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Page 38 text:
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WOLVERINE 1932 ff X 5 V Q rffraaffike, Iwi M4 ,,f4 AVL, I .ze :.Z.'-1' WM: Iooooooooooooooooooooooool i 'f E LAN- H W af 3 5 0 0 0 ET - 0 .2 3 3 3 3 Class History 3 0 It seems to us that our four years of high school life could be very iittingly rep- 0 0 resented by colors. Upon working this thought out it falls into the following plan. 0 0 Green for the Freshman year. The greenest green imaginable. Poor little scared 0 0 . 1 . . . . 0 0 rats scattllng here and there, blunderlng into Senior Classes and being razzedg 0 0 ducking the merciless torments poured upon us by Sophomores and Juniors, asking Q 0 questions and receiving misleading answers. Oh! could anyone have been as green 0 0 as we!! 0 0 Next comes our Sophomore year-royal blue. The blue of lords and kings, the 0 0 blue of princes and rulers, and most of all, the blue with which to welcome royalty. 0 0 For our new principal, Mr. House, was certainly that! What overbearing, piggish Q 0 little upstarts we must have been, justly deserving the name Sophomore! But it 0 2 was a feeling never again to be encountered, and we are glad we experienced it. 0 0 Then too, we must not forget a slightly deeper shade of blue, a mourning shade 3 with which we felt the loss of one of our dearest friends, Ruth Stoutamire. 0 Red for Juniors, the red of courage, the red of the conquererg and even more the 0 2 orange-red tints of fire. We were filled with determination and purpose. We must 3 go to the heights, and we must work to get our start. Then came the awful fire 3 which partly destroyed our school building. Will we ever forget the leaping red 3 0 flames against the cold, wintery night sky, or the crowded days following, when we 0 0 went to school without a school, the many tardies and excuses. O, what a year! Q 0 For our Senior year, it is fitting to use our school colors, blue and white. The 0 3 blue for sincerity and loyalty and the white for purity of purpose and character. 0 0 We feel that even though we are not able to reach the top, we have our place, and 0 our duty is to fill that place to the best of our ability. We know too, that if we are 0 0 to do our best, we must keep pure in mind, body, and spirit and towards this end 0 0 we will strive since it and whatever goal we have are one. 0 0 i 0 0 0 0 0 2 3 3 3 0 o 0 0 0 'fl 34' ll' 0 0 0 99099999900009000090QOGGGOGGGQGOGGOOOQGGGG
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Page 37 text:
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xW rig! f OQOOOOOOOOOOOOQQOOOQOI .57 .. ., W O LV E R l N E we l 9 3 2 ' f 42 tn 'il eff fl'f'Vf1 . E721 'iff' . q 'H 'gt' 1: ,dine- !,la,.z.:ag??yp5P ! 1, I939 WOLVERINE PAGE 2 : INTERESTING DEBATE T0 BE GIVEN HERE Mr. Ross Stevenson, stu- dent of Wheresis College, will take the afiirmative side of the debate to be given at the High School to-night. The subject of the debate is, Resolved ,that pencils should be sharpened at both ends. Miss Edith Thomas upholds the negative side. -s. H. s.-- ALUMNI NOTES fContinued from Preceding Pagel received when she saw a mouse in her kitchen yester- day. Mr. George Garst is now a promising and prosperous fruit grower in the West. Miss Elizabeth Stevenson is now a teacher of chemistry in Salem High School. Miss Martha Maihl ac- cepts a position as secretary with the Wallar H. Moore Real Estate Agency. Miss Dorothy Williams accepts a position with the James Bostwick Min- strels. Mr. Harvey Sears has re- ceived the contract of erect- ing a new Salem City Audi- torium. Miss Laura Myers has been appointed chief operator in the Bell Telephone Ofiice on Fifth Avenue, New York. Miss Blanche Lyerle and Miss Shirlene Fitzgerald are head nurses at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Miss Irene Linkous, who is considered the best expert at giving permanent waves in New York, has been visit- ing in Salem. Chief of Police Dennis Richardson received 85,000 reward for the capture of Burglar Bill. Mr. Louis Crouch is now the cartoonist for the New York Sun. Miss Ruby Deaton is pleading with the school board to install comfortable benches on the school ground so that adoring lads and adorable lasses may sit down to adore. Miss Lillian Carson and Miss Ellen Burke have pur- chased Russian Wolf hounds to keep away unwanted swains. Miss Mary Bays holder of the Worlds pionship in Typing. Miss Margaretta and Miss Katherine hold very honorable positions in the Congressional Library in Washington. Mr. Garland Bruce has succeeded his father, Mr. F. L. Bruce, as teacher of Junior English at Salem High School. Mr. Barker Webber has been appointed the successor of Mr. J. H. Snapp, teacher of Senior English at Salem High School. Miss Linelle Joyner has been appointed principal of the Kirk Street Kindergarten. Miss Cordelia Cowan is the new matron of the Howl Orphan Home. Mr. Emmet Andrews is teaching mathematics at the University of California. Mr. Emory Garst is now First Lieutenant in the U. S. Army. Mr. Lennis McGhee and Mr. Leo Painter have ac- cepted positions as joint math professors at Harvard Uni- versity. Mr. Robert Driscoll is studying law at Duke Uni- versity. Miss Helen Stump has accepted a position as one of the four secretaries of Salem High School. is the Cham- Hisey Davis Hope to Renew Hitch-Hiking Mr. Russel Cronk and Mr. Bill Hilton, two of Salem's foremost citizens. are taking an active part in the attempt to repeal the ban on hitch- hiking. -s. H. Ll- BEST SELLERS Mr. Frank Francisco and Mr. Bronsy Hudson will re- lease their book, How To Make Teachers Like You, to-morrow. Mr. Greer Robertson and Mr. North Plunkett expect to complete their newest novel. Dyna Might, some time in the near future. ls. H. sf- New Dancing School Opened Miss Blair Wiley, former student of Salem Hi, recently opened a new dancing school in Salem, on the fifteenth floor of the Flatiron Building. The school will accommodate two hundred pupils and will feature the new Wiley Shag so much in demand now. Miss Blair Wiley's Dancing School Open All Hours 'Phone 00000 Aurich A. Woodson Attorney-at-Law Salem, Virginia Howl Orphan Home CORDELIA COWAN Matron W. H. Moore REAL ESTATE AGENCY I I I Phone 63 Grandin Theater M onday-Tuesday WILMA Cox in HWHY PM W cdncsday- Thursday LUCILLE CROCKETT in THE SCREAM Friday-Saturday MILDRED CooK in NOTICE Mr. Wesley Hayden has at last secured a hat which will not give him a headache from being too tight. Mr. Oliver Divers will speak to-night at the City Auditorium on Speed. --s. 1-1. s.- London Limericks Well Received London Limericks, a new comic magazine edited by Gillie Williams, is now on the market and has been very well received by both Lon- doners and New Yorkers. Kuddly Kitty Shop FRANCES DANNER JUANITA CARPER Persian Cats a Specialty Tomato Plants for Sale See RAYMOND THOMAS Registered Stock for Sale DEWITT HARTMAN 'Phone 677 Miss Collette McCluer Classes in French 'Phone 123 Garst Fruit Co. Orchards in INDIANA, IowA AND IDAHO Cure Your Spring F ever at Hobble Hospital Toss Your Cares to the Airs and Enjoy Our MHELL0 BEAUTIFULH l SUNSHINE GIRL ? 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0. 0 0 0 0 0, 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000909900090OGGGGOGGOOOOGGGGGGGGOGOG0000G03
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Page 39 text:
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