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Page 13 text:
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SEVENTH GRADE First row (left to right)—Mamie Huntsberry, Mildred Brandenburg, Betty Huntsberry, Betty Lou Itnyre (vice president), Mrs. Mann (advisor), Eilene Reecher (president). Junior Pryor (secretary), Joyce Wolfe, Louise Herbst (treasurer), Alma Gift, Mary Stuller, Elaine Gouker. Second row Leister Stot- tlemyer, Robert Harris, Charles Slick, Robert Stottlemyer, Blanche Sanders, Marguerite Kline, Dolly Diehl, Agnes Bachtell, Eubert Burgess, Hubert Burgess, Betty Ridge, Verona Hahn, Blanche Shatzer, Anna Mowdy, Glendora Lewis, Harold Smith, Nevin Backenstaff. Third row—Dominick Dattilio, Leardie Shifflett, Thelma Warner, Mary Catherine Kelbaugh, Evelyn DeLauter, Dickie Brown, Vivian Boward, Rosemary Ferguson, Mary Jo Murray, Lorraine Gearhart, Catherine Leibolt, Lois Barkdoll, Catherine Frey, Rose Kretsinger, Kathleen Hahn, Mary Susan Rinehart, Joann Snowberger, Ralph Kendall. Fourth row—Robert Eckstine, Charles Cline, Richard Shockey, Daniel Swope, Elwood Hauver, Wayne Snyder, Donald Warrenfeltz, and Robert Smith. SCHOOL PATROL First row (left to right)—James Heck, Glenn Bachtell, Samuel Kipe (captain), Melvin Cowan (lieu- tenant), Richard Toms (sergeant), Raymond Hershberger (lieutenant of the Junior Patrol), Richard Hays. Second row—Eugene Cowan, Joseph Kline, Robert Smith, Walter Dayhoff. Third row Rich- ard Beard, Roy Boswell, Leister Stottlemyer, Robert Tracy, Robert Harris, Eugene Kendall, Richard Brown, Nevin Lewis. Charles Slick. Fourth row—Robert Smith, George Bushey, David Martin, David Benner, Mr. Martin, Elwood Hauver, Donald Warrenfeltz, and George DeLauter. Absent—Lloyd Bowman and Franklin Forres . Page 11
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Page 12 text:
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1943 LEGACY We, the Senior Class of 1943 of S. H. S., being of sound min 1 and firm body, do hereby make and publish our last will and testament. As a student body, we bequeath to the Junior Class our dignity and the authority to dominate the lowerclassmen. To Mr. Haynes we leave our profound admiration and ever-enduring friendship. A bouquet of thankfulness and appreciation for their help in pulling us through is bestowed upon the faculty. Individually we make these bequeathals: To the basketball teams of next year. La Nona Hahn and Earl Bachtell hand down their ability to make goals. Richard Masters wills his curly locks to Mr. Rohrbaugh. Mary Ann Kipe becomes the heiress to Phyllis Slick’s gift of gab. Jack Hartle wills his deep bass voice to Carl Kipe. It should be a great help in next year’s Glee Club. To the teachers, Grace Weaver leaves her tinkling bells so that the stu- dents will be able to tell how near the teachers are. Betty Stottlemyer bequeaths her attendance record to Agnes Funk. Upon Albert Cline is bestowed Cairoll Wyand’s fiery red hair. S. H. S. just can’t get along without a red head. John Moore leaves Luella, with orders to handle carefully, to Don Werde- baugh. Kenneth Needy gives his peaceable disposition to Bill Winders. To Caroline Olson, Cleo Toms wills her small stature. Mr. Martin falls heir to Conway Flohr’s fire-fighting ability. Donald Bollinger bestows his retiring nature upon Preston Flohr so that the girls can have some peace. The running ability of Albert Kretsinger is handed down to John Kel- baugh. Richard Jacques’ slow walk and lazy manner of speaking is left to Ver- non Brown. Lester Davis bequeaths his popularity with the girls to Francis Rouse. Bill Smith is willed Quinn Fogle’s permit to Chewsville. Mary Belle Boswell leaves her tomboyish ways with Vivian Walter. To Betty June Biser, Betty Tressler confers her melodious giggle. Christine Olson wishes to present her turned-up nose to Gamma Lee Doyle. June Whitmer bestows her hep cat methods to Rosie Kretsinger. Her cheerful, “Ipana” smile, Charlotte Mong presents to Frances Royer. To anyone who has a knack for bearing burdens, Frances Green surren- ders her boyfriends. James Smith bequeaths his Hitler hairdo to Robert Green. Floyd Gearhart grants his winning way with the women to Delbert Smith. To Donald Fleagle, Leroy Fleagle leaves his numerous trips to Waynes- boro. Eileen Pryor leaves her good-natured smile to Zelda Grove. Jane Hauver bestows her willingness to cooperate to Freddie Heiston. In witness whereof, we, the Class of 1943, the testators, have to this will set our hands and seal, this first day of June, one thousand nine hundred and forty-three.
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Page 14 text:
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Kalamazoo. Michigan, June 11, 1953. Mr. Richard Masters. Principal, Smithsburg High School, Smithsburg, Maryland. Dear Mr. Masters: The whereabouts of our fellow classmates has always been a personal concern of mine, and on this tenth anniversary, 1 have a record of the progress of the group. Smithsburg High School certainly has grown under your guidance—our Alma Mater prints its own school paper, raises all food for cafe- teria use, has movable movie apparatus in all the classrooms, a sick room with a nurse avail- able at all times, a traveling cafeteria, sound- proof rooms, etc. My work, selling “prefab” houses, takes me all over the country—so I have at various places met many former classmates. 1 happened upon Leroy Fleagle at Newark, where I learned he had perfected a type of window that is unbreakable — keeps out dust and allows the vitamin rays of the sun to en- ter. Quinn Fogle is making a name for himself in his movie career. You probably saw the pre- view to his last picture via television. I visited a beauty saloon in Philadelphia, operated by Eileen Pryor and Grace Weaver. The work was all done on a belt which carries the person through a series of machines, oper- ated by the girls. It requires only a few min- utes for one to secure a permanent and a man- icure. Jack Hartle, who has long replaced Marc Warren as a band leader, recently fulfilled an appointment at the Stork Club in New York City. Lester Davis travels daily from Miami to Peru to give vocal lessons to his classes there. He pilots his plane that makes the trip in an hour. John Moore always loved hunting and to this day you can find him greatly absorbed in this sport. John has a pair of collapsible wings that carry him quickly to any part of the district where he is hunting. Richmond. Virginia, claims Betty Stottle- myer as one of its best secretaries. Betty owns a typewriter and chair combination that she uses on her way to and from work so she won’t lose any time. In St. Louis, Missouri, Kenneth Needy, the agent for Fairchild Aircraft Company, is help- ing with plans for an auto-airplane. He is cer- tainly going places. Floyd Gearhart, an ex-Navy radio man, is now directing television transmission at WJEJ. Out on the West Coast, Richard Jacques, ev- eryone’s friend, is now in charge of the air- I ort, which is the terminal for all Pacific trans oceanic travel. At the same field I found Charlotte Mong, now stewardess on a plane that flies non-stop from California to India. Carroll Wyand, chief of the ground crew, works on the great eight-motored transports. Carroll was in the Army Air Corps, remember? Oh, yes. Frances Green and Juno Whitmer, two glamour girls from the United States, are in South America on a good will tour! Their charm will certainly help to keep friendly rela- tions in the Americas. Jane Hauver owns the new all-glass en- closed flower house where prize flowers are grown under special lamps. Jane has many cups and ribbons for her flowers. Yesterday James Smith returned in his heli- copter from Germany where he helped in the reconstruction of industry after the war. In New York the other day, 1 met Christine Olson on her way to the new open air amphi- theater which thousands pack to hear her sing. Albert Kretsinger has just run a four-min- ute mile at Madison Square Garden. Remember how he could run when he attended school? You know those new major league baseball teams for girls? Guess who is the leading pitcher? None other than La Nono Hahn, our old schoolmate. She looks like a twenty-game winner this year. The chief of the fleet of the new super fire- engines in St. Louis turned out to be Conway Flohr who has worked out a plan for fighting fires with a new chemical he has compounded. Marybelle Boswell and Donald Bollinger, collaborating as nurse and physician, are mak- ing international tours demonstrating their new infantile paralysis treatment. According to the patients they have cured, their positions in the world are well established. The ultra-modern decorating establishment located on Fifth Avenue in New York City was created by Betty Tressler. She has made ador- able little cubbyholes out of the penthouses in the two hundred story all-glass skyscraper. Cleo Toms, attired in a white synthetic wood lab coat, came out of her plastic laboratory long enough to tell me of the latest develop- ments of the run-proof tissue paper dresses, when I called on her. On Capitol Hill in Washington, I dined re- cently with the former Phyllis Slick and her husband, an ambassador for the United States of Europe. She has made a hobby of collecting freaks from the different countries. This space isn’t sufficient to tell you all the data I have collected. Come up for dinner Fri- day evening—let’s say seven-thirty—at the St. George. Catch that six o’clock plane out of Smithsburg. Sincerely yours, Earl Bachtell. Paye 12
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