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Page 19 text:
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SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR 13 Marion DeWitt is at Wheaton College again this year. Herbert Smith and Malcolm Fuller are stu- dents at Boston University. Florence Wilbur, Helen Cunningham and Mary Pendelton are sophomores at Simmons. Ralph Ells and Harold Freeman are at Har- vard College. Leon Yacubian is at Lowell Textile School. James Marmaud is a sophomore at Boston College. Paul Goldstein is at Bentley School. Ruth Hill is employed by the John Hancock Life Insurance Company. Donald Grinnell is at Massachusetts Insti- tute of Technology. Charles Campbell is a student at St. Mary’s Academy. Irving Wells is working with the Edison Electric Company. Malcolm Wilkins is at Tufts College. 1921 Miss Penrose Brown, of the class of 1921, recently graduated from Forsyth-Tufts, win- ning the Fradz Eesinberg memorial prize. The engagement of Katharyn Buck and Theodore Higgins was recently announced. Hortense Sheldon and Mary Nolan are juniors at Emerson College. Mary Ranton, Radcliffe, 1925, has been awarded a scholarship. George Megathlin, Harold Stevens and John Garrod are at Dartmouth College. Hazel Freeman is a junior at Radcliffe Col- lege. Beatrice Sweet is teaching violin. 1920 Marjorie MacPhee and Herbert Campbell were married last month. Edward Cook and Lawrence Maddison are at Tufts College. f 1919 Leone Warren, Simmons, 1923, is employed by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Francis E. Biller, Somerville High School, 1919; Boston University, 1923, is teaching at the Western Junior High School. 1918 Beatrice Savage, Jackson, 1922, is now an as- sistant to the Dean. Blanche Harding, Radcliffe, 1922, will study the coming year for her master’s degree. 1914 Melvin W. Hodgdon has returned to Middle- ton, Ohio, to resume his duties, after a brief visit in this city. Russell Cook is a teacher of violin and is al- so conducting several orchestras. THE TIE THAT BINDS (Continued from Page 9) She could not understand it. The incidents of the last three weeks passed in rapid succes- sion through her thoughts. In a few moments she had lived again all the hours of anticipa- tion. Why did things now seem so different from what she had supposed? Would the whole trip be as much of a disappointment as this last day had been? The entire situation seemed beyond her comprehension. A gong struck. It was twelve o’clock. There was a motion, a sway of the boat. It had started! She was separated from land, from her land, which she could not touch again for months, perhaps longer. It might be years, for all she knew. It was noon time. She could pic- ture her father coming home for his lunch, and she was not there to meet him. “Poor Dad,” she thought, and then, suddenly, everything cleared up—she understood. She was home- sick. She had been so selfish to leave her father. She left the stateroom and rushed up to the deck, where she found Dorothy. “You’re just in time to see the excitement,” was her greeting. “Two lady visitors were on board when we started, and they’re putting them off in a power boat.” “Where?” gasped Margaret. Could it be possible there was a means of escape? “Over there. No, just this side of those men, see ?” Margaret unceremoniously left her friends and rushed to the spot where the boat was be- ing lowered. She spoke to one of the ladies. “Oh, please, will you take me ashore, too? I don’t belong on board—really!” The woman looked hesitatingly at her com- panion, but without waiting for their reply, Margaret followed them into the boat. Mr. Phillips did not go home to supper that night. Instead, he ate a lunch in a restaurant near his work. He felt it would be too lonesome at home without Margaret. He must learn by degrees to accustom himself to her absence, so it was rather late when he turned his steps toward home. As he reached the house, he was (Continued on Page 14)
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Page 18 text:
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12 SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR TVOTFS OF THL ALVMNI CAMTBELL-08 1923 Hester Waldron was the fortunate winner of a two-hundred-dollar scholarship for excel- lence in passing the entrance examinations at Radcliffe College. This is the third instance of Somerville High School's winning this honor, Dorothy Currie and Ruth Arrington having won it in previous years. Raymond Reed, Dudley Noyes and Bertram Gustin are at Dartmouth College. Priscilla Leach and Isabelle Guibord are freshmen at Boston University. Delancey Cleveland and Beatrice Lord are at- tending Massachusetts Normal Art School. Elizabeth Tibbetts and Esther Fisher are at- tending Fisher Business College. Robert Glover is at Lowell Textile School. Warren Caswell is working for the First Na- tional Bank of Boston. Genevieve Bowser is a student at Jackson College. Stanley Teele is at Worcester Academy. Claire Tuck is at Roger Hall, Lowell. Norman Codding and Harold Potter are at- tending Chauncy Hall, Boston. Evelyn Young and Inez Comstock are fresh- men at Simmons College. Adelbert Morrill is working on one of the United Fruit Company's steamers. Dorothy Lawson is attending Framingham Normal School. Cleon Hopkins, Warren Thomas and Welton Burgess are at Tufts College. Jennie Doyle is a freshman at Lowell Normal School. Fayette Haskell is teaching music at Madame Lombard’s Studio. Henry Blackman is working for Brown, Dur- rell Company, wholesale dry goods. Helen Monte and Frances Knibbs are at Chandler School. Rollo Lewis is at Northeastern University. Elizabeth Stewart, Rena Josie and Dorothy Obear are freshmen at Radcliffe College. Roger Marston is a freshman at Boston Uni- versity. E. William Johansen is at Ohio State Uni- versity studying veterinary surgery. Lawrence Marble is at Fisher Business Col- lege. Donald Hamilton is working for the Hollis Meat Company of Boston. Lester Crooker is attending Tufts Pre-Med- ical School. Edward Jeremiah is at Dean Academy. John Wells is a freshman at Tufts College. Emma Alls is a secretary to Mr. Avery, as- sisting Miss Ham in the school office. 1922 Lydia Marvin and Mildred Nickerson are sophomores at Radcliffe College. Robert MacPhail is a student at Yale. Paula Heald and Adelaide Green are fresh- men at Jackson College. Allison Grant has recently left for Wesleyan, where he is studying for the ministry. Marion Linfield was married to Carlos Whit- cher last June. Otis Hanslick, Kenneth Chase and Kenneth Wolf are sophomores at Tufts College. Helen Marshall is attending Massachusetts Normal Art School. Olive Holmes is a freshman at Emerson Col- lege. Robert Sylvester is at Tufts College. Evelyn Stearns is attending Leslie Kinder- garten School.
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Page 20 text:
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14 SOMERVILLE HIGH SCHOOL RADIATOR The Durfee Hilltop, Fall River.—Your Com- mencement number was especially attractive, because of its class will, history and prophecy. The Southern Bell, Somerville.—Your grad- uation number was exceptionally fine. The page for autographs was very novel. Do come again. The Chatterbox, Auburn, Indiana.—A very newsy little paper, but where is your exchange column ? The Netop, Turners Falls High School.—We like your cover design and your athletic de- partment is exceptionally fine. We note the absence of an exchange column. Grotonian, Groton, Mass.—Your stories are very interesting, but you need a few cuts to add to the attractiveness of your paper. Come again. Red and Black, Whitman High School.—A nice little magazine with good stories. Why not begin a library department? The Palmer, Palmer, Mass.—An excellent paper with fine jokes. Would like to hear from you again. The Spotlight, South Hadley High School.— Your senior number was very interesting, but where are your exchange notes? Echo, Winthrop, Mass.—An excellent paper with fine jokes. Salemica, New Salem Academy.—Your ex- change department is great. Why not have some alumni notes? The Hermonite, Mount Hermon.—Your liter- ary department is good and your jokes clever. Where are your exchange notes? Mirror, Coldwater, Michigan.—Your athletic department is good, but you have too few good stories. Blue and Gold, Malden High School.—A very interesting little paper, but an exchange de- partment would be an improvement. THE TIE THAT BINDS (Continued from Page 13) astonished to see a light shining from the kitchen window. Visions of robbers and of fire flashed through his thoughts as he ran up the steps, but when he opened the front door he heard a voice singing. Was it Margaret’s voice, or was he dreaming? Indeed, it was her voice, for there in the doorway stood Margaret her- self. “Why, my girl, what does this mean?” “I—I couldn’t leave you, Dad, after all.” FOOTBALL SCHEDULE October 6—Lawrence at Somerville. October 12—Somerville at Medford. October 20—Malden at Somerville. October 27—Somerville at Cambridge. November 3—Newton at Somerville. November 10—Everett at Somerville. November 17—Somerville at Brookline. November 29—Somerville at Rindge. 10 A. M. Admission 50c.
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