Ship stewardess Husband Farmer ive Ambitious Augumentat Devilish Indust OH 0 3M 3 Q3 m 0 35 D m m 'J o 'H H H U H 5 D1 O M bs U 'U was oi: mfd b:d44+4 O Hv4N4JC0O +lr4fuv d.d D4 4-4 0 m NJ 44 v4+eo m.n E or4b10 0 m 0.0 6 .d44KMd O oQ4mB m .M o 5 H f-1013?-P 034:16 .QQ4-4Clw 3454 a an Ep OID 0,0-r-I Re per Coo d Ps m O Q w m mf4 Q d 0 o hxitbo SSEU 0 00300-1 HHS! 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O44 v u a h v 5 O E1 ID II 0 0 U rim P1 O O 545 8533 gh Pwmln 6 Psi H d Q 0 0' 0' ????????? Nurse Y ck Happy-go-lu arefree pins Using b0bb erst K?g aduate gr 9 Ol hut oqyfa Lnnf4-t 042 To B Ra M B To A sen ooki T208 Ba 1405 r4 ?? oonist Q. gs. 'U0'r'l 00-0+-Vs-4 IOHUI-11-l 000156 U0-2054 ba +9bm 4311r4U OOWOID 431414914 55r-1145 n m 0 +2 m 0 .d 0 Q 44 rl H +4 -4 'U 0 P F4 0 Q ooamndg r-'I Q 0--HO s-1421-Q Q4-3 .H U H O P444 +9 Peas Boys New Sit boys CJ H 330 N10 H H 0 H49 332 535 EEESB l i -Qugfg 1119 d d HJ 6 01153 F1 B bu0'H!U O d 33 H1304 g:d'g IQE 0 G gi: gig 0N4F4 :J H49 H +3 P'0:il4 0 buh P4 HUON UMMQHQHH M d HHUUH 33230239 H3202 433225830 .D H U d 5 U Q 5 +4 U m 5 mnewemse5ssao:3a2ssss:,Eas +3 0 0 D H 0 bs d r4 De r4 P4 U .D +3 0 U -M M as 3z 0 P 'rl +7-P gs mg E45 fS Q. sr ID 0 Al O Q '11 9g3,e H Q Q U U H-Q 0 0 B1 0 H H 8 +3 CO Sc ticed be no ading To Re a Or-I U10-'I gqn Q3 was m 0 use H43 +3 UQ Connie Barnes . . Jimmie Johnson. . Elizabeth Gunter! George Recos J Lucille Cooley. .,. . Carol Cooper Frederick Elliott! Shirley Dorow . . Marjorie Harper . Sally Harris. . . June Legare . . . Barbara Merritt . Ernest Phillips . Nancy Adams . . . Ann Bryant. . . Basil Coolidge. . Alden Phillips. . Carolyn Thayer. . Robert Thayer . Vera Varney.. . Ann Yonker. . . Eva Adams . . . Barbara Barnes. . Judith Bates. . . Msrilee Burnham . Marilyn Edwards . Flora Fisher. . . William Hood. . Jane Iott . . . Clarke Johnson. . Betty Russell . Mr. Robbins . Mr. Bagley. . Mr. Olson . . Mr. Wheeler . . Mrs. Phillips . Miss Dawson . . Miss Amsden . . Freshmen . Sophomores. . Juniors . . Seniors . 'D E952 E125 o o o e o e o e e o 'urhese Loves or Mine' . . . 'Jealous Heart' . . . . . . 'So This Is Love' ocoeooeeehe nMiBsY0lln . 'We Just Couldn't Say Good-bye' O O O I O O O O 0 0 ns n . . . . . . 'Stanley Steamer' . . . . . . . 'Where Are You,fB1ue Eyes?' . . . . . . . .'You're a Character, Dear' . . . . . . . . 'Don't Gamble with Romance' . 'All I NH8d Is a Cow, a Plow, and a Frau' . 'Have I Told You Lately That I Love You?' 0 o 0 e e 0 e e e e 0 .'Babys1tter Blues' e e e o e o e e o e 'Rumors he O C I O 0 O O e'wh0?' o o only 10011811 H9a1't' . . . .'Enjoy Yourself' o e nDaddy's . 'I Only Want a Budfdyi' eeeeeeeeooeoenwhereAreY0u?n eoooeeeeeonIwa.ntYo!lt0wa.ntuen 'My Dreams Are Getting Better.All the Time' o e e' e o e o enCan't Loving Man' oe oeooeeooeonsomedayn . . . . . . . . 'Quicksilver' . 'Little Fish in a Big Pond' . . . . . . .'Sent1mental Me' . . . . . . 'Are You for Real?' . 'I Can't Begin to Tell You' . . 'Try a Little Tenderness' . . . . 'Why Can't You Behave?' .'For He's a Jolly Good Fellow' Q o o o o e e o music, Music, Music' . . . . . . . . . 'I'd've Baked a.Cake' . .'A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes' . . . . . . .'The Old Master Painter' o e e o e e e o e o 0 P-.nshost Ridersn ooeeoooeeooeonuuleqrra-inn . .'Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered' . . . . . . . 'Cry of the Wild Goose' Sally Harris '51 ez+----- -eg. I H O V I E R E V I E W S MOVIE 'Trapped'. . . . . . . 'Nr. Blanding Builds 'Red, Hota and Blue' . 0 e e e e 'Battleground' . . . . 'My Dear SecretarX'. . 'Thieves' Highway . 'Ambush' 0 e e o c e 'Stampede' 0 0 e 0 0 'The Red Danube '. . . 'Gone With the Wind' . 'The Red Sh0eSnve 0 0 'Flight into France' . 'The Hidden Room'. . 'Master Minds' . . . 'Everybody Does It'. . 'The Reckless Moment'. 'Three Came Home'. . . nwh.iI'1p001n0 9 0 Q 0 Q 'Intruder in the Dust' 'One Last Fling' . . . 'Angels in Disguise' . 'Beyond the Forest'. . 'The Devil's Henchmen' 'A Dangerous Profession 'Once Upon a Dream'. . 'Outcasts of the Trail' nThB SDBRO P1t'. e o e w60dn e o e o o 'It's a Great Feeling. 'Riders in the Sky'. . 'Tough Ass1gnment'.. 'The ThP68.t o o e 0 0 'Tell It to the Judge' nTI'811's Endn. 0 0 0 s 'The Big lheel'. . . nFBU.d1n' e e His Dream House'. . . .P -2?-2551-52-if-2'e-Z?'l?-Zi-iI'9i'iHZ-65-XM-Ii--Hi--I? STUDY FTWIOD 5R Cntr 215 A ORM IF3g 'i' 429 f Hp s i 'IIN . It M REMINDS gg gg . . Chemistry laboratory . P. H. S. gymnasium . . . . . Petersham 0 0 e Q 0 Hot lunches . . . . . . Town meeting . .Office practice class . . . . . Quaker Drive . . . . . Deer week . .The cloakroom . . .Swift River ee o eeTheratS . . .Dancing classes . . The French class . The 'Robbins' nest . P. H. S. senior boys . ,Passing all tests . . . Changing classes . . .The seniors , Geometry class . P. H. S. Janitor day of vacatiolm 0 QL8.St . . . . The student body 0 0 .Athol . . .The faculty . . Teaching Graduation . Freshmen 0 e e .Dear Pe Hn Sq . Grammar school gardens . . . Last day of school . H. S. basketball teams . . .English composition e ex' e e e cards . . .Absence excuses . . Two-fifteen p.m. . . School Committee . . . .Record hops : ,sf 0 , 5 1 'ffiuf F R S hm. fuk - K xv . ' 1 ik' ny? 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VJ lffflen tazy FIRST GRADE ECHOES A small child should be taught to lead a well balanced life: therefore school activities should be divided into three portions: scholastic, physical, and social. During the past year we have tried to follow this plan. All of the requirements in reading, spelling, penmanship, and arithmetic have been met. All the reading tests have ' been passed by all of the pupils. Many library books have been read for pleasure, information, and as models for oral compositions. We have studied about Indians, Pilgrims, Eskimos, the Dutch people, and the holidays. This spring we are going to have a nature club which will help us in our study of wild flowers, birds, and animals. Games, dances, and exercises have helped to keep us physically at ease during our school day. Three parties have been given. The first was a lively, exciting Halloween party, the second was a happy Christmas party with a tree and presents, and the third was a Valen- tine party with postmen and many valentines. Thus we hope a founda- tion has been given each child that will never need a remedial program. The members of the first grade are listed with the picture taken by Mr. Van. Patricia Gash left us in December to go to live in Barre. Miss Cobb uswurwssssssswswwaws SECOND GRADE I The second grade has had many good times this year. We have had parties at Halloween, Christmas and Valent1ne's Day. Our class also took part in a patriotic program in February. The projects we have worked on have been interesting and we feel we have learned a great deal. We have studied about the Indian, the Eskimo, and the Dutch. For our spring project we organized a nature club and took many interesting walks and collected all kinds of things, including seeds, berries, stones, and insects. We have had a very happy year. cp The members of the second grade are listed with their picture. Q , F4 Irs. Bates wsswsswusuusssssssus ' THIRD AND FOURTH GRADES as When school opened in September there were twenty-nine pupils so enrolled in grades three and four. si 2: During the fall term we took part in the campaign to raise money for the Ch1ldren's Medical Center Fund. Our room collected more money than any other in our school. In November Ann Swift entered our school, coming here from Wor- cester. Kathleen Yonker came back to school, having recovered from the illness which had kept her home since last spring. Our Christmas Party was a very happy occasion, with one excep- tion--Richard Kudron had left us a short while before to attend school in Belchertown. This left our membership at thirty, eleven in the fourth grade, and nineteen in the third grade. You can see who we are if you will look at our picture. Miss Reid -x--:z-u-ax-xz-az-4:--:e-::--:x-e1-x-::-::--mz--z:-ea-H- FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADES When we came back to school in September we were surprised to find that we had Mrs. Clark for a teacher. Mrs. Hallberg was in the hospital and did not come back to us until October. When we knew that Hrs. Hallberg was at home we sent her a sunshine box, which pleased her im ensely. In October Hr. Magee, our new Audubon teacher, came to us for the first time. We have learned much about conservation and have en- joyed our Audubon course very much. In December Richard Morris came from North Brookfield and joined our fifth grade. He did not stay with us long because on March 13 he left us to return to his own home in Worcester. On February 9 our class went on a bus trip to Barre to hear a lecture by Allan Cruickshank, one of the most famous naturalists in our country. This lecture was sponsored by the Massachusetts Audubon Society. In March our class formed a nature club with officers as follows Hermas Swope, Presidentg Elaine Elliott, Vice-President, William Russell, Secretary: and Patricia Thayer, Treasurer. Many members of our class made bird houses which were to be put up at their homes to attract the birds. For the rest of the year we will be working hard to pass and we will also be preparing material for our annual exhibition. Mrs. Hallberg swuuuwasswussswuuwuw L dig. s'!4gf iff irq? Jinx, 1 am , 4144 7010654 -w 21- I- I - AH 'PC F1547 mow, LEFT TQ ggsagf ANN swrrw, MIORAELE THAYRR, JUUI'H cuaxraa, Yvouws ADAHA, DORIS au5gaLL, Rsxvxx LAwsoN, HELEN KNAPP, ALIUE VARNHV, AWD MILDRED il1VJ:Aff'Wi3. ICIWARD PASSETT, LAWRMNCFI BALDWIN, EARLH KING, '37-.RALDINE 5v7fQ, FAJVARL wwwwpLL, SHARON QHTCHINSQN, SANDRA BAQQHS, srvwwv Lawmwa, nowa- Las PATUWIQ, Auf RGVNONT Dowow. Qggvu ROW: RICHARD CLARK, GILBERT xrww, DowALn nf.Ar1t, AiTF'H DwfnQ, nscwaxv w676W, 'Rayman RANKS, LLOV' HPHAw, Avo QAAL ipggg. ARSBYH: awwamw QLARK, aawua FOUTALL, Aww yATHLmRw Yowxaw. ThACHER:MISS .Tl'.-l.,- 1 I FIRST ROWL-'LEFT TOWRIURT: ALMA ADAMS, FRANCES ADAMS, KAY BURNHAM, ELAINE ELLIOTT PATRICIA THAYER, ALICE DOROW, MAUREEN BALDWIN, AND MARGARET MAC ASKILL. ROW: FLOYD BALDWIN, BERNARD BALDWIN, WILLIAM RUBY, HARRIEIIT DAME, ELAINE BANKS, EIIIRE ANDERSON, WILLIAM RUSSELL, DAVID BUELL, AND ARLAND BARNES. THIRD ROW: JAMES RUBY, PAUL LA POINTE, RICHARD MORRIS, RICHARD HOOD, LEE CLARKE, ERMAS SWOPE, RICHARD COOLEY, FREDRIK MARSH, AND MRS. HALLBERG. ABSENT: NAN PAULEY. D ALE!!! Class of '45 James Barnes is attending Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. Florence May Cooley is living at home and is managing the Highland Beauty Salon in Barre. Glenn Lawson is now living in Iowa and studying to be a chiropractor. Gordon Mitchell is living in Petersham. Doris CNelsonJ Coolidge is living in Walden Breezes, Concord, Mass. Ruth fNewburyJ Bassingthwalte is living in Petersham. John LePoer' is living in Petersham and attending Worcester State Teachers College. He is married to Ann Withington. Leo LaP01ntg is living at Dexters in Petersham. Class of '46 Bernard Barnes Jr. is working at the Erving Paper Mills in Erving, Mass., and living in Petersham. M. Kathryn Brunelle is one of the telephone operators. She is living in Petersham. Constance KBurdettl Hall is living in Hubbardston. Laura Knowles has resigned at the telephone office and is doing free- lance typing. ShiP16y CPPGDIBD LaPointe is living at Dexters in Petersham. Gabriel Recos Jr. is attending Stockbridge School of Agriculture, Amherst, Mass. Clifford Upham is living on West Street in Petersham. Class of '47 Virginia Bates is working in Leavitts in Orange, and is living in Petersham. Robert Belden is attending Clark University where he is majoring in mathematics. He is working part-time in Hutchinson's store and living in Petersham. Stuart Bryant is living in Petersham and working in the Union Twist Drill in Athol. Rosalie KC1arkJ Vitello is living in Athol and working in Grants department store in Athol. May LePoer is taking nurses training at Hahneman Hospital in Worces- tG! e Rosemary KSull1vanJ Hayes is living in Barre Plains. Evelyn Upham is working in the Mary Lane Hospital in Ware. Lawrence White is living with relatives in New Hampshire. Class of '48 Lois CAdamsJ Cooley is living in Petersham and working in the Union Twist Drill. Carlyn Bryant is taking nurses training at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. Sally Cooley is living in Petersham and working in the Worcester County Bank in Barre. Arllne Dorow is living on East Street in Petersham. Ernest Johnson is attending the University of Massachusetts and liv - ing in Amherst. Richard Warrington is living in Petersham and working on his father's farm. Class of '49 Beverly Elliott is attending Simmons College in Boston and is living there Kathryn Baldwin is living and working at Mr. Fisher's. Robert Douthit is attending New Hampton School, New Hampton, N. H. Melvin Merritt is living in Petersham and working in the Barre Woolen Mill. Class of '25 Edith CAndersonP Mara is living in Oxford, John W. Barnes is the road supervisor in Petersham. Margaret Barnes is a waitress at College Inn in South Hadley, Mass. Mabel KCutlerD Russell is living in Petersham. Amelia C-Jacobson! Swanson is living in North Platte, Nebraska. Edward A. Nelson is working in the Optical Co.in Southbridge, Mass. Clarence N. Russell is an artesian well driller. He is living in Petersham. Lillian G. Smith is deceased. She died in 1929. Elizabeth Cwoodsl Varney is living in Petersham. Fifty Years Ago As explained last year,there was no graduating class fifty years ago. There was no high school in Petersham between the years 1896 to about 1908. Shirley Dorow '51 'as-:see-1:--:eeeaesem-as-:sez-4:-az-zeee-new KEY TO THE KINDERGARTEN PAGES 1. Jimmie Johnson and Connie Barnes 10. Marjorie Harper 2. George Recos 11. Melvin and Barbara Merritt 3. Alden Phillips 12. Robert and Carolyn Thayer 4. Jane Iott 13. Barbara Merritt 5. Carol Cooper 14. Eva Adams 6. Ann Yonker 15. Elizabeth Gunter 7. Jane Iott and Judy Bates 16. Lucille Cooley 8. Flora Fisher 17. Connie Barnes 9. Alden and Ernest Phillips 18. Shirley Dorow iZ 2i'-23-41-5561-4.4-pi ' -X--Di' 'iH5'3l'-31-9365-91-171--lhi' 1 M ' -y. . w with kk , A X , . X A , f f -A 2 Lfceng,-,,7 ' I ' l av' V ' Q N L, j., -'Q K 55 ' '. 'V .L . , M' ,Q9 ,K 'L ,lfff 1- , A K ' K A ukxk t ,,v :g,wfL' 1Lh, 5 :f'i P1 - ' I V gr, f W , ,. 'Q Q -'L ?' , . f i 4 fv .,f3'lf5f M i , - if 5 ,wifi f' ..,, M -5-.5 1 fi X , f 2 1 I K ,,,:5zfIj?::3:,: -' - , X 4 , ,. NA V Q, 45' 5 K: ,Q V ' 0 if - H X11 AV 4- 4,1 ,V , If . an . , X .. ,sg c 9,9--N 'N-.N H 4 . V- A Xifvg : f m f i- ff, WMU .wi 5 5 if V , 4 XV T, . , it w i . Spam ,fr 5 . , lf., I - if 5, f QQ ,ff . -- , ' , .. ,, :I3 Q' ' f f.x1::LL'tqTAf'V'Y'- A, Q v gf' haf' . xx I x tl V' ' 4, , ' U X-. A f H4 I i, X czsifx .- ,1g+'fL , . ' P , , . 5 ff A, . 1 If lffxl, J, y ffm., X ' . 1, ,gg ' 'R -fb-,QM N f , ff X . u 1 J g XX u ' ' 'g fi 'Nx - . X if , ff f A R1 f ,., Z V 2, , fy 4, A . U I , X N xx E R., ' f K 1 F' 'K A 4 if if f x . ff , ' ' f 4 ,M , '- ,f , :A .A,. - - XX X, :JA ': 3 5. 'L U0 I ftacfuate of the Elan of 1950 ,V V I ' f 1 X ' 1 - Q ,f 5 3 jam 3 ,, -mg: - X 'f A fl 5 ' 5 f ' 4,-fg ' EZ, ' gf? , 5 fi 5 Qi .1 ,f 'W ' is i is ,gh f A . r 2 r 'ri 5' J W Af! i I-'L N - ' M! .gh Q W ifjg f T H I rg' jwj: 1 V - , I Y - ' 2 .61 X 5 pa, yy , . N,-.Fmt ll Q uid .gf ff P .u - QQ g' u .AV-Af' '?-fri, , :ini- lib E ! '! ,Hi ' ' iw 1 M . . . b Aww-.-f,., , ,ggQ.,: ' -- .., - -,,:, ' ,1 - ,.v..lh.x It I wW ,in ..f-.Q-4 I ' , ' ,-...E-.-we--,fx , -,au-an -qqsf. ..-wr ,ew 1 PHL SQWQQQQQW VUL SMFLQLQZZW f--..-' .qv- w J Q 6 J, , I fi 11' 'Wi B . xi I n4 ' V 4-,,,.f..f?'f I2 4,7 V V Alla' 1 -'J 4.21 ,, f I 9 his f Q , 'ff' Wx llmilli, ' F I 5 -hz! 52, ,ff , , ,l : , X ., ,gn gn. K, , Q 'ff i lg 5 f ! 'if' ': b , ' ' ilu ' fi ' ' ,fQ:if2 if ,f , R I U: N Eg' rf' . X Q' 0 0 kay? . 49' lv- ,nur -M,,..sw'- UU! l COM?LIIfIEN'I'S CJ? UNION TWIST DRILL CQ oi . I O 9 II ' ' R ww - - . K Z? ' fi 4B 1 Y -:hi vqtrtl lq ia if -O T49 QIQUIY ' ' I QQ , 52Ei.i':,1.1,':'4g,.fnm11fNff1:1v gg , 11 LE'-i?g-wfgwgyay 4 , - 4 ATHOL, MAS SAC I-IUSE. T T5 HUTCHIN ONS STDRE V1 X for N Yxq Q 6 Yovxwm I W 'eo' .0 -MQ 9 Ur MCHEWAUGINN We can think of no better message to the graduating Class of '50, than the words of Chauncey H. Depew: 'The sheet-anchor of the Ship of State is the common school. Teach, first and last, Americanism. Let no youth leave the school without being thoroughly grounded in the history, the principles, and the incalcu- lable blessings of American liberty. Let the boys be the trained soldiers of consti- tutional freedom, the girls the intelligent lovers of free men. Our very best wishes to you all, and remem- ber alvays-we are singularly blessed, in being a part of this land of opportunity. Frank and Ruth Hodgkins 0 10 6483 COIIPLIIIENTS OF T W I N DAI KY FA R M F. U. ELLIOTT TH BEST IN PASTEUKIZED GUEKNSEY MILKQB. CREAM P 3 Q E R s H A m, u A s s A c H U s E T T s HTEL. 119-2 BUTTEKNUT DAIRY BAK sfxA1nw1ciAes1AJ1,oUN'rA m SERVICE nourn 122 PETEHSHAM, IASS. Becker Junior Qcllesge Worcester Massachusetts A CAREER SCHOOL Accountancy Medical Secretarial Business Administration Executive Secretarial Merchandising Commercial Journalism Administrative Secretarial Secretarial Finishing Stenographic Secretarial Fall Term begins September 15 Catalog on request Authorized to confer the Associate in Science degree YOUR COMMUNITY COLLEGE A Coeducational Offers Two-year Courses in ENGINEERING KMechanical, Electrical, and Industriall BUSINESS MANAGEMENT PRELEGAL ACCOUNTING PREDENTAL LIBERAL ARTS Graduates have transferred to the junior year of over sixty colleges and universities throughout the United States xVORCES1'ER J umoa Conuzns KA two-year Community College Operating Within the Y.M.C.A.D Telephone: 5-6101 766 Main Street, Worcester COIPLII NTS OF M. J. Bf4.l'l'TON PAINTS AND SUPPLIES BABES, IASS. -' - 'r--wh .rs 082100 TRY 2 - 6' tag nest V s-,YQ Q4 We aesr. Q- 1 . I'iE.lD'S 'IKUCKING SERVICE ANYTHING - ANYWHERE - ANYTIME Qs P 'Q - TRAC TOR YVOKK A 5Pf.ClALTY EES-t S12!'00t, Petersham, Massachusetts Telephone 129-4 ASSOCIATED WITH ff f 9 1-xl pr r'N HNAN 5 LA KKLSS Q DAILY TRIPS TO BOSTON AND WORCESTER. Just a Friendly Reminder ALGEPINE OASIS LUNCH ONETTE AND DAIRY BAR Barre, Hass. Open 6:50 A.M. - 11:00 P.M. 1 COHPLIMENTS OF qu, lil xlsw Nil I f'fe f'lflT lx U or ., -'g,JJ1xf 312 MAIN STREET ATHOL, MASS. TELEPHONE 123 Complete COIPLHENTS' OF Real Estate Service mg: fl r'r 9 ' r' ,mx fr f' EDMONDJ., ROBERTH. AND UL LN-I fd-Eli D -r LN-J JV!-:lib Q PRED D. Tousle-NANT Realtors and Yqssociafes KBNDALL LANE C I S Main Street BARRE, IASB. G a Ph M F hb Q Phonezaww 4 69 nd 61416 '1 HEALY BROS. GENERAL INSURANCE - SURETY BONDS SUMMER STREET BARRE, MASS. BENGTSON HARDWARE CO. Headquarters for B1rd's Roofing and Paints of all kinds and a good place to trade. 4 WEST LYNDE STREET Tel. 453 Gardner, Mass. Compliments of T S IFI D I FI S ! Offi F Add Mh C ul i'Z' Y'-'ez S'1'r ' FARNUM, QFHCS EQUIPMENT Szgrv ice 10 School st. Athol. Mass IOS Exchange SI., Tel, l92fVV ward G. Farnum Arhol, Massachusetts O Y 0 M U C ' A 0 JOSEPH EMCOX JEWELER 486 MAIN STREET ATHOLa MASS- W. N. POTTER GRAIN STORES, INC. GRASS SEEDS, SUPPLIES, BAY, STIAW 8 COAL Admhluau. I-IAMES PHOTO SHG? FlLMS'CA1XflERA5' SUPPLJEJ S ' 'S' ETC. STUDIO, ATHOL, IASS. LORINDA POULTRY FARM Donald and Delight Haines Oven-Ready Poultry Fresh.Eggs Friday Delivery East Street Tel. 139-3 Petersham Compliments of HARRY GOLDSHER'S CLOTHING STORE 455 Main Street Athol, Massachusetts Telephone 1008 Compliments of ALLEN OIL CO. RANGE and FUEL OIL Athol, Mass. COMPLIM NTS OF A FIU EN D A BEAUTY AID FOR EVERY NEED MA IQJQRIE SM I T I-1,5 BEAUTY SHO? ROOK 6 TEL. 1570 FIRST NATIONAL BANK BLDG. ATHOL, MASSACHUSETTS COHPLIMENTS or ' 'IJHE fifxfifif PUBLISIIING CO. INC. 'I'I'IE. BAKIQE. GAZE'I ,I'f. PRESS r fx fx sq nm srmm KLIIIJ Q ATHOL snons REPAIRED COHPLIIBNTS OF ATI-I OL COAL CO. Arson IASSACHUSETTS l J - Y-- COMPLIMENTS OF r' WA 5 I-I IN G 'IO N IE WEL ERS OF ATHQL COMPLIMENTS OF WE5 TE K N AU TO STCDK.E A11-jQL M ASS. Compliments of Ray 8: Woody's Shell Station 1590 Main Street Telephone 1929 Arhol, Mass. ' Compliments of I r I' f' I' ' r r' f' rl SWA AD AL .IJLJS I 15 L M l :-I OPTOMETRIST Athol Massachusetts GARDNER PAINT 8: WALL PAPER CO. KQO53 Q34hI K9Ni 2 Q DISTINCTIVE . S'2'J2',fQfEEsRS 264 CENTRAL STREET WALL PAPER ARTIST GARDNER. MASS- CSEITIQQE MATERIALS AND PHONE 170 VARNISHES o lnMh3 7 frfIrrH1N0WR'lfM ' MUSICAL 406 MAIN ST. ATl-lOL,l IA55- THF - I ' ATI-IQL sfxvmss sfxmiq Acne! ron ussncnusrrrs SAVINGS BANK LIP! IKSURAICK GCU LD'S oPPos1'rE Y.M.c.A. A'rHoL, MASS. HALLMARK GREETING CARDS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Compliments of cf 7 77 7 u ANDLR5 CN S Atho1's Friendly Uptown Store Compliments of BLANGHAIHPS Jenney Station - ,- TiF::'ria:?x::e. A KI' H UK E. PKEBLL Accessories 1728 MAIN STREET ATHOI., MASS. Tel. 1931 TRUCKIHG cournruzwrs or K. I RED! -M IX CONCK ETF. mans, MASSACHUSETTS 'rnnnrnoun 193 7 Hl C QHIU C 1365 MAIN STREET - An-non., MASSACHUSETTS - PHONE 637 A COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE ALBERT J. REGIENUS LUMBER TELEPHONE 'E' BARRE, MASSACHUSETTS UPTOWN CLEANERS Paullsgarage KEN ABARE AND HOWARD sr-uiw, PRoPs. QUALITY WORK AT MODERATE PRICES I W' Pick UP And Df'H'W S 'I a n S Complete'Auto Body and Front End Alignment ' Towing Frame and Axle Straightening 1503 Main Street 'lf 6lCpl'10flC 1878 Safety Glass Installed Arc and Gas Welding Painting 963 Main St. Athol, Mass. ATHOL, MASSACHUSETTS Phones: Office 34-W Home 34-R 7fZcTemzeg'4 7714144 Sala Dealers in Hudson Motor Cars ' zzzo MAIN STREET ATHOL, MASS., Athol Clothing Co. Established 1892 MENS AND Boys. CLOTHIERS EEZIQLNE ATHOL, MASS. FURNISHINGS gnhiuin gill. QI. Efrmrlg, 311: Antiques bought and sold Qllletersham, Cillllassnrlfgxtsetts mel. Iljrtersham 127 r Hfw r H' f' r r - r L.. JL. FJJLGLL l.lXlx..CJJl.PfJJLAlJL',.D Plymouth-DeSoto 52 Freedom Street Athol, Massachusetts Telephone 1600 HIGHLAND BEAUTY SALON FLORENCE MAY COOLEY, MCR. J 1 COMPLETE LINE OF BEAUTY CULTURE .xflw f i -f',:Fw n'.' C 55? 15' wffgi, 6 7 ,, 'A' 4, Nu A ' BARRE, mass. TEL- '77 T HE GA KDNEK E LEC TRI C L I SHT COMPANY BARRE MASSACHUSETTS Tnlnn mmf AUT0MA'lflCV monucrs cum' ous William R. Bentley Summci' Street Barre, Mass. 1'aL.us A 'He Sallsfadlon of Qnalltgll 'Remains Long erfflcr 771: E- ?rlcc Has Been Forgotten BRODERICK'S GENERAL STORE WEST STREET Telephone 60-2 BARRE DRUG EDSON V. SEARS, Reg. Pharm. BARRE, Tel. 303 MASS. Complete Camera Department A RTHUR F. TYLER CO. lanufacturers of SASHES, BLINDS, and SHUTTERS 900 HAIN STREET ATI-IOL, MASS. COMPLIHENTS OF f 'F' GARESOSL BROS. 01414 cAP1'roL 'rrlamfaas ussigxgrgghrs C OIPLIHENTS OF Instruction on Piano 'and Piano Accordion Tel. 12-21 Roberta W. Banks COIEPLI HENTS QF - ENQE L, PLUMBEK IARBLE s'rnns'r url-lor. nss. Compliments of r' Hr' r' H- - Br.LCi-JEK s.cKVlC,e 5 IAI JON 20 School St. Tel. 1195 Athol, Massachusetts Compliments of THE VOGUE. Athol lassachusetts COHPLIIENTS OF P' D fi. L A PE. A'rHoL, MASSACHUSETTS The Hilltop staff wishes to express its gratitude to all those who purchased fn space in this book. Compliments of DIA. P1 IVAN VAUGIHAN B! Take your prescriptions to Clark's Reliable Pharmacy Tel. 750 479 Main Street. ATI-IOL. MASS In Drugs, the Prime Essential is Quality In the Druggist, Reliability WCURTAIN SHIP! LITl'LE FILKS CEIITRE Wham qwehe Cerwin! med' GARDNER , MASSACHUSETTS ATHOL CREDIT UNION PERSONAL LOANS REAL-ESTATE LOANS AUTOIOBILE LOANS K ATHOL, HASS. COHPLIHENTS OF iBf:fLJfnfiI515SLJ,C5 SANDWICH SHOPPE ATHOL, MASSACHUSETTS INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS AND FARM EQUIPKENT SEE US FOR YOUR FARM NEEDS ' R1 f l r IPr'r .IAXJI L..Jmi'S 'f'QlJf ' :2 'f ' I yn s. If-XIQIVI LQUIPMENI' CO. 148 MARBLE STREET ATHOL, IASS. TEL. 765 -ni- ofacfzance .gzzevision ompany f HLHPH O N E 19 3 0 2 7 3 C E N T R A L S T R E ET, GARDNER, MASSACHUSETTS Tn. GIGLIIITTI Ann co. DRY CLEANING AND TAILORING TELEPHONE 1407-M 552 SOUTH STIIEET ATNOI., MASSACHUSETTS X Gardner Coal Co. H fl-IEAT HEADQUARTERS, COKE, ANTHRACITE and BITUMINOUS COAL RANGE and FUEL OIL E I 1 GARDNER, MASS.. TEL. 129-W IF l'r's HARD To FIND - SAVE TIME GO FIRST TO GO0D 0W PEARSO 'S iardnert Shopping Center FOR COMPLETE ASSORTMENTS RIGHT STYLES - TOP QUALITY - FAIR PRICES MOBILUBRICATION WA SHING POLISHING MOBIL TIRES TUBES ACCESSORIES School St. Socony 570 School St. Tel. 1745 ATHOL. MASSACHUSETTS BUELL FARM HARRY C. BUELL. PROP, TRACTOR WORK - FARM PRODUCE OLIVER STREET PETERSHAM. MASSACHUSETTS PHONE 101 7? Gardner, Mass . Compliments of THOMAS J. DUANE No. Hain St. Petersham, Mass. PETERS!-IAM 'SH CDE IAEWX I KI NG 2 mile from tom Barre Road W. H. DOUGLAS Lzocsnvnu.: DAIRY FRANKLIN H. JOHNSON MILK AND CREAM U'-fi6'5Q2 GARDNER OFFICE SUPPLY CO. P.L.LEMAY 277 Central St. Tel. 414 GARDNER. MASSACHUSETTS Headquarters For Portable Typewriters HIGHLAND HARDWARE. CO. 1-lfxfawffxraa, PAINTS, GLASS, AND GLAZING. Telephone 311 A HARDWARE s'ronE SINCE 1858 1477 lain Street Athol, Massachusetts Compliments of WALKEW5. 5.251223 515119.11 Athol WALTER F. ROBINSON Contractor and Builder 1899 Main Street Athol, Mass. Telephone 914-W Compliments of ALBERT RAY BIAYA NT CARPENTER ONLY HOME OPERATED PLANT IN ATHOL QUALITY CLEANING .RFXIK.gXE:mf?5 CLEA NERS STORE, PLANT, 165 EXCHANGE ST. 326 CHESTNUT HILL PHONE 285 PHONE 334 COMPLIHENTS OF BAKIQE. SAVINGS BANK BARRE IASSACHUSETTS C OMPLIMENTS OF Mills' Laundry, Athol I Mills' Specialty Shop, Athol Mills' Dress Shop, Orange GEORGE VA! DULAS Licensed Electrician Radio and Television--Sales and Service BARRE Phone M MacMANNIS, 7144541 - Aruor., MASSACHUSEITS 5 in ART' ss ECESTCAURAN T 280 Central Street Gardner, Mass. T H .E F I R 5 'J' NAT J ONAL BANK fN r' - l xJ I' MEMBER OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION BEARD MOTORS, Inc. smaonaschwlsfmu p I sums, MASSACHUSETTS 2 an ' W. W. Woodward Lumber Co. INCORPORATED LUMBER 8: BUILDERS' MATERIALS Athol, Massachusetts KU D YE CA B 1431+ Main St. Athol Mass. COMPLIMENTS OF HCDY I 'Sf KEMNAN'f o'L,Lxuf5HL1N 5 llEN'S STORE AND LADIES' SHOP ATHOL, MASS. QUIKKS 5'rA'r1oN5f4Y ST ORE. ATHOL, IASS. Fl TC H INSURA NCE um STREET ATHOL KASSACHUSETTS , . I ww' CARROLL CUT ATE COSMETICS 405 Main Street M. ZAGER, Dealer 9 Parker su-ee! FITCHBURG, MASS. GARDNER, MASS. F. SUUTARI 8: CO. The Greatest Name in Footwear For len, Women, Boys and Girls 53 Pine St. Gardner, lass. COMPLIMENTS DF ABITE - - ALUNCH . - ORABANQUE1' Q fu f L.q ' 'JU F 'J' T CAMPUS TEA Room J. M.. x.,fX.JL'. JL ffl'..LL1S HE AND RESTAURANT 7 PLEASANT STREET GARDNER. MASS MASSACHUSETTS QUALITY FOODS - PLEASANT ATMOSPHERE F, J. BRAUN, PnoPRlETon Service Brat - - Quality Always 1 - - ' L11 sox 316 GARDNER, MAss. E1 Quan nuns TELEPHONE 1165 POTTER ELECTRICAL CO., INC. 292 CENTRAL STREET GARDNER, MASSACHUSETTS T L.EPHoNE,26.U0 Phone 620 THUMPSIIN 8 PIIEEIIE GULF SERVICE STATION MAIN and MECHANIC STS. An-loL. MASS. COIPLI HENTS OF DR. ROGER BARTON ATHOLQ HASSACHUSETTS AV , Compliments of f E. ESM . ml? 1 . ' rg .WT ral ,V XI .xr Y JFS I Jr Jffrlgjfrx, ,F ' 3 henry d. wood ' 1 beauty Salon I-red G. Tessier-, Prop. starrett bldg. athol, mass. 112 Blain Street Athol, Mass. COIPLI HENTS OF C. B. BEMIS GROCBRIES CANDY ICE CREAI IAIN STREET ATHOL, IASSACHUSETTS . 66 . Xx . . LES STEWART , . Qs. 0 -255 0 'WN DODGE AND PLYMOUTH PASSENGER CARS ..... DODGE mucxs WAIT! SALES AND SERVICE Summer Street BARRE, MASSACHUSETTS Telephone 305 DR. DUANE L. TALCQTI DMD 521 lain Street Athol, Massachusetts Tel e COIPLIIENTS OF DR. RAY FESSENDEN ATHQL IASSACHUSETTS coMPL1MENTs or DK. CAMILLE J. SCI-IMIT BARRE, uAss. TEL 97-2 cournrusnrs or ATI-I OL DA! LY N E W5 TAXI IDEAL CAB H 6 6 0 D. Bl ETTE An-lol. mxss HIGHLAND DA! ,KY Arnor., MASS. FOR STYLE IN YOUNG MEN'S CLOTHES A nm STREET FI 5 E E 'S ATI-IOL, uss ONEY LANGELIEK CAISREN TE K AND BUIL DER TEL. as-3 BARRE nss. 0 E. P. NVINE E TRICAL A LP-GAS APPLI S ARRE. MASSACHUSETTS z O J. F. HIGGINS AND CCJMPANY ESTABLISHED 1900 SERVING THIS TRADING AREA FINE QUALITY FURNITURE FLOOR COVERING 8: BEDDING GAS AND ELECTRIC APPLIANCES Qrittnzfs Hjaclfs RESTAURANT FAMUUSPUPCDRN U N T M M U N SNYDER AND BRI 'ITON FUNERAL SERVICE BARRE MASSACHUSETTS L YMAIXI 'I' HE FLCDRIST 'A GOOD PLACE T0 BUY GOOD FLOWERS' In-nor. rnom: ass-w ms. COMPLIKENTS OF III QM PSOJXI IN SUR ANCE INC. 465 HAIN STREET ATHOL Compliments of WEST ROA D INN DINE REASONABLY, BUT WELL ATHOL CANDY CO. AND RESTAURANT FOOD TASTEFULLY PREPARED, PRomP'rLY SERVED 574 MAIN ST. TEL. see A'rHoL IVOR P. NUZZEY, D. M. D., F. A. C D 52I Main Street ATHOL, MASSACHUSETTS Wax .side Fa rm .al George K. Wilder at Telephone - Petersharn 34 PURE GUEHNSEY lIIK,CREAl,COTTAGE CHEESE ACCHEDITED HERD WE OPERATE OUR OWN PLANT JOHN J. I-IOKRIG AN QUALITY CLEANING AND PRESSING MOTH PROOF 'NO EXTRA COST FOR MOTH PROOFING' TELEPHONE 1289 194 EXCHANGE ST. ATHOL, MASS O A COMPLIHENTS OF BK I 'I TONS M A RK ET BARRE1 MASS COMPLIMENTS OF IFINANS EXPRESS BAKKE., MASSACHU S ET TS TELEPHONE 5-4 Y , cournlumnrs OF .S TONES GA K AGE BARRE unss. DA V1 S H A RDWAK E C O. GARDNER, IASSACHUSETTS SPORT IN G1 QOOD5 KAWLI NS BAS ESA LL SUPPLI ES O I If your clothes are not becoming to you, r' I r- f' W .S C L L A N L A 5, Tgggiggoggdugg.. 87 Pine Street Gardner, Mass. Tel. 2129-M COIPLIIENTS OF A FRIEND COMPLIMENTS OF PLOTKIN FUKNIT UILE 'ATHOL'S LARGEST HOME FURNISHERS' 41 EXCHANGE STREET ATHOL, uss. H . . - GET YOUR BUSINESS TRAINING WHERE BUSINESSMEN GET THEIR HELP Business Administration Secretarial Stenographic Clerical Business Machines FALL TERM BEGINS September 11, 1950 SUMM R SESSION BEGINS July 10, 1950 THE BEST IN BUSINESS TRAINING' -plus EFFECTIVE PLACEMENT SESTSH SEHUUL UF BUSINESS SSIENSE, INS 1010 Main Street Dial 6-5767 Arthur P, Ward Katherine Foley Ward Directors 0 A COMTLIMENTS OF 291522 EQHEEBHQZIQH QQMEAHX TELEPHONE PETERSHAM 119-22 GET RELIABLE HARDWARE SUPPLIES CLF. PAJGE. CO. INC. HARD VVAR17. CIE L BROS. HIGH STANDARD PAINTS AND VARNISHBB ATHOL, MASS. QEL. 153 COHPLII NTS OF WFH 1AT1N:nY' ' 'S COIPLIMENTS OF W. H. KILLAY CO. HXIC. 457 IAIN STREET ATHOL IASSACHUSETTS 6243 Hy' Y . af 7 .FE Q is if X.:-1... . .-.vmg-..m..1gwmw.-.- . 1-v 1 r Q. .vs 4 -ng, '59 we Er wagjf .,,,L 4, A. . l',. -..,, wk. Q jg- . .. . , , -,l.. .fn . UWM A .-,Q V , Y:-,,:,L. .: - :- gr ..., - .iff-1' 1, ' 2, 1, g -' '-. 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