Westbrook High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Westbrook, ME)

 - Class of 1938

Page 11 of 94

 

Westbrook High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Westbrook, ME) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 11 of 94
Page 11 of 94



Westbrook High School - Blue and White Yearbook (Westbrook, ME) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 10
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Page 11 text:

'V H N 10 araaf- whether in the city or in the forests. It takes millions of dollars to replace the lumber lost in buildings and furniture destroyed in tires each year. Therefore, we should be careful in the use of fire. A point should be taken to make every week Fire Prevention Weekn and American Forest VVeek, for there is nothing closer and clearer to our national well-being than our forests and the products which we derive from them. However, in addition to the fact that we must do our best to conserve the forests which we already have, we must replace the trees that are taken from the forests each year by necessity. VVe must organize a reforestation program so that the trees will be planted like the crops on a farm. Our government has already laid the foundation for a national forest policy by providing for the cooperation between the government and the vari- ous states in the work of conservation and re- forestation. In spite of the perplexing problems facing our government, there are few more im- portant than the question of the preservation of our forests. The youth of modern America must always be ready to mold public opinion to the extent that our government will carry on the great work that it has already started. The future of the United States depends largely upon the suc- cess of this movement. We must not become a nation without trees. WHAT KIND OF BOYS DO GIRLS LIKE? FLORENCE DRINKWATER, '38 What is the most important thought that enters the mind of any average girl of today? There is no need for me to give you the answer. Everyone knows that it is boys, Now, what sort of boys do girls like? That is a question that each girl should answer herself and I will give my personal opinion of a good example. I shall call him Raymond. Raymond is a boy who has respect for his father and mother and, certainly, if he can be good to them he will be the same to his wife and children. He even treats his sisters and other girls as well as he does his own boy friends. That is more than I can say of some boys who are near me every day. In appearance, Raymond is neat enough for any girl to be proud to be seen with. He has a clean and healthy mind and a good character. That has much to do with winning a girl's affection. I sup- pose that if any boy reads this he will say Ray- mond is quite a sissy. But, girls, do you think so? No! What a boy needs is many more helpful suggestions like some of those that I have given. If any of you boys want to argue, we girls are waiting. SEE AMERICA FIRST ETHELYN SMITH, '38 The one ambition of travelers, whether they are experienced travelers, travelers through read- ing, or travelers only in imagination, is to go abroad. Oh, to see Paris in the spring-the Louvre-the Alps--Normandy in apple blossom time-the Riviera, and all the famous places pic- tured in geography books, or in travel pamphlets, or heard about from the fortunate ones who have visited these places! Little do we realize how beautiful our own country is and how surprised at all its beauty we should be if we only followed the slogan-our national slogan- See America First. There is little opportunity for one to forget this slogan if he has once-only once is enough- expressed a desire to See America First. I know. I cannot for the life of me understand why steamship lines, railroad companies, and health resorts advertise in well-known magazines if they to answer their advertise- prefer paying-customers or real trips and not imaginary I to know? There was no the traditional lower left- do not expect people ments. CFerhaps they ones who contemplate ones.j But how was Statement inserted in hand corner to the effect that Only those positive of why, where, and how they intend to take the above stated trip need apply. If only things had been clear! One day, while idly turning the pages of a magazine, I came upon a full-page advertisement

Page 10 text:

W f is 5 2619 5 W 2 lqwvviif w Q4 sw- aa wwskesgf Il' 2 2- if 'M pg 57 if 5.2, thas: 0 H6192 CONSERVATION ETHELYN SMITH, l38 Trees have played a very important part in the development of our country and the preservation of our lands. It was from these primeval forests that our forefathers built their homes, secured their fuel, and made their tools. The accumulation of fallen leaves and decayed timber from the forests made the soil so fertile that we have be- come one of the greatest agricultural nations of the world. These same trees have also enabled us to build up a large lumber industry that has furnished the raw materials for the manufacture of a great many wood products. In addition to all these, the forests conserve the soil, that is, they keep the soil from washing away with the heavy rains. Therefore, in view of all these aids which the forests afford us, should we not be willing to do our bit by the wise conservation of our timber lands? Certainly, we all agree that without the forests the world would be a very dreary place in which to live. However, because of the immense quantities of lumber used each year and the various destructive forces, such as insects, tires, and diseases, the for- ests are rapidly disappearing. At present, our forests are being used up and destroyed about four and one-half times as fast as they are being replenished. When the first settlers came to these shores, about 900,000,000 acres of land were cov- ered with forests. Today, only one-fifth of that expanse remains. As there is usually an explanation for every- thing, there are a great number of reasons for the extensive consumption of our lumber each year. The major demands are railroad ties, tele- phone and telegraph poles, mine props, paper and pulp, wooden fence posts, pencils, buildings, fur- niture, ships, and many other needed things. These items are replenished each year in great quantities, moreover. In addition to the usage of the forests for our many industries, destruction by forest fires, severe storms, and diseases take their annual toll. Sad it is that much more timber is destroyed each year by Fire than is put to use. Statistics state that in a recent year approximately 92,000 fires burned over an area as large as the State of New York. Many of the fires are caused by carelessness, usu- ally of campers and tourists. There are also many species of insects that attack the trees, destroying thousands of acres of valuable forests every year. ln one respect, trees are as human as people, in that their health is affected by diseases. When the diseases in trees progress to such a point that the work of the roots, stems, and leaves is lessened or interrupted, the trees sicken and die. Diseases such as blights, rusts, and bracket fungi cause great losses among certain species of trees. The chestnut blight alone has killed nearly all of the chestnut trees in the eastern part of the United States. Therefore, since there are so many destructive forces beyond the control of man which lessen the supply from the forests each year, we should do all that we can to cut down on the amount of timber which is needlessly wasted each year. lt has been estimated that approximately two-thirds of a tree is wasted between the time that it is cut in the forest and the time that it is converted into a finished product. This waste is found in not cutting the trees close to the ground, leaving nu- merous slabs and brush around to rot, and throw- ing aside many useful pieces at the mills. Although the average high school student may not be able to do much to prevent the waste of our trees from these various sources, he can do much to aid in cutting down the loss of many valuable trees from fire each year. We can be certain not to leave campfires burning or to throw matches which are lighted among the brush and underwood. Every fire means a loss of wood



Page 12 text:

admonishing all readers to select their winter vacationland immediately, as all reservations would soon be taken. A small rectangle appeared below containing such names as Florida, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Idaho, California, and count- less others, with a small square beside each one in which the would-be vacationist was to place a small check mark Qonly in the ones in which he was especially interested, howeverj. Unsuspect- ingly, I placed a check mark in almost all of them, omitting only a few for the mere looks of the thing. It will be very interesting and educational, I thought, to receive pamphlets from all parts of our wonderful country. Alas! little did I know of the consternation and even the misfortune that awaited me and others. After this bold act, I impatiently awaited the arrival of my first pamphlet. So infatuated with my idea was I that I sometimes gave very vague and abstract answers to questions asked me in school. On one instance in particular I was said to have replied that Santa Fe was the name of that most honorable gentleman who first saw the Pacific Ocean. QI do not know to this very day whether or not I said that, so absorbed was I in my thoughtsj I had not long to wait, however, before results of my act began to materialize and the mail began to arrive. The poor mailman looked daggers at me each time he saw me. I could hardly blame him, for it was I who was responsible for his bag being filled to capacity each morning, and later necessitated his carrying two bags of mail, it was I who caused him to wear out three pairs of shoes in one month, and above all it was I who lived in the last house on his route. C I am even told that the office was required to hire three extra mailmen during my pre-vacation splurge.j If my poor, innocent plan had only stopped there, perhaps C I am not positivej I should not now be so prejudiced against flowery, innocent advertise- ments which lure one to such depths of distraction that they really require a rest and a good one. CPerhaps that is one way of securing trade, but ah, I shall never knowll But no, my telephone rang continually night and day, and everyone, from sweet-voiced women to gruff-sounding men, inquired for me and asked if I was the personage who had so generously answered the advertise- ment. On being told, rather reluctantly, that I was the one, they inquired as to the date of my departure from home, the date of my arrival at my destination, and vice versa, as to the length of my stay, the places I desired most to visit, my choice of residence, whether I wanted the very small, ultra-modern traveler's kitchenette contain- ing forty-two rooms, three sun rooms, a patio, a private swimming pool, and such knickknacks, or whether I preferred something more roomy and conventional. My poor head practically swam. And wou1dn't yours, answering such questions as these every day for three or four weeks? CThe sad part of it is, I could answer only in the negativej The climax to my woes came on a Wednesday, when I was where all good children should be- in school. And quite fortunate it was for me, too, that I was in that grand institution of learning. CI truly believe that was one time I was thankful for such an institutionj A very dignified, busi- nesslike gentleman walked determinedly up my front steps and rang the door bell. The door opened and my maternal parent was confronted with the very same volley of questions which had been asked me over the telephone. When she at last found an opening fwhich, incidentally, was not until twenty minutes laterj she emphatically informed the gentleman that she most certainly was not the person in question, that the person in question had not contemplated any such trip as he had so eloquently described, that she had applied for pamphlets only from sheer pleasure, and that the person in question would not trouble them further in any such matter. tHe dejectedly departedj Thus, as in Shakespeare's verse- how far a candle throws its beam, so shines a good deed in a naughty world -my unsuspecting act reached into deep, dark, cobwebby corners and all occu- pants rose up to question me. QNever again lj

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