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Page 26 text:
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M SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR. Miss Stearns, secretary; Moore, vice- president ; Harts, treasurer; and Snow- man, editor. We ought to put Macdonald, Sturte- vant and Kimball on the Peace Com- mission. When the building shook with such a terrific crash the other day, we all thought Cushman had fallen down. Mr. Baxter thinks it verv strange that every boy who asks him for a pen- cil or block of paper has had only one. Doyle received a pretty compliment sometime ago. One of the teachers said that Smith was the shortest boy in the room. We learn from the “Anabasis that the Greeks sang while engaging in bat- tle. We extend consolations to their adversaries. And let the girls remember that al- though the schoolhouse may sometimes be used as a restaurant, it must never become a dance-hall. Our invincible class team has dis- banded. The captain was unable to get a Thanksgiving game, so the boys have gone out of training for the season. We know now that that notorious man in the “Anabasis” was really shot in the left wing. One of the class said, “And they do not receive the attack but fly.” Manager Doyle has been assigning parts for the class theatricals, reproduc- ing a portion of de Quincey’s “Flight of the Kalmucks.” The characters of Cushman and Sturtevant for skeletons and Brine for Zebec-Dorchi arc partic- ularly appropriate. 01 Where is our class artist this year ? Keep it up, boys, and you will admin- ister a dose to the “boys upstairs.” We are all very sorry to learn of the illness of Miss McClellan and Master Doyle. Master Brown as class president and Miss Thompson as class secretary were again elected this year. The influence of the supernatural in Coleridge’s “Ancient Mariner” is strongly felt by the Latin studeat, who had the dead bodies gather themselves together in a heap. One of our 1st Div. boys at 1.30 o’clock, “What comes next hour ? ” Dream on. The class of 1901 is well represented in the executive committee by Miss True and Master Smith. Somerville Latin High, 1901, in their first game defeated Cambridge High, 1902 and 1903, by the score of 12-0. Moth balls were known to the Romans, as one scholar says, they pre- served their feathered helmets by using them. ’02 “It is too bad he is so, Good.” Oh what could the football team do, Without the luck of naughty two ? “French is so much like a rubber ball ! ” What has become of the class pin committee ? Teacher: “Miss Dearborn, N. G. ? Miss D : “Yes, sir. Teacher, asking for a simile, “He is as strong as ? Miss Lion ?” “Uncle Pete.” An old negro named Pete was very much troubled about his sins. Perceiv- ing him one day with a downcast look, his master asked him the cause. “Oh, massa, I’m such a great sinner.” “But, Pete,” said his master, “you are foolish to take it so much to heart. You never see me troubled about my sins.” “I know de reasons, massa,” said Pete, “when you go out duck shooting, and kill one duck and wound anoder, don’t you run after the wounded duck ? ” “Yes, Pete,” and the master wondered what was coming next. “Well, massa, dat is de way wid me and you. De dcbil's got you shore ; but as he am not sure ob me, he jess chase dis chile all de time.” S. Edith Moses, S. L. S., ’02.
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Page 25 text:
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SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR. 3 LATIN NOTES vs» ,0 4 t 9 - - 'I 'P ±iA’ ■ U or J SR 9V — ’99. Seniors at last! Pourquoi ce pork-war. Muldoon is undoubtedly our crack bass. The question still is, “What shall our class motto be ?” Pupil: It is “sed est tante.” Teacher: Had you said “est tante?” How tastily and daintily the witches of Shakespeare express themselves ! Miss K. (translating): “I see who has gall (Gaul) Catiline feared and Head (fled).” We all rcgict the absence of Harris and extend our best wishes to him for success. Our football seng seems to come true as well in the Senior as in the Junior League. French pronunciations: La soeur (la sewer) Un deux trois Carter s ink (quatre cinq). Story in French: “Frank is an atten- tive boy.” Wiggin: “Charles is the head of his class.” Miss Blood must have been thinking of “Gabriel Grub” when she said “gob- lin” for “gobbler.” Lost ! ! ! A tear dropped by Thetis. Who are the dealers in Greek and Latin horses? We wonder ! ’99 has a slight (?) representation in football—Story, Fitts, Wiggin, Sanborn, Ayres, Armstrong and Pierce. The eyesight of the ancients must have been keener than ouis in that they could see an extinguished flame. A member of our class carries written on his brow the score of the English High game. One touchdown. Our officers are: President, Story; Vice-President, Miss Poole ; Secretary, Miss Kingsley ; Treasurer, P'itts. Agamemnon must have been an odd sight. The face of a dog, heart of a deer, body soaked in wine and clothed in shamelessness. How did Pallas in ancient times carry on that long conversation with Aeneas from a distant hilltop? Did he use a megaphone ? ’00 Sturtevant is “bracing up.” Phillips is our Physics oracle. Poor Miss Densmorc ! If the teacher would only let her whisper. Mr. Baxter says that our girls are the sickliest girls he ever saw. Purcell complains that our new elec- tric bell sounds like an ice-cream wagon. Why can’t the boys, too, enjoy the banquet in the laboratory Friday after- noons ? Teacher: “What was the end of Themistocles?” Doubtful Scholar: “I think he died.” Moore’s only consolation in his recent trouble with his knee was being univer- sally mistaken for a Santiago hero. At the second meeting of the class Miss Clarke was elected president;
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Page 27 text:
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SOMKRVILLK HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR. 15 ENGLISH NOTES , w,e M ft A 4.- S jfX ’99 Room the Radiator ! Make this the best volume ever issued. Poor Clay was a pacifactory (pacifica- tor). Wonder how such “factories” were run. Strange how weak some of our foot- ball boys are when it comes to standing in recitation. A young lady of the Senior class re- cently informed her classmates that she thought a shell was not so hard as a cannon ball. S Heard in History A: Governor Houston of Texas wrote to Washington asking if he could be annexed to the United States.” Socrates must have needed the sym- pathy of his friends for we are told that he had a tyrant of a wife who frequently dampened his feelings with a pitcher of water. It is hard to realize that we have reached the fourth year of our High School course. Let us make this the most pleasant and most profitable year of the course. A certain young gentleman gave the following quotation recently: “Man for the field and women for the hearth, Man for the sword, for the needle she; Man with the head and woman with the heart; Man to command and woman to obey ; All else confusion.” We wonder if these are sentiments of that young man. Upon being asked the date of the next algebra recitation, the instructor re- plied, “That is a question involving arithmetic and therefore should not be brought up in an algebra recitation.” The girls of English C are growing uneasy owing to the frequency with which the boys give the quotations: “How weak a thing the heart of woman is,” or, “How hard it is for women to keep counsel.” The Seniors should congratulate themselves upon securing Channing’s new histories. It looks odd to see ac- counts of the late Spanish War between the covers of a regular history, waiting to be studied. ’00 How III Eng. B. do seem to enjoy the “Weird Seizures.” Sometimes the “y” in “bicycle” is too long. Ask Smith about this. Isn't it discouraging when a Senior pupil in typewriting writes, “The seats were piled ‘tear’ on ‘tear?’ ” Some turkeys are more vain than others, but on Thankgiving Day they are all dressed all dressed alike. Why wouldn’t it be a good plan to es- tablish a school fund to supply our low- voiced girls with megaphones ? Latest observations of a red corpuscle magnified 560 times declare it to be “just like a cross section or a foot-ball ” Our had recitals arc quite successful. Some of the participants are like the five foot boiler, with a seven foot whistle—
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